His early science fiction anthologies were big, fat books which found their way to many public libraries and helped develop a love of science fiction in numerous young adults. Outside of the field, Conklin wrote eight nonfiction books and numerous articles.
His early anthologies relied heavily on Astounding Science Fiction, the major player in the 1940s SF magazine scene. Later anthologies also included many stories from the rising new magazines, Galaxy and F&SF. While he seldom included award-winning stories (to be frank, there wasn't much in the way of awards when he started), Conklin's anthologies were chock-full of good stories, including many that have become classics. Would they become classics whithout having appeared in his anthologies? Perhaps, but without Conklin the science fiction field would have been different without his influence. That influence increased when he became a book reviewer from 1950 to 1955 for Galaxy Science Fiction, weighing on Sf novels and the rare collections and anthologies, as well as many related non-fiction and science books.
Conklin's influence waned in the Sixties. The field had become glutted with magazines, anthologies, and collections, and Conklin's books -- now much smaller -- were issued as paperback origins, just a few of many in a sea of paper. Nonetheless, each of Conklin's books stand out as an entertaining value. Who could ask for more?
The list below covers his 40 science fiction anthologies, plus his one detective anthology and four single-author collections that Conklin edited (one by H. G. Wells, two by theodore Sturgeon, and one by Edgar Allan Poe). For the most part the information comes from ISFDb. I've tried to include the first print appearance of each story, as well as other information that I felt was pertinent. Following ISFDb practive, I did not bother I did not bother to list an author's real name when his or her pen name was better known in the field. Any mistakes in the list are mine and I will happily own up to them while blithrly pinning the blame on my computer.
How many of these books have you read? How many stories?
1) The Best of Science Fiction (1946); also published as The Golden Age of Science Fiction. In 1952, this book was voted 6th place as the Analog Award's All-time Best Book; 1st place was won by another anthology, Healy and McComas' Adventures in Time and Space; second place went to van Vogt's novel Slan, followed by Seven Science Fiction Novels of H. G. Wells, Heinlein's The Man Who Sold the Moon, and Campbell's Who Goes There? in 3rd, 4th, and 5th place respectively. Ray Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles followed in 7th place.
- John W. Campbell, Jr., "Concerning Science Fiction" (introductory essay)
- Groff Conklin, Introduction
- "Anson MacDonald" (Robert A. Heinlein), "Solution Unsatisfactory" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, May 1941)
- Frank R. Stockton, "The Great War Syndicate" (abriged from the author's 1888 novel)
- "Lewis Padgett" (Henry Kuttner & C. L. Moore), "The Piper's Son" (from Astounding Science Fiction, February 1945; the first story in the authors' Baldy series)
- Cleve Cartmill, "Deadline" (from Astounding Science Fiction, March 1944; this story predicted the atomic bomb in enough detail that government agents descended upon the Astounding office, convinced that there had been a national security leak)
- Clifford D. Simak, "Lobby" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1944)
- Robert A. Heinlein, "Blowups Happen" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, September 1940; the seventh story published in the author's ambitious Future History series; this story has been nominated in the best novelette catagory for this year's Retro Hugo Awards)
- "Don A. Stuart" (John W. Campbell. Jr.), "Atomic Power" (from Astounding Stories, December 1934)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "Killdozer!" (from Astounding Science Fiction, November 1944)
- Raymond Z. Gallun, "Davy Jones' Ambassador" (from Astounding Stories, December 1935)
- Morrison Colladay, "Giant in the Earth" (from Wonder Stories, April 1933)
- "Anson MacDonald" (Robert A. Heinlein), "Goldfish Bowl" (from Astounding Science Fiction, March 1942)
- David H. Keller, M.D., "The Ivy War" (from Amazing Stories, May 1930)
- Ralph Milne Farley, "Liquid Life" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories. October 1936)
- Edgar Allan Poe, "A Tale of the Ragged Mountains" (from Baltimore Weekly Sun, March 23, 1844)
- Arthur Conan Doyle, "The Great Keinplatz Experiment" (from Belgravia, July 1885)
- H. G. Wells, "The Remarkable Case of Davidson's Eyes" (from Paul Mall Budget, March 28, 1895)
- Julian Huxley, "The Tissue-Culture King" (from The Yale Review, April 1926)
- John Taine, "The Ultimate Catalyst" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, June 1939)
- "Calvin Peregoy" (Thomas Calvert McClary), "The Terrible Sense" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, August 1938)
- Donald Wandrei, "A Scientist Divides" (from Astounding Stories, September 1934)
- Malcolm Jameson, 'Tricky Tonnage" (from Astounding Science Fiction, December 1944)
- Arthur Leo Zagat, "The Lanson Screen" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, December 1936)
- Nat Schachner, "The Ultimate Metal" (from Astounding Stories, February 1935)
- "Don A. Stuart" (John W. Campbell, Jr.),"The Machine" (from Astounding Stories, February 1935; the first story in the author's The Machine series)
- Norman L. Knight, "Short-Circuited Probability" (from Astoundng Science-Fiction, September 1941)
- A. E. van Vogt, "The Search" (from Astounding Science Fiction, January 1943)
- "Warner van Lorne" (F. Orlin Tremaine), "The Upper Level Road" (from Astounding Stories, August 1935; the "van Lorne" pen name was usually used by Tremaine's brother, Nelson Tremaine; this is apparently the only time it was used by F. Orlin Tremaine, who was the editor of Astounding at the time)
- Paul Ernst, "The 32nd of May" (from Astounding Stories, April 1935)
- Nelson S. Bond, "The Monster from Nowhere" (from Fantastic Adventures, July 1939)
- Murray Leinster, "First Contact" (from Astounding Science Fiction, May 1945; winner of the 1996 Retro Hugo Award for Best Novelette)
- Robert A. Heinlein, "Universe" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, May 1941; this novelette was eventually made part of Heinlein's Future History series)
- Isaac Asimov, "Blind Alley" (from Astounding Science Fiction, March 1945)
- Wallace West, "En Route to Pluto" (from Astounding Stories. August 1936; the first story in the author's Bird of Time series)
- Cecil B. White, "The Retreat to Mars" (from Amazing Stories, August 1927)
- Austn Hall, "The Man Who Saved the Earth" (from All-Story Weekly, December 13, 1919)
- Charles W. Diffin, "Spawn of the Stars" (from Astounding Stories of Super-Science, February 1930)
- Anthony Boucher, 'Expedition" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, August 1943)
- Leslie F. Stone, "The Conquest of Gola" (from Wonder Stories, April 1931)
- Ross Rocklynne. "Jackdaw" (from Astounding Science Fiction, August 1942)
2) A Treasury of Science Fiction (1948) (The Berkley and Berkley Medallion paperbacks printed only 8 of the 30 stories; these are marked with *)
- Groff Conklin, Introduction
- Chan Davis, "The Nightmare" (from Astounding Science Fcition, May 1946)
- Poul Anderson and F. N. Waldrop, "Tomorrow's Children" (from Astounding Science Ficition, February 1947; the first story in the Tomorrow's Children series continued by Anderson alone)
- Paul Carter, "The Last Objective" (from Astounding Science Fiction, August 1946)
- Arthur C. Clarke, "Loophole"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1946)
- Edward Grendon, "The Figure" (from Astounding Science Fiction, July 1947)
- H. F. Heard, "The Great Fog"* (from the author's The Great Fog and Other Weird Tales, 1944)
- P, Schuyler Miller, "The Chrysalis" (from Astounding Stories, April 1936)
- L. Sprague de Camp, "Living Fossil" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, February 1939)
- "Philip Latham" (R. S. Richardson), "N Day" (from Astounding Science Fiction, January 1946)
- Jack Williamson, "With Folded Hands..."* (from Astounding Science Fiction, (July 1947; the first story in The Humanoids series)
- C. L. Moore, "No Woman Born" (from Astounding Science Fiction, December 1944)
- Cleve Cartmill, "With Flaming Sword" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, September 1942)
- Malcolm Jameson, "Children of the 'Betsy B'" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, March 1939)
- William Tenn, "Child's Play" (from Astounding Science Fiction, March 1947)
- Raymond F. Jones, "The Person from Porlock" (from Asrounding Science Fiction, August 1947)
- A. E. van Vogt, "Juggernaut"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, August 1944)
- D. D. Sharp, "The Eternal Man" (from Science Wonder Stories, August 1929; the first of two stories featuring Herbert Zulerich)
- "Lewis Padgett" (Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore), "Mimsy Were the Borogroves"* (from Astounding Science-Fiction, February 1943)
- H. Beam Piper, "Time and Time Again" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1947)
- Harry Walton, 'Housing Shortage" (from Astounding Science Fiction, January 1947)
- Robert Moore Williams, "Flight of the Dawn Star" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, March 1938)
- "Lawrence O'Donnell" (Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore), "Vintage Season" (Astounding Science Fiction, September 1946)
- Oscar J. Friend, 'Of Jovian Buid" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, October 1938)
- "Polton Cross" (John Russell Fearn), "Wings Across the Cosmos" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, June 1938)
- "Martin Pearson" (Donald A. Wollheim), "The Embassy" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, March 1942)
- Lester del Rey, "Dark Mission" (from Astoudning Science-Fiction, July 1940)
- Murray Leinster, "The Ethical Equations"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, June 1945; nominated for the 1996 Retro Hugo for Best Story)
- Robert A. Heinlein, "It's Great to Be Back!"* (from The Saturday Evening Post, July 26, 1947; part of Heinlein's Future History series)
- Clifford D. Simak, 'Tools" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, July 1942)
- Arthur C. Clarke, "Rescue Party"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, May 1946)
3) Big Book of Science Fiction (1950) (also published as The Big Book of Science Fiction and as The Classic Book of Science Fiction) (The Berkley and Berkeley Medallion paperbacks printed only 10 of the 32 stories; these are marked with *
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Thomas McMorrow, "Mr. Murphy of New York" (from The Saturday Evening Post, March 22, 1930)
- Waldemar Kaemffert, "The Diminishing Draft" (from All-Story Weekly, February 9, 1918)
- Ward Moore, "Peacebringer", (from Amazing Stories, March 1950)
- Horace L. Gold, "A Matter of Form" (from Astounding-Science Fiction, December 1938)
- Morrison Colladay, "The Planetoid of Doom" (from Wonder Stories, December 1932)
- W. Alexander, "One Leg Too Many" (from Amazing Stories, October 1929: part of the Dr. Wentworth series)
- Miles J. Breuer, M.D., "The Man with the Strange Head" (from Amazing Stories, January 1927)
- Katherine MacLean, "Defense Mechanism" (from Astounding Science Fiction, October 1949)
- Lewis Padgett (Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore),"Margin for Error" (from Astounding Science Fiction, November 1947)
- Mack Reynolds, "Isolationist" (from Fantastic Adventures, April 1950.
