Harlan Ellison
All Books By Harlan Ellison
Deathbird Stories
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Length: 16 hours 15 minutes
- Publisher: Recorded Books, Inc.
- Publish date: July 14, 2020
- Language: English
-
4.15(3389 ratings)
For more than three decades this singular collection of stories in which the New Gods of freeways and slot
machines, internal combustion deities and evil so enormous that it swallows the streets in shadow has compelled the
attention of not only readers of imaginative bent, but the praise of hard-line literary critics. One cannot codify modern
literature of the fantastic without including a reference or selection from this dark book of godly and troubling stories
that will not be ignored.
Ellison Wonderland
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Narrator: Harlan Ellison
- Length: 14 hours 14 minutes
- Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
- Publish date: January 01, 2015
- Language: English
-
4(1033 ratings)
Originally published in 1962 and updated in later decades with a new introduction, Ellison Wonderland contains sixteen masterful stories from the author’s early career. This collection shows a vibrant young writer with a wide-ranging imagination, ferocious creative energy, devastating wit, and an eye for the wonderful and terrifying and tragic. Among the gems are “All the Sounds of Fear,” “The Sky Is Burning,” “The Very Last Day of a Good Woman,” and “In Lonely Lands.” Though they stand tall on their own merits, they also point the way to the sublime stories that followed soon after and continue to come even now, more than fifty years later.
... Read moreI Have No Mouth & I Must Scream and Other Works
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Length: 19 hours 23 minutes
- Publisher: Recorded Books, Inc.
- Publish date: July 01, 2021
- Language: English
I Have No Mouth & I Must Scream
In a post-apocalyptic world, four men and one woman are all that remain of the human race, brought to near extinction by an artificial intelligence. Programmed to wage war on behalf of its creators, the AI became self-aware and turned against humanity. The five survivors are prisoners, kept alive and subjected to brutal torture by the hateful and sadistic machine in an endless cycle of violence.
This story and six more groundbreaking and inventive tales that probe the depths of mortal experience prove why Grand Master of Science Fiction Harlan Ellison has earned the many accolades to his credit and remains one of the most original voices in American literature.
Paingod and Other Delusions
Robert Heinlein says, “This book is raw corn liquor–you should serve a whiskbroom with each shot so the customer can brush the sawdust off after he gets up from the floor.” Perhaps a mooring cable might also be added as necessary equipment for reading these eight wonderful stories. They not only knock you down … they raise you to the stars. Passion is the keynote as you encounter the Harlequin and his nemesis, the dreaded Tictockman, in one of the most reprinted and widely taught stories in the English language; a pyretic who creates fire merely by willing it; the last surgeon in a world of robot physicians; a spaceship filled with hideous mutants rejected by the world that gave them birth. Touching, gentle, and shocking stories from an incomparable master of impossible dreams and troubling truths.
From the Land of Fear
Eleven side trips to the dark edge of imagination by master storyteller Harlan Ellison, From the Land of Fear presents some of the author’s early work from his start in the late fifties. Here you can see a vibrant, imaginative young writer honing his craft and sowing the seeds of what would become his brilliant career, including the standout piece “Soldier,” a clever antiwar tale included both in shortstory form and as a screenplay for TV’s The Outer Limits. True Ellison fans will enjoy this collection as a chance to see the writer’s growth over time. As Roger Zelanzy says in his wonderful introduction, “He is what he is because of everything he’s been up until the Now.”
... Read moreLove Aint Nothing But Sex Misspelled and Other Works
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Length: 24 hours 22 minutes
- Publisher: Recorded Books, Inc.
- Publish date: November 17, 2020
- Language: English
Memos from Purgatory and Other Works
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Length: 13 hours 4 minutes
- Publisher: Recorded Books, Inc.
- Publish date: August 11, 2020
- Language: English
From the Hugo and Nebula Award-winning author of Strange Wine: A gritty memoir of life in NYC that
became the basis for a Hitchcock TV drama. This audiobook also includes Ellison’s Children of the Streets.
