THE ALIENS ARE AMONG US!
âWhere is everybody?â Nobel Prize-winning physicist Enrico Fermi once asked after a discussion about the possibility of intelligent life elsewhere in the universe. To sum up the Fermi Paradox, if the billions of stars in our galaxy have planets with intelligent life on them, why hasnât anyone visited us?
But maybe they have, and we just havenât noticedâand thatâs the way they want it. And if they are here in secret, why are they here? Are they tourists? Anthropologists, perhaps? Or journalists sending stories back about the quaint habits of the primitives? Or maybe the extraterrestrial equivalent of hunters or fishermen? (Any odd disappearances in your neighborhood lately?) An enemy already within the gates? Or a refugee seeking sanctuary? Gourmets looking for exotic foreign food? Alien criminals hiding out? Alien cops looking for those alien criminals? No missionariesâat least not yetâand there doesnât seem to be a Galactic Peace Corps. They might happen to look close enough to human to pass, or they might be masters of disguise. Or they might be so incomprehensibly different that we donât even notice that theyâre here.
The secret visitors are revealed by such luminaries as Larry Niven, Poul Anderson, Spider Robinson, William Tenn, and more. And if any alien visitors want to check out the local nativesâ speculations herein, feel free. Please pay with local currency, of course.
At the publisherâs request, this title is sold without DRM (Digital Rights Management).
Praise for previous anthologies edited by Hank Davis: About Time Troopers:
"The editorsâ mastery of the military SF and time travel subgenres is evident in their thoughtful selections. Fans of literate speculative fiction will hope for more from these experts." âPublishers Weekly Cosmic Corsairs:
âWho doesnât like space pirates? (Well, their victims I guess, but thatâs beside the point.) . . . Hank Davis has a fine sense for choosing a wide mix of stories, and this book is no exception. No story is like another, yet they manage to form a whole greater than the parts. From sapient ships to piratical sibling rivalry, pirate detectives to ingenious captives seeking freedom, from alien biology to orbital mechanics, the stories share some of the same elementsâpragmatic thinking, moral complexity, loyalty, and betrayal. Definitely a fun one." âAnalog In Space No One Can Hear You Scream:
â[T]he 13 tales in this collection blend sf with horror to demonstrate the resiliency of both genres . . . offers strong tales by the genreâs best storytellers.â âLibrary Journal
â[F]irst-rate science fiction, demonstrating how short stories can still entertain.â âThe Galveston County Daily News A Cosmic Christmas 2 You:
âThis creative and sprightly Christmas science fiction anthology spins in some surprising directions. . . . A satisfying read for cold winter evenings . . . a great stocking stuffer for SF fans.â âPublishers Weekly As Time Goes By:
âAs Time Goes By . . . does an excellent job of exploring not only romance through time travelârelationships enabled or imperiled by voyaging through timeâbut the intrinsic romance of time travel itself. . . . The range of styles and approaches is as wide as the authors' sensibilities and periods might suggest . . . full of entertaining and poignant stories . . . â âAlvaro Zinos-Amaro, IntergalacticMedicineShow.com About Star Destroyers, coedited by Christopher Ruocchio:
â. . . spectacular space battles and alien contacts . . . themes of military ethics, the uses of artificial intelligence, and the limits of the capacity of the human mind. . . . it is the human interactions and decisions that ultimately drive the stories. . . . will appeal to fans of military and hard science fiction and any readers fascinated by the possibilities of space travel." âBooklist
â. . . stories of giant spaceships at war, at peace, and in the often-gray areas between. . . . a worthy addition to a long tradition of ship-based fiction, and its authors portray captains, arcane astrogators, and civilian child passengers with equal depth. Itâs recommended for fans of military SF and space adventure." âPublishers Weekly
â. . . youâd probably expect some tight, action-filled space opera stories of giant space battles . . . and thereâs some of that. But there are also espionage stories, rescue missions, political conflicts, alternate histories, even a few humorous tales. . . . each author took the premise in a different direction . . . if I had to identify one common feature to all the stories, it would be that theyâre all fun. . . . Like it says, big ships blowing things up. Whatâs not to like?" âAnalog
Hank Davis is Senior Editor at Baen Books. He served in the Army in Vietnam and has had stories in Analog Science Fiction, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, and anthologies If and Orbit. Sean CW Korsgaard is a U.S. Army veteran, award-winning photojournalist and freelance reporter, and an assistant editor and media relations manager at Baen Books. As a reporter he has over 1,500 bylines to his name, and his work has been featured in outlets as diverse as The New York Times, VFW Magazine, and Analog. A graduate of Virginia Commonwealth University, where he studied mass communications and history, the anthology Worlds Long Lost includes his first published work of fiction.
Sean lives in Richmond, Virginia, with his wife, Suzy.
