312 pages
English language
Published Aug. 14, 1970 by Ballantine Books.
312 pages
English language
Published Aug. 14, 1970 by Ballantine Books.
Science fiction writers have long warned, in an astonishing variety of stories and interpretations, of the ecological crisis that controls mankind.
Frederik Pohl, a master of future prognostication himself, has selected superb representative stories from the thousands that exist.
Contents:
Station HR972 • (1967) • short story by Kenneth Bulmer X Marks the Pedwalk • (1963) • short story by Fritz Leiber A Bad Day for Sales • (1953) • short story by Fritz Leiber The Midas Plague • (1954) • novella by Frederik Pohl Among the Bad Baboons • (1968) • novelette by Mack Reynolds The Marching Morons • (1951) • novelette by C.M. Kornbluth New Apples in the Garden • (1963) • short story by Kris Neville Uncalculated Risk • (1962) • short story by Christopher Anvil The Year of the Jackpot • (1952) • novelette by Robert A. Heinlein The Luckiest Man in Denv • (1952) • …
Science fiction writers have long warned, in an astonishing variety of stories and interpretations, of the ecological crisis that controls mankind.
Frederik Pohl, a master of future prognostication himself, has selected superb representative stories from the thousands that exist.
Contents:
Station HR972 • (1967) • short story by Kenneth Bulmer X Marks the Pedwalk • (1963) • short story by Fritz Leiber A Bad Day for Sales • (1953) • short story by Fritz Leiber The Midas Plague • (1954) • novella by Frederik Pohl Among the Bad Baboons • (1968) • novelette by Mack Reynolds The Marching Morons • (1951) • novelette by C.M. Kornbluth New Apples in the Garden • (1963) • short story by Kris Neville Uncalculated Risk • (1962) • short story by Christopher Anvil The Year of the Jackpot • (1952) • novelette by Robert A. Heinlein The Luckiest Man in Denv • (1952) • short story by C.M. Kornbluth The Census Takers • (1956) • short story by Frederik Pohl Day of Truce • (1963) • novelette by Clifford D. Simak Eco-Catastrophe! • (1969) • short story by Paul R. Ehrlich Introduction (Nightmare Age) • essay by Frederik Pohl