A.E. van Vogt “The Weapon Shops of Isher” Vintage Paperback 1977
$17.00
Part of A.E. van Vogt's highly influential *Isher* series, *The Weapon Shops of Isher* is a landmark of Golden Age science fiction that explores the tension between an authoritarian empire and a mysterious network of weapon shops providing defensive technology to the citizenry. Famously championing the phrase "The right to buy weapons is the right to be free," this classic narrative of time-travel and political intrigue remains one of speculative fiction's most debated and enduring classics.
A.E. van Vogt “The Weapon Shops of Isher” Vintage Paperback 1977
$17.00
Part of A.E. van Vogt's highly influential *Isher* series, *The Weapon Shops of Isher* is a landmark of Golden Age science fiction that explores the tension between an authoritarian empire and a mysterious network of weapon shops providing defensive technology to the citizenry. Famously championing the phrase "The right to buy weapons is the right to be free," this classic narrative of time-travel and political intrigue remains one of speculative fiction's most debated and enduring classics.
Frederik Pohl “Man Plus” Vintage Paperback 1980
$11.00
Frederik Pohl's Hugo Award-winning masterpiece *Man Plus* remains one of the most chillingly realistic and philosophically profound explorations of cybernetic technology and space colonization in science fiction history. As humanity prepares to escape an increasingly unlivable Earth, astronaut Roger Torraway undergoes radical, monstrous surgical alterations to survive the hostile Martian environment. Pohl masterfully balances hard-science extrapolation with deep psychological dread, questioning
Frederik Pohl “Man Plus” Vintage Paperback 1980
$11.00
Frederik Pohl's Hugo Award-winning masterpiece *Man Plus* remains one of the most chillingly realistic and philosophically profound explorations of cybernetic technology and space colonization in science fiction history. As humanity prepares to escape an increasingly unlivable Earth, astronaut Roger Torraway undergoes radical, monstrous surgical alterations to survive the hostile Martian environment. Pohl masterfully balances hard-science extrapolation with deep psychological dread, questioning


