Prices in AUD. Shipping worldwide. Flat rate $8 postage per order within Australia. International by weight calculated at checkout. Read full terms.
-
Galactic Girl
Fiona Richmond
London: Arrow Books, 1984.Sci-fi erotica.
-
Regiment of Women
Thomas Berger
Toronto: Popular Library, 1973.Gender role-reversal dystopian novel. 2047: When Women Rule the World. “Women rule supreme. Dressed in business suits and stick-on beards, they attack the weaker sex with dildos. To propagate the species, men are drafted into State controlled sperm farms. And rebels of the underground Men’s Liberation face the penalty of castration.”
-
Ultimate Transform
Raymond E. Banks
Wilmington: Orchard Publishing Co., 1978.Sci-fi smut pulp. Castle Books CB 209. Also published as Lust in Space under the pseudonym Ralph Burch and The Moon Rapers as Ramond Banks. Cover art by Paul Stinson.
-
Slave of Passion
Xantia
Lancashire: Blue Sky Books, 1998.The Planet Thor: Where Women are Salves and Men are Masters. Sci-fi SM. The second novel in the erotic fiction Thorean Master Series.
-
Slave of Desire
Xantia
Lancashire: Blue Sky Books, 1997.The Planet Thor: Where Women are Salves and Men are Masters. Sci-fi SM. The first novel in the erotic fiction Thorean Master Series.
-
Parliament of Dreams
Chrysalis
Brisbane: Chrysalis, 1996.Programme for Australia’s first Babylon 5 convention, Brisbane May 3-5, 1996. Unrecorded in OCLC.
-
Dangerous Visions and New Worlds: Radical Science Fiction, 1950-1985
Andrew Nette; Iain McIntyre
Oakland: PM Press, 2021.“Much has been written about the “long Sixties,” the era of the late 1950s through the early 1970s. It was a period of major social change, most graphically illustrated by the emergence of liberatory and resistance movements focused on inequalities of class, race, gender, sexuality, and beyond, whose challenge represented a major shock to the political and social status quo. With its focus on speculation, alternate worlds and the future, science fiction became an ideal vessel for this upsurge of radical protest. Dangerous Visions and New Worlds: Radical Science Fiction, 1950 to 1985 details, celebrates, and evaluates how science fiction novels and authors depicted, interacted with, and were inspired by these cultural and political movements in America and Great Britain.” (publisher’s blurb) This copy signed by editor, Andrew Nette.
-
A Scanner Darkly
Philip K. Dick
London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2012. -
Ubik
Philip K. Dick
London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2017.