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Passager clandestin pour Mars

Cette série relate les aventures audacieuses d'explorateurs qui s'embarquent pour des voyages interstellaires à l'aube de l'exploration spatiale. Suivez des courses palpitantes contre la montre et des nations rivales pour être les premiers à atteindre des mondes étrangers. Découvrez les mystères de planètes inexplorées et relevez des défis inattendus qui mettent à l'épreuve l'ingéniosité et la technologie humaines. Les récits sont riches en inventivité, en courage et en une profonde fascination pour l'inconnu.

Stowaway to Mars
Sleepers of Mars

Ordre de lecture recommandé

  1. 1

    Stowaway to Mars

    • 240pages
    • 9 heures de lecture
    3,2(104)Évaluer

    A space opera set on Mars by one of the twentieth century’s most brilliant—and neglected—science fiction and horror writers, whom Stephen King called “the best writer of science fiction that England has ever produced.” What if alien life-forms included autonomous, conscious machines? An international prize is offered to the first man to complete an interplanetary journey. For British pilot Dale Curtance, it is the ultimate challenge; he must build a ship, assemble a top-notch crew, and beat the Russians and the Americans, too. Soon the Gloria Mundi heads for Mars. There’s only one problem: a stowaway named Joan Shirning. At first, the men resent Joan’s presence. But they come to realize that she is the only one who has firsthand knowledge of the Martians—or at least the intelligent beings that will one day replace them. . . .

    Stowaway to Mars
  2. 2

    Sleepers of Mars

    • 155pages
    • 6 heures de lecture
    3,4(231)Évaluer

    Coronet Books recently published STOWAWAY TO MARS, one of John Wyndham’s most famous stories. The title story of this collection, though it can be read as a separate entity, pursues the ideas thrown up by the original novel, drawing them to some fascinating conclusions. Of course, we are now well used to the idea of Man On The Moon, we have become blasé as to the possibilities of inter-planetary travel. But imagine two expeditions to Mars, one British, the other Russian, both in the process of discovering a mechanical race, invented and produced by the Martians as they believe their specie to be dying. The other four novellas in this collection give further evidence of John Wyndham’s genius at invention, characterisation and sense of movement.

    Sleepers of Mars