OPUS#048 Three from the Tomb, The

OPUS: #048
Title: The Three From the Tomb
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1932
Type: novelette

“A dramatic thrill-tale about three millionaires, dead and buried for month, who reappeared among the living”–TOC
“A thrill-tale of surgery – three millionaires, dead and buried who reappear in the world of the living”

Publications:

  • Weird Tales, Vol. 19, no. 2, February 1932, (Feb 1932, ed. Farnsworth Wright, publ. Popular Fiction Publishing Co., Chicago, IL, $0.25, 144pp, Pulp, magazine) Cover: C. C. Senf; Illust: Doolin
  • Startling Mystery Stories, Vol. 2, no. 2=No. 8, Spring 1968, (1968, ed. Robert A. W. Lowndes, publ. Health Knowledge, Inc., $0.50, 132pp, digest, magazine) Cover: Virgil Finlay

ebook: https://archive.org/details/Weird_Tales_v19n02_1932-02_sas

OPUS#118 Death Comes in Glass (GH#2)

OPUS: #118
Title: Death Comes in Glass
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1937
Type: short story
Publication:

  • Thrilling Detective [v25 #1, September 1937] (10¢, pulp), pp. 54-61.

OPUS#061 Snake-Men of Kaldar, The [SM#2]

OPUS: #061
Title: The Snake-Men of Kaldar
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1933
Type: novelette
Series: Stuart Merrick
Series number: #2
“Kaldar, World of Antares – a mighty tale of red warfare an a distant planet”–TOC
“Another mighty tale of Kaldar, world of Antares – a tale of red warfare against a race of monsters on a distant planet”

Publications:

  • The Magic Carpet Magazine, Vol. 3, no. 4, October 1933, (Oct 1933, ed. Farnsworth Wright, publ. Popular Fiction Pub. Co., $0.25, 132pp, Pulp, magazine) Cover: M. Brundage; Illust : Wilcox
  • Magic Carpet Magazine, (1977, ed. William H. Desmond, Diane M. Howard, John R. Howard, Robert K. Wiener, publ. Odyssey Publications, # OP9, 128pp, tp, anth) Cover: Margaret Brundage , J. Allen St. John
  • Kaldar: World of Antares, (Nov 1998, Edmond Hamilton, publ. Haffner Press, 1-893887-01-4, $55.00, 219pp, hc, coll) Cover: Jon Arfstrom

newSM.11

OPUS#193 Star of Dread, The [CF#15]

OPUS: #193
Title: The Star of Dread
Author: Brett Sterling (Edmond Hamilton)
Year: 1943
Type: novel
Series: Captain Future
Series Number: 15
“The world’s greatest space-farers battle to expose a dangerous secret menacing mankind and face desperate risks as they pursue two scheming miscreants across the void!”–TOC

Publication:

  • Captain Future [v5 #3, Summer 1943] (15¢, 132pp, pulp, cover by Earle K. Bergey), pp. 13-90. Illustrated by Thomas.
  • Captain Future, Summer 1943, (Oct 2009, ed. Oscar J. Friend, publ. Adventure House, 978-1-59798-242-9, $14.95, 128pp, tp, anth) Cover: Earle K. Bergey

OPUS#149 Dweller in the Darkness

OPUS: #149
Title: Dweller in the Darkness
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1939
Type: short story

“A public enemy gains the advantage of complete invisibility – only to find it the supreme curse!”–TOC
“Public Enemy Number One Forces Dr. Geary to give him the secret of invisibility, so that he could better prey upon his victims – but he does not suspect the awful horror that accompanies the experiment!”

Publications:

  • Science Fiction, Vol. 1, no. 4, October 1939, (Oct 1939, ed. Charles D. Hornig, publ. Blue Ribbon Magazines, $0.15, 132pp, Pulp, magazine) Cover: Frank R. Paul; Illust: Schomburg
  • Science Fiction (UK), October 1939

ebook: https://archive.org/details/sciencefictionv01n04193910/page/n55/mode/2up

OPUS#148 Horror Out of Carthage

OPUS: #148
Title: Horror Out of Carthage
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1939
Type: novelette
“Across 2000 years went Blaine and Edith to find themselves doomed by history to die in the conquest of ancient Carthage.” – Fantastic Adventures
“Ever wonder where those old “horror” movies originate? We’re not claiming they all came from the pen of Ed Hamilton, but there is what may very well be the original plot idea for all of them. There’s this old archeologist see, and he has a beauteous daughter and they’re on this dig when all-of-a-sudden…” – Fantastic

Publications:

  • Fantastic Adventures, Vol. 1, no. 3, September 1939, (Sep 1939, ed. Raymond A. Palmer, publ. Ziff-Davis Publishing Company, $0.20, 100pp, Bedsheet, magazine), pp. 6-23. Cover: Harold W. McCauley
  • Fantastic, Vol. 17, no. 6, August 1968, (Aug 1968, ed. Harry Harrison, publ. Ultimate Publishing Co., Inc., $0.50, 148pp, Digest, magazine), pp. 23-50, 142. Illust : Jay Jackson

Reviews:

