
Mankind faces extinction at the hands of interplanetary visitors.
Lockley is working as a surveyor in the wilderness when a fellow surveyor radios that he's seen an alien ship land. Lockley knows he should get the word back to the military. But first, he needs to rescue Jill.
This classic science fiction novel by Murray Leinster was published by Berkley in 1962. Operation Terror
was recently by General Books.
Murray Leinster was a nom de plume of William Fitzgerald Jenkins (1896-1975), an award-winning American writer of science fiction and alternate history. He wrote and published over 1,500 short stories and articles, 14 movie scripts, and hundreds of radio scripts and television plays.
Leinster is credited with the invention of parallel universe stories. Four years before Jack Williamson's The Legion of Time came out, Leinster published his "Sidewise in Time" in the June 1934 issue of Astounding. This was probably the first time that the concept of alternative worlds appeared in modern science fiction.
Leinster's 1946 short story "A Logic Named Joe" contains one of the first descriptions of a computer (called a "logic") in fiction. In the story, Leinster was decades ahead of his time in imagining the Internet. He envisioned logics in every home, linked through a distributed system of servers (called "tanks"), to provide communications, entertainment, data access, and commerce; one character says that "logics are civilization."
Jenkins was also an inventor, best known for the front projection process used in special effects.