Hawk Carse Short Stories by Anthony Gilmore
Requirements: ePUB reader, Mobi reader, WinRAR, 1.27 MB
Overview: Harry Bates was an American science fiction editor and writer. His 1940 short story "Farewell to the Master" was the basis of the well-known 1951 science fiction movie The Day the Earth Stood Still. Under the pseudonym of Anthony Gilmore, Harry Bates wrote the following stories in the Hawk Carse series with Desmond W. Hall, collected in Space Hawk: The Greatest of Interplanetary Adventurers:
•"Hawk Carse", Astounding, November, 1931
•"The Affair of the Brains", Astounding, March, 1932
•"The Bluff of the Hawk", Astounding, May, 1932
•"The Passing of Ku Sui", Astounding, November, 1932
Boucher and McComas described the 1952 collection as "strongly commended to all connoisseurs of prose so outrageously bad as to reach its own kind of greatness." P. Schuyler Miller described the stories as "space opera of the old, raw, gloves-off school [including] every cliché of the period," concluding "Hawk Carse was so bad that he was almost good." Everett F. Bleiler characterized the series as "traditional pulp Western stories transplanted into space, with the addition of an Oriental villain in the mode of Sax Rohmer's Dr. Fu-Manchu."
Genre: Sci-Fi
Download Instructions:
http://rapidgator.net/file/1fa528adc002a24ba55dc651b4191af3/Hawk_Carse_Short_Stories_-_Anthony_Gilmore.rar.html
Mirror:
http://www.multiupload.nl/H05NU3XMJ8
Requirements: ePUB reader, Mobi reader, WinRAR, 1.27 MB
Overview: Harry Bates was an American science fiction editor and writer. His 1940 short story "Farewell to the Master" was the basis of the well-known 1951 science fiction movie The Day the Earth Stood Still. Under the pseudonym of Anthony Gilmore, Harry Bates wrote the following stories in the Hawk Carse series with Desmond W. Hall, collected in Space Hawk: The Greatest of Interplanetary Adventurers:
•"Hawk Carse", Astounding, November, 1931
•"The Affair of the Brains", Astounding, March, 1932
•"The Bluff of the Hawk", Astounding, May, 1932
•"The Passing of Ku Sui", Astounding, November, 1932
Boucher and McComas described the 1952 collection as "strongly commended to all connoisseurs of prose so outrageously bad as to reach its own kind of greatness." P. Schuyler Miller described the stories as "space opera of the old, raw, gloves-off school [including] every cliché of the period," concluding "Hawk Carse was so bad that he was almost good." Everett F. Bleiler characterized the series as "traditional pulp Western stories transplanted into space, with the addition of an Oriental villain in the mode of Sax Rohmer's Dr. Fu-Manchu."
Genre: Sci-Fi
Download Instructions:
http://rapidgator.net/file/1fa528adc002a24ba55dc651b4191af3/Hawk_Carse_Short_Stories_-_Anthony_Gilmore.rar.html
Mirror:
http://www.multiupload.nl/H05NU3XMJ8
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