Description:
Second Stage Lensmen by E. E. "Doc" Smith is a blazing masterpiece of Golden Age science fiction, bursting with space battles, intergalactic intrigue, and super-scientific adventure. Continuing the legendary Lensman series, this thrilling novel follows the Second Stage Lensmen-elite heroes armed with mind-bending powers and the indestructible Lens of Civilization-as they fight to defend the Galactic Patrol against the shadowy forces of Boskonian evil.
From the fiery skies of distant galaxies to the heart of the Galactic Lensman Council, Smith's imagination ignites in a whirlwind of starship combat, psychic warfare, and cosmic-scale heroism. Sleek Needle Ships streak through deep space in a clash of energy beams and antimatter explosions, as the fate of a thousand worlds hangs in the balance.
First published in the pulp era, Second Stage Lensmen remains a cornerstone of space opera, influencing generations of science fiction writers from Isaac Asimov to George Lucas. Readers will be swept into a universe of limitless adventure, superhuman intellect, and galactic-scale warfare-a classic tale of courage, technology, and the unbreakable will to protect the galaxy.
Perfect for fans of retro science fiction, pulp adventure, and the epic Lensman saga, this edition brings back the high-energy storytelling that defined E. E. "Doc" Smith as the father of modern space opera.
Brief description: E. E. Doc Smith (Edward Elmer Smith, 1890-1965) was one of the foundational architects of modern science fiction and the creator of the space-opera tradition as it is still understood today. Trained as a chemical engineer, Smith brought a unique combination of scientific imagination and narrative escalation to his fiction, forever changing the scale at which science fiction stories could operate.He is best known for the Lensman series, a sweeping saga of galactic conflict that introduced concepts now taken for granted in the genre: universe-spanning wars, hierarchies of advanced intelligences, escalating cosmic stakes, and heroes entrusted with authority beyond conventional law. Long before such ideas became common, Smith envisioned civilizations locked in conflicts measured not in nations or planets, but in entire galaxies.Though his work first appeared in the pulp magazines of the 1930s and 1940s, Smith's influence extends far beyond that era. The Lensman series directly shaped later generations of science fiction writers and helped define the narrative DNA of space opera, from epic military SF to modern cinematic franchises. His stories are remembered not merely as early examples of the genre, but as the moment when science fiction discovered how big it could be.