- Murray Leinster, "Nobody Saw the Ship"* (from Future Combined with Science Fiction, May/June 1950)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "Mewhu's Jet"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, November 1946)
- Graham Doer, "The Outer Limit" (from The Saturday Evening Post, December 24, 1949)
- Dorothy de Courcy and John de Courcy, (from Startling Stories, September 1948)
- Eric Frank Russell, "Dear Devil" (from Other Worlds Science Stories, May 1950; nominated for the 2001 Retro Hugo Award for Best Novelette)
- Ralph Williams, "Emergency Landing" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, July 1940)
- 'Green Peyton" (G. Peyton Wertenbaker), "The Ship That Turned Aside" (from Amazing Stories, March 1930)
- Peter Phillips, "Manna" (from Astounding Science Fiction, February 1949)
- Noel Loomis, "The Long Dawn" (from Super Science Stories, January 1950)
- T. L. Sherred, "E for Effort" (from Astounding Science Fiction, May 1947)
- Fletcher Pratt, "The Roger Bacon Formula"* (from Amazing Stories, January 1929, where it was published as by Pratt and "Irvin Lester" -- "Lester" being one of Pratt's pen names)
- Lester del Rey, "The Wings of Night"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, March 1942)
- Clifford D. Simak, "Desertion"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, November 1944; the fourth story in Simak's City series)
- Robertson Osbourne, "Contact. Incorporated" (from Planet Stories, Fall 1949, where it was originally titled ""Action on Azura")
- Fredric Brown, "Arena"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, June 1944)
- Jerry Shelton, "Culture" (from Astounding Science Fiction, September 1944)
- Jules Verne, "In the Year 2889" (from The Forum, February 1889; originally published in 1891 in France as "La Journee d'un Jounaliste Americain en 2889")
- Ray Bradbury, "Forever and the Earth"* (from Planet Stories, Spring 1950)
- "Peter Reed" (John D. MacDonald), "The Miniature"* (from Super Science Stories, September 1949)
- Fritz Leiber, "Sanity"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1944)
- C. M. Kornbluth, "The Only Thing we Learn"* (from Startling Stories, July 1949)
- Damon Knight, "Not With a Bang" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Winter-Spring 1950)
4) The Science Fiction Galaxy (1950)
- Groff Conklin, "Introcution"
- E. M. Forster, "The Machine Stops" (from Oxford and Cambridge Review, November 1909; winner of the 2012 Prometheus Hall of Fame Award)
- Rudyard Kipling, "As Easy as A.B.C." (from The London Magazine; March 1912; nominated nine times for the Prometheus Hall of Fame award (from 2006 through 2014) but has never won)
- William Hope Hodgson, "The Derelict" (from The Red Magazine, December 1, 1912)
- Arthur C. Clarke, "The Fires Within" (from Fantasy No. 3, August 1947, as by "E. G. O'Brien")
- John D. MacDonald, "A Child Is Crying" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, December 1948)
- Margaret St. Clair, "Quis Custodiet...?" (from Startling Stories, July 1948)
- Murray Leinster, "The Life-Work of Professor Muntz" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, June 1949)
- Miles J. Breuer, M.D., "The Appendix and the Spectacles" (from Amazing Stories, December 1928)
- A. Rowley Hilliard, "Death from the Stars" (from Wonder Stories,October 1931)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "The Hurkle Is a Happy Beast" (from The Magazine of Fantasy, Fall 1949)
- Ray Bradbury, "King of the Gray Spaces" (from Famous Fantastic Mysteries, December 1943)
- Laurence Manning, "The Living Galaxy" (from Wonder Stories, September 1934)
5) In the Grip of Terror (1951)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Maurice Level, "The Last Kiss" (from Level's 1920 collection Tales of Mystery and Horror; first published in France in le Journal, 1912)
- Ray Bradbury, "The Illustrated Man" (from Esquire, July 1950)
- Stephen Crane, 'The Upturned Face" (from Ainslee's Magazine, March 5, 1900)
- Dororthy L. Sayers, "The Incredible Elopement of Lord Peter Wimsey" (first published in 1933, source not given)
- E. F. Benson, "The Horror Horn" (from Hutchinson's Magazine, September 1922)
- Will F. Jenkins (aka "Murray Leinster"), "Night Drive" (first published in 1950, source not given)
- H. P. Lovecraft, "In the Vault" (from The Tryout, November 1925)
- Guy de Maupassant, "The Diary of a Madman" (first appeared in English in 1885; orignally published in France in Le Gaulois as "Un fou")
- William F(ryer) Harvey, "The Tool" (first published in 1928, source not given)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "Bianca's Hands" (from in Argosy, UK edition, May 1947)
- Walter Owen, "The Cross of Carl" (first published in 1931, no source given)
- Margaret St. Clair, "Hathor's Pets" (from Startling Stories, January 1950)
- Wilkie Collins, "A Terribly Strange Bed" (from Household Words, April 24, 1852 undet the title "The Story of a Terribly Strange Bed")
- W. W. Jacobs, "The Well" (from Jacob's 1902 collection The Lady of the Barge)
- Samuel Blas, "Revenge" (first published in 1947, no source given)
- Edgar Allan Poe, "The Pit and the Pendulum" (from The Gift from 1843, Fall (probaly October) 1942)
- "H. W. Guernsey" (Howard Wandrei), "Macklin's Little Friend" (Astounding Stories, November 1936)
- H. H. Munro, "The Easter Egg" (first published under the pen name "Saki" in 1911, no source given)
- H. G. Wells, "The Moth" (from Pall Mall Gazette, March 28, 1895, also known as "A Moth - Genus Novo" and "A Moth: Genus Unknown)
- Ambrose Bierce, 'A Resumed Identity" (from Cosmopolitan, September 1908, under the title "The Man")
- Wilbur Daniel Steele, "Bubbles" (from Harper's Magazine, March 1926)
6) Possible World of Science Fiction (1951) (The Berkley and Berkley Medallion paperbacks have 10 of the 22 stories, marked with *)
- Groff Conklin, 'Introduction"
- Raymond Z. Gallun, "Operation Pumice" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, April 1949)
- Robert A. Heinlein, "The Black Pits of Luna" (from The Saturday Evening Post, January 10, 1948)
- A. E. van Vogt, "Enchanted Village"* (from Other Worlds Science Stories, July 1950)
- Malcolm Jameson, "Lilies of Life"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, February 1945)
- Ray Bradbury, "Asleep in Armageddon"* (from Planet Stories, Winter 1948)
- Isaac Asimov, "Not Final!"* (from Astounding Science-Fiction, October 1941)
- Frank Belknap Long, "Cones" (from Astounding Stories, February 1936)
- D. L. James, "Moon of Delirium" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, January 1940)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "Completely Automatic" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, February 1941)
- Nelson S. Bond, "The Day We Celebrate" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, January 1941)
- Margaret St. Clair, "The Pillows"* (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, June 1950)
- Hal Clement, "Proof" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, June 1942)
- Murray Leinster, "Propagandist"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, August 1947)
- H. B. Fyfe, "In Value Deceived"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, November 1950)
- Jack Vance, "Hard-Luck Diggings" (from Startling Stories, July 1948; part of Vance's Magnus Ridolph series)
- John Berryman, "Space Rating"* (from Astounding Science-Fiction, October 1939)
- Katherine MacLean, "Contagion" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, October 1950)
- Clifford D. Simak, "Limiting Factor"* (from Startling Stories, November 1949)
- Sam Merwin, Jr., "Exit Line" (from Startling Stories, September 1950, under the pen name "Matt Lee")
- James H. Schmitz, "Second Night of Summer" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, December 1950; part of Schmitz's Agents of Vega series)
- Arthur C. Clarke, "A Walk in the Dark" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, August 1950)
- Poul Anderson, "The Helping Hand"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, May 1950; nominated for the 2001 Retro Hugo Award for Best Novelette)
7) 28 Science Fiction Stories by H. G. Wells 1953; a single-author collection edited by Groff Conklin)
8) Invaders of Earth (1952) (The Weidenfeld & Nicolson reprint contains 14 of the 22 stories marked *; the Pocket Books reprint contains 15 stories marked @; the Tempo edition reprints contain 16 stories marked #); the Digit edition reprints 8 stories marked % and a further Digit book, 1962's Enemies in Space, reprints 6 additional stories marked $) Yeah, I know. It's beginning to look like a string of curse words.
- Men Like Gods (the 1923 novel)
- "The Empire of the Ants" (first published in The Strand Magazine, December 1905)
- "The Land Ironclads" (first published in The Strand Magazine, December 1903)
- "The Country of the Blind" (first published in The Strand Magazine, April 1904)
- "The Stolen Bacillus" (first published in Pall Mall Budget, June 24 1894)
- "The Flowering of the Strange Orchid" (first published in Pall Mall Budget, August 2, 1894)
- "In the Avu Observatory" (first published in Pall Mall Budget, August 9, 1894)
- "A Story of the Stone Age" (first published in The Idler, May 1897)
- "Aepyornis Island" (first published in Pall Mall Budget, December 13 (or 27 -- sources differ), 1894)
- "The Remarkable Case of Davidson's Eyes" (first published in Pall Mall Budget, March 28, 1895; Conklin included this story in his anthology Best of Science Fiction)
- "The Plattner Story" (first published in The New Review, April (or May?) 1896)
- "The Argonauts of the Air" (first published in Phil May's Annual, December 1895)
- "The Story of the Late Mr. Elvesham" (first published in The Idler, May 1896)
- "In the Abyss" (first published in Pearson's Magazine, August 1, 1896)
- Star Begotten (the 1937 novel first published as Star-Begotten: A Biological Fantasia)
- "Under the Knife" (first published in The New Review, January, 1896)
- "The Sea Raiders" (first published in The Weekly Sun Literary Supplement, Decmber 6, 1896)
- "The Crystal Egg" (first published in The New Review, May 1897; this story is related to Wells' novel The War of the Worlds)
- "The Star" (first published in The Graphic, December 1897)
- "The Man Who Could Work Miracles" (first published in Illustrated London News, July 1898)
- "Filmer" (first published in The Graphic, December 1901)
- "A Story of the Days to Come" (first published as a series of four linked stories in Pall Mall Magazine beginning in June 1899 and running through October 1899; yeah, I know -- that's 5 months. Go figure.)