THE ALIENS ARE AMONG US!
âWhere is everybody?â Nobel Prize-winning physicist Enrico Fermi once asked after a discussion about the possibility of intelligent life elsewhere in the universe. To sum up the Fermi Paradox, if the billions of stars in our galaxy have planets with intelligent life on them, why hasnât anyone visited us?
But maybe they have, and we just havenât noticedâand thatâs the way they want it. And if they are here in secret, why are they here? Are they tourists? Anthropologists, perhaps? Or journalists sending stories back about the quaint habits of the primitives? Or maybe the extraterrestrial equivalent of hunters or fishermen? (Any odd disappearances in your neighborhood lately?) An enemy already within the gates? Or a refugee seeking sanctuary? Gourmets looking for exotic foreign food? Alien criminals hiding out? Alien cops looking for those alien criminals? No missionariesâat least not yetâand there doesnât seem to be a Galactic Peace Corps. They might happen to look close enough to human to pass, or they might be masters of disguise. Or they might be so incomprehensibly different that we donât even notice that theyâre here.
The secret visitors are revealed by such luminaries as Larry Niven, Poul Anderson, Spider Robinson, William Tenn, and more. And if any alien visitors want to check out the local nativesâ speculations herein, feel free. Please pay with local currency, of course.
At the publisherâs request, this title is sold without DRM (Digital Rights Management).
Praise for previous anthologies edited by Hank Davis: About Time Troopers:
"The editorsâ mastery of the military SF and time travel subgenres is evident in their thoughtful selections. Fans of literate speculative fiction will hope for more from these experts." âPublishers Weekly Cosmic Corsairs:
âWho doesnât like space pirates? (Well, their victims I guess, but thatâs beside the point.) . . . Hank Davis has a fine sense for choosing a wide mix of stories, and this book is no exception. No story is like another, yet they manage to form a whole greater than the parts. From sapient ships to piratical sibling rivalry, pirate detectives to ingenious captives seeking freedom, from alien biology to orbital mechanics, the stories share some of the same elementsâpragmatic thinking, moral complexity, loyalty, and betrayal. Definitely a fun one." âAnalog In Space No One Can Hear You Scream:
â[T]he 13 tales in this collection blend sf with horror to demonstrate the resiliency of both genres . . . offers strong tales by the genreâs best storytellers.â âLibrary Journal
â[F]irst-rate science fiction, demonstrating how short stories can still entertain.â âThe Galveston County Daily News A Cosmic Christmas 2 You:
âThis creative and sprightly Christmas science fiction anthology spins in some surprising directions. . . . A satisfying read for cold winter evenings . . . a great stocking stuffer for SF fans.â âPublishers Weekly As Time Goes By:
âAs Time Goes By . . . does an excellent job of exploring not only romance through time travelârelationships enabled or imperiled by voyaging through timeâbut the intrinsic romance of time travel itself. . . . The range of styles and approaches is as wide as the authors' sensibilities and periods might suggest . . . full of entertaining and poignant stories . . . â âAlvaro Zinos-Amaro, IntergalacticMedicineShow.com About Star Destroyers, coedited by Christopher Ruocchio:
â. . . spectacular space battles and alien contacts . . . themes of military ethics, the uses of artificial intelligence, and the limits of the capacity of the human mind. . . . it is the human interactions and decisions that ultimately drive the stories. . . . will appeal to fans of military and hard science fiction and any readers fascinated by the possibilities of space travel." âBooklist
â. . . stories of giant spaceships at war, at peace, and in the often-gray areas between. . . . a worthy addition to a long tradition of ship-based fiction, and its authors portray captains, arcane astrogators, and civilian child passengers with equal depth. Itâs recommended for fans of military SF and space adventure." âPublishers Weekly
â. . . youâd probably expect some tight, action-filled space opera stories of giant space battles . . . and thereâs some of that. But there are also espionage stories, rescue missions, political conflicts, alternate histories, even a few humorous tales. . . . each author took the premise in a different direction . . . if I had to identify one common feature to all the stories, it would be that theyâre all fun. . . . Like it says, big ships blowing things up. Whatâs not to like?" âAnalog
Hank Davis is Senior Editor at Baen Books. He served in the Army in Vietnam and has had stories in Analog Science Fiction, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, and anthologies If and Orbit. Sean CW Korsgaard is a U.S. Army veteran, award-winning photojournalist and freelance reporter, and an assistant editor and media relations manager at Baen Books. As a reporter he has over 1,500 bylines to his name, and his work has been featured in outlets as diverse as The New York Times, VFW Magazine, and Analog. A graduate of Virginia Commonwealth University, where he studied mass communications and history, the anthology Worlds Long Lost includes his first published work of fiction.
Sean lives in Richmond, Virginia, with his wife, Suzy.