  • Gallagher, Edward J., The Annotated Guide to Fantastic Adventures, Starmont House, 1985, p. 3. “At the time of the Roman invasion the King of Carthage and the high priestess of Moloch project their minds across time and trade bodies with an archeologist excavating Carthage and his fiance. Only the aid of the King’s jealous wife enables the two Americans to reverse the mind travel process and escape hideous death at the hands of the Romans or sacrifice to Moloch.”

ebook: https://comicbookplus.com/?dlid=37013

OPUS#147 Debtor at Eight

OPUS: #147
Title: Debtor at Eight
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1939
Type: short story or vignette
“There’s a time and place for everything, even murder, but eight o’clock in a modern study, isn’t it!”
Publication:

  • Detective Short Stories [v2 #4, September 1939] (Manvis Publications, Inc., 10¢, 116pp, pulp), pp. 68-70?.

OPUS#146 Man Who Solved Death, The

OPUS: #146
Title: The Man Who Solved Death
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1939
Type: short story
“Dr. White dares the vengeance of the Unknown in his quest for knowledge – and a terrible condemnation comes from beyond the grave!”–TOC

Publications:

  • Science Fiction, Vol. 1, no. 3, August 1939, (Aug 1939, ed. Charles D. Hornig, publ. Blue Ribbon Magazines, $0.35, 132pp, Pulp, magazine) Cover: Frank R. Paul

OPUS#145 Short-Wave Madness

OPUS: #145
Title: Short-Wave Madness
Author: Robert Castle (Edmond Hamilton)
Year: 1939
Type: short story
Dr Gorrell’s great discovery gave him the powers of a god! All the secrets of the Universe were to be his, until that mighty, cosmic voice from out of the Infinite spoke: “You have gone to far!”–TOC
“Are there any limits to the progress of mankind? Are there any secrets that are forever forbidden to the minds of this world? Dr Gorrell finds a horrible affirmative in the realm beyond space!”

Publication:

  • Science Fiction [v1 #2, June 1939] (15¢, 132pp, pulp, cover by Frank R. Paul), pp. 57-61. Illustrated by Frank R. Paul.

OPUS#144 Prisoner of Mars, The

OPUS: #144
Title: The Prisoner of Mars (Complete Novel)
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1939
Variant Title of: Tharkol, Lord of the Unknown (by Edmond Hamilton)
Type: NOVEL
「[註:後の『スター・キング』の原型となった作品。] 若いアメリカ人フィリップ・クレインが、偶然ある機械を見つけだすのだが、たちまちその機械によって火星に運ばれてしまう。そこで彼は自分が亡き王の息子であり、現在の君主ラヌーの異父兄弟だということを知る。ところで、このラヌーは誘拐されたばかりなので、フィリップは何も状況が分からないままに、自分の役割を演じなければならない。そのうえ、彼は兄弟とあまりにもよく似ているので、ラヌーの婚約者マーラ姫も間違えてしまう。マーラはラヌーをまったく愛していなかったけれども、政治的な理由でラヌーと結婚することになってしまっていたのである。マーラはフィリップに心を奪われてしまうが、フィリップはすでに地球人の婚約者ケイがいたので話はややこしくなる。」- ジャック・サドゥール著; 鹿島茂,鈴木秀治訳『現代SFの歴史』(早川書房, 1984.12) p. 187-188
Publications:

  • Startling Stories, Vol. 1, no. 3, May 1939, (May 1939, ed. Mort Weisinger, publ. Better Publications, Inc., $0.15, 132pp, Pulp, magazine) Cover: Howard V. Brown; Illust: Wesso
  • Tharkol, Lord of the Unknown, (1950, Edmond Hamilton, publ. World Distributors / Sydney Pemberton, 1/6, 160pp, pb) Cover: H. W. Wesso

Review:

  • Gammell, Leon L., The Annotated Guide to Startling Stories, Starmont House, 1986, p. 4. “Interplanetary Prisoner of Zenda-type pastiche, by the late grand old master of the space opera, largely forgotten and neglected nowadays. Though born of an Earthly mother, Philip Crain discovers that his father was the advance guard of a Martian invasion force, accidentally marooned on Earth for his entire lifetime, and his look-alike cousin is the ruler of Mars. Accidentally transported to Mars via matter-transmitter, he becomes quickly involved in the political intrigue, swashbuckling action and eventual exchange of identities that is the usual hallmark of this kind of story, but Hamilton’s novel is fast-paced and exciting, and should make good reading even today, interspersed with interesting characters to liven up the plot, among whom are a diabolical mechanical brain manipulating the inhabitants of two worlds for its own obscure purposes and a giant robot servant, almost human in its faithfulness and loyalty, perhaps a foreshadowing of the irrepressible Grag of the Captain Future series. At the end of the story, Hamilton offers an ingenious solution for resolving the difficulties of the two warring planets, which stem largely from the Red World’s desperate need for water for her dead and desiccated oceans, very simply accomplished by transporting the terrestrial polar ice-caps to Mars through the matter-transmitters that were to provide passage originally for her invading armies. Who knows? Perhaps this will be the very method used in terraforming Mars to make it livable for our first colonies in the not-so-distant future, even as Hamilton’s storybook space-suits were the prototype for the ones used by today’s astronauts! “