- "The Magic Shop" (first published in The Strand Magazine, June 1903)
- "The Valley of Spiders" (first published in Pearson's Magazine, March 1903)
- "The Truth About Pyecraft" (first published in The Strand Magazine, April 1903)
- "The New Accelerator" (first published in The Strand Magazine, December 1901)
- "The Stolen Body" (first published in The Strand Magazine, November 1898)
- "A Dream of Armageddon" (first published in Black and White, May/June 1901)
8) Invaders of Earth (1952) (The Weidenfeld & Nicolson reprint contains 14 of the 22 stories marked *; the Pocket Books reprint contains 15 stories marked @; the Tempo edition reprints contain 16 stories marked #); the Digit edition reprints 8 stories marked % and a further Digit book, 1962's Enemies in Space, reprints 6 additional stories marked $) Yeah, I know. It's beginning to look like a string of curse words.
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Murray Leinster, "This Star Shall be Free"*@#% (from Super Science Stories, November 1949)
- Robert Moore Williams, "Castaway"*@#% (from Astounding Science-Fiction, February 1941)
- Eric Frank Russell, "Impulse"*@#% (from Astounding Science-Fiction, September 1938)
- "David Grinnell" (Donald A. Wollheim), "Top Secret"@# (first published in Sir! Magazine, 1948, issue not given)
- Allen K(im) Lang, "An Eel by the Tail"*% (from Imagination, April 1951)
- William F. Temple, "A Date to Remember"# (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, August 1949)
- Millard Verne Gordon" (Donald A. Wollheim), "Storm Warning"*% (from Future Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1942)
- Margaret St. Clair, "Child of Void"*@#% (from Super Science Stories, November 1949)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "Tiny and the Monster"@# (from Astounding Science Fiction, May, 1947)
- Mack Reynolds, 'The Discord Makers"@# (from Out of This World Adventures, July, 1950)
- Milton Lesser, "Pen Pal"@ (from Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1951)
- A. E. van Vogt, "Not Only Dead Men"*@#% (from Astounding Science-Fiction, November 1942)
- Carl Grunert, "Enemies in Space"*$ (this is possibly the first English translation; the story appeared in the author's 1907 collection Feinde im Weitall? und andere Novellen)
- Howard Koch, "Invasion from Mars"*@#S (the radio script from Orson Welles and his Mercury Theatre on the Air over the Columbia Broadcasting System on October 30, 1938)
- Mildred Clingerman, "Mnister Without Portfolio"@# (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, February 1952)
- Fredric Brown, "The Waveries"*#$ (from Astounding Science Fiction, January 1945)
- Edward Grenden, "Crisis"@# (from Astounding Science Fiction, June 1951)
- Edgar Pangborn, "Angel's Egg"*@#$ (from Galaxy Science Fiction, June 1951)
- William Tenn, "'Will You Walk a Little Faster"@# (from Marvel Science Fiction, November 1951)
- Henry A. Norton, "The Man in the Moon"*% (from Astounding Science-Fiction, February 1943)
- Katherine MacLean, "Pictures Don't Lie"*@#$ (from Galaxy Science Fiction, August 1951)
- Anthony Boucher, "The Greatest Tertian"*@#S (original to this anthology)
9) Omnibus of Science Fiction (1952) (also published as Strange Travels in Science Fiction, Strange Adventures in Science Fiction, and Science Fiction Omnibus) (The Berkley and Berkley Medallion editions contained 11 of the 43 stories, marked *; the publishers Grayson & Grayson reprinted 22 of the 43 stories in two volumes: Strange Travels in Science Fiction, 13 stories marked @, and Strange Adventures in Science Fiction, 9 stories marked #)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- John Liemert, "John Thomas's Cube"@ (from The Atlantic Monthly, August 1945)
- L. Sprague de Camp, "Hyperpilosity" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, April 1938)
- Fletcher Pratt & "B. F. Ruby," "The Thing in the Woods" (from Amazing Stories, February 1935; "Ruby" is a pen name for Pratt -- Pratt at times would use one of his pseudonymns as a "collaborator")
- Katherine MacLean, "And Be Merry..." (from Astounding Science Fiction, February 1950)
- Will H. Gray, "The Bees from Borneo" (from Amazing Stories, February 1931)
- "David Grinnell" (Donald A. Wollheim), "The Rag Thing" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1951)
- Mark Clifton, "The Conqueror" (from Astounding Science Fiction, August 1952)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "Never Underestimate..."# (from If, March 1952)
- David H. Keller, M.D., "The Doorbell"# (from Wonder Stories, June 1934)
- A. J. Deutsch, "A Subway Named Moebius"*@ (from Astounding Science Fiction, December 1950; nominated for the 2001 Retro Hugo Award for Best Short Story)
- Ross Rocklynne, "Backfire" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, January 1943)
- James Blish, "The Box"# (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, April 1949)
- Ann Griffith, "Zerisky's Law" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, November 1951)
- R. R. Winterbotham, "The Fourth Dynasty" (from Astounding Stories, December 1936)
- H. P. Lovecraft, "The Color Out of Space"*@ (from Amazing Stories, September 1927)
- Ralph Williams, "The Head Hunters" (from Astounding Science Fiction, October 1951)
- Anthony Boucher, "The Star Dummy"*@ (from Fantastic, Fall 1952)
- Damon Knight, "Catch That Martian"# (from Galaxy Science Fiction, March 1952)
- Richard Matheson, "Shipshape Home"@ (from Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1952)
- Isaac Asimov, "Homo Sol"* (from Astounding Science-Fiction, September 1940; the first of three stories in Asimov's Homo Sol series)
- William Tenn, "Alexander the Bait" (from Astounding Science Fiction, May 1946)
- Ray Bradbury, "Kaleidoscope"*@ (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, October 1949)
- Paul Ernst, "'Nothing Happens on the Moon'"@ (from Astounding Science-Fiction, February 1939)
- "Norman Menasco" (Wyman Guin), "Trigger Tide" (from Astounding Science Fiction, October 1950)
- Murray Leinster, "Plague"*# (from Astoundng Science Fiction, February 1944)
- Jack Vance, "Winner Lose All" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, December 1951)
- Eric Frank Russell, "Test Piece"* (from Other Worlds Science Fiction, March 1951)
- Chester S. Geier, "Environment"# (from Astounding Science Fiction, May 1944)
- Alan E. Nourse, "High Threshold"@ (from Astounding Science Fiction, March 1951; the first of two stories in Nourse's The Universe Between series)
- John D. MacDonald, "Spectator Sport"*# (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, February 1950)
- A. E. van Vogt, "Recruiting Station"# (from Astounding Science-Fiction, March 1942)
- Raymond F. Jones, "A Stone and a Spear"@ (from Galaxy Science Fiction, December 1950)
- "Lewis Padgett" (Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore), "What You Need" (from Astounding Science Fiction, October 1945)
- Wayland Hilton-Young, "The Choice"# (from Punch, March 19, 1952)
- Andre Maurois. "The War Against the Moon" (from Maurois' The Next Chapter: The War Against the Moon, 1927)
- Ralph Robin, "Pleasant Dreams"@ (from Galaxy Science Fiction, October 1951)
- H. B. Fyfe, "Manners of the Age"@ (from Galaxy Science Fiction, March 1952)
- Fredric Brown, "The Weapon"*@ (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1951)
- Jack London, "The Scarlet Plague"@ (from London Magazine, June 1912)
- Robert Abernathy, "Heritage" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, June 1952)
- Arthur C. Clarke, "History Lesson"* (from Startling Stories, May 1949)
- Lester del Rey, "Instinct"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, January 1952)
- Peter Phillips, "Counter Charm" (first published in 1951; no further information given)
10) Science Fiction Adventures in Dimension (1952) (also published as Adventures in Dimension) (The Grayson & Grayson edition, Adventures in Dimension, reprinted 13 of the 23 stories marked * and the Berkley Medallion edition reprinted 12 of the 23 stories marked @)
- Groff Conklin, 'Introduction"
- Theodore Sturgeon, "Yesterday Was Monday"@ (from Unknown Fantasy Fiction, June 1941)
- William L. Bade, "Ambition"@ (from Galaxy Science Fiction, October 1951)
- Murray Leinster, "The Middle of the Week After Next"@ (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, August 1952; the first of two stories about Thaddeus Binder)
- Lester del Rey, "...And It Comes Out Here"@ (from Galaxy Science Fiction, February 1951)
- "Geroge Whitley" (A. Betram chandler), "Castaway" (from Weird Tales, November 1947)
- Marion Gross, "The Good Provider" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September 1952)
- Amelia Reynolds Long, "Reverse Phylogeny"* (from Astounding Stories, June 1937)
- William Sell, "Other Tracks"@ (from Astounding Science-Fiction, October 1938)
- Day Keene "'What So Proudly We Hail...'"* (from Imagination, December 1950)
- Ray Bradbury, "Night Meeting"*@ (first published in Bradbury's The Martian Chronicles, 1950)
- H. L. Gold, "Perfect Murder" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, March 1940)
- "E. M. Hull" (A. E. van Vogt and E. Mayne Hull), "The Flight That Failed'*@ (from Astounding Science-Fiction, December 1942)
- 'Lewis Radgett" (Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore), "Endowment Policy"*@ (from Astounding Science-Fiction, August 1943)
- Raymond F. Jones, "Pete Can Fix It"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, February 1947)
- "Peter Cartur" (Peter Grainger), "The Mist"*@ (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September 1952)
- Miles J. Breuer, M. D., "The Gostak and the Doshes"* (from Amazing Stories, March 1930)
- Isaac Asimov, "What If..."*@ (from Fantastic, Summer 1952)
- John D. MacDonald, 'Ring Around the Redhead"* (from Startling Stories, November 1948)
- Alan E. Nourse, "Tiger by the Tail"*@ (from Galaxy Science Fiction, November 1951)
- William F. Temple, "Way of Escape"* (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, June 1948)
- "Roger Flint Young" (Peter Grainger), "Suburban Frontiers" (from Astounding Science Fiction, February 1950)
- Fritz Leiber, "The Business of Killing"@ (from Astounding Science Fiction, September 1944)
- Frank Belknap Long, "To Follow Knowledge"* (from Astounding Science-Fiction, December 1942)
11) The Supernatural Reader, edited with Lucy Conklin (1953) (The World/WDL Books edition contains 19 of 27 stories marked *)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Herb Paul, "The Angel with Purple Hair"* (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, December 1950)
- F. Marion Crawford, "For Blood Is the Life"* (from Collier's, December 16, 1905)
- Richard Hughes, "The Stranger"* (from Hughes' 1926 collection A Moment of Time)
- "Stephen Grendon" (August Derleth), "Mrs. Manifold" (from the 1949 anonymously edited -- by Donald A. Wollheim -- anthology The Girl with the Hungry Eyes and Other Stories, said to be the first all-original science fiction anthology)
