An edition of Who Goes There? (1948)

The Thing

from outer space

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  • 6 Have read
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  • 3.67 ·
  • 3 Ratings
  • 24 Want to read
  • 2 Currently reading
  • 6 Have read

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Last edited by OnFrATa
December 4, 2022 | History
An edition of Who Goes There? (1948)

The Thing

from outer space

  • 3.67 ·
  • 3 Ratings
  • 24 Want to read
  • 2 Currently reading
  • 6 Have read

A remote scientific research expedition at the North Pole is invaded by a monstrous alien, reawakened after lying frozen for centuries after a crash-landing. The alien is intelligent, cunning and a shape-changer who can assume the form and personality of anything it destroys and soon it is among the men of the expedition, killing and replacing them, using its shape-changing ability to lull the scientists one by one into inattention and destruction. The transformed alien can seemingly pass every effort at detection and the expedition seems doomed until at last the secret vulnerability of the alien is discovered and it is destroyed.Who Goes There? according to the science fiction historian Sam Moskowitz (1920-1997) had an autobiographical impetus: Campbell's mother and aunt were identical twins and enjoyed the "game" of substituting for one another in his care as an infant and young child, confusing him again and again with false identity. It was this uncertainty, this susceptibility to masquerade and his terror at the game which, Moskowitz said, Campbell funneled into this last and greatest of his magazine pieces. (A short novel, The Moon Is Hell, was published only in book form in the early l950's.) Carefully and rigorously extrapolated in its portrait of the menaced expedition, the novelette is regarded as perhaps the greatest horror story to emerge form the field of science fiction. It was the basis for one of the great early science fiction films and its excellent remake decades later.The copyright of the novelette was, typically of the time, owned by Street & Smith Publications to whose magazine Campbell had sold all of the rights. Hawks paid Street & Smith $900 for all film rights, $500 of that was paid over "voluntarily" by Street & Smith to Campbell. "Don't you feel cheated?" Isaac Asimov said he asked Campbell at the time of the film's successful release. "No," Campbell said, "If it's a good film and it will get more people to read science fiction and take it seriously, then it's all a very good thing."

Publish Date
Publisher
Tandem Books
Language
English
Pages
220

Buy this book

Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Who Goes There
Who Goes There
2002, RosettaBooks
E-book in English
Cover of: The Thing
The Thing: from outer space
1966, Tandem Books
Paperback in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Published in
London
Other Titles
The Thing is the UK version of 'Who Goes There?'
Copyright Date
1948

The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Number of pages
220

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL26781049M
OCLC/WorldCat
18510684

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
December 4, 2022 Edited by OnFrATa Merge works (MRID: 31847)
March 13, 2019 Edited by Dirk_P_Broer entered 1966 Tandem Books edition
March 13, 2019 Edited by Dirk_P_Broer Added new cover
March 13, 2019 Created by Dirk_P_Broer Added new book.