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Note that this same title is listed above as a novel, since all later editions dropped this short story. Chalker reports that Campbell purchased the story from Burks in order to use the concept. Stuart, but which was actually a collaboration between John Campbell and Arthur J. Contains The Moon Is Hell! and also "The Elder Gods", which was originally published in the October 1939 Unknown as by Don A. Reading, Pennsylvania: Fantasy Press, 1951 hardcover. Chicago: Shasta Publishers, 1948 hardcover. Short story collections and omnibus editions The story itself first saw book form in the 1948 Shasta collection see below.
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The Nicholls Encyclopedia mentions a 1952 chapbook, published in Australia, as the first edition of Who Goes There? as a standalone novel, but provides no bibliographic details. "Who Goes There?" Novellete originally published in Astounding, August 1938.Originally serialized in the October and November 1936 Astoundings as Uncertainty. Bound dos-a-dos with Campbell's The Planeteers, as Ace Double G-585 see below. New York: Ace Books, Inc., 1966 paperback. Lloyd Eshbach of Fantasy Press printed the copies for both editions, including 100 that he did for longtime customers. It was to have been a Fantasy Press project, but was handed off to Gnome when the Fantasy Press folded. Both the Tuck Encyclopedia and the Chalker-Owings History list the editions as simultaneous. The Reginald Index lists the Fantasy Press as the first edition but this is apparently incorrect. Note that the Gnome Press and Fantasy Press editions were very limited in release. Originally published in Amazing Stories Quarterly, Spring/Summer 1932. Hicksville, New York: Gnome Press, 1961 hardcover simultaneous with: Reading, Pennsylvania: Fantasy Press, 1961 hardcover. Originally published in Amazing Stories Quarterly, Spring 1931. Reading, Pennsylvania: Fantasy Press, 1956 hardcover. Fixup of three stories in Campbell's "Arcot, Morey and Wade" series, all from 1930: "Piracy Preferred", "Solarite", and "The Black Star Passes". Reading, Pennsylvania: Fantasy Press, 1953 hardcover. See the entry in the short story collection section below.
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London: New English Library, 1975 paperback. This is their first publication, so the book is not a fixup in the usual sense, although the stories were not originally intended for publication as a novel. Three linked novellas: "The Incredible Planet", "The Interstellar Search", and "The Infinite Atom", originally written as sequels to The Mightiest Machine but rejected by Tremaine for publication in Astounding. Reading: Pennsylvania: Fantasy Press, 1949 hardcover. Originally serialized over five issues in Astounding, starting in December 1934. Providence, Rhode Island: Hadley Publishing Company, 1947 hardcover.
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2 Short story collections and omnibus editions.
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