- A. E. Coppard, "Piffingcap"* (from Coppard's 1921 collection Adam and Eve and Pinch Me)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "Shottle Bop" (from Unknown Fantasy Fiction, February 1941)
- H. H. Munro ("Saki"), "Gabriel-Ernest"* (from The Westminster Gazette, May 29, 1909)
- Fitz-James O'Brien, "The Lost Room"* (from Harper's Magazine, September 1858)
- James S. Hart, "The Traitor"* (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Fall 1950)
- Charles R. Tanner, "Angus MacAuliffe and the Gowden Tooch" (from Other Worlds Science Stories, March 1951)
- Babette Rosmond and Lenard M. Lake, "Are You Run-Down, Tired --" (from Unknown Worlds, October 1942)
- May Sinclair, "The Nature of the Evidence" (from Fortune, May 1923)
- Mary Elizabeth Counselman, "The Tree's Wife"* (from Weird Tales, March 1950)
- E. Nesbit, 'The Pavilion"* (from The Strand Magazine, November 15, 1915)
- Edgar Pangborn, "Pickup for Olympus"* (original to this anthology)
- H. F. Heard, "The Swap" (from the author's 1944 collection The Great Fog and Other Weird Tales)
- Ray Bradbury, "The Tombling Day"* (from Shenandoah, Autumn 1952)
- Nigel Kneale, "Minuke"* (from the author's 1949 collection Tomato Cain and Other Stories)
- John Collier, "Bird of Prey"* (from the author's 1941 collection Presenting Moonshine)
- David H. Keller, "The Thing in the Cellar"* (from Weird Tales, March 1932)
- Will Jenkins ("Murray Leinster"), "The Devil's Henchman"* (from Argosy, May 1952)
- M. R. James. "Lost Hearts" (from Pall Mall Magazine, December 1895)
- Lord Dunsany, "Thirteen at Table"* (from the author's 1916 collection Tales of Wonder)
- Philip Fisher, "Lights"* (from Argosy All-Story Weekly, July 15, 1922)
- Harold Lawlor, "The Silver Highway" (from Weird Tales, May 1946)
- Ambrose Bierce, "The Moonlit Road"* (from Cosmopolitan, January 1907)
- E. M. Forster, "The Curate's Friend"* (first published in 1907, source unknown)
12) Crossroads in Time (1953)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Hal Clement, "Assumption Justified" (from Astounding Science Fiction, October 1946)
- Joseph E. Kelleam, "The Eagles Gather" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, April 1942)
- Murray Leinster, "The Queen's Astrologer" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, October 1949)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "'Derm Fool'" (from Unknown Fantasy Fiction, March 1940)
- Clifford D. Simak, "Courtesy" (from Astounding Science Fiction, August 1951)
- Lee Cahn, "Secret" (from Astounding Science Fiction, January 1953)
- Margaret St. Clair, "Thirsty God" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, March 1953, under the pen name "Idris Seabright")
- Fritz Leiber, "The Mutant's Brother" (from Astoundng Science-Fiction, August 1943)
- F. L. Wallace, "Student Body" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, March 1953)
- J. T. McIntosh, "Made in U.S.A." (from Galaxy Science Fiction, April 1953)
- Chad Oliver, "Technical Advisor" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, February 1953)
- Katherine MacLean, "Feedback" (from Astounding Science Fiction, July 1951)
- P. Schuyler Miller, "The Cave" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, January 1943)
- George O. Smith, "Vocation" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1945)
- A. Macfadyen, Jr., "The Time Decelerator" (from Astounding Stories, July 1936)
- Jerome Bixby, "Zen" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, October 1952)
- Horace B. Fyfe, "Let There Be Light" (from If, November 1952)
- W. Norbert (Norbert Weiner), "The Brain" (from Technical Engineering News, April 1952)
13) 6 Great Short Novels of Science Fiction (1954)
- Conklin, "Introduction"
- Stuart Cloete, "The Blast" (from a two-part serial in Collier's, April 1946)
- Robert A. Heinlein, "Coventry" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, July 1940; part of the author's Future History series; nominated for the 2016 Retro Hugo award for Best Novella)
- Murray Leinster, "The Other World" (from Startling Stories, November 1949)
- James Blish, "Surface Tension" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, August 1952; significantly rewritten from a 1942 story, "Sunken Universe"; part of the author's Pantropy series)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "Maturity" (from Astounding Science Fiction, February 1947)
13) Science Fiction Thinking Machines: Robots, Androids, Computers (1954) (The Bantam edition reprints 12 of the 22 stories, marked *)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- S. Fowler Wright, "Automata: 1" (from Weird Tales, September 1929; one-third of the novelette)
- Ambrose Bierce, "Moxon's Master" (from the San Francisco Examiner, April 16, 1899)
- Isaac Asimov, "Robbie"* (from Super Science Stories, September 1940, as "Strange Playfellow"; winner of the 2016 Retro Hugo for Best Short Story)
- Raymond Z. Gallun, "The Scarab" (from Astounding Stories, August 1936)
- Fritz Leiber, "The Mechanical Bride" (original to this anthology)
- Herbert Goldstone, "Virtuoso"* (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Fecruary 1953)
- S. Fowler Wright, "Automata:2" (from Weird Tales, September 1929; the second third of the novelette)
- Eric Frank Russell, "Boomerang"* (from Fantastic Universe, August-September 1953, as "A Great Deal of Power")
- William Tenn, "The Jester"* (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, August 1951)
- Karel Capek, "R.U.R." (a play first produced in Prague on January 26, 1921; the English version opened on October 9, 1922)
- Clifford D. Simak, "Skirmish"* (from Amazing Stories, December 1950)
- Michael Shaara, "Soldier Boy" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1953)
- S. Fowler Wright, "Automata: 3" (from Weird Tales, September 1929; the final third of the novelette)
- Alan Bloch, "Men Are Different"* (original to this anthology)
- Chan Davis, "Letter to Ellen"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, June 1947)
- Wallace West, "Sculptors of Life" (from Astounding Science Fiction, December 1939)
- Theodore Sturgeon, 'The Golden Egg"* (from Unknown Fantasy Fiction, August 1941)
- Wallace Macfarlane, "Dead End"* (from Galaxy Science Fiction, January 1952)
- Hal Clement, "Answer" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1947)
- Poul Anderson, "Sam Hall"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, August 1953; set in the same universe as the author's 1964 novel Three Worlds to Conquer)
- Walter M. Miller, Jr., "Dumb Waiter"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1952)
- Robert Sherman Towne, "Problem for Emmy"* (from Startling Stories, June 1952)
- "Selected List of Tales About Robots, Androids, and Computers"
14) A Way Home (1955; by Theodore Sturgeon, edited by Conklin; a collection of 11 stories; all further editions of this title contains 9 of the 11 stories marked *)
15) Science Fiction Adventures in Mutation (1955) (The Berkley edition reprints 14 of the 20 stories, marked *)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- "Unite and Conquer"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, October 1948)
- "Special Aptitude"* (from Other Worlds Science Stories, March 1951 as "Last Laugh")
- "Mewhu's Jet"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, November 1946; Conklin included this story in his anthology Big Book of Science Fiction and in his other Sturgeon collection Thunder and Roses)
- "Hurricane Trio"* (from Galaxy Science Fiction, April 1955)
- "...And My Fear Is Great..." (from Beyond Fantasy Fiction, July 1953; nominated for the 2004 Retro Hugo Award for Best Novella; Conklin also included this story in his other Sturgeon collection Thunder and Roses)
- "Minority Report" (from Astounding Science Fiction, June 1949; Conklin also included this story in his other Sturgeon collection Thunder and Roses)
- "The Hurkle Is a Happy Beast"* (from The Magazine of Fantasy, Fall 1949; Conklin also included this story in his anthology The Science Fiction Galaxy and in his other Sturgeon collection Thunder and Roses)
- "Thunder and Roses"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, November 1947; Conklin included this as the title story in his other Sturgeon collection)
- "Bulkhead"* (from Galaxy Science Fiction, March 1955 as "Who?"; nominated for a 1956 Hugo Award for Best Novelette; Conklin included this story in his other Sturgeon collection Thunder and Roses)
- "Tiny and the Monster"* (from Astoundng Science Fiction, May 1947; Conkin included this story in his anthology Invaders of Earth and in his other Sturgeon collection Thunder and Roses)
- "A Way Home"* (from Amazing Stories, April-May 1953; Conklin included this story in his other Sturgeon anthology Thunder and Roses)
15) Science Fiction Adventures in Mutation (1955) (The Berkley edition reprints 14 of the 20 stories, marked *)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Stephen Arr, "Chain of Command"* (from Galaxy Science Fiction, May 1954)
- James Blish, "Battle of the Unborn"* (from Future Combined with Science Fiction Stories, May/June 1950)
- Miles J. Breuer, M.D., "The Hungry Guinea Pig" (from Amazing Stories, January 1930)
- Fredric Brown, "Keep Out"* (from Amazing Stories, March 1953)
- Ed M. Clinton, Jr., "The Small World of M-75" (from If, July 1954)
- Theodore R. Cogswell, "Limiting Factor"* (from Galaxy Science Fiction, April 1954)
- "David Grinnell" (Donald A. Wollheim), "The Lysenko Maze"* (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, July 1954)
- E. Mayne Hull, "The Patient"* (from Unknown Worlds, October 1943)
- Henry Kuttner (with C. L. Moore, uncredited?), "Cold War"* (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, October 1949; part of the author's Hogben series)
- Murray Leinster, "Skag with the Queer Head"* (from Marvel Science Fiction, August 1951)
- Emmett McDowell, "Veiled Island" (from Astounding Science Fiction, January 1946)
- Kris Neville. "Experimental Station" (original to this anthology -- sort of; this is; this is an extensively reworked version of "The First", Super Science Stories, September 1950)
- Alan E. Nourse, "Family Resemblance"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1953)
- Mack Reynolds, "And Thou Beside Me" * (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April 1954)
- Eric Frank Russell, "This One's on Me"* (from Nebula Science Fiction, Number 4, June 1953)
- Margaret St. Clair, "Age of Prophecy" (from Future Combined with Science Fiction Stories, March 1951)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "The Love of Heaven"* (from Astounding Science Fiction, November 1948)
- F. L. Wallace, "The Impossible Voyage Home" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, August 1954)
- James White, "The Conspirators"* (from New Worlds Science Fiction, #24, June 1954)
- S. Fowler Wright, "The Better Choice"* (original to this anthology?)
