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"The Sound" is a science fiction short story by Canadian American writer A. E. van Vogt, originally published in Astounding in February 1950. [1]The story takes place during a war between humanity and the alien Yevd, a species with the organic ability to project holographic disguises and fire energy blasts.
The child wakes his father and describes the sound to him. The child believes that the sound comes from a "monster with no arms and legs", which "slides on its fur" and "pulls itself along on its teeth". [1] The father and child discover that the sound is coming from the mice in the walls, and the child is comforted by his parent.
The Mysterious Traveler was an American media ... The lonely sound of a distant locomotive ... John Dickson Carr's most unusual and least known short stories, "The ...
Ultimately, the narrator's actions result in hearing a thumping sound, which the narrator interprets as the dead man's beating heart. The story was first published in James Russell Lowell's The Pioneer in January 1843. "The Tell-Tale Heart" is often considered a classic of the Gothic fiction genre and is one of Poe's best known short stories.
"Noise" is a science fiction story written by Jack Vance in 1952. Also known as Music of the Spheres, it was first published in the magazine Startling Stories in 1952. It is about a space voyager who is marooned on a beautiful alien planet that seems to have no other inhabitants.
Researchers say the famous ‘Bio-Duck’ quacks were made by several speakers
"The Singing Bell" is a science fiction mystery short story by American writer Isaac Asimov, which first appeared in the January 1955 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction and was reprinted in the 1968 collection Asimov's Mysteries. "The Singing Bell" was the first of Asimov's Wendell Urth stories. [1]
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