When Frank Poole, whose body has been frozen in deep space for 1000 years, is resurrected, his second life brings him enlightening culture shocks a-plenty, but his Odyssey eventually leads him to defy the limitless power of an alien technology. The final sequel to 2001: A Space Odyssey.
Two of the biggest names in SF together again, with the third of the acclaimed Time's Odyssey sequence
The best collection ever of Arthur C. Clarke's short fiction, including the stories on which 2001: A Space Odyssey and Childhood's End were based.
Arthur C. Clarke's classic in which he ponders humanity's future and possible evolution.
The science fiction classic, reissued with stunning new cover artwork, an important new foreword by the author and a fascinating new introduction by Stephen Baxter.
In the most exciting SF collaboration ever, Arthur C. Clarke and his universally acknowledged heir Stephen Baxter pool talent, fantastic ideas, unprecedented cosmic insights as well as page-turning plotting skills and breathlessly good writing to produce the most awesome novel of the future since 3001.
Omnibus edition of three classic and inspirational Clarke tales
The sequel to the only SF novel to sweep all SF awards and one of the bestsellers of all time
To the spaceship Discovery, floating in the silent depths of space since Dave Bowman passed through the alien 'Star Gate', comes Heywood Floyd on a mission of recovery. What he finds near Jupiter is beyond the imaginings of any mere human.
2061 is the year Halley's Comet makes its next pilgrimage to the inner Solar System -- and the year centenarian Heywood Floyd encounters once again the alien Monoliths. Near Jupiter, the transfigured forms of Dave Bowman and HAL the computer are Heywood's only chance of survival -- if they too are not now alien beings.
Clarke's masterful evocation of the far future of humanity, considered his finest novel.
'The best book yet about man's most dramatic journey, the most exciting science fiction novel for years' Evening Standard
Two of the biggest names in SF together again; the sequel to the acclaimed Time's Eye.