- ""Selected List of Tales About Mutants and Changlings"
16) Science Fiction Terror Tales (1955)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Ray Bradbury, "Punishment Without Crime" (from Other Worlds Science Stories, March 1950; part of the author's Marionettes, Inc. series)
- Fredric Brown, "Arena" (from Astounding Science Fiction, June 1944; Conklin had previously used this story in Big Book of Science Fiction)
- Robert Sheckley, "The Leech" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, December 1952)
- Richard Matheson, "Through Channels" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April 1951)
- Peter Phillips, "Lost Memory" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, May 1952)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "Memorial" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1946)
- Margaret St. Clair, "Prott" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, January 1953)
- Isaac Asimov, 'Flies" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 1953)
- Paul Ernst, "The Microsopic Giants" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, October 1936)
- Anthony Boucher, "The Other Inauguration" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, March 1953)
- Alan E. Nourse, "Nightmare Brother" (from Astounding Science Fiction, February 1953)
- Murray Leinster, "Pipeline to Pluto" (from Astounding Science Fiction, August 1945)
- Philip K. Dick, "Imposter" (from Astounding Science Fiction, June 1953)
- Robert a. Heinlein, "They" (from Unknown Fantasy Fiction, April 1941)
- Chad Oliver, "Let Me Live in a House" (from Universe Science Fiction, March 1954)
17) Operation Future (1955)
- Groff Coinklin, "Introduction"
- Theodore Sturgeon, 'The Education of Drusilla Strange" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, March 1954)
- Peter Phillips, "c/o Mr. Makepeace" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, February 1954)
- "John Benyon" ("John Wyndham"), "Technical Slip" (from The Arkham Sampler, Spring 1949)
- "Idris Seabright" (Margaret St. Clair) "Short in the Chest" (from Fantastic Universe, July 1954)
- Murray Leinster, "Cure for a Ylith" (from Startling Stories, Novenber 1949 as "William Fitzgerald")
- Eric Frank Russell, "Exposure" (from Astounding Science Fiction, July 1950)
- Clifford D. Simak, "Worrywart" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, September 1953)
- Lester del Rey, "Day Is Done" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, May 1039)
- Jack Finney, "Quit Zoomin' Those Hands in the Air" (from Collier's, August 4, 1951)
- H. B. Hickey, "Hilda" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September 1952)
- Chad Oliver, "Blood's a Rover" (from Astounding Science Fiction, May 1952)
- Winston K. Marks, 'Call Me Adam" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, February 1954)
- Damon Knight, "Special Delivery" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, April 1954)
- Robert F. Young, "The Garden in the Forest" (from Astounding Science Fiction, September 1953)
- Malcolm Jameson, "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, December 1941, under the pen name "Colin Keith")
- Katherine MacLean, "Games" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, March 1953)
- Jerome Bixby, "The Holes Around Mars" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, January, 1954)
- "Lewis Padgett" (Henry Kuttner and C. L. Moore), "Project" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1947)
- Isaac Asimov, "The Fun They Had" (from NEA Service, "Boys and Girls page", December 1951)
18) Thunder and Roses (collection of 8 stories by Theodore Sturgeon and edited by Conklin; all stories were included in Conklin's previous Sturgeon collection A Way Home; ISFDb includes this as a separate book and I am following their lead)
19) The Graveyard Reader (1958)
- "Mewhu's Jet" (from Astounding Science Fiction, November 1946; Conklin also included this story in his anthology Big Book of Science Fiction)
- "...And My Fear Is Great..." (from Beyond Fantasy Fiction, July 1953; nominated for the 2004 Retro Hugo Award for Best Novella)
- "Minority Report" (from Astounding Science Fiction, June 1949)
- "The Hurkle Is a Happy Beast" (from The Magazine of Fantasy, Fall 1949; Conklin also included this story in his anthology The Science Fiction Galaxy)
- "Thunder and Roses" (from Astounding Science Fiction, November 1947)
- "Bulkhead" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, March 1955 as "Who?"; nominated for the 1956 Hugo for Best Novelette)
- "Tiny and the Monster" (from Astounding Science Fiction, May 1947; Conklin also included this story in his anthology Invaders of Earth)
- "A Way Home" (from Amazing Stories, April-May 1953)
19) The Graveyard Reader (1958)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Ray Bradbury, "The Screaming Woman" (from Today, May 27, 1951; part of Bradbury's GreenTown series)
- Ambrose Bierce, "A Bottomless Grave" (from the San Francisco Examiner, February 26, 1888)
- Richard Hughes, "The Cart" (from the author's 1926 collection A Moment in Time)
- Henry Kuttner, "The Graveyard Rats" (from Weird Tales, March 1936)
- Roald Dahl, 'Skin" (from The New Yorker, May 17, 1952)
- Mary Elizabeth Counselman, "Night Court" (from Weird Tales, March 1953)
- Charles Beaumont, "Free Dirt" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, May 1955)
- Wallace West, "Listen, Children, Listen!" (from Fantastic Universe, October-November 1953)
- John Collier, "Special Delivery" (from the author's 1941 collection Presenting Moonshine)
- Fitz-James O'Brien, "The Child That Loved a Grave" (from Harper's, April 1861)
- H. P. Lovecraft, "The Outsider" (from Weird Tales, April 1926)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "The Graveyard Reader" (from Science Fantasy, #31, October 1958)
20) Br-r-r! (1959)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Theodore Sturgeon, "It" (from Unknown, August 1940)
- Charles Beaumont, "Nursery Rhyme" (from the author's 1957 collection The Hunger and Other Stories)
- Will F. Jenkins, "Doomsday Deferred" (from The Satuday Evening Post, September 24, 1949 under the pen name "Murray Leinster")
- Horace L. Gold, "Warm, Dark Places" (from Unknown Fantasy Fiction, October 1940)
- Isaac Asimov and "James MacCreigh" (Frederik Pohl), "Legal Rites" (from Weird Tales, September 1950)
- Algernon Blackwood, "An Egyptian Hornet" (from the author's 1917 collection Day and Night Stories; first published in 1915, source unknown)
- "Idris Seabright" (Margaret St. Clair) "White Goddess" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, July 1956)
- Ray Bradbury, "The Handler" (from Weird Tales, January 1947)
- Roald Dahl, "The Sound Machine" (from The New Yorker, September 17, 1949)
- David H. Keller, M.D., "The Worm" (from Amazing Stories, March 1929)
21) Four for the Future (1959)
- Poul Anderson. "Enough Rope" (from Astounding Science Fiction, july 1953; part of the author's Wing Alak series)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "The Claustrophile" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, August 1956)
- Henry Kuttner (with C. L. Moore, uncredited), "The Children's Hour" Astounding Science Fiction, March 1944 as by "Lawrence O'Donnell")
- Eric Frank Russell, "Plus X" (from Astounding Science Fiction, June 1956)
22) Ten Great Mysteries by Edgar Allan Poe (1960, edited by Groff Conklin)
23) 13 Great Stories of Science Fiction (1960)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" (first published in Graham's Lady's and Gentleman's Magazine, April 1841; part of the author's Chevalier Dupin series)
- "The Purloined Letter" (first published in The Gift, September 1844; part of the author's Chevalier Dupin series)
- "The Tell-Tale Heart" (first published in The Pioneer, January 1843; Conklin included this story in his anthology Twisted)
- "The Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar" (first published in The Broadway Journal, December 20, 1845; Conklin included this story in his anthology Great Science Fiction About Doctors)
- ""The Pit and the Pendulum" (first published in The Gift, a Christmas and New Year's Present for 1843, October 1842; Conklin included this story in his anthology In the Grip of Terror)
- "A Tale of the Ragged Mountains" (first published in The Baltimore Weekly Sun, March 23, 1844; Coinklin included this story in his anthology The Best of Science Fiction)
- "A Descent Into the Maelstrom" (first published in Graham's Lady's and Gentleman's Magazine, May 1841)
- "The Black Cat" (first published in United States Saturday Post, August 19, 1843)
- "'Thou Art the Man'" (first published in Godey's Lady's Book, November 1844)
- "Metzengerstein" (first published in Saturday Courier, January 14, 1842)
23) 13 Great Stories of Science Fiction (1960)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Algis Budrys, "The War Is Over" (from Astounding Science Fiction, February 1957)
- Poul Anderson, "The Light" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, March 1957)
- John Wyndham, "Compassion Circuit" (from Fantastic Universe, December 1954)
- Wyman Guin, "Volpla" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, May 1956)
- Arthur C. Clarke, "Silence, Please!" (from Science Fantasy, #2, Winter 1950: part of the author's Tales from the White Hart series)
