Biblio
Export 995 results:
[ Author
Filters: First Letter Of Last Name is S [Clear All Filters]
S
The Age of the Tail. Boston, MA: Little, Brown, 1955.
Captive Planet. Minneapolis, MN: Bethany House Publishers, 1986.
The Venus Belt. New York: Ballantine Books, 1981.
A letter sent by I.B. Gentleman vnto his very frende Maystet [sic] R.C. Esquire: vvherin is conteined a large discourse of the peopling & inhabiting the cuntrie called the Ardes, and other adiacent in the north of Ireland, and taken in hand by Sir Thomas Smith one of the Queenes Maiesties priuie Counsel, and Thomas Smith Esquire, his sonne. London: Ptd. by Henry Binneman for Anthonhson [i.e. Anthony Kitson], 1572.
"The Laminated Woman" In Fantastic Universe. Vol. 2.5 ., 1954.
His Pseudoic Majesty or The Knights of the Fleece. New York: Liberty Pub. Co, 1903.
Future Boston: The History of a City 1990-2100, Edited by Smith, David Alexander ed.(b. 1953). New York: Tor, 1994.
"The Lone and Level Sands" In Future Washington, Edited by Lilley, Ernest. Washington, DC: Washington Science Fiction Association (WSFA), 2005.
"Kanosha" In Little Blue Marble ., 2021.
In the Cube. New York: Tor, 1993.
Future X. A Novel. Los Angeles, CA: Holloway House Pub. Co, 1990.
The Indians Won. New York: Belmont Books, 1970.
Orleans. New York: G. P. Putnam's Sons, 2013.
"Steve Sepp, Tasty! Tasty! No Mean Feast" In Nature . Vol. 472.7342., 2011.
“Embarrassment Box” In New Libertarian. Vol. 4.20 & 5.9&10 (no. 187) ., 1990.
Thorndale or The Conflict of Opinions. Edinburgh, Scot.: William Blackwood and Sons, 1857.
"Birthright" In If: Worlds of Science Fiction . Vol. 5.5 ., 1955.
"The Root of Ampoi" In Arkham Sampler (Sauk City, WI)., 1949.
"Thirteen" In Neo-Opsis Science Fiction Magazine. Vol. no. 17 ., 2009.
The Young Philosopher. Vol. 4 Vols. London: T. Cadell Jr and W. Davies, 1798.
Altruria. New York: Altruria Publishing Company, 1895.
Conscientia: or, Latter-Day Pilgrims. Paisley, Scot.: Alexander Gardner, 1882.
The Allegion or New World Religion. Based upon a proposition affording a scientific fundament of thought as benevolently revolutionary as were the proposals of Copernicus and Galileo in Astronomy, or of Dr. Joseph Priestly in Chemistry. New York: Ptd. by William Edwin Rudge, 1932.
The Perfect Planet. New York: Avalon, 1962.
Unpopular Planet. New York: Dell, 1975.