World's End : The Future That Found Him First

Kenneth Blake believes time is a frontier waiting to be crossed, not a boundary meant to hold. When his machine finally works, it does not deliver triumph or proof, but a vision of Earth emptied, hunted, and almost finished. The future he touches is not ruled by kings or wars, but by a single advancing presence that consumes everything it reaches. Blake is forced to face a choice no inventor plans for: whether knowledge alone is enough, or whether action must defy the rules that made discovery possible in the first place.

World’s End unfolds with mounting unease rather than spectacle. Each revelation tightens the pressure on Blake, not through explosions or battles, but through what he is allowed to know and what he is allowed to remember. The story builds toward a moment where the machinery of time becomes secondary to the human cost of intervention. The tension lies not in whether the future can be altered, but in what must be surrendered if it is.

Henry Kuttner was one of the most versatile voices in American science fiction, publishing dozens of stories across the 1930s, 40s, and 50s in magazines such as Astounding Science-Fiction, Thrilling Wonder Stories, and Weird Tales. Writing under his own name and several pseudonyms, Kuttner moved easily between cosmic menace, speculative science, and psychological strain. World’s End sits firmly within his darker, idea-driven work, pairing a vast threat with a sharply personal decision that leaves a lasting mark long after the final page.

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Kenneth Blake believes time is a frontier waiting to be crossed, not a boundary meant to hold. When his machine finally works, it does not deliver triumph or proof, but a vision of Earth emptied, hunted, and almost finished. The future he touches is not ruled by kings or wars, but by a single advancing presence that consumes everything it reaches. Blake is forced to face a choice no inventor plans for: whether knowledge alone is enough, or whether action must defy the rules that made discovery possible in the first place.

World’s End unfolds with mounting unease rather than spectacle. Each revelation tightens the pressure on Blake, not through explosions or battles, but through what he is allowed to know and what he is allowed to remember. The story builds toward a moment where the machinery of time becomes secondary to the human cost of intervention. The tension lies not in whether the future can be altered, but in what must be surrendered if it is.

Henry Kuttner was one of the most versatile voices in American science fiction, publishing dozens of stories across the 1930s, 40s, and 50s in magazines such as Astounding Science-Fiction, Thrilling Wonder Stories, and Weird Tales. Writing under his own name and several pseudonyms, Kuttner moved easily between cosmic menace, speculative science, and psychological strain. World’s End sits firmly within his darker, idea-driven work, pairing a vast threat with a sharply personal decision that leaves a lasting mark long after the final page.

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