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MIRROR TO THE SKY.
New York: An AvoNova Book William Morrow and Company, Inc., [1992]. Octavo, cloth-backed boards. First edition. "In a bemired near future godlike aliens arrive with the possibility of a cure for humanity's woes, but of course it turns out that they have complex motives. The author's first new novel in almost two decades, and, as such, a minor event." - Pringle, The Ultimate Guide to Science Fiction, second edition (1995), p. 240-241. "Geston's writing has improved, but there have been some changes I regret. Even as he has moved towards greater realism, he has toned down the flamboyant imagination that made him so attractive in the past." - Andy Robertson, Interzone.
LORDS OF THE STARSHIP.
London: Michael Joseph, [1971]. Octavo, boards. First edition. A military dystopia on Earth in the far future. "The starship is centuries in the building; around the immense yards nations rise and fall, battle after battle is fought. In the end, the whole thing is exposed as a terrible lie. A weird, horrifying future of continuous flux, stasis and war. Geston's first novel [as well as his first book], published when he was barely out of his teens. Amazing." - Pringle, The Ultimate Guide to Science Fiction, second edition (1995), pp. 216-7. One of the major novels of the 1960s. Anatomy of Wonder (2004) II-434. Sargent, British and American Utopian Literature, 1516-1985, p. 304. Survey of Science Fiction Literature III, pp. 1261-64.
MIRROR TO THE SKY.
New York: AvoNova/William Morrow and Co., 1992. Wrappers. First edition. Advance uncorrected proof.