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THE BLACK STAR PASSES JOHN W. CAMPBELL ACE BOOKS, INC. 1120 Avenue of the Americas New York, N.Y. 10036 THE BLACK STAR PASSES Copyright, 1953, by John W. Campbell, Jr. Copyright, 1930, by Experimenter Publications, Inc. An Ace Book, by arrangement with the author. _Cover art by Jerome Podwil._ Printed in U.S.A. Contents Introduction 7 BOOK ONE Piracy Preferred 11 BOOK TWO Solarite 71 BOOK THREE The Black Star Passes 145 [Illustration] INTRODUCTION These stories were written nearly a quarter of a century ago, for the old _Amazing Stories_ magazine. The essence of any magazine is not its name, but its philosophy, its purpose. That old _Amazing Stories_ is long since gone; the magazine of the same name today is as different as the times today are different from the world of 1930. Science-fiction was new, in 1930; atomic energy was a dream we believed in, and space-travel was something we tried to understand better. Today, science-fiction has become a broad field, atomic energy--despite the feelings of many present adults!--is no dream. (Nor is it a nightmare; it is simply a fact, and calling it a nightmare is another form of effort to push it out of reality.) In 1930, the only audience for science-fiction was among those who were still young enough in spirit to be willing to hope and speculate on a new and wider future--and in 1930 that meant almost nothing but teen-agers. It meant the brightest group of teen-agers, youngsters who were willing to _play_ with ideas and understandings of physics and chemistry and astronomy that most of their contemporaries considered "too hard work." I grew up with that group; the stories I wrote over the years, and, later, the stories I bought for _Astounding Science Fiction_ changed and grew more mature too. _Astounding Science Fiction_ today has many of the audience that read those early stories; they're not high school and college students any more, of course, but professional engineers, technologists and researchers now. Naturally, for them we need a totally different kind of story. In growing with them, I and my work had to lose much of the enthusiastic scope that went with the earlier science fiction. When a young man goes to college, he is apt to say, "I want to be a scientist," or "I want to be an engineer," but his concepts are broad and generalized. Most major technical scho
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