Hemingway said, “A man should never write what he doesn’t know.” In the mid
-fifties, Harlan Ellison–kicked
out of college and hungry to write–went to New York to start his career. It was a time of street gangs, rumbles, kids
with switchblades, and zip guns made from car radio antennas. Ellison was barely out of his teens himself, but he took
a phony name, moved into Brooklyn’s dangerous Red Hook section, and managed to con his way into a “bopping
club.” What he experienced (and the time he spent in jail as a result) was the basis for the violent story that Alfred
Hitchcock filmed as the first of his hour
-long TV dramas. This autobiography is a book whose message you will not
be able to ignore or forget.
Slippage
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Length: 14 hours 28 minutes
- Publisher: Recorded Books, Inc.
- Publish date: April 18, 2023
- Language: English
-
4.11(1007 ratings)
With this, his bestselling and most critically acclaimed collection ever, Ellison celebrates four decades of brilliant, outrageous writing. The award-winning novella Mefisto in Onyx is the centerpiece of an irreverent and wildly imaginative book that the San Diego Union-Tribune called “electrifying … Ellison is back, as unsettling as ever.”
... Read moreSpider Kiss
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Narrator: Stefan Rudnicki
- Length: 7 hours 22 minutes
- Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
- Publish date: January 01, 2015
- Language: English
-
3.78(564 ratings)
From one of the most highly celebrated and dynamic American writers of our time, comes Spider Kiss, Harlan Ellison’s electrifying novel of the early years of rock and roll.
If you think the only thing Ellison writes is speculative fiction, craziness about giant cockroaches that attack Detroit, or invaders from space who look like pink eggplant and smell like chicken soup, this dynamite novel of the emergent days of rock and roll will turn you around at least three times. No spaceships, no robots, just a nice kid from Louisville named Stag Preston with a voice like an angel, seductive moves like the devil, and an invisible monkey named Success riding him straight to hell.
... Read moreStalking the Nightmare and Other Works
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Length: 20 hours 12 minutes
- Publisher: Recorded Books, Inc.
- Publish date: May 17, 2022
- Language: English
Stalking the Nightmare
Here you’ll find twenty of his very best stories and essays (including the four-part “Scenes from the Real World”), an anecdotal history of the doomed TV series, The
Starlost, he created for NBC; “Tales from the Mountains of Madness”; and his hilariously brutal reportage on the three most important things in life: sex, violence, and labor relations.
Over the Edge
Amid the ruins of a world in which men become monsters, dreams turn to poison, and the only sanity lies in fantasy, these nine stories and three essays take you beyond the brink, to study the terrifying landscape charted by Harlan Ellison.
The Beast That Shouted Love at the Heart of the World and Other Works
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Length: 17 hours 18 minutes
- Publisher: Recorded Books, Inc.
- Publish date: December 24, 2019
- Language: English
-
3.57(7 ratings)
In a post-apocalyptic future, fifteen-year-old Vic wanders the wasteland with Blood, his
genetically-altered telepathic dog, in a struggle for survival against violent marauders, deadly
radioactive insects, and an underground community desperate to restore the human race in the
Hugo Award-nominated and Nebula Award-winning novella, “A Boy and His Dog,”–the
basis of the cult classic film.
An intergalactic conspiracy infects the minds of the most powerful politicians in the
Republican Party–and only one jolly old elf can save them in “Santa Claus vs. S.P.I.D.E.R.”
And in the Hugo Award-winning title story, disparate threads of violence, conflict, and
conversation weave an intricate tapestry across worlds and times in an experimental tour-deforce of the imagination.
This groundbreaking collection brings together some of Harlan Ellison’s most innovative
and intriguing stories, frightening and funny visions of human nature that can only come from
the peerless Grand Master of Science Fiction.
