Complete Anthologies

Science Fiction & Fantasy, High Tech, Space Opera, Science Fiction, Adventure
Cover of the book Complete Anthologies by Laurence M. Janifer, ScienceAdventure Publishing
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Author: Laurence M. Janifer ISBN: 1230000232412
Publisher: ScienceAdventure Publishing Publication: April 10, 2014
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Laurence M. Janifer
ISBN: 1230000232412
Publisher: ScienceAdventure Publishing
Publication: April 10, 2014
Imprint:
Language: English

Includes an active table of contents so you can use your NOOK's GOTO CHAPTER feature to easily navigate to each book.

Contents
Sight Gag (1962)
Charley de Milo (1959)
Mex
Hex (1959)
The Man Who Played to Lose (1961)
Occasion for Disaster (1960)
Wizard (1960)
Lost in Translation (1961)

Count Down

Sight Gag (1962)
Intelligence is a great help in the evolution-by-survival—but intelligence without muscle is even less useful than muscle without brains. But it's so easy to forget that muscle—plain physical force—is important, too!

Charley de Milo (1959)
It isn't at all obvious--at first thought--that having two perfectly good, usable arms could be a real handicap to a man....

The Man Who Played to Lose (1961)
Sometimes the very best thing you can do is to lose. The cholera germ, for instance, asks nothing better than that it be swallowed alive....

Occasion for Disaster (1960)
A very small slip, at just the wrong place, can devastate any enterprise. One tiny transistor can go wrong ... and ruin a multi-million dollar missile. Which would be one way to stop the missiles....

Wizard (1960)
Although the Masquerade itself, as a necessary protection against non-telepaths, was not fully formulated until the late years of the Seventeenth Century, groups of telepaths-in-hiding existed long before that date. Whether such groups were the results of natural mutations, or whether they came into being due to some other cause, has not yet been fully determined, but that a group did exist in the district of Offenburg, in what is now Prussia, we are quite sure. The activities of the group appear to have begun, approximately, in the year 1594, but it was not until eleven years after that date that they achieved a signal triumph, the first and perhaps the last of its kind until the dissolution of the Masquerade in 2103.

Lost in Translation (1961)
In language translation, you may get a literally accurate word-for-word translation ... but miss the meaning entirely. And in space-type translation ... the effect may be the same!

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Includes an active table of contents so you can use your NOOK's GOTO CHAPTER feature to easily navigate to each book.

Contents
Sight Gag (1962)
Charley de Milo (1959)
Mex
Hex (1959)
The Man Who Played to Lose (1961)
Occasion for Disaster (1960)
Wizard (1960)
Lost in Translation (1961)

Count Down

Sight Gag (1962)
Intelligence is a great help in the evolution-by-survival—but intelligence without muscle is even less useful than muscle without brains. But it's so easy to forget that muscle—plain physical force—is important, too!

Charley de Milo (1959)
It isn't at all obvious--at first thought--that having two perfectly good, usable arms could be a real handicap to a man....

The Man Who Played to Lose (1961)
Sometimes the very best thing you can do is to lose. The cholera germ, for instance, asks nothing better than that it be swallowed alive....

Occasion for Disaster (1960)
A very small slip, at just the wrong place, can devastate any enterprise. One tiny transistor can go wrong ... and ruin a multi-million dollar missile. Which would be one way to stop the missiles....

Wizard (1960)
Although the Masquerade itself, as a necessary protection against non-telepaths, was not fully formulated until the late years of the Seventeenth Century, groups of telepaths-in-hiding existed long before that date. Whether such groups were the results of natural mutations, or whether they came into being due to some other cause, has not yet been fully determined, but that a group did exist in the district of Offenburg, in what is now Prussia, we are quite sure. The activities of the group appear to have begun, approximately, in the year 1594, but it was not until eleven years after that date that they achieved a signal triumph, the first and perhaps the last of its kind until the dissolution of the Masquerade in 2103.

Lost in Translation (1961)
In language translation, you may get a literally accurate word-for-word translation ... but miss the meaning entirely. And in space-type translation ... the effect may be the same!

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