Eric C. Williams Explained
Eric C. Williams |
Birth Date: | 22 July 1918 |
Birth Place: | London, UK |
Death Date: | 2010[1] |
Occupation: | Author |
Genre: | Science fiction |
Nationality: | British |
Eric Cyril Williams (1918–2010) was a British science fiction author active in the 1960s and 1970s, and then again in the last decade of his life. Williams was active in science fiction fandom in the 1930s, contributing the fanzines such as The Satellite. He worked as a bookseller prior to becoming an author.[2]
Bibliography
Science fiction
Novels
- Flash (1972)
- Homo Telekins (1981)
- Largesse from Triangulum (1979)
- Monkman Comes Down (1968)
- Project: Renaissance (1973)
- The Call of Utopia (1971)
- The Drop In (1977)
- The Time Injection (1968)
- Time for Mercy (1979)
- To End All Telescopes (1969)
Short stories
- "Amenemhet's Gift" (2001)
- "Arboreal Interlude" (2003)
- "Brides for Mars" (2002)
- "Dark City in Glass City" (2000)
- "Mr. Hazel's Miracle Carpet" (Dec 1937, Amateur Science Stories)
- "My First Space-Ship" (March 1938, Amateur Science Stories)
- "Number 7 (1969)
- "Something" (1999)
- "Sunout" (1965)
- "The Desolator" (1965)
- "The Egyptian Message" (2000)
- "The Garden of Paris" (1965)
- "The Martians" (2002)
- "The Paper Killer" (2003)
- "The Real Thing (1966)
- "The Venus Vein" (Dec 1937, Amateur Science Stories)
- "The Visitor" (2003)
Anthology appearances
Notes and References
- News: Langford . David . David Langford . Curiosities: To End All Telescopes, by Eric C. Williams . F&SF . Hoboken, NJ . 258 . Spilogale . Jan–Feb 2011 .
- Book: Clute, John . John Clute
. John Clute . Peter Nicholls . Peter Nicholls (writer) . The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction . St. Martin's Press . 1993 . New York, NY . 1327 . 0-312-09618-6 . registration .