Step into another unforgettable collection of vintage imagination with Lost Sci-Fi Books 341–360, featuring twenty remarkable stories from some of the greatest writers of the Golden Age and beyond. From deep-space mysteries and rogue robots to ancient secrets, eerie encounters, and clever twists, every story delivers a new adventure.
Travel through the endless darkness of space in Michael Shaara’s Orphans of the Void, then explore strange futures in tales by Robert Sheckley, Robert Silverberg, Philip K. Dick, Harry Harrison, Ray Bradbury, and Harlan Ellison. Meet quarantined alien civilizations, malfunctioning machines, mysterious visitors, impossible inventions, and explorers who discover that the greatest dangers are often hidden in plain sight.
This collection also reaches beyond traditional science fiction. Edgar Allan Poe’s unforgettable Some Words with a Mummy blends satire with the supernatural, Jack London’s A Thousand Deaths explores the boundaries of life and death, while Frank Lillie Pollock, Dorothy Quick, E. M. Hull, and others add mystery, fantasy, and unforgettable speculative fiction to the journey.
You’ll encounter civilizations on the brink, impossible scientific experiments, first contact gone wrong, unexpected heroes, forgotten discoveries, and futures shaped by curiosity, ambition, and human nature. Some stories will make you laugh, others will leave you unsettled, and many will surprise you with endings that remain just as powerful today as when they were first published.
Whether you’re discovering these authors for the first time or returning to revisit timeless classics, Lost Sci-Fi Books 341–360 delivers hours of imaginative storytelling from an era when every issue of a magazine promised another voyage into the unknown.





















