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“The X-Machine” by John E. Muller (aka, R. L. Fanthorpe with Patricia Fanthorpe). London: John Spencer & Co./Badger Books SF-74 (1962). Cover Art by Henry Fox. by lhboudreau

© lhboudreau, all rights reserved.

“The X-Machine” by John E. Muller (aka, R. L. Fanthorpe with Patricia Fanthorpe).  London: John Spencer & Co./Badger Books SF-74 (1962).  Cover Art by Henry Fox.

“The Ultimate Weapon had been unleashed, humanity could only wait.”

From the back cover:

Sally McQuire worked for an unusual organization. She was an undercover agent for the I.P.F., but her friends knew her only as a scatter-brained night club dancer. Then came the Thing. At first there were just odd paragraphs in provincial papers. A cow disappeared. Fish stopped biting. Finally Jon Vardo, a shepherd, vanished without a trace. The I.P.F. put Sally on the track. She discovered a strange common denominator linking the events. There was a mathematical and geographical sequence. Sally arranged to be at the next danger zone, and then she too vanished. This is a story of humanity at its best, locked in a life and death struggle with a cruel, cold culture of Beings from the Beyond. This is a story of humanity fighting against incredible odds and fantastic weapons. Can the mind of man hold its own against deadly, sinister intelligence from beyond the stars?

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Badger Books were published between 1959 and 1967 in a number of genres, predominantly war, westerns, romance, supernatural and science fiction. In common with other “pulp” or mass-market publishers of the time, Badger Books focused on quantity rather than quality. A new title in each of the major genres appeared each month, generally written to tight deadlines by low-paid authors. One of the most remarkable facts about Badger Books is that much of its output was produced by just two authors (using a range of house names and other pseudonyms). John Glasby (over 300 novels and short stories) and Robert Lionel Fanthorpe (over 200 novels and stories). [Wikipedia]