In a deluxe collector's edition, four classic science fiction novels from the genre's most transformative decade--including the landmark Flowers for Algernon This volume, the first of a two-volume set gathering the best American science fiction from the tumultuous 1960s, opens with Poul Anderson's immensely popular
The High Crusade, in which aliens planning to conquer Earth land in Lincolnshire during the Hundred Years' War.
In Clifford Simak's Hugo Award-winning
Way Station, Enoch Wallace is a spry 124-year-old Civil War veteran whose lifelong job monitoring the intergalactic pit stop inside his home is largely uneventful--until a CIA agent shows up and Cold War hostilities threaten the peaceful harmony of the Galactic confederation.
Daniel Keyes's beloved
Flowers for Algernon--winner of the Nebula Award and adapted as the Academy Award-winning movie
Charly--is told through the journal entries of Charlie Gordon, a young man with severe learning disabilities who is the test subject for surgery to improve his intelligence.
And in the postapocalyptic earthscape of Roger Zelazny's Hugo Award-winning
. . . And Call Me Conrad (also published as
This Immortal) Conrad Nomikos reluctantly accepts the responsibility of showing the planet to the governing extraterrestrials' representative and protecting him from rebellious remnants of the human race. Using early manuscripts and original setting copy, this Library of America volume restores the novel to a version that most closely approximates Zelazny's original text.