· Bug-Eyed Monsters., edited by Bill Pronzini and Barry N. Malzberg. Last week I posted a brief article on Damon Knight’s landmark SF anthology, A Science Fiction Argosy (and I mean that in the literal sense — it’s so large that for years I used it as a visual landmark when scanning my bookshelves.) The first response in the Comments Section was from the esteemed John C. Hocking, . · Bug-Eyed Monsters, as I confess on my blog post about it (Sects and Violence in the Ancient World) was a bargain buy at a forgotten book sale. After reading a collection of Rod Serling stories, I turned to s sci-fi. The stories here are quite varied and diverse/5. Bill Pronzini and Barry Malzberg's _Bug-Eyed Monsters_ () is a theme anthology of 13 stories and a gaggle of cartoons around a subject that the editors admit is a bit old fashioned. The heyday of the bug-eyed monster (B.E.M.) in the sf magazines was in the s and s. In the s, B.E.M.s were still menacing scantily clad heroines on the covers of some magazines; but with the _Astounding_ 3/5(1).
Bill Pronzini is an American novelist of detective fiction, western fiction, science fiction and several other genres. He is married to fellow mystery author Marcia Muller, who he often collaborates www.doorway.ru is best known for his Nameless Detective novels and also writes the John Quincannon series.. Pronzini made his debut as a published author with the novel The Stalker in Bug-eyed monsters Item Preview remove-circle Share or Embed This Item. Share to Twitter. Share to Facebook. Share to Reddit. Bug-eyed monsters by Pronzini, Bill; Malzberg, Barry N. Publication date Topics Science fiction, American, Monsters Publisher New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich. Bug-Eyed Monsters, as I confess on my blog post about it (Sects and Violence in the Ancient World) was a bargain buy at a forgotten book sale. After reading a collection of Rod Serling stories, I turned to s sci-fi. The stories here are quite varied and diverse.
Bug-eyed monsters by Bill Pronzini, Barry N. Malzberg, unknown edition. Bug-eyed monsters were popular in the early days of science fiction with their bulging eyes, groping tentacles and dripping ichor. Edgar Rice Burroughs and H.P. Lovecraft (among other writers) built entire careers on the endless confrontation between man and monster. No one takes bug-eyed monsters seriously anymore. All about Bug-Eyed Monsters: 13 Stories of Dripping, Creeping, Gurgling, Purling, Trilling, Oozing, Seeping, Gushing Deadly Monsters by Bill Pronzini. LibraryThing is a cataloging and social networking site for booklovers.
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