Subtitled "Noted Scientists Prove That Truth Can Be Stranger Than Fiction."
Edited by Harry Harrison and Theodore J. Gordon.
Jacket Copy: "A collection of intriguing essays about the latest and most
controversial scientific discoveries. Discoveries which may radically alter
the future of mankind."
Introduction
"The Conquest of Senescence" by R.W. Prehoda
"People freezing: the Establishment thaws" by R.C.W. Ettinger
"What are Tachyons, and What Could We Do With Them?" by G. Feinberg
"Inside-out Worlds" by D.M. Cole and D.W. Cox
"Requirements for Communications to a Naive Recipient" by A.G. Wilson and T.J. Gordon
"Search for Artificial Stellar Sources of Infrared Radiation" by F.J. Dyson
"Psychology in the Year 2000" by G. Murphy
"Do Plants Feel Emotions?", by T. Bacon and R. Kirkpatrick
"Anomalous Prediction of Quantum Processes by Some Human Subjects" by H. Schmidt
"Long-delayed Echoes of Radio Transmissions" by O.G.Villard, C.R.Graf, and J.M. Lomasney
"The Life and Death of Project Camelot" by I.L. Horowitz
"The Jousting at Camelot - or Social Technology Encounters the Shield of the Social Structure" by T.R. Vallance
"Ovshinsky: Promoter or Persecuted Genius?" by P.M. Boffey
"The Strange Case of Polywater" by M. Sinclair
New York: Doubleday, 1972. 201pp., hbk. Jacket: Patricia Saville Voehl.
Kirkus Reviews, 15th November 1971.
The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction #256, p.40-42.
Review by Avram Davidson.
New York Times Book Review, 3rd September 1972.
Review by Theodore Sturgeon.