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Post by PeterC on May 20, 2021 20:30:20 GMT
Thank you for this interesting reply.
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Post by šrincess šµuvstarr on May 20, 2021 21:08:01 GMT
Thank you for this interesting reply. No problem. I would have been wrong too. Do you have a favourite book by him?
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Post by PeterC on May 21, 2021 7:58:43 GMT
No, I haven't read any of his books but this thread has stimulated my interest.
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Post by Knygathin on Aug 10, 2023 20:03:37 GMT
Van Vogt can be creepy and nightmarish, if you are able to project your imagination into impossibly distant futures and mind boggling circumstances.
Speaking of Sci Fi, I inquire for a thread (new or old) that lists the best science fiction horror stories. The most famous perhaps being "Who Goes There?" by John W. Campbell. ... Take it from there.
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Post by andydecker on Aug 11, 2023 10:20:21 GMT
Van Vogt can be creepy and nightmarish, if you are able to project your imagination into impossibly distant futures and mind boggling circumstances. Speaking of Sci Fi, I inquire for a thread (new or old) that lists the best science fiction horror stories. The most famous perhaps being "Who Goes There?" by John W. Campbell. ... Take it from there. In the last 20 years I guess every second Warhammer 40 K story counts.
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enoch
Devils Coach Horse
Posts: 117
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Post by enoch on Aug 12, 2023 18:38:45 GMT
Van Vogt can be creepy and nightmarish, if you are able to project your imagination into impossibly distant futures and mind boggling circumstances. Speaking of Sci Fi, I inquire for a thread (new or old) that lists the best science fiction horror stories. The most famous perhaps being "Who Goes There?" by John W. Campbell. ... Take it from there. In the last 20 years I guess every second Warhammer 40 K story counts. Harlan Ellison's "I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream" gets my #1 vote. And I agree about the Warhammer 40K stories.
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