12 results for "Analog Science Fiction and Fact Magazine" between $2.00 and $50.00

12 Analog Science Fiction and Fact Magazine $2.00 $50.00 /l/Analog-Science-Fiction-and-Fact-Magazine
ANALOG SCIENCE FICTION AND FACT MAGAZINE
ANALOG SCIENCE FICTION AND FACT MAGAZINE

Analog Science Fiction And Fact is the best SF magazine on the market. It started in the mid 1930s and is still going strong. The consistency of the quality is unbeatable. I have subscribed for 20 years and expect to maintain this subscription always. If you love SF, or are even slightly interested, this is the magazine for you!

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Analog Science Fiction & Fact
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Analog Science Fiction and Fact, July-August 2009 [MultiFormat]
Analog Science Fiction and Fact, July-August 2009 [MultiFormat]

eBook Description: Our July/August "double" issue features two big stories. The cover is for "Seed of Revolution," the latest and possibly the best of Daniel Hatch's series about Chamal, the world where evolution works very differently than it does on Earth. (No, it doesn't matter if you haven't read the earlier stories; in fact, you may get a clearer understanding of Chamal's bizarre biology from this story than from any of its predecessors.) The differences necessarily color the way its inhabitants...

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Analog Science Fiction and Fact, November 2011
Analog Science Fiction and Fact, November 2011

Description: Andrea Cort, Adam-Troy Castro's prickly but effective troubleshooter, returns to lead off our November issue in "With Unclean Hands," wherein she faces a particularly thorny interspecies problem for which her own past is uniquely relevant. But being especially well qualified does not mean a person will find a task easy. . . . Our science fact article comes from Richard B. Robinson, a researcher on the frontiers of a field that was new to me: "Repairing a Broken Heart: Beyond Electronic...

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Analog Science Fiction and Fact, December 2011
Analog Science Fiction and Fact, December 2011

Description: Our December issue starts off with a spectacular Bob Eggleton cover for Brad R. Torgersen's novelette, "Ray of Light," which is one of the more unusual post-apocalypse stories you're likely to read. Given a catastrophe big enough to force practically everybody into hiding, one of the central and most important questions is, "When can you go back out?" It's especially difficult when your hiding place is as unusual as this one, and when you have to stay there long enough to start forgetting...

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Analog Science Fiction and Fact, January-February 2012
Analog Science Fiction and Fact, January-February 2012

Our January-February double issue is a big event in several ways: It takes advantage of its extra space to include lots of special treats that wouldn't fit in a regular issue, and it leads off with the opening of a new Robert J. Sawyer serial, Triggers. The title, as you'll see, has more than one meaning, but at the center of it all is memory: What is it, how does it work, and what triggers it? And, beyond all that, what happens if an unforeseen event allows--and forces--people to share memories...

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Analog Science Fiction and Fact, March 2012
Analog Science Fiction and Fact, March 2012

Our March issue offers two novelettes, quite different in some respects yet both dealing with mysteries, things that aren't what they seem, and familiar patterns in very unfamiliar contexts. Craig DeLancey's "The Ediacarian Machine" starts out as archeology, but the archeologists could never guess where it would lead. Kyle Kirkland's "Upon Their Backs" (which you may recognize as part of a familiar saying) also begins with an archeological air (or is it paleontology or anthropology?), this time with...

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Analog Science Fiction and Fact, April 2012
Analog Science Fiction and Fact, April 2012

In recent years there has been much talk and concern about invasive species--and countertalk about whether "invasive" species are necessarily bad. Susan Forest leads off our April issue with a thought-provoking novelette about "The Most Invasive Species" and the elusive relationship between quality of intentions and quality of results. Craig DeLancey also has a novelette, "Ecce Signum," which is the latest (and last?) in his series about "Marrion's Children," bred and raised for a unique and very...

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Analog Science Fiction and Fact, May 2012
Analog Science Fiction and Fact, May 2012

Our May issue features two big items: the powerful conclusion of Robert J. Sawyer's and Daniel Hatch's novella "The End of Ordinary Life" (a title that, by the way, could apply equally well to Sawyer's novel!). Major events in history, like revolutions and first contact, are often thought of as dramatic, large-scale confrontations among world leaders and their armies. They can be much quieter--perhaps even unnoticed by most--until they're well underway, but in the end no less dramatic or significant...

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Analog Science Fiction and Fact, June 2012
Analog Science Fiction and Fact, June 2012

Paul Carlson has been attracting a good deal of attention here with his series of stories about robot truck drivers in the not too distant future, drawing extensively on his own experience (more with trucks than robots, I suspect) to create a really authentic feel of the road--and human reactions to a changing world. Robots are tools, but very special tools; and humans are notoriously good at turning even the finest tools to nefarious ends. Hence the "Crooks" in Carlson's novelette leading off our...

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Analog Science Fiction and Fact,, July-August 2012
Analog Science Fiction and Fact,, July-August 2012

Our July/August double issue appropriately features a number of special items--and combinations of items. Vincent Di Fate's cover illustrates "Nightfall on the Peak of Eternal Light," a novella by Richard A. Lovett and William Gleason, which in turn has a companion fact article by Lovett, "Fluffy Impact: What LCROSS Found When It Crashed on the Moon." LCROSS was the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite, a NASA mission that deliberately crashed a satellite onto the Moon as a means of searching...

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Analog Science Fiction and Fact July August 2012
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