The Throne of Saturn (short story collection) explained

The Throne of Saturn
Author:S. Fowler Wright
Cover Artist:Ronald Clyne
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Science fiction
Publisher:Arkham House
Release Date:1949
Media Type:Print (hardback)
Pages:viii, 186 pp

The Throne of Saturn is a collection of science fiction short stories by British author S. Fowler Wright. It was released in 1949 and was the author's first American book and his only collection published by Arkham House. It was released in an edition of 3,062 copies.

The book is an expansion of The New Gods Lead published by Jarrolds in 1932 by the addition of two stories.

Contents

The Throne of Saturn contains these twelve stories, as well as a foreword:

  1. "Justice"
  2. "This Night"
  3. "Brain"
  4. "Appeal"
  5. "Proof"
  6. "P.N. 40"
  7. "Automata"
  8. "The Rat"
  9. "Rule"
  10. "Choice"
  11. "The Temperature of Gehenna Sue"
  12. "Original Sin"

Reception

Boucher and McComas described the 1949 edition as "twelve superb short stories of a future in which the new gods have led man into strange scientific and sociological bypaths -- a book it would be difficult to overpraise."[1] P. Schuyler Miller praised the collection as "imaginative fiction entirely different from anything else you are likely to find in print."[2] An article by "R.K." in The Age called the work "an illustration of a keen, vivid imagination".[3]

Reprints

References

. Sheldon Jaffery . The Arkham House Companion . Mercer Island, WA . Starmont House, Inc.. 37–38. 1989 . 1-55742-005-X.

. Jack L. Chalker . Mark Owings . The Science-Fantasy Publishers: A Bibliographic History, 1923-1998 . Westminster, MD and Baltimore . Mirage Press, Ltd. . 1998. 34.

. S.T. Joshi . Sixty Years of Arkham House: A History and Bibliography . Sauk City, WI . Arkham House . 1999 . 0-87054-176-5. 55.

Notes and References

  1. "Recommended Reading," F&SF, Summer 1950, p.107
  2. "The Reference Library", Astounding Science Fiction, January 1952, p.134-35
  3. News: R. K. . 1 September 1951 . A Wellsian Fantasy: Short Stories of Fowler Wright . The Age.