Apocalyptic Sci-Fi - 7 Science...
Alan E. Nourse, Harlan Ellison,...
Apocalyptic Sci-Fi is a powerful collection of seven classic science fiction short stories that imagine humanity at the edge of collapse—and what comes after. Written by some of the most influential voices of the Golden Age, including Philip K. Dick, Frederik Pohl, Harlan Ellison, Alan E. Nourse, and William F. Nolan, these stories come from the 1940s, 50s, and 60s—an era when science fiction confronted the anxieties of nuclear war, overpopulation, authoritarian control, and the fragility of civilization itself.
Each story presents a different vision of the end: not always with explosions and fire, but through quiet inevitability, moral compromise, or ideas pushed just a little too far. In Let The Ants Try, humanity faces extinction through its own ingenuity. The Fifty-Fourth of July explores patriotism and survival when society no longer functions as intended. Philip K. Dick’s stories—The Golden Man, The Turning Wheel, and Survey Team—question fate, evolution, and whether human dominance is temporary by design. Glow Worm delivers an early taste of Ellison’s sharp intensity, while Small World traps its characters inside a nightmare of scale and consequence.
These aren’t just tales of disaster—they’re warnings, thought experiments, and philosophical challenges. The futures imagined here feel uncomfortably plausible, even decades after they were written.
Included stories:Let The Ants Try — Frederik PohlThe Fifty-Fourth of July — Alan E. NourseThe Golden Man — Philip K. DickGlow Worm — Harlan EllisonSmall World — William F. NolanThe Turning Wheel — Philip K. DickSurvey Team — Philip K. Dick
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