@booklet {927, title = {After Worlds Collide}, howpublished = {Blue Book Magazine (New York)}, volume = {58.1 - 58.6 }, year = {1933}, note = {

Rpt. New York: Frederick A. Stokes, 1934. Rpt. New York: Paperback Library, 1963. Separately paged with\ When Worlds Collide\ as Philip [Gordon] Wylie and Edwin Balmer,\ When Worlds Collide. Philadelphia, PA: J. B. Lippincott, 1961; and Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1999, with an \“Introduction\” by John Varley (v-ix).

}, month = {November 1933 {\textendash} April 1934}, pages = {6-31; 28-48; 50-69; 42-62; 36-59; 70-92}, publisher = {Stokes}, address = {New York}, abstract = {

Sequel to their When Worlds Collide [(New York: Stokes, 1933. Originally published Illus. Joseph Frank{\'e} in Blue Book Magazine (New York) 55.5 - 56.4 (September 1932 \– February 1933): 6-29; 32-52; 30-52; 32-55; 50-73; 122-49]. Rpt. New York: Frederick. A. Stokes, 1933. Rpt. Chicago, IL: A. L. Burt, 1933; New York: Paperback Library, 1962. A 1951 film of When Worlds Collide was directed by Rudolph Mat{\'e} (1898-1964) with a screenplay by Sydney Boehm (1908-90). When Worlds Collide shows preparations for leaving Earth prior to its collision with another planet and the successful landing on another planet. The After Worlds Collide shows the first period on that planet, the discovery of the cities of its previous inhabitants, with some suggestion that they had produced a eutopian society, and conflict with a dystopian society of \“Asiatics\” and Russians who had also escaped Earth and established a society based on slavery.

}, keywords = {Male author, US author}, author = {Edwin Balmer (1883-1959) and Philip [Gordon] Wylie (1902-71)} }