The City on the Edge of Forever
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Narrator: Harlan Ellison
- Length: 8 hours 1 minutes
- Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
- Publish date: January 01, 2016
- Language: English
-
4.23(754 ratings)
The original teleplay that became the classic Star Trek episode, with an expanded introductory essay by Harlan Ellison, The City on the Edge of Forever has been surrounded by controversy since the airing of an “eviscerated” version–which subsequently has been voted the most beloved episode in the series’ history. In its original form, The City on the Edge of Forever won the 1966-67 Writers Guild of America Award for Best Teleplay. As aired, it won the 1967 Hugo Award.
The City on the Edge of Forever is, at its most basic, a poignant love story. Ellison takes the listener on a breathtaking trip through space and time, from the future, all the way back to 1930s America. In this harrowing journey, Kirk and Spock race to apprehend a renegade criminal and restore the order of the universe. It is here that Kirk faces his ultimate dilemma: a choice between the universe–or his one true love.
This edition makes available the astonishing teleplay as Ellison intended it to be aired. The author’s introductory essay reveals all of the details of what Ellison describes as a “fatally inept treatment” of his creative work. Was he unjustly edited, unjustly accused, and unjustly treated?
... Read moreThe Compleat Glass Teat
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Length: 24 hours 33 minutes
- Publisher: Recorded Books, Inc.
- Publish date: February 15, 2022
- Language: English
The Glass Teat: Essays
The classic collection of criticism about television and American culture from the late, multi-award-winning legend.
From 1968 through 1972, Harlan Ellison penned a series of weekly columns, sharing his uncompromising thoughts about contemporary television programming for the Los Angeles Free Press, a.k.a. “The Freep,” a countercultural, underground newspaper. Sitcoms and variety shows, westerns and cop dramas, newscasts and commercials, Ellison left no pixilated stone unturned, expounding on the insipidness, hypocrisy, and malaise found in the glowing images projected into the faces of American audiences.
The Glass Teat: Essays of Opinion on the Subject of Television collects fifty-two of Ellison’s columns–including his 2011 introduction “Welcome to the Gulag,” his unapologetic commentary about how cellphones and the internet have extended television’s reach, eroding intelligence and freedom and creating a legion of bloodshot eyed zombies unable to communicate beyond their screens or think for themselves.
Provocative and prescient, irreverent and insightful, Ellison’s critical analyses of the glowing box that became the center of American life are even more relevant in the twenty-first century.
The Other Glass Teat: Essays
The late, multi-award-winning author of The Glass Teat continues his critical assault on television in this second collection of classic criticism.
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, there were only three major television networks broadcasting original programs and news. And there was only one Harlan Ellison taking them all to task in a series of weekly essays he wrote for the countercultural, underground newspaper, the Los Angeles Free Press, a.k.a. “The Freep.” For nearly four years, he channel surfed through the mire of ABC, CBS, and NBC, finding little of value but much to critique. No one offered a more astute analysis of the idiot box’s influence on American culture, or its effects on the intelligence and psyche of viewers.
The Other Glass Teat: Further Essays of Opinion on the Subject of Television collects Ellison’s final fifty columns, presenting his thoughts on everything from dramas and sitcoms to game shows and roundtable discussions, unleashing his fury against sponsors, the nightly news, and the broadcasts of President Nixon–warning readers about the commander-in-chief’s war against the media long before the Watergate scandal broke.
As television has evolved into wireless streaming services and digital interactions on portable devices, Ellison’s timeless rage against the machine has become prophecy. His plea to unplug is an even more necessary call to action in the face of the twenty-first century’s media onslaught.
... Read moreThe Deadly Streets and Other Works
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Length: 15 hours 59 minutes
- Publisher: Recorded Books, Inc.
- Publish date: May 26, 2020
- Language: English
The Deadly Streets
Raw, vital, uncompromising–here are portraits of the lost, the damned, the helpless, trying to get a handle on
life. A startling collection of “hip” stories by an impressive young writer, torn from the shadows of the twilight world.
Muggers, slashers, street gangs, lurkers in the shadows: no need to read Lovecraft to be thoroughly terrified. Just
read these 16 violent tales … or take a walk in the park tonight.
