Dead Man's Planet : A Ghostly Vigil On A Frozen Asteroid

A drifting asteroid between Mars and Jupiter should have been nothing more than a temporary stop. Instead, it greets two spacemen with fields that glow, buds that fire back, and a path that leads to a sealed door bearing the mark of Earth. Someone has lived here. Someone has farmed this frozen stone. And someone has left a body standing guard in the cold.

Inside the buried cabin, they meet Ghor, a pale, sharp-eyed figure who claims the asteroid as his birthplace. He has shaped alien weeds into trees, roses, and even corn that tastes like home. His plants regenerate at impossible speed, divide like living hydras, and defend themselves with lethal bursts of organic radioactivity. What he and his father built is both brilliant and unstable. When the native growth begins to move, and the valley fills with stalks that hunt by sensing the faint signals of living flesh, survival will depend on more than ray guns and courage. It will require a decision that no visitor to this “Dead Man’s Planet” expects to face.

Russ Winterbotham wrote dozens of fast-moving science fiction tales during the 1940s and 1950s, publishing in magazines such as Planet Stories, Startling Stories, and Thrilling Wonder Stories. He later moved into television writing, contributing scripts to programs including Captain Video and His Video Rangers. “Dead Man’s Planet” showcases his gift for high-concept speculation grounded in physical detail: low gravity, airless rock, regenerative biology, and a single startling twist that reframes everything that came before. It is classic magazine-era science fiction at full power—bold, strange, and unforgettable.

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A drifting asteroid between Mars and Jupiter should have been nothing more than a temporary stop. Instead, it greets two spacemen with fields that glow, buds that fire back, and a path that leads to a sealed door bearing the mark of Earth. Someone has lived here. Someone has farmed this frozen stone. And someone has left a body standing guard in the cold.

Inside the buried cabin, they meet Ghor, a pale, sharp-eyed figure who claims the asteroid as his birthplace. He has shaped alien weeds into trees, roses, and even corn that tastes like home. His plants regenerate at impossible speed, divide like living hydras, and defend themselves with lethal bursts of organic radioactivity. What he and his father built is both brilliant and unstable. When the native growth begins to move, and the valley fills with stalks that hunt by sensing the faint signals of living flesh, survival will depend on more than ray guns and courage. It will require a decision that no visitor to this “Dead Man’s Planet” expects to face.

Russ Winterbotham wrote dozens of fast-moving science fiction tales during the 1940s and 1950s, publishing in magazines such as Planet Stories, Startling Stories, and Thrilling Wonder Stories. He later moved into television writing, contributing scripts to programs including Captain Video and His Video Rangers. “Dead Man’s Planet” showcases his gift for high-concept speculation grounded in physical detail: low gravity, airless rock, regenerative biology, and a single startling twist that reframes everything that came before. It is classic magazine-era science fiction at full power—bold, strange, and unforgettable.

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  1. Lost Sci-Fi Books 16 thru 20 : Sexy Aliens, Space Pirates, and Dimensional Burlesque: Retro Sci-Fi at Its Wildest

    Winston Marks, William Morrison, Joseph Slotkin, Alan E. Nourse, Russ Winterbotham

  2. Lost Sci-Fi Books 1 thru 20

    Philip K Dick, Mack Reynolds, James Mckimmey, Winston Marks, John Massie Davis, Russ Winterbotham, Richard Magruder, Malcolm B. Morehart, Stanley Mullen, Charles E. Fritch, William Morrison, Joseph Slotkin, Alan E. Nourse

  3. Aliens and Nothing But Aliens 2

    Philip K Dick, Ray Bradbury, Erik Fennel, C. H. Thames, Bjarne Kirchhoff, Robert Silverberg, Russ Winterbotham, Lawrence F. Willard, Richard R. Smith, Frederik Pohl, Ross Rocklynne, George Whittington, John Bernard Daley, William Morrison, Fredric Brown, Henry Slesar

  4. Aliens and Nothing But Aliens 5 - Seventeen Lost Sci-Fi Short Stories from the 1930s, 40s, 50s and 60s : Otherworldly Creatures, Cosmic Encounters, And Alien Mysteries From The Golden Age Of Sci-Fi

    Isaac Asimov, Harlan Ellison, John W. Campbell, Frank Belknap Long, Murray Leinster, Damon Knight, Mack Reynolds, Robert Sheckley, Sam Carson, Ron Goulart, Russ Winterbotham, Elisabeth R. Lewis, Morton Klass, Winston Marks, Stephen Marlowe, Joe Gibson, Alfred Coppel

  5. Lost Sci-Fi Books 1 thru 10

    Philip K Dick, Winston Marks, James Mckimmey, Mack Reynolds, Richard Magruder, Russ Winterbotham

  6. #64

    The Monster That Threatened The Universe : When Progress Refuses to Agree

    Russ Winterbotham

  7. Sci-Fi Criminals and Nothing But Sci-Fi Criminals -15 Lost Sci-Fi Short Stories from the 1930s, 40s, 50s and 60s

    Ray Bradbury, Alfred Coppel, Winston Marks, Russ Winterbotham, Philip K Dick, C. H. Thames, Murray Leinster, George Whittington, Richard R. Smith, Frederik Pohl, Charles L. Fontenay, Harry Harrison, Robert Silverberg, Poul Anderson

  8. Space Travelers 10 : Explorers, Aliens, and Impossible Choices Among the Stars

    Arthur C. Clarke, Ron Goulart, Tom Godwin, Robert Silverberg, Nelson S. Bond, Manly Wade Wellman, Russ Winterbotham, Michael Shaara, Robert Wicks, Gene L. Henderson, William Bender, Thomas S. Gardiner, Alfred Connable, Roger D. Aycock

  9. 50 Vintage Sci-Fi Short Stories 2 - More than 29 hours of Vintage Science Fiction : Classic Futures and Cosmic Fears from the Golden Age Masters

    Philip K Dick, Harlan Ellison, Bjarne Kirchhoff, Millard V. Gordon, Harry Harrison, Rog Phillips, Robert Silverberg, August Derleth, H. B. Fyfe, Lawrence F. Willard, C. M. Kornbluth, Alfred Coppel, Jack McKenty, Winston Marks, Fritz Leiber, Fredric Brown, Lyman D. Hinckley, Frederik Pohl, Murray Leinster, George O. Smith, Darius John Granger, C. H. Thames, Ray Bradbury, William Morrison, George Whittington, Russ Winterbotham, Bob Tucker, Erik Fennel, S. J. Sackett, Richard R. Smith, Mike Ellis

  10. Sci-Fi Spaceships and Nothing But Sci-Fi Spaceships

    Alan E. Nourse, Stanley Mullen, Richard O. Lewis, Russ Winterbotham, Charles E. Fritch, Winston Marks, Frank M. Robinson, Irving Cox, Philip K Dick, Ray Bradbury, Richard S. Shaver, Alfred Coppel

  11. Lost Sci-Fi Books 11 thru 20

    John Massie Davis, Malcolm B. Morehart, Mack Reynolds, Charles E. Fritch, Stanley Mullen, Winston Marks, William Morrison, Joseph Slotkin, Alan E. Nourse, Russ Winterbotham