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: #118
Title: Death Comes in Glass
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1937
Type: short story
Publication:
OPUS: #277
Title: The Red Beak of Thoth
Authors: Jack Williamson and Edmond Hamilton
Year: 2004
Type: novelette
Publications:
OPUS: #278
Title: Stark and the Star Kings
Authors: Edmond Hamilton and Leigh Brackett
Year: 2005
Type: novelette
Series: Star Kings (SK)
Publications:
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:
OPUS: #276
Title: The Iron One
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1972
Type: short story
Publications:
OPUS: #274
Title: Castaway
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1969
Type: short story
Publications:
Title: Doomstar
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1966
Type: NOVEL
「(この作品に登場する)原子力兵器は、生命の源である恒星を、死をもたらす究極の兵器へと変容させるものである。コバルトの同位元素と触媒をおさめた弾頭をつんだ高速ミサイル群が、恒星に打ち込まれる。弾頭は恒星のなかに存在するコバルト原子と反応し、極端に不安定な別種の同位元素を作りだす。臨界点を超えるとその核反応は自己増殖をはじめ、恒星は巨大なコバルト爆弾となって、数百万キロの範囲内のすべての生命を死滅させてしまうのである。」-『SF百科図鑑』
Publications:
Book Reviews:
OPUS: #267
Title: The Pro
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1964
Type: short story
Almost we would omit references to the Grand Old Days of Magazine Science Fiction for fear of conjuring up images that either we or the author of this story are confined to a bath-chair and gout-stool (neither of us is; and mind your clumsy feet)- but accuracy forbids. In the Grand Old Days of Magazine Science Fiction, videlicet the otherwise non-grand 30s, then, a querulous reader wrote to one SF magazine and complained that
“Edmond Hamilton is always saving worlds … The implication was not that Mr. Hamilton collected them in a morocco album, but that his stories often dealt with their rescue from evil. Pax. He was and is not only a realist but an optimist—both attributes being manifested in this cool and competent and utterly believable story which links the Science Fiction past with its already beginning-to-be-realized-and-vindicated-present. Edmond Hamilton appears here for the first time since 1954. It is nice to have him aboard again.
Mr. Hamilton writes of himself:
“I sometimes feel like a time-traveller, for this reason: I’m 59 years old, which isn’t so old these days (it isn’t, is it, honest?) But my formative first 7 years were spent on a Ohio farm so far back in, that it must have had a time-lag of a decade. Horses reared up in buggy-shafts at sight of an automobile, and a steam-
threshing-machine was a thing which frightened me horribly.
Yet last month I flew home from London in a jet in 5 or 6 hours, and the rockets stand on the launching-pads ready to make for the moon, and only the fact that I was blessed or cursed with a science fictional imagination has prevented me from exclaiming, “Stop the world, etc. …”
I wrote my first s-f story when I was 14. It was “The Plant That Was Alive.” It was also Terrible. No one bought it. I was at that time, however, unquenchable. … I was a freshman in college and supposed to be a child prodigy, and I took that seriously and loftily ignored study and broke rules and got canned out of school
after three years. But I kept trying to write s-f, and in February, 1926, succeeded in selling the old Weird Tales.
What a thrill it was when, a month later, a science-fiction magazine appeared! A couple of years later when a second s-f magazine appeared, I decided to become a professional writer. I’m filled with retrospective admiration for a decision so costnically heroic and stupid. To make matters worse, my next 42 stories sold without a refection … only then did I start to get the bumps and learn.
But I’ve stuck to it ever since. I love to tell adventure stories and have told hundreds … but every now and then I want to write something quite different. THE PRO is one of the different ones.”
Publications:
Title: World of the Starwolves
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1968
Type: NOVEL
Series: Starwolf
Series Number: 3
Publications:
Reviews:
Title: The Closed Worlds
Author: Edmond Hamilton
Year: 1968
Type: NOVEL
Series: Starwolf
Series Number: 2
Publications:
Reviews:
In Japanese
『さいはてのスターウルフ』, 1970.8