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B&N Reads Blog

6 “Lost” Sci-Fi & Fantasy First Novels Published Posthumously

6 “Lost” Sci-Fi & Fantasy First Novels Published Posthumously

First novels—as in, the first manuscript a writer actually completes, not necessarily their first published work—are always fascinating. Often they are… how to put this? Simply quite terrible; there’s a reason most published authors have a “trunk novel” or two gathering dust somewhere. But some first novels are different: some first novels are perfectly good books that just don’t get published for one reason or another, be it market forces or plain bad luck.

But if a writer attains a sufficient level of fame, there will always be interest in their early work—which means sometimes, that “lost” first novel eventually gets published. The six books on this list are by great SFF writers who passed away before their “first” books saw print—leaving their readers one last unexpected gift.

Warrior of the Altaii (B&N Exclusive Edition)

Robert Jordan

1

BN Exclusive

$27.99

Ships in 1-2 days.

For Us, the Living: A Comedy of Customs

Robert A. Heinlein

eBook

$7.99

Ships in 1-2 days.

Gather Yourselves Together

Philip K. Dick

Paperback

$20.99

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Blind Voices, by Tom Reamy
Tom Reamy was a legendary figure in SF fandom circles in the 1950 and ’60s, and always aspired to be a writer himself. Something held him back, however; while he wrote and worked on his fiction, he didn’t start submitting stories until the early 1970s. Once he got started, it was clear all that work had paid off—he began selling stories steadily, including one slated for Harlan Ellison’s legendary vaporware anthology The Last Dangerous Visions. Blind Voices was Reamy’s only completed novel, but he didn’t get to see it hit print; it was published after he died unexpectedly of a heart attack in 1977. There’s some reason to believe Reamy wasn’t satisfied with the manuscript—which the published described as a complete but not final draft—and indeed the book feels rough in places. But it’s also a fantastic story about a strange and terrible circus and freak show that comes to a small Kansas town during the Depression and changes the lives of three local girls. The book was a Hugo and Nebula Award finalist, and is well worth reading if only to get a sense of what we lost with its author’s untimely passing. Unfortunately, it’s currently out of print.

The Wolfman

Nicholas Pekearo

eBook

$12.99

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What other posthumous novels are worth checking out?