- William T. Powers, "Allegory" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1953)
- Alan Nelson, "Soap Opera" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April 1953)
- William Morrison, "Shipping Clerk" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, June 1952)
- G. C. Edmondson, "Technological Retreat" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, May 1956)
- Damon Knight, "The Analogues" (from Astounding Science Fiction, January 1952; the first story in the author's The Analogues series)
- Lion Miller, "The Available Data on the Worp Reaction" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September 1953)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "The Skills of Xanadu" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1956)
- Richard Gehman, "The Machine" (first published in 1946. source unknown)
24) Six Great Short Science Fiction Novels (1960)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Isaac Asimov, "Galley Slave" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, December 1957; a Susan Calvin story)
- Judith Merril, "Project Nursemaid" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1955)
- Clifford D. Simak, "Final Gentleman" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, January 1960)
- Algis Budrys, "Chain Reaction" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1957)
- Damon Knight, 'Rule Golden" (from Science Fiction Adventures, May 1954)
- Katherine MacLean, "Incommunicado" (from Astounding Science Fiction, June 1950)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Isaac Asimov, "What If..." (from Fantastic, Summer 1952; Conklin included this in a previous anthology, Science Fiction Adventures in Dimension)
- Eric Temple Bell ("John Taine"), "The Ultimate Catalyst" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, June 1939; Conklin included this in a previous anthology, The Best of Science Fiction)
- Miles J. Breuer, M.D., "The Gostak and the Doshes" (from Amazing Stories, March 1930; Conklin included this in a previous anthology, Science Fiction Adventures in Dimension)
- Arthur C. Clarke, 'Summertime on Icarus" (from Vogue, June 1960)
- Ralph S. Cooper, "The Neutrino Bomb" (previously published in 1961, source unknown)
- Chan Davis, "Last Year's Grave Undug" (original to this anthology)
- J. B. S. Haldane, "The Gold-Makers" (previously published in 1932, source unknown)
- Julian Huxley, "The Tissue-Culture King" (from The Yale Review, April 1926; Conklin included this in a previous anthology, The Best of Science Fiction)
- Willy Ley, "A Martian Advenure" (previously published in 1937 under the pen name "Robert Willey, source unknown)
- James McConnell, "Learning Theory" (from If, December 1957)
- Chad Oliver, "Mother of Necessity" (from the author's 1955 collection Another Kind)
- John R. Pierce, "John Sze's Future" (original to this anthology)
- Robert S. Richardson, "Kid Anderson" (previously published in 1957, source unknown; may have been published under the author's "Philip Lathan" pen name)
- Dr. Louis N. Ridenour, 'Pilot Lights of the Apocalypse" (previously published in 1946, source unknown)
- Leo Szilard, "Report on 'Grand Central Terminal'" (from the author's 1961 collection The Voice of the Dolhins, and Other Stories; originally written in 1948. source unknown)
- Norbert Weiner, 'The Brain" (from Technical Engineering News, April 1952, under the pen name "W. Norbert"; Conklin included this in a previous anthology, Crossroads in Time)
26) Twisted (1962) (The Horwitz edition contains 10 of the 15 stories, marked *)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Ray Bradbury, "The Playground" (from the author's 1952 collection The Illustrated Man)
- George Langelaan, "The Other Hand" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1961)
- David H. Keller, M.D., "The Thing in the Cellar" (from Weird Tales, March 1932; Conklin included this in a previous anthology The Supernatural Reader)
- Guy de Maupassant, "The Diary of a Madman" (first published in France in Le Gaulois in 1895; first English publication in 1895, source unknown; Conklin included this in a previous anthology In the Grip of Terror)
- Stephen Crane, "The Upturned Face" (from Ainslee's Magazine, March 5, 1900; Conklin included this in a previous anthology In the Grip of Terror)
- William W. Stuart, 'The Little Man Who Wasn't Quite" (from Galaxy Magazine, December 1961)
- Will F. Jenkins ("Murray Leinster") "Night Drive" (first published in 1950, source unknown; Conklin include this in a previous anthology In the Grip of Terror)
- Walter M. Miller, Jr., "The Song of Marya" (from Venture Science Fiction Magazine, March 1957, as "Vengeance for Nikolai")
- 'Stephen Grendon" August Derleth), "Mrs. Manifold" (from the anonymously edited -- by Donald A. Wollheim -- 1949 anthology The Girl with the Hungry Eyes, and Other Stories; Conklin included this in a previous anthology The Supernatural Reader)
- Ambrose Bierce, "A Holy Terror" (from Wasp, December 23, 1882)
- Eric Frank Russell, "Impulse" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, September 1938; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Invaders of Earth)
- Margaret St. Clair, "Brenda" (from Weird Tales, March 1945)
- Edgar Allan Poe. "The Tell-Tale Heart" (from The Pioneer, January 1983)
- H. P. Lovecraft, "The Shunned House" (first published in a 1928 booklet printed by Paul Cook with a print run of 100 or less. of which only 6 were originally circulated; first major publication in Weird Tales, October 1927)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "The World Well Lost" (from Universe Science Fiction, June 1953)
27) Worlds of When (1962)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Chad Oliver, "Transfusion" (from Astounding Science Fiction, June 1959)
- Fritz Leiber, "Bullet with His Name" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1958)
- Arthur C. Clarke, "Death and the Senator" (from Analog Science Fact -> Fiction, May 1961)
- Mack Reynolds. "Farmer" (Galaxy Magazine, June 1961)
- Margaret St. Clair, "Rations of Tantalus" (from Fantastic Universe, July 1954)
28) Human and Other Beings (1963; edited by "Allen DeGraeff' [Albert P. Blaustein] with Groff Conklin as an uncredited "subeditor)
- Groff Conklin, 'Science Fiction and Ideas" (forward)
- "Allen DeGraeff" (Albert P. Blaustein), "Preface"
- Fredrik Brown and Mack Reynolds, "Dark Interlude" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, January 1951)
- Richard Wilson, "Love" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 1952)
- Richard Wilson, "Honor" (from Science Fiction Quarterly, February 1956)
- Raymond E. Banks, "Double Dome" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, May 1957)
- Ray Bradbury, "Way in the Middle of the Air" (from the author's 1950 collection The Martian Chronicles)
- Ray Bradbury, "The Other Foot" (from New Story Magazine, March 1951)
- Evelyn E. Smith, "The Vilbar Party" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, January 19550
- J. T. mcIntosh, "Made in U.S.A. (from Galaxy Science Fiction, April 1953: Conklin included this in a previous anthology Crossroads in Time)
- George P. Elliott, "The NRACP" (from The Hudson Review, Fall 1949)
- Theodore R. Cogswell, "The Big Stink" (from If, July 1954)
- William Tenn, "Down Among the Dead Men" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, June 1954)
- Leigh Brackett, "All the Colors of the Rainbow" (from Venture Science Fiction Magazine, November 1957)
- Frederik Pohl and C. M. Kornbluth, "The World of Myrion Flowers" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1961)
- Frederik Pohl, "My Lady Green Sleeves" (from the author's 1957 collection The Case Against Tomorrow)
- Robert Sheckley, "Holdout" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, December 1957)
- Eric Frank Russell, "Test Piece" (from Other Worlds Science Stories, March 1951; Conklin included this story in a previous collection Omnibus of Science Fiction)
29) Fifty Short Science Fiction Tales (1963; edited by Isaac Asimov and Groff Conklin)
- Isaac Asimov, "Introduction 1"
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction 2"
- Poul Anderson, "Ballarde of an Artificial Satellite", (rom The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1958)
- Isaac Asimov, "The Fun They Had" (from NEA Service, Boys and Girls page, December 1951; Conklin included this story in a previous collection Operation Future)
- Alan Bloch, "Men Are Different" (from Conklin's 1954 anthology Science Fiction Thinking Machines)
- Anthony Bucher, "The Ambassadors" (from Startling Stories, June 1953)
- Fredric Brown, "The Weapon" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1951; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Omnibus of Science Fiction)
- T. P. Cravan, "he Random Sample" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April 1953)
- Cleve Cartmill, "Oscar" (from Unknown Fantasy Fiction, February 1941)
- "Peter Cartur" (Peter Grainger), "The Mist" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September 1952; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Science Fiction Adventures in Dimension)
- James Causey, "Tething Ring" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, January 1953)
- Arthur C. Clarke, "The Haunted Space Suit" (from New Worlds Science Fiction, #73, November 1958 as "Who's There?")
