"IT HAS NO NATURAL ENEMIES, BECAUSE IT BECOMES WHATEVER IT WANTS TO": FIRST EDITION OF JOHN CAMPBELL'S WHO GOES THERE?, BASIS FOR JOHN CARPENER'S THE THING—SIGNED BY CAMPBELL
CAMPBELL, John W., Jr. Who Goes There? Seven Tales of Science-Fiction. Chicago: Shasta Publishers, 1948. Octavo, original blue cloth, original dust jacket.
First edition of Campbell's collection of seven science fiction stories—including the titular story which served as the basis for John Carpenter's "The Thing" (1982), as well as "The Thing from Another World" (1951)—in fantastic illustrated dust jacket designed by Hannes Bok. This copy one of an unspecified number of subscriber's copies signed by Campbell on the front free endpaper.
Before becoming editor of Astounding Science-Fiction, where he shaped the Golden Age of science fiction, John W. Campbell, Jr. wrote and published 16 stories under the pseudonym Don A. Stuart from 1934-39. This