Quakko wrote:
"As far as I have been able to find out it was Earth 2 (1955) by Vargo Statten, which is a pen name for John Russell Fearn. Although I haven't been able to find any description of the story or cover"
Here's one of the covers, if that helps.
"Can You Remember Your First Science Fiction Novel?"
Oh, good lord, no. This was the early 1970s; the children's section of the public library was flooded with sort-of-SF books. There was
The Wonderful Flight to Mushroom Planet,
Freddy and the Men from Mars,
Matthew Looney's Voyage to Earth (those wonderful illustrations by Gahan Wilson!), the classic
Doctor Dolittle in the Moon (in, not on) . . .
The book that really launched me into science fiction I discovered at age ten:
Rocket Jockey, by Philip St. John AKA Lester del Rey. It was about a space race within the solar system; each planet and its inhabitants were given their own character. (The inhabitants of Mars were clearly Soviets; it was a Cold War novel, but one that had a happy ending.) The most striking chapter is where the spaceship must skim close to the sun. The entire chapter consists of the characters waiting, in slow agony, to see whether they will die of the heat. It was such an incredible contrast in suspense to the hectic danger of TV that it helped to make me fall in love with science fiction.
Two other books that proved to be turning points for me were Robert A. Heinlein's
Have Space Suit, Will Travel and James Gunn's
The Listeners. Then I discovered Isaac Asimov's short story collections, with all his chatty introductions about the history of science fiction (well, actually about the history of
him, but he mentioned other authors too), and I was hooked.
steve12553 wrote:
"The Shy Stegosaurus of Cricket Creek by Evelyn Sibley Lampman"
Yes! Another fun quasi-SF writer! Does anyone besides me remember
Rusty's Space Ship? I especially loved
this illustration. Oh, for the days when all you needed to go exploring on strange planets was goggles and a clothespin over your nose.
DMFW:
"It's really hard to remember exactly what was my first taste of written science fiction but it would have been in the early 70's at the age of nine or ten I think, and was very likely one of the Hugh Walters series of juvenile space adventures which systematically covered the solar system in a series of alliteratively titled adventures with names like 'Spaceship to Saturn', 'Journey to Jupiter', 'Nearly Neptune' etc..."
Yes, yes, yes! I read a lot of those in the Library of Congress (hey, there are advantages to having a father who's a scholar) because, them being British books, my public library didn't have the full set. I grabbed a couple of the titles when my public library purged most of its children's collection when I was in college.
Expedition Venus 's ever-expanding mold reminded me vividly of
another children's book.