From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mach 1: A Story of Planet Ionus
Cover of Terror on Planet Ionus
Author Allen A. Adler
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Genre Science fiction novel
Publisher Farrar, Straus and Cudahy
Publication date
1957
Media typePrint ( Hardcover)
Pages212 pp

Mach 1: A Story of Planet Ionus is a 1957 science fiction novel by Allen A. Adler. A paperback version was published in 1966 by Paperback Library with the alternate title Terror on Planet Ionus.

Synopsis

While testing an experimental warship, the "Mach 1", a human pilot and his companion are kidnapped into space by aliens from the planet Ionus, which turns out to be a moon of Saturn. There, they confront an oversized monster named Karkong who is menacing the Ionians. Karkong follows them back to Earth. Chaos ensues.

Critical reception

Damon Knight wrote of the novel: [1]

This is no novel: it is half-heartedly "novelized" screen story. The blank-faced characters stand up and speak their lines woodenly, without any perceptible motivation; of characterization, explanation, depth of any kind there is none...[the book is] so bad that ordinary epithets will not do. It is incredibly, stupidly, loathsomely bad... The style is pretentious, ignorant and vulgar.

References

  1. ^ Knight, Damon (1967). In Search of Wonder. Chicago: Advent.

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mach 1: A Story of Planet Ionus
Cover of Terror on Planet Ionus
Author Allen A. Adler
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Genre Science fiction novel
Publisher Farrar, Straus and Cudahy
Publication date
1957
Media typePrint ( Hardcover)
Pages212 pp

Mach 1: A Story of Planet Ionus is a 1957 science fiction novel by Allen A. Adler. A paperback version was published in 1966 by Paperback Library with the alternate title Terror on Planet Ionus.

Synopsis

While testing an experimental warship, the "Mach 1", a human pilot and his companion are kidnapped into space by aliens from the planet Ionus, which turns out to be a moon of Saturn. There, they confront an oversized monster named Karkong who is menacing the Ionians. Karkong follows them back to Earth. Chaos ensues.

Critical reception

Damon Knight wrote of the novel: [1]

This is no novel: it is half-heartedly "novelized" screen story. The blank-faced characters stand up and speak their lines woodenly, without any perceptible motivation; of characterization, explanation, depth of any kind there is none...[the book is] so bad that ordinary epithets will not do. It is incredibly, stupidly, loathsomely bad... The style is pretentious, ignorant and vulgar.

References

  1. ^ Knight, Damon (1967). In Search of Wonder. Chicago: Advent.

External links


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