No Doors, No Windows
You have nothing to fear but fear itself. The only trouble is, fear comes in so many different shapes and sizes
these days–the rejection by a beautiful woman, the threat of impending nuclear holocaust, the erratic behavior of
wackos walking the streets who only need a wrong word and there they go to the top of an apartment building with a
sniperscope’d rifle. Fear is all around you, and the minute you get all the rational fears taken care of, all battened down
and secure, here comes something new. Like the special fears generated in these 16 incredible stories. Fear described as
it has never been described before, by the startling imagination of Harlan Ellison, master fantasist, tour guide through
the land of dreadful visions, unerring observer of human folly and supernatural diabolism.
The Harlan Ellison Hornbook and Other Works
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Length: 19 hours 1 minutes
- Publisher: Recorded Books, Inc.
- Publish date: October 12, 2021
- Language: English
The Harlan Ellison Hornbook
The Hugo and Nebula Award-winning author probes topics ranging from departed pets to Lenny Bruce and San Quentin in this provocative collection of essays.
A major collection of Harlan Ellison’s incomparable, troublemaking, uncompromising, confrontational essays and newspaper columns, The Harlan Ellison Hornbook mines deep into the author’s colorful past. Failed love affairs, departed pets, a defense of comic
books–in lesser hands, these subjects would be pabulum or treacle. When Harlan Ellison is behind the typewriter, the mundane becomes an all-out intellectual brawl. Emotionally moving and verbally stimulating, these columns cannot be missed, especially Ellison’s
article on controversial comedian Lenny Bruce or the chilling account of the author’s trip to visit a death row inmate in San Quentin State Prison.
Harlan Ellison’s Movie: An Original Screenplay
Herein lies in written form Harlan Ellison’s Movie, the full-length feature film Ellison created when a producer at 20th Century-Fox said, “If we gave you the money, and no interference, what sort of movie would you write?” Well, that producer is no longer at the
studio; he left the entire venue of moviemaking after Harlan Ellison’s Movie was seen by the Suits. There is no use even trying to describe what the film is about, except to confirm the long-standing rumor that it contains a scene in which a 70-foot-tall boll weevil chews
and swallows an entire farmhouse and silo on-camera. (It is Scene 33C.)
Troublemakers
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Length: 10 hours 0 minutes
- Publisher: Recorded Books, Inc.
- Publish date: April 12, 2022
- Language: English
-
4(306 ratings)
In a career spanning more than 50 years, Harlan Ellison has written or edited 75 books, more than 1700 stories, essays, articles and newspaper columns, two dozen teleplays, and a dozen movies.
Now, for the first time anywhere, Troublemakers presents a collection of Ellison’s classic stories–chosen by the author–that will introduce new readers to a writer described by the New York Times as having “the spellbinding quality of a great
nonstop talker, with a cultural warehouse for a mind.”
Web of the City
- By: Harlan Ellison
- Narrator: Stefan Rudnicki
- Length: 6 hours 28 minutes
- Publisher: Blackstone Publishing
- Publish date: January 01, 2015
- Language: English
-
3.5(344 ratings)
“Get it straight right now: these aren’t kids playing games of war. They mean business. They are junior-grade killers and public enemies one through five thousand.”
In Rusty Santoro’s neighborhood, the kids carry knives, chains, bricks, and broken glass. And when they fight, they fight dirty, leaving the streets littered with the bodies of the injured and the dead. Rusty wants out–but you can’t just walk away from a New York street gang. And his decision may leave his family to pay a terrible price.
First published more than half a century ago and inspired by the author’s real-life experience going undercover inside a street gang, Web of the City was Harlan Ellison’s first novel and marked the long-form debut of one of the most electrifying, unforgettable, and controversial voices of twentieth-century letters. Appearing here with the short story “No Game for Children,” which Ellison wrote for the pulp magazines of the 1950s, Web of the City offers both a snapshot of a lost era and a portrait of violence and grief as timely as today’s most brutal headlines. Includes an introduction read by the author.
Also includes the 1959 short story “No Game for Children”
... Read more