- Mildred Clingerman, "Stair Trick" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, August 1952)
- Roger Dee, "Unwelcome Tenant" (from Planet Stories, Summer 1950)
- Arthur Feldman, "The Mathematicians" (from Amazing Stories, October-November 1953)
- Jack Finney, "The Third Level" (from Collier's, October 7, 1950)
- Stuart Friedman, "Beautiful, Beautiful, Beautiful" (from Future Science Fiction Stories, March 1952)
- Edward Gendron, "The Figure" (from Astounding Science Fiction, July 1947; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology A Treasury of Science Fiction)
- "David Grinnell" (Donald A. Wollheim), "The Rag Thing" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1951; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Omnibus of Science Fiction)
- Marion Gross, "The Good Provider" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September 1952; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Science Fiction Adventures in Dimension)
- Robert A. Heinlein, "Columbus Was a Dope" (from Startling Stories, May 1947)
- Albert Hernhuter, "Texas Week" (from Fantastic Universe, January 1954)
- H. B. Hickey, "Hilda" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September 1952: Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Operation Future)
- W. Hilton-Young, "The Choice" (from Punch, March 19, 1952; Conklin inclulded this story in a previous anthology Omnibus of Science Fiction)
- Damon Knight, "Not with a Bang" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Winter-Spring 1950; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Big Book of Science Fiction)
- C. M. Kornbluth, "The Altar at Midnight" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, November 1952)
- Fritz Leiber, "A Bad Day for Sales" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1953)
- Jack Lewis, "Who's Cribbing?" (from Startling Stories, January 1953)
- John D. MacDonald, "Spectator Sport" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, February 1950; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Omnibus of Science Fiction)
- Avro Manhattan, "The Cricket Ball" (from Lilliput, 1955, date not given)
- Winston K. Marks, "Double-Take" (from Science Fiction Adventures, December 1953 as "Ken Winney)
- John P. McKnight, "Prolog" (from The Magazine of Fantasy ans Science Fiction, August 1951)
- Lion Miller, "The Available Data on the Worp Reaction" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September 1953; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology 13 Stories of Great Science Fiction)
- Alan Nelson, "Narapoia" (from What's Doing, April 1948; the first of two stories about Dr. Manly J. Departure)
- Alan E. Nourse, "Tiger by the Tail" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, November 1951; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Adventures in Dimension)
- Peter Phillips, "Countercharm" (first pulished in 1951, source unknown; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Omnibus of Science Fiction)
- Arthur Porges, "The Fly" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September 1952)
- Mack Reynolds, "The Business, As Usual" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 1952)
- Frank M. Robinson, "Two Weeks in August" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, February 1951)
- Edward G. Robles, Jr., "See?" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, June 1954)
- Eric Frank Russell, "Appointment at Noon" (from Amazing Stories, March 1954)
- James H. Schmitz, "We Don't Want Any Trouble" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, June 1953)
- Howard Schoenfeld, "Built Down Logically" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, December 1951)
- "Idris Seabright" (Margaret St. Clair), "An Egg a Month from All Over" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1952)
- Robert Sheckley, "The Perfect Woman" (from Amazing Stories, December 1953-January 1954)
- Walt Sheldon, 'The Hunters" (from Startling Stories, March 1952)
- Evelyn E. Smith,"The Martian and the Magician" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, November 1952)
- Will Stanton, "Barney" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, February 1951)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "Talent" (from Beyond Fantasy Fiction, September 1953)
- William Tenn, "Project Hush" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, February 1954)
- A. E. van Vogt, "The Great Judge" (from Fantasy Book, No. 3, July 1948)
- Ralph Williams, "Emergency Landing" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, July 1940; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Big Book of Science Fiction)
- S. Fowler Wright, "Obviously Suicide" (first published in 1951, source unknown)
- Karen Anderson, "Six Haiku" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, July 1962)
30) Great Science Fiction About Doctors (1963) (edited by Noah D. Fabricant, M.D. and Groff Conklin)
- Noah D. Fabricant and Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Miles J. Breuer, M.D., "The Man Without an Appetite" (first published in Czech magazine Bratrsky Vestnikcirca 1916)
- Arthur C. Clarke, "Out of the Cradle, Endlessly Orbiting" (from Dude, March 1959)
- Clifton Dance, Jr., M.D., "The Brothers" (first published in 1952, source unknown)
- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, M.D., "The Great Keinplatz Experiment" (from Belgravia, July 1885; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology The Best of Science Fiction)
- David Harold Fink, M.D., "Compound B" (from Raymond J. Healy's 1954 anthology 9 Tales of Space and Time)
- Nathaniel Hawthorne, "Rappaccini's Daughter" (from The United States Magazine and Democratic Review, December 1844)
- David H. Keller, M.D. "The Pychophonic Nurse" (from Amazing Stories, November 1928)
- C. M. Kornbluth, 'The Little Black Bag" (from Astounding Science Fiction, Julu 1950; winner of the 2001 Retro Hugo Award for Best Novelette)
- Murray Leinster, "Ribbon in the Sky" (from Astounding Science Fiction, June 1957; the first in the author's Med Service series)
- Winston K. Marks, "Mate in Two Moves" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, May 1954)
- William Morrison, "Bedside Manner" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, May 1954)
- Alan Nelson, "The Chopdropper" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, January 1955; the second story about Dr. Manly J. Departure)
- Alan E. Nourse, M.D., "Family Resemblance" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1952: Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Science Fiction Adventures in Mutation)
- Edgar Allan Poe, "Facts in the Case of M. Valdemar" (from Broadway Journal, December 20, 1845; Conklin included this story in the collection Ten Great Mysteries by Edgar Allan Poe)
- Arthur Porge, "Emergency Operation" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, May 1956; the second story in the author's Ruum series)
- "J. R. Shango" (Clifton Dance), "A Matter of Ethics" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, November 1954)
- F. L. Wallace, "Bolden's Pets" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, October 1955)
- J. A. Winter, M.D., "Expedition Marcy" (from Astounding Science Fiction, November 1948; the first story in the author's Expedition series)
31) Great Stories of Space Travel (1963)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Lester del Rey, "The Wings of Night" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, March 1942; Conkin included this story in a previous anthology Big Book of Science Fiction)
- Jerome Bixby, "The Holes Around Mars" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, January 1954; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Operation Future)
- Ray Bradbury, "Kaleidoscope" (from Thrilling Wonder Stories, October 1949; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Omnibus of Science Fiction)
- Jack Vance, "I'll Build Your Dream Castle" (from Astoundng Science Fiction, September 1947)
- A. E. van Vogt, "Far Centaurus" (from Astounding Science Fiction, January 1944)
- Murray Leinster, "Propagandist" (from Astounding Science Fiction, August 1947; Conklin included this story in a previous collection Possible Worlds of Science Fiction)
- Damon Knight, "Cabin Boy" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, September 1951)
- Arthur C. Clarke, "A Walk in the Dark" (from Between Time and Terror, 1950, no date given; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Possible Worlds of Science fiction)
- Isaac Asimov, "Blind Alley" (from Astounding Science Fiction, March 1945; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology The Best of Science Fiction)
- Poul Anderson, "The Helping Hand" (from Astounding Science Fiction, May 1950; nominated for the 2001 Retro Hugo Award for Best Novelette; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Possible Worlds of Science Fiction)
- Eric Frank Russell, "Allamagoosa" (from Astoundng Science Fiction, May 1955; winner of the Hugo Award for Best Short Story)
32) 17 X Infinity (1963)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Hollis Alpert, "The Simian Problem" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, July 1960)
- Isaac Asimov, "Strikebreaker" (from Science Fiction Stories, January 1957 as "Male Strikebreaker")
- Ray Bradbury, "Come Into My Cellar" (from Galaxy Magazine, October 1962)
- Hal Draper, "MS Fnd in a Lbry" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, December 1961)
- Howard Fast, "Cato the Martian" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 1960)
- Henry Gregor Felson, "The Spaceman Cometh" (from Collier's, November 11, 1955)
- E. M. Forster, "The Machine Stops" (from Oxford and Cambridge Review, November 1909; Conklin include this story in a previous anthology The Science Fiction Galaxy)
- Richard Goggin, "Frances Harkins" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, December 1952)
- Herbert Gold, "The Day They Got Boston" (from Metronome, January 1961)
- Frank Herbert, "A-W-F, Unlimited" (from Galaxy Magazine, June 1961)
- Rudyard Kipling, "As Easy as A.B.C." (from The London Magazine, March 1917; nominated 8 times for the Prometheus Hall of Fame from 2006-2014, but always a bridesmaid; Conklin included this story in an earlier anthology The Science Fiction Galaxy)
- Rudyard Kipling, "MacDonough's Song" (poem) (first published in 1912. no source given)
- Alan Nelson, "Silenzia" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September 1953)
- Frederik Pohl, "What To Do Until the Analyst Comes" (from the author's 1956 collection Alternating Currents "Everybody's Happy But Me!")
