
Jack Williamson
John Stewart Williamson, who wrote as Jack Williamson, was an American science fiction writer, one of several called the "Dean of Science Fiction". He is also credited with one of the first uses of the term genetic engineering. Early in his career he sometimes used the pseudonyms Will Stewart and Nils O. Sonderlund.

After world's end
A man's mysterious death unlocks a future of robotic tyranny and cosmic battles where humanity's survival hangs by a thread.
By Jack Williamson

The prince of space
In a future world, a reporter's pursuit of a notorious space outlaw leads him to uncover a terrifying plot of interplanetary war.
By Jack Williamson

The Cosmic Express
Longing for a simpler existence, a couple uses dangerous new tech to escape to Venus, only to discover that nature's raw reality is far from their imagined paradise.
By Jack Williamson

The second shell
When a journalist and an ex-agent uncover a scientist's deadly invention, they’re thrust into an intergalactic battle to save humanity from alien-like beings lurking high above the Earth.
By Jack Williamson

Salvage in Space
In the lonely expanse of space, a miner discovers a derelict spaceship harboring a terrifying secret and a beautiful woman in suspended animation, leading him on a perilous quest for answers and survival.
By Jack Williamson

The Pygmy Planet
A bored man's humdrum life explodes into breathtaking adventure as he shrinks down to rescue a woman from a planet of mechanical beings who worship a steam hammer.
By Jack Williamson

The alien intelligence
A doctor journeys into a strange and dangerous world to find his mentor and confront alien mysteries hidden beneath a foreboding mountain.
By Jack Williamson

The green girl
When Earth faces destruction, a young man's dreams of a mythical green girl could be the key to salvation found in a hidden underwater world.
By Jack Williamson

The Masked World
Astronauts venture to a deceptive planet veiled by monstrous plants to uncover the fate of lost explorers, only to find a coded warning they may not escape from in time.
By Jack Williamson