"Salut Toto ! Salut Chouquette !", voilà les mots prononcés lors de la première rencontre entre un martien et un homme. L'étonnement et l'émerveillement vont être cependant de courte durée. En effet, les petits hommes verts ne sont pas du tout comme nous avions pu les imaginer jusqu'à présent. Malpo
Martiens, go home !
✍ Scribed by Brown, Fredric
- Publisher
- Folio SF
- Year
- 1973
- Tongue
- French
- Weight
- 108 KB
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Enfermé dans une cabane en plein désert, Luke Devereaux, auteur de science-fiction en mal d'invention, invoque désespérément sa muse - de toute évidence retenue ailleurs - quand soudain... on frappe à la porte. Et un petit homme vert, goguenard, apostrophe Luke d'un désinvolte « Salut Toto ! ».
Un milliard de Martiens, hâbleurs, exaspérants, mal embouchés, d'une familiarité répugnante, révélant tous les secrets, clamant partout la vérité, viennent d'envahir la Terre. Mais comment s'en débarrasser ?
Fredric Brown (1906-1972) a exercé à peu près tous les métiers avant de débuter dans la littérature par des romans policiers. Ses nouvelles, très nombreuses et aussi cotées que ses romans, sont de petits bijoux d'humour et d'invention qui le placent parmi les auteurs cultes de la science-fiction américaine.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
Its 1964, and a billion Martians suddenly kwimmed to Earth. Theres one Martian for every three people on the planet. Theyre annoying but your fist goes straight through them, since theyre essentially projections that can talk. And the most annoying about them is that they always tell the truth.
Its 1964, and a billion Martians suddenly kwimmed to Earth. Theres one Martian for every three people on the planet. Theyre annoying but your fist goes straight through them, since theyre essentially projections that can talk. And the most annoying about them is that they always tell the truth.
It’s 1964, and a billion Martians suddenly ’kwimmed’ to Earth. There’s one Martian for every three people on the planet. They’re annoying but your fist goes straight through them, since they’re essentially projections that can talk. And the most annoying about them is that they always tell the truth
An Iraq war veteran turned small town homemaker, Colleen works hard to keep her deployment behind her—until pregnancy brings her buried trauma to the surface. She hides her mounting anxiety from her husband, Derby, who is in turn preoccupied with the media frenzy surrounding the long-overdue retrial
**Book 1 of The Survivalist Series** *If society collapsed, could you survive?* When Morgan Carter's car breaks down 250 miles from his home, he figures his weekend plans are ruined. But things are about to get much, much worse: the country's power grid has collapsed. There is no elect