Timescapes: Stories of Time Travel
Timescapes: Stories of Time Travel is an anthology of science fiction short stories on time travel edited by Peter Haining. It was first published in the United Kingdom hardcover by Souvenir Press in August 1997. The first American edition was issued in hardcover under the alternate title Time Travelers: Fiction in the Fourth Dimension by Barnes & Noble Books in 1998.[1]
Cover of first edition | |
Author | edited by Peter Haining |
---|---|
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Genre | Science fiction |
Publisher | Souvenir Press |
Publication date | 1997 |
Media type | Print (hardcover) |
Pages | 288 pp. |
ISBN | 0-285-63387-2 |
The book collects twenty four novelettes and short stories by various science fiction authors, with an introduction by the editor.
Contents
- "Introduction" (Peter Haining)
- "A Little Something for Us Tempunauts" (Philip K. Dick)
- "Mr. Strenberry's Tale" (J. B. Priestley)
- "All the Time in the World" (Arthur C. Clarke)
- "The Instability" (Isaac Asimov)
- "Time Has No Boundaries" (Jack Finney)
- "She Caught Hold of the Toe" (Richard Hughes)
- "The Reason Is with Us" (James E. Gunn)
- "Man in His Time" (Brian W. Aldiss)
- "The Clock that Went Backwards" (Edward Page Mitchell)
- "A Gun for Dinosaur" (L. Sprague de Camp)
- "The Deadly Mission of Phineas Snodgrass" (Frederik Pohl)
- "Of Time and Kathy Benedict" (William F. Nolan)
- "Production Problem" (Robert F. Young)
- "I Hear You Calling" (Eric Frank Russell)
- "The Men Who Murdered Mohammed" (Alfred Bester)
- "Time Intervening" (Ray Bradbury)
- "The Grey Man" (H. G. Wells)
- "Flux" (Michael Moorcock (and Barrington J. Bayley))
- "The Greatest Television Show on Earth" (J. G. Ballard)
- "Through Time and Space with Ferdinand Feghoot: XXXV" (Grendel Briarton)
- "Time Bum" (C. M. Kornbluth)
- "All You Zombies—" (Robert A. Heinlein)
- "The Gernsback Continuum" (William Gibson)
- "The Time Disease" (Martin Amis)
Notes
- Timescapes: Stories of Time Travel title listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
gollark: Fear it:
gollark: (Taiwan holds basically all leading edge semiconductor production and I believe a lot of the older stuff. Invading could physically damage it in hard to fix ways, and would probably lead to the loss of most of the people working on it and their knowledge; even ignoring this, it relies on materials from elsewhere which could be cut off. Basically everyone needs the chips produced by TSMC, and if they just stopped existing so would... roughly all consumer electronics for several years.)
gollark: It would not.
gollark: I don't think they can actually militarily do anything to Taiwan without imploding the entire world economy for several years.
gollark: It's unreasonable that people's life chances are affected by who they happened to be born to.
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