In sf, space travel is interplanetary, interstellar or, rarely, intergalactic. Extra-solar travel is usually, not always, FTL (faster than light).
Poul Anderson's works cover every option.
Interplanetary
Twilight World
The War Of Two Worlds
Shield
Three Worlds To Conquer
Tales Of The Flying Mountains: stories
Orion Shall Rise
The Technic History: "The Saturn Game"
Interplanetary and STL Interstellar
The Psychotechnic History: "Marius" to "Brake"
Genesis
The Boat Of A Million Years, XIX, Thule
STL Interstellar
Tales Of The Flying Mountains: Prologue; Interludes; Epilogue
The Byworlder
The Kith, Rustum, Directorate and Harvest Of Stars future histories
FTL Interstellar
Brain Wave
The Psychotechnic History: "Gypsy" to "The Chapter Ends"
The Technic History: "Wings of Victory" to "Starfog"
The Long Way Home
After Doomsday
The High Crusade
The Star Fox and Fire Time
Planet Of No Return
The Enemy Stars
The Hoka series (with Gordon R. Dickson)
STL Intergalactic and Intercosmic
Tau Zero
FTL Intergalactic
World Without Stars
The Avatar
Time Travel and Space Travel
The Time Patrol series and two time travel novels refer to future space travel but focus on time travel through history.
3 comments:
Kaor, Paul!
I think you forgot Anderson's THE WAR OF TWO WORLDS, which I would put in your "Interplanetary" category. And I'm not sure if the space ship used by the alien "Sigman" in THE BYWORLDER was either STL or FTL.
Ad astra! Sean
Sean,
I forgot THE WAR OF TWO WORLDS and will now add it. Thus, three early novels feature versions of Mars.
Paul.
Kaor, Paul!
And I believe Anderson's THE WAR OF TWO WORLDS to be better than Wells' WAR OF THE WORLDS, simply as a story.
And to make it even more complicated, there's also Anderson's short story "The Case of the Martian Crown Jewels," an affectionate Holmesian pastiche featuring a non-human, Martian equivalent of Sherlock Holmes.
Both of these stories might have been written so closely together that the alien Martians in them strongly resemble each other. And written at a time when there was still SOME hope intelligent life existed there.
Ad astra! Sean
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