The Monsters of Juntonheim (UK edition)

The Monsters of Juntonheim :
a Complete Book-Length Novel of Amazing Adventure
“A long American invades a Miracle Land that time forget – and finds a Wonder Realm that is forbidden to all mortals.”
Publisher: London : World Distributors/Sidney Pemberton, 1950
Pagination: 160 p. ; 19 cm.
Series: A World Fantasy Classic ;
Note: pbk
Original: A Yank at Valhalla
MoJ
 

City at World's End (UK Corgi)

City at World’s End
London : Transworld, 1954.8. –
221 p. ; 17 cm. – (Corgi Books ; T-58)
“The were the only humans alive on earth – until the spaceship came …” — Cover
Millions of years ahead …
The were ordinary, present-day people, but they were terrified, half-crazy with fear – for suddenly, without warning, they had been projected millions of years into the future, to an Earth grown old and dying and alien …
CWE-trans

City at World's End (UK Museum)

City at World’s End
Publisher: London : Museum Press, 1952.9
Pagination: 192 p. ; 19 cm
Series: Science Fiction at its best
Note: Science Fiction Club
NBN: b5212209
CWE1952
This is the story of a present-day town and its people—a small city in the Middle West whose fifty thousand inhabitants are suddenly projected into an unprecedented and terrifying situation.
As the result of a weird scientific cataclysm, Middletown and all its people find themselves hurled out of their own time into the far future of the Earth—an Earth grown old and alien and dying, an Earth long since abandoned by man. Here is the story of pompous Mayor Garris, and of Johnson, the scared electrician; of Hubble, the scientist, and of Mrs. Adams, who worried about her roses; of lovely Carol Lane and of John Kenniston, who felt a fatal guilt; of all the other members of this community who find themselves and their town forever marooned at the end of the world. And when, at last, these people of the present meet the people of the far future, people whose civilization stretches across the worlds of a thousand stars—then the present and the future clash in dramatic conflict, to produce one of the most startling and absorbing tales of Science Fiction yet to have appeared.

City at World's End (Fell)

City at World’s End
New York : F. Fell, 1951. –
239 p. ; 20 cm. – (Fell’s Science Fiction Library ; 51-10074)
This is the story of a present-day town and its people – a small Midwestern city whose fifty thousand inhabitants are suddenly flung into an unprecedented and terrifying situation.
When a strange scientific cataclysm strikes, Middletown and all its people find themselves hurled out of their own time into the far future of Earth – an Earth grown old and alien and dying, an Earth long ago abandoned by man. Here is the story of pompous Mayor Garris, and of Johnson, the scared electrician; of Hubble, the scientist, and of Mrs. Adams, who worried about her roses; of lovely Carol Lane and of John Kenniston, who felt a fatal guilt; or all the bankers, bakers, millhands, housewives, old folk and children, who find themselves and their town forever marooned at the end of the world.
And when, at last, these people of the present meet the folk of the far future, the folk whose civilization stretches across the worlds of a thousand stars – then the present and the future clash in dramatic conflict on the dying, forgotten Earth.
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