The Collected Captain Future Volume One
Captain Future: Wizard of Science

by Edmond Hamilton
Introduction by Richard Lupoff (signed)
Edited by Stephen Haffner (signed)
Front Cover by George Rozen

Haffner Press First Edition

Description: Thick heavy hardback book published by the Haffner Press in 2009. The copyright page states 'First Edition'. High quality book with sewn pages, cloth covered binding, headbands at top and bottom of spine, acid neutral paper. The print run for this book was only 1,000 copies, the edition is sold out and now sells for a premium on the resale market. Signed by the introduction writer on the title page without inscription or personalization. Inscribed 'MEOW!' by the editor/publisher Stephen Haffner without personalization by the cat that is part of his imprint logo.

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Edmond Hamilton items for sale

From the Publisher: Here is a letter, attributed to Standard Magazines editor Leo Margulies, sent to science fiction fanzine editors in 1939. This text is from Bob Tucker’s classic fanzine Le Zombie (vol. 2, No. 4, Oct 28, 1939)

Dear Mr. Tucker,

Can there be anything new in scientifiction? We say yes — and offer CAPTAIN FUTURE. Fellows, CAPTAIN FUTURE is tops in scientifantasy! A brand new book-length magazine novel devoted exclusively to a star-studded quartet of the most glamorous characters in the Universe. And the most colorful planeteer in the Solar System to lead them — CAPTAIN FUTURE. You’ll find Captain Future the man of Tomorrow! His adventures will appear in each & every issue of the magazine that bears his name.

He ought to be good. We spent months planning the character, breathing the fire of life into him. For we feel that the man who controls the destinies of nine planets has to be good. But don’t take our word for it — get your first copy of CAPTAIN FUTURE the day it hits the newstands and marvel at the wizard of science as he does his stuff on every thrilling page.

You’ll find Captain Future the most dynamic space-farer the cosmos has ever seen. A super-man who uses the forces of super-science so that you will believe in them. You’ll see Captain Future’s space craft, the Comet spurting thru the ether with such hurricane fury you’ll think Edmond Hamilton, the author, has hurled you on a comet’s tail.

And you’ll agree that Captain Future’s inhuman cavalcade — the Futuremen — supplement the world’s seven wonders. There’s Grag, the metal robot; Otho, the synthetic android; and Simon Wright, the living brain. A galaxy of the ultimate immortal forces!

So come on….give the most scintillating magazine ever to appear on the scientifiction horizon the once over. You’ll be telling us, as we tell you now, that CAPTAIN FUTURE represents fantasy at it’s unbeatable best.

CAPTAIN FUTURE will appear at all newsstands in a few weeks. Price, 15 cents. First issue features Edmond Hamilton’s novel, CAPTAIN FUTURE AND THE SPACE EMPEROR. Cover by Rozen. Illustrations by Wesso. Short stories by Eric Frank Russell and O. Sarri. Brand new departments — THE WORLDS OF TOMORROW, THE FUTUREMEN, UNDER OBSERVATION, and THE MARCH OF SCIENCE.

That’s all.

–Leo Margulies

Table of Contents:
• Introduction by Richard A. Lupoff
• Original Magazine Editorial
• Captain Future and the Space Emperor (Captain Future, Winter 1940)
• Calling Captain Future (Captain Future, Spring 1940)
• Captain Future's Challenge (Captain Future, Summer 1940)
• The Triumph of Captain Future (Captain Future, Fall 1940)
• The Future of Captain Future
• Artwork Gallery

Reviews:

Edmond Hamilton (1926-1977) was a pioneer of American science fiction who began his writing career during the 'Golden Age' of pulp magazines. He sold his first story, 'The Monster-God of Mamorth" to Weird Tales magazine in 1926 and became a prolific contributor to the science fiction pulp magazines of the 30s and 40s. He was writing and getting published through the 1960s, even as the popularity of science fiction action/adventure tales of the kind he specialized in was fading. Now under the deft and expert editorship of Stephen Haffner, Haffner Press is bringing out deluxe editions comprising all of the Edmond Hamilton stories, beginning with "Captain Future", a quintessential science fiction hero who, along with his three companions (a sentient robot, a synthetic android, and a disembodied brain kept alive in a serum-case) protected the solar system against all manner of villains and menaces. Captain Future was such a popular character that it became the title of one of the many science fiction pulp magazines of the day. Now all those wonderful science fiction adventures of yesteryear are available in a single 776-page volume. - Midwest Book Review

One more title for tonight, also a deeply-appreciated review copy: The Collected Captain Future, Volume One, from Haffner Press. Edmond Hamilton was the quintessential space opera writer of the 1930s and '40s, but he was an author I had never read: with this book in hand, I read the 150-page long title story, "Captain Future and the Space Emperor", first published in 1940. It is a hoot; it is a casebook of prose the like of which is described in writing courses under the heading *do not write like this* -- a compendium of "said-bookisms" such as "he muttered sickly to himself", "the President asserted confidently", "the thing gasped hoarsely", and so on and on. But more than that, it's a tale of simple presumptions about space flight and planetary natives and easy villains with unironic tags like "space emperor"... So unironic that it's hard to believe anyone could have read this stuff without choking. Isn't there a lesson here, though, about context and presumptions and relative sophistication? Might we reflect on what has or has not changed since then? As an example, here back in 1940 two of Edmond Hamilton's characters debate about who or which is most human... a debate carried on in subsequent decades by Isaac Asimov and STTNG's Data and all the way to Bernard Beckett's Genesis. Some things never change; some debates seem never to be resolved. — Mark R. Kelly, Views from Medina Road, the locusmag blog

Condition: Binding - very good, top and bottom of spine slightly bumped, upper part of spine is flattened because of the weight of the thick text block. the cloth covering the boards shows slight water staining at the top of the front and back boards near the spine (more on the back than on the front), I don't see any staining or warping of the page surfaces but there maybe a very faint shadow of staining on the top page edges (so faint I'm not actually sure that's what it is, otherwise page edges very very slightly soiled. Dust jacket - fine, slight edgewear and wrinkling, not price clipped, in dust jacket protector.

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