OPUS: #112
Title: The Corpse Died Twice
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1937
Type: vignette
Publication:
- Popular Detective [v10 #3, April 1937] (Beacon Magazines, Inc., 10¢, 132pp, pulp), pp. 50-53.
OPUS: #112
Title: The Corpse Died Twice
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1937
Type: vignette
Publication:
OPUS: #101
Title: Cosmic Quest
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1936
Type: short story
“To Save a Race from Destruction, a Star-Roving Explorer Speeds Through a Boundless Universe!”
Publications:
Reviews:
OPUS: #98
Title: Children of Terror
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1936
Type: short story
Publication:
OPUS: #096
Title: Crooked Cop
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1936
Type: short story
Publication:
OPUS: #095
Title: The Crime Crusader
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1936
Type: short story
Publication:
OPUS: #090
Title: Crimson Gold
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1936
Type: short story
Publication:
OPUS: #089
Title: Copper Proof
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1936
Type: short story
Publication:
OPUS: #088
Title: Child of the Winds
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1936
Type: short story
“A tender and fascinating tale of a strange plateau in Turkistan where the winds of Earth converge”–TOC
“A tender and fascinating story about a strange plateau in Turkistan where the winds from all over Earth converge”
Publications:
ebook: https://archive.org/details/Weird_Tales_v27n05_1936-05_sas
Title: The Cosmic Pantograph
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1935
Type: short story
“In our March, 1935 issue we published a short story by this favorite author, entitled “The Eternal Cycle.” This tale received much higher acclaim than many of our novels and has been accepted by our readers as a short science-fiction classic.
We do not hesitate to say that you will find the present yarn of at least equal merit to “The Eternal Cycle.” It also presents some brand-new conceptions never before hinted at in science-fiction. And we all know how rare stories like that are.
Though Edmond Hamilton goes, at times (as he does in this story), into the very heights of fantasy, his work at no time becomes illogical or unconvincing. He makes you believe what he is telling you. tearing down all the barriers of conventions and routine, but always making things real and lifelike.
A few minutes from now you will be entering upon a new train of thought, inspiring, enthralling, fantastic.”
“Must man die, as Doctor Robine believers, with his own universe.”
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Reviews:
OPUS: #073
Title: Carter Makes a Squeal
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1935
Type: vignette
Publication: