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Imagination was one of the most successful science fiction magazines of its time. Wile many of it contemporaries tried to push literary boundaries, Imagination focused on adventure and space opera assuring its financial success. Here are some of the finest stories ever to appear in it's pages. Over 200,000 words of pulse pounding, adventure fiction. If you enjoyed this book, you'll want to search on "Positronic Publishing Super Pack" and check out all our other Super Packs!
Mr. Spaceship by Philip K. Dick
The Mind Digger by Winston Marks
Earth Alert! by Kris Neville
Stopover Planet by Robert E. Gilbert
Voyage to Eternity by Milton Lesser
Spacemen Never Die! by Morris Hershman
Brown John's Body by Winston Marks
Spillthrough by Daniel F. Galouye
The Legion Of Lazarus by Edmond Hamilton
The Beasts In The Void by Paul W. Fairman
The Star Lord by Boyd Ellanby
The Invader by Alfred Coppel
Prison Of A Billion Years by C. H. Thames (Milton Lesser)
Prelude To Space by Robert W. Haseltine
Spies Die Hard! by Arnold Marmor
The Minus Woman by Russ Winterbotham
The Dictator by Milton Lesser
Adolescents Only by Irving Cox, Jr.
Goodbye, Dead Man! by Tom W. Harris
Native Son by T. D. Hamm
Dogfight-1973 by Mack Reynolds
Cancer World by Harry Warner, Jr.
Mr. Chipfellow's Jackpot by Dick Purcell
The Graveyard Of Space by Milton Lesser
There Is A Reaper by Charles V. De Vet
Zero Hour by Alexander Blade
Piper in the Woods by Philip K. Dick
About the author
Philip K. Dick was born in Chicago on December 16, 1928, and grew up in the San Francisco Bay Area. He began publishing short stories in 1952, mostly finding homes in popular science fiction magazines, but he had little commercial success until he published The Man in the High Castle in 1962. He followed with novels such as Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep, Ubik, and Flow My Tears, the Policeman Said, establishing him as a writer of science fiction. Following years of drug abuse and a series of mystical experiences in 1974, Dick's work dealt more explicitly with issues of theology, metaphysics, and the nature of reality. He died in 1982 in Santa Ana, California, at the age of 53, due to complications from a stroke.