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Vampires have fascinated mankind for centuries. These creatures of the night enthral us, terrify us, and seduce us. The Vampire Super Pack brings together 42 vampires stories spanning almost 200 years. With over 225,000 words of fascinating fiction this is the Vampire anthology you've been waiting for. The Vampire Super Pack Included here in are: Lipstick on a Business Card by Alledria Hurt The Vampyre by John William Polidori Saving Grace by Lillian Csernica For the Blood is the Life by F. Marion Crawford The Life by J. A. Campbell The Burial by Lord Byron Cold Hands, Warm Heart by Darin Kennedy The Room in the Tower by E. F. Benson Foraged by Joann Verostko Aylmer Vance and the Vampire by Alice and Claude Askew Empty Morning by Melanie Tem & Steve Rasnic Tem The Tomb of Sarah by F. G. Loring Soliloquy by Alexandra Elizabeth Honigsberg The Vampire Maid Hume Nisbet The Vamp-Pyre, by John William Polidori by Stephen Woodworth The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire by Arthur Conan Doyle Sense of Blood by Gerri Leen Mrs. Amworth by E. F. Benson The Becoming by Charles S. Ramsburg, Jr. The Sad Story of a Vampire by Stanislaus Eric, Count Stenbock Manhattan Vs. Brooklyn by Linda Tiernan Kepner The Hills of the Dead by Robert E. Howard Virtual Day by Stephen Antczak Good Lady Ducayne by Mary E. Braddon Kvetchula by Darrell Schweitzer Dracula's Guest by Bram Stoker Kvetchula's Daughter Darrell Schweitzer Each Man Kills by Victoria Glad The Greater Thirst by Marilyn Mattie Brahen Isle of the Undead by Lloyd Arthur Eshbach Custody by Jay O'Connell The Vampire by Jan Neruda Feeding the Mouth that Bites Us by L. Jagi Lamplighter The Vampire of Croglin Grange by Augustus Hare The Hunger by Warren Lapine Told in a First-Class Smoker: A Modern Vampire T. F. Ridgwell Vintage Domestic by Steve Rasnic Tem Carmilla by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu My Angel Of Darkness by Jamie Wild Clarimonde by Théophile Gautier The True Story of A Vampire by Eric Stenbock Mona Lisa by Warren Lapine
There was a period, from 1961-1967, when Roger Zelazny was magic, and every new story of his was an event. He was a tremendously variable writer. The heart-wrenching "A Rose for Ecclesiastes" (written October 1967) was nothing like the passionate "Graveyard Heart," which was completely different from the mind blowing "The Ides of Octember," serialized in Amazing as "He Who Shapes," which was altogether different from the post-nuclear holocaust romp, "Damnation Alley," published in Galaxy and released as a film ten years later.Zelazny had style, his language sang, his prose flowed like poetry. There was really no one else quite like him when he exploded onto the scene. Collected here together in one volume are the ten long stories that made Zelazny a legend. The impact of these ten stories cannot be denied. Reading them together gives one a sense of how rare an accomplishment Zelazny's early career was. Samuel R. Delany is the author of more than 20 novels including Nova and Dhalgren. He has won two Hugo Awards, four Nebula Awards, two Lambda Awards, and the Stonewall Book Award. Delany is an SFWA Grand Master and was inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2002. He is widely regarded as one of our most important science fiction authors.Roger Zelazny was a science fiction and fantasy writer, a six time Hugo Award winner, and a three time Nebula Award Winner. He published more than forty novels in his lifetime. His first novel This Immortal, serialized in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction under the title ...And Call Me Conrad, won the Hugo Award for best novel. Lord of Light, his third novel, also won the Hugo award and was nominated for the Nebula award. He died at age 58 from colon cancer. Zelazny was posthumously inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2010.
