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During the decade’s first few years, we find a number of titles published by E.E. Note that the Thirties (1934–1943) are an interregnum between sci-fi’s Radium and Golden Ages.
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Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s Herland (1915, serialized).Beresford’s The Hampdenshire Wonder (1911). Gustave Le Rouge’s Le Prisonnier de la Planète Mars (1908).Rudyard Kipling’s With the Night Mail (1905).The following classics from the science fiction genre’s Radium Age (1904–33) era are listed here in order to provide some historical context. JOSH GLENN’S *BEST ADVENTURES* LISTS: BEST 250 ADVENTURES OF THE 20TH CENTURY | 100 BEST OUGHTS ADVENTURES | 100 BEST RADIUM AGE (PROTO-)SCI-FI ADVENTURES | 100 BEST TEENS ADVENTURES | 100 BEST TWENTIES ADVENTURES | 100 BEST THIRTIES ADVENTURES | 75 BEST GOLDEN AGE SCI-FI ADVENTURES | 100 BEST FORTIES ADVENTURES | 100 BEST FIFTIES ADVENTURES | 100 BEST SIXTIES ADVENTURES | 75 BEST NEW WAVE SCI FI ADVENTURES | 100 BEST SEVENTIES ADVENTURES | 100 BEST EIGHTIES ADVENTURES | 75 BEST DIAMOND AGE SCI-FI ADVENTURES | 100 BEST NINETIES ADVENTURES | NOTES ON 21st-CENTURY ADVENTURES. Clarke | PLUS: Jack Kirby’s Golden Age and New Wave science fiction comics. | Murray Leinster | Kurt Vonnegut | Stanislaw Lem | Alfred Bester | Isaac Asimov | Ray Bradbury | Madeleine L’Engle | Arthur C. Ballard | Jorge Luis Borges | Poul Anderson | Walter M. Dick | Jack Williamson | George Orwell | Boris Vian | Bernard Wolfe | J.G. GOLDEN-AGE SCI-FI at HILOBROW: Golden Age Sci-Fi: 75 Best Novels of 1934–1963 | Robert Heinlein | Karel Capek | William Burroughs | E.E.
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Sci fi haunted space station series#
And if you’d like to support the cause, please visit the HiLoBooks homepage you’ll find purchase links for our series of reissued Radium Age sci-fi paperbacks. Please let me know what favorite 1934–1963 sci-fi novels I’ve overlooked. I do! I’ve read and re-read the books on this list putting together this Golden Age 75 page has provided me with an excellent excuse to revisit terrific stories that I first devoured as a teenager in the early ’80s. (Isaac Asimov, the Golden Age’s premier publicist, once claimed that although it may have possessed an exuberant vigor, the pre-Golden Age science fiction he grew up reading “seems, to anyone who has experienced the Campbell Revolution, to be clumsy, primitive, naive.” Though true of much 1930s pulp sci-fi, this is a gross over-generalization.) On the other hand, just because I dispute the “Golden Age” moniker doesn’t mean I don’t enjoy science fiction published during this period.
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I dispute the widely, lazily accepted notion that 1934–1963 was science fiction’s greatest era - particularly to the extent that the moniker suggests that the genre’s Radium Age (1904–1933) was a benighted period. I retain the “Golden Age” designation for 1934–63 science fiction out of convenience, since we’re all accustomed to referring to it as such. (They were also no doubt influenced by the 1932 publication of Aldous Huxley’s literate, analytical, socially conscious Brave New World.) According to my eccentric generational and cultural era schema, 1934 is the first year of the Thirties (1934–1943), so let’s go ahead and semi-arbitrarily call 1934 the Golden Age’s starting point. By my reckoning, however, Campbell and his cohort first began to develop their literate, analytical, socially conscious science fiction in reaction against the 1934 advent of the campy Flash Gordon comic strip, not to mention Hollywood’s innumerable mid-1930s Bug-Eyed Monster-heavy “sci-fi” blockbusters that sought to ape the success of 1933’s King Kong. Campbell’s 1937 assumption of the editorship of the pulp magazine Astounding. Scholars of the subject tend to claim that science fiction’s “Golden Age” dates to John W.