This second collection (after NEWS FROM THE MOON) of 13 proto-science
fiction tales and other scientific romances, penned between 1796 and
1921, is translated and annotated by renowned science fiction writer and
scholar Brian Stableford. From cosmic journeys exploring Mars and
Jupiter, examining the nature, languages and reproductive methods of
various alien species, to the tale of a man who awakens 10,000 years in
the future when the Moon has broken apart and rained debris upon the
Earth and suspension bridges link the planets of the Solar System; from
future war stories, the discovery of automata and telepathy, to
speculations about the extraterrestrial origins of Life on Earth, the
tales gathered here exemplify the manifest intention of writers from the
18th and 19th centuries to create a new genre of imaginative fiction.
The title piece, written in 1913, was the first-ever published item in a
series of propagandistic works of fiction by rocket enthusiasts. It is
remarkable for its description of space travel, and its attempt to
design a hypothetical biosphere for another planet.