The Haunted Woman is a tense, atmospheric novel that questions the nature of reality. Isbel Loment is leading an ordinary, if uneventful, existence. She is engaged to a rather boring man and is just passing through her own life. Everything changes when she and her fiancé rent a remote house in Sussex. In the house Isbel discovers rooms that appear to exist in different realities from her own. Her discoveries in this house will change both her life and her destiny forever .
King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table! What magic is in the words! How they carry us straight to the days of chivalry, to the witchcraft of Merlin, to the wonderful deeds of Lancelot and Perceval and Galahad, to the Quest for the Holy Grail, to all that "glorious company, the flower of men," as Tennyson has called the king and his companions! Down through the ages the stories have come to us, one of the few great romances which, like the tales of Homer, are as fresh and vivid to-day as ever.
Imagination was one of the most successful science fiction magazines of its time. Wile many of it contemporaries tried to push literary boundaries, Imagination focused on adventure and space opera assuring its financial success. Here are some of the finest stories ever to appear in it's pages. Over 200,000 words of pulse pounding, adventure fiction. If you enjoyed this book, you'll want to search on "Positronic Publishing Super Pack" and check out all our other Super Packs! Mr. Spaceship by Philip K. Dick The Mind Digger by Winston Marks Earth Alert! by Kris Neville Stopover Planet by Robert E. Gilbert Voyage to Eternity by Milton Lesser Spacemen Never Die! by Morris Hershman Brown John's Body by Winston Marks Spillthrough by Daniel F. Galouye The Legion Of Lazarus by Edmond Hamilton The Beasts In The Void by Paul W. Fairman The Star Lord by Boyd Ellanby The Invader by Alfred Coppel Prison Of A Billion Years by C. H. Thames (Milton Lesser) Prelude To Space by Robert W. Haseltine Spies Die Hard! by Arnold Marmor The Minus Woman by Russ Winterbotham The Dictator by Milton Lesser Adolescents Only by Irving Cox, Jr. Goodbye, Dead Man! by Tom W. Harris Native Son by T. D. Hamm Dogfight-1973 by Mack Reynolds Cancer World by Harry Warner, Jr. Mr. Chipfellow's Jackpot by Dick Purcell The Graveyard Of Space by Milton Lesser There Is A Reaper by Charles V. De Vet Zero Hour by Alexander Blade Piper in the Woods by Philip K. Dick
Will needs desperately to find Key Lime in Key West in order to save the world. Not the pie mind you, but a shape shifter named Key Lime who Onyx intelligence believes is masquerading as one of Hemingway's cats. Will, who happens to be a shape shifting Fire Demon is the perfect man . . .er demon . . . for the job. He hates shape shifting into cat form, but when the "Old Man" gives you an order like this the only question you ask is what kind of cat? Join Will and his trusty sidekick Hawk on three mad cap adventures as these super secret agents from another dimension do everything they can to try to divert one disaster after another. Engaging and funny.Carl Yoke is a retired university professor who has been writing fiction for several years. He has published extensive literary criticism and poetry in the past in magazines such as Extrapolation, SF & Fantasy Review, Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts, and Amazing Stories. He was the founding executive editor of Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts.
A Voyage to Arcturus is a novel by the Scottish writer David Lindsay. First published in 1920, it combines fantasy, philosophy, and science fiction in an exploration of the nature of good and evil and their relationship with existence. It has been described by the critic and philosopher Colin Wilson as the "greatest novel of the twentieth century" and was a central influence on C.S. Lewis's Space Trilogy.
A Voyage to Arcturus by David Lindsay combines fantasy, philosophy, and science fiction in an exploration of the nature of good and evil and their relationship with existence. It has been described by the critic and philosopher Colin Wilson as the greatest novel of the twentieth century. Lindsay's descriptive prose is simply beyond compare.The Haunted Woman is a tense, atmospheric novel that questions the nature of reality. Isbel Loment is leading an ordinary, if uneventful, existence
Gawain is unfailingly valiant, generous, and courteous, even, to excess. It is in truth Gawain and not Arthur who was the typical English hero. Ride with him now on one of his most gallant adventures!
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