Fourteen killer science fiction short stories from some of the best sci-fi authors of the 1940s, 50s, and 60s—tales where danger is personal, ideas are lethal, and survival is never guaranteed.
These stories explore murder, justice, revenge, and unintended consequences through the sharp lens of classic science fiction. From assassins engineered by society to machines that decide humanity's fate, each tale delivers tension, dark irony, and the kind of twist that made readers of the pulp era sit up and reread the final page. This is science fiction at its most ruthless—where technology solves problems by creating even worse ones.
You'll encounter worlds where punishment is more terrifying than crime, heroes haunted by yesterday's wars, monsters born from human ambition, and futures where silence, obedience, or efficiency can be deadly. Some stories strike fast and hard; others creep under your skin and stay there. All of them reflect a time when science fiction wasn't afraid to ask uncomfortable questions—and didn't bother offering easy answers.
Featuring masters of the genre at the height of their powers, this collection is a showcase of classic storytelling, unforgettable concepts, and grimly clever ideas that still feel unsettlingly relevant today.
Stories included:
Slay-Ride by Winston Marks
Wreck Off Triton by Alfred Coppel
Retribution by George T. Spillman
The Skull by Philip K. Dick
Prison of a Billion Years by C. H. Thames
The Misplaced Battleship by Harry Harrison
Monsters That Once Were Men by Robert Silverberg
Seventh Victim by Robert Sheckley
Birkett's Twelfth Corpse by August Derleth
Hero From Yesterday by Robert Silverberg
The Foxholes of Mars by Fritz Leiber
Watchbird by Robert Sheckley
Cry Silence by Fredric Brown
The Power by Fredric Brown