The Best of Poul Anderson
Contents:
- Recollecting Anderson (essay by Barry N. Malzberg)
- Introduction by Poul Anderson
- The Longest Voyage (1960)
- The Barbarian (1956)
- The Last of the Deliverers (1958)
- My Object All Sublime (1961)
- Sam Hall (1953)
- Kyrie (1968)
- The Fatal Fulfillment (1970)
- Hiding Place (1961)
- The Sky People (1959)
IN A WORLD JUST BEYOND TOMORROW...
A traveler from the stars becomes the unwilling oracle for a Stone-Age people and the pawn in a primitive power struggle.
A disaffected sociologist discovers that each of his dreams for the perfect society contains the seed of a nightmare.
The War of Judgment has thrown mankind back into the Dark Ages, where
the blue-eyed marauding Sky People and their victims face off in a
struggle made desperate by the survival of twentieth-century technology.
Time travel provides one society with the perfect way to punish its criminals.
Readers also enjoyed
Poul Anderson
Poul Anderson's name is synonymous with the golden age of science fiction, a master of speculative worlds where the future is as vast and varied as the past. Born in 1926 in the United States, Anderson's journey as an author was shaped by his fascination with history, science, and the unknown. A child of the Great Depression, he was drawn to stories that stretched the boundaries of possibility, whether set in the stars or rooted in the depths of myth. Over the course of his career, Anderson built a reputation for crafting intricate narratives that blend hard science fiction with the richness of historical and fantasy elements, making him one of the genre's most respected voices.