- "Idris Seabright" (Margaret St. Clair), "Short in the Chest" (from Fantastic Universe, July 1954; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Operation Future)
- Evelyn E. Smith, "The Last of the Spode" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 1953)
- Theodore Sturgeon, 'Never Underestimate" (from If, March 1952; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology Omnibus of Science Fiction)
- William Tenn, "Brooklyn Project" (from Planet Stories, Fall 1948)
33) 12 Great Classics of Science Fiction (1963)
34) Great Detective Stories About Doctors (1964; edited by Groff Conklin and Noah D. Fabricant, M.D.; because this is not an SF anthology, ISFDb does not list the sources for most stories)
- Groff Conklin, 'Introduction"
- Algis Budrys, "Due Process" (from Astounding/Analog Science Fact & Fiction, February 1960)
- Fredrik Brown, "Earthmen Bearing Gifts" (from Galaxy Magazine, June 1960)
- Zenna Henderson, 'Things" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, July 1960)
- George Sumner Albee, "The Top" (first published in 1953, source unknown)
- Poul Anderson, "My Object All Sublime" (from Galaxy Magazine, June 1961)
- Robert Sheckley, "Human Man's Burden" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, September 1956)
- J. F. Bone, "On the Fourth Planet" (from Galaxy Magazine, April 1963)
- Cordwainer Smith, "The Ballad of Lost C'Mell" (from Galaxy Magazine, October 1962)
- Robert F. Young, "Thirty Days Had September" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1957)
- A. Bertram Chandler, "The Cage" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science FictionJune 1957)
- William W. Stuart, "Star-Crossed Lover" (from Galaxy Magazine, April 1962)
- J. I. McIntosh, "Immortality...For Some" (from Astounding/Analog Science Fact & Fiction, March 1960)
34) Great Detective Stories About Doctors (1964; edited by Groff Conklin and Noah D. Fabricant, M.D.; because this is not an SF anthology, ISFDb does not list the sources for most stories)
- Groff Conklin and Noah D. Fbricant, M.D., "Introduction"
- Arnold Bennett, "Midnight in the Grand Bablylon Hotel"
- Lawrence G. Blochman, "Murder in a Motel"
- George Harmon Coxe, "The Doctor Takes a Case"
- Dorothy Canfield Fisher, "The Gift of Oblivion"
- Francis Leo Golden, "The Testimony of Dr. Farnsworth"
- Ben Hecht, "Miracle of the Fifteen Murderers"
- MacKinlay Kantor, "The Grave Grass Quivers"
- Gerald Kersh, "The Eye" (from The Saturday Evening Post, March 2, 1957, as "The Murderer's Eye")
- Rufus King, "The Seven Good Hunters"
- Manuel Komroff. "The Head"
- Helen McCloy, "The Other Side of the Curtain"
- "Wade Miller" (William Miller and Robert Wade), "The Memorial Hour"
- Alan E. Nourse, "The Man in the White Mask"
- Alan Rinehart, "The Mirrored Room"
- Anthony Wynne, "The Cyprian Bees" (from Flynn's Detective Fiction, February 6, 1926)
- Francis Brett Young, "A Bussman's Holiday"
35) Dimension 4 (1964)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "Won't You Walk?" (from Astounding Science Fiction, January 1956)
- E. C. Tubb, "Sense of Proportion" (from Nebula Science Fiction, Number 32, July 1958)
- John D. MacDonald, "Trojan Horse Laught" (from Astounding Science Fiction, August 1949)
- Cleve Cartmill, "Someday We'll Find You" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, December 1942)
36) Five-Odd (1964; also published as Possible Tomorrows)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Isaac Asimov, "The Dead Past" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1956)
- Kingsley Amis, "Something Strange" (from The Spectator, 1960, no date given)
- J. T. McIntosh, "Unit" (from New Worlds Science Fiction, #56, February 1957)
- James H. Schmitz, "Gone Fishing" (from Analog Science Fact -> Fiction, May 1961)
- F. L. Wallace, "Big Ancestor" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, November 1954)
37) 5 Unearthly Visions (1965)
- Eric Frank Russell, "Legwork" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1956; nominated for the 1956 Hugo Award for Best Novelette)
- Walter M. Miller, Jr., "Conditionally Human" (abridged) (from Galaxy Science Fiction, February 1952)
- Raymond Z. Gallun, "Stamped Caution" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, August 1953)
- Damon Knight, "Dio" (from Infinity Science Fiction, September 1957)
- Clifford D. simal, "Shadow World" (from Galaxy Science Fiction. September 1957)
38) Giants Unleashed (1966; also published as Minds Unleashed)
- Groff Conklin, "The Long Limitation of Intelligence" (Introduction)
- Theodore Sturgeon, "Microcosmic God" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, April 1941)
- Richard Ashby, "Commencement Night" (from Astounding Science Fiction, August 1953)
- Arthur C. Clarke, "The Deep Range" (from Argosy [UK], April 1954)
- J. T. McIntosh, "Machine Made" (from New Worlds, #10, Summer 1951)
- Edward Grendon, "Trip One" (from Astounding Science Fiction, July 1949)
- William Tenn, "Venus Is a Man's World" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, Julky 1951)
- Lawrence [sic] Manning, "Good-Bye, Ilha!" (from Judith Merril's 1952 anthology Beyond Human Ken)
- Isaac Asimov, "Misbegotten Missionary" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, November 1950)
- Murray Leinster, "The Ethical Equations" (from Astoundng Science Fiction, June 1945; nominated for a 1996 Retro Hugo Award for Best Short Story; Conklin included this story in a previous anthology A Treasury of Science Fiction)
- Robert A. Heinlein, "Misfit" (from Astounding Science-Fiction, November 1939; part of the author's Future History series)
- Poul Anderson, "The Genius" (from Astounding Science Fiction, December 1948)
- Eric Frank Russell, "Basic Right" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1958)
39) 13 Above the Night (1965)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- J. F. Bone, "Founding Father" (from Galaxy Magazine, April 1962)
- Frank Herbert, "Mating Call" (from Galaxy Magazine, October 1961)
- Fritz Leiber, "Nice Girl with Five Husband" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, April 1951)
- Mack Reynolds, "Prone" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September 1954)
- C. M. Kornbluth, "The Education of Tigress Mccardle" (from Venture Science Fiction Magazine, July 1957)
- Eric Frank Russell, "Now Inhale" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1959)
- Stephen Barr, "The Back of Our Heads" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, July 1958)
- Isaac Asimov, "Button, Button" (from Startling Stories, January 1953)
- Judith Merril, "The Deep Down Dragon" (from Galaxy Magazine, August 1961)
- Avram Davidson and Morton Klass, "The Kappa Nu Nexus" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, August 1961)
- Gordon R. Dickson, 'Idiot Solvant" (from Analog Science Fact -> Science Fiction, January 1962)
- James White, "Counter Security" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, February 1963)
- J. Lincoln Paine, "The Dreistein Case" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 1958)
40) Another Part of the Galaxy (1966)
- Groff Conklin. "Introduction: 'Act III Scene V, Another Part of the Forest'"
- Edgar Pangborn, "The Red Hills of Summer" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September 1959)
- "Paul Ash" (Pauline Ashwell), "Big Sword" (from Astounding Science Fiction,October 1958)
- J. T. McIntosh, "First Lady" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, June 1953)
- J. F. Bone, "Insidekick" (from Galaxy Magazine, February 1959)
- Poul Anderson, "The Live Coward" (from Astounding Science Fiction, June 1956; part of the author's Wing Alak series)
- Eric Frank Russell, "Still Life" (from Astounding Science Fiction, January 1959 as "Study in Still Life")
41) Seven Come Infinity (1966)
- Groff Conklin, "Preface"
- Clifford D. Simak, "The Golden Bugs" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 1960)
- Charles V. De Vet, "Special Feature" (from Astounding Science Fiction, May 1958)
- Eric Frank Russell, "Panic Button" (from Astounding Science Fiction, November 1959)
- Raymond F. Jones, "Discontinuity" (from Astounding Science Fiction, October 1950)
- Murray Leinster, "The Corianus Disaster" (from Science Fiction Stories, May 1960)
- William Tenn, "The Servant Problem" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, April 1955)
- Chad Oliver, "Rite of Passage" (from Astounding Science Fiction, April 1954)
42) Science Fiction Oddities (1966; the Rapp & Whiting editions include 8 of 19 stories in a volume titled Science Fiction Oddities marked *, and 10 of 19 stories in a volume titled Science Fiction Oddities: Second Series marked @)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Alan Arkin, "People Soup"* (from Galaxy Magazine, November 1958)
- Isaac Asimov, "What Is This Thing Called Love?"* (from Amazing Stories, March 1961)
- Stephen Barr, "Callahan and the Wheelies"* (from The Magazine of Fantasy ans Science Fiction, August 1960)
- R. Bretnor, "Mrs. Poppledore's Id"* (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, February 1952)
- Avram Davidson and Sidney Klein, "The Teeth of Despair"* (from The Magazine of Fantasy ans Science Fiction, May 1961)
- G. C. Edmondson, "The Galactic Calabash"* (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, January 1960; part of the author's Mad Friend series)
- H. F. Ellis, "Space-Crime Continuum" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, September 1954)
- Charles L. Harness, "The Chessplayers"* (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1953)
- R. A. Lafferty, "What's the Name of That Town?"* (from Galaxy Magazine, October 1964)
- Fritz Leiber, "Rump-Titty-Titty-Tum-TAH-Tee"@ (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, May 1958; nominated for the 1959 Hugo Award for Best Short Story)
- Robert Lory, "Rundown"@ (from If, May 1963)
- Edward Mackin, "The Trouble with HARRI"@ (from Authentic Science Fiction, #77, February 1957)
- Winston K. Marks, "The Water Eater@" (from Galaxy Science Fiction, June 1953)
- Robert Nathan, "A Pride of Carrots"@ (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, December 1959)
- Gerard E. Neyroud, "The Terra-Venusian War of 1979"@ (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, December 1959)
- Alan E. Nourse, "The Coffn Cure"@ (from Galaxy Science Fiction, April 1957)
- John Novotny, "On Camera"@ (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April 1956)
- John R. Pierce, "See No Evil"@ (original to this anthology)
- Fredrik Pohl, "Punch"@ (from Playboy, June 1961)
44) Seven Trips Through Time and Space (1968)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction"
- Larry Niven, "Flatlander" (from If; March 1967; nominated for the 1968 Nebula Award for Best Novelette)
- Cordwainer Smith, "The Crime and the Glory of Commander Suzdal" (from Amazing Stories, May 1964; part of the author's Instrumentality of Mankind series)
- "Johnathan [sic} Blake MacKenzie" (Randall Garrett), "Overproof" (fom Analog Science Fact -> Fiction, October 1965)
- J. T. MacIntosh, "Poor Planet" (from The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, August 1964)
- Kris Neville, "Shamar's War" (from Galaxy Magazine, February 1964)
- Frank Herbert, "The Tactful Saboteur" (from Galaxy Magazine, October 1964)
- H. Beam Piper, "Ministry of Disturbance" (from Astounding Science Fiction, December 1958)
45) Elsewhere and Elsewhen (1968: the Rapp & Whiting reprint published the book in two volumes: Science Fiction Elsewhen with 4 of the 9 stories marked * and Science Fiction Elsewhere with 5 of the 9 stories marked @)
- Groff Conklin, "Introduction)
- Walt Richmond and Leigh Richman, "Shortstack"* (from Analog Science Fact -> Science Fiction, December 1964; part of the authors' Willy Shorts series)
- Mark Clifton, "How Allied"* (from Astounding Science Fiction,March 1957; part of the author's Ralph Kennedy series)
- J. T. McIntosh, "The Wrong World"* (from Galaxy Magazine, December 1960)
- Allen Kim Lang, "World in a Bottle"* (from Galaxy Magazine, October 1960)
- Cordwainer Smith, "Think Blue, Count Two"@ (from Galaxy Magazine, February 1963; winner of the 1990 Seiun Award for Best Translated Short Story)
- Poul Anderson, "Turning Point"@ (from If, May 1963)
- Michael Shaara, "The Book"@ (from Galaxy Science Fiction, Nevember 1953)
- James H. Schmitz, "Trouble Tide"@ (from Analog Science Fact -> Science Fiction. May 1965; part of the author's The Hub series)
- Donald E. Westlake, "The Earthman's Burden"@ (from Galaxy Magazine, October 1962)
Wow, I had no idea Groff Conklin edited 45 anthologies! I've read maybe a dozen of Conklin's books. I might have six or seven on my shelves that I have't read yet! Great review!
ReplyDeleteI have 1, 2, 9 and 23. I have a bookmark in the midst of 9 right now.
ReplyDeleteOh, and that's one hell of a post, and research, job well done.
ReplyDelete