Henry Hasse
Henry Louis Hasse (born February 7, 1913 in Indiana ; died May 20, 1977 in Los Angeles ) was an American science fiction writer.
Henry Hasse was well known in early 1930s fandom . As an author, he has published a number of short stories, often collaborating with other authors, including Emil Petaja , whose pseudonym Theodore Pine he occasionally used. There were several other collaborations with the young Ray Bradbury , whose first professional publication Pendulum was a collaboration with Hasse, which appeared in the pulp magazine Super Science Stories in November 1941 .
His best-known story is He Who Shrank (1936), about a man who begins to shrink from taking a drug and who visits a series of smaller and smaller micro-world universes. The narrative was included in the classic anthology Adventures in Time and Space by Raymond J. Healy and J. Francis McComas and in Isaac Asimov's Before the Golden Age .
His 1968 novel The Stars Will Wait (1968, German as Die Irrfahrt der Agfalon ) is a space opera .
bibliography
- novel
-
The Stars Will Wait (1968)
- English: The odyssey of Agfalon. Translated by Rosemarie Ott. Bastei Lübbe # 21042, 1974, ISBN 3-404-09951-6 .
- Short stories
- The End of Tyme (1933, with A. Fedor)
- The Return of Tyme (1934, with A. Fedor)
- He Who Shrank (1936)
- The Guardian of the Book (1937)
- A Miracle of Time (1940)
- The Man Who (1940, with A. Fedor)
- Mission Unknown! (1941)
- Proktols of Neptune (1941)
- The Star of Satan (1941)
- Farewell to Fuzzies (1941)
- Pendulum (1941, with Ray Bradbury )
- Thief of Mars (1941)
- Out of This World (1942)
- The Missing Day (1942)
- City of the Living Flame (1942)
- Mars Warning (1942)
- Gabriel's Horn (1943, with Ray Bradbury)
- Star of Panadur (1943, with Albert dePina)
- Alcatraz of the Starways (1943, with Albert dePina)
- The Angular Stone (1943)
- Revenge of the Vera (1943)
- Horror at Vecra (1943)
- Passage to Planet X (1945)
- Final Victim (1946, with Ray Bradbury)
- Dread-Flame of M'Tonak (1946)
- Final Glory (1947)
- Walls of Acid (1947)
- Trail of the Astrogar (1947)
- Eternal Zemmd Must Die! (1949)
- Tomb of the Seven Taajos (1950)
- Survival (1950)
- Don't come to Mars! (1950, with Emil Petaja )
- The Eyes (1951)
- The Secret of Satellite Seven (1952, with Emil Petaja, as Theodore Pine)
- One Purple Hope! (1952)
- And Return (1952)
- Three Lines of Old Martian (1953)
- Ultimate Life (1953, with Albert dePina)
- Subject for Today (1954)
- Via Paradox (1954, with Albert dePina)
- Clansmen of Fear (1957)
- We're Friends, Now (1960)
- The Violin String (1961)
- The Beginning (1961)
- The Way to CASm's Place (1973)
- The Ensorcelled (1975)
literature
- Hans Joachim Alpers , Werner Fuchs , Ronald M. Hahn : Reclam's science fiction guide. Reclam, Stuttgart 1982, ISBN 3-15-010312-6 , p. 194.
- Hans Joachim Alpers, Werner Fuchs, Ronald M. Hahn, Wolfgang Jeschke : Lexicon of Science Fiction Literature. Heyne, Munich 1991, ISBN 3-453-02453-2 , p. 528.
- John Clute , David Langford : Hasse, Henry. In: John Clute, Peter Nicholls : The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction . 3rd edition (online edition), version dated March 16, 2018.
- Donald H. Tuck : The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy through 1968. Advent, Chicago 1974, ISBN 0-911682-20-1 , p. 210.
Web links
- Works by Hasse, Henry in Project Gutenberg ( currently not usually available for users from Germany )
- Henry Hasse in the Internet Speculative Fiction Database (English)
personal data | |
---|---|
SURNAME | Hate, Henry |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Hasse, Henry Louis (full name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | American science fiction writer |
DATE OF BIRTH | February 7, 1913 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Indiana |
DATE OF DEATH | May 20, 1977 |
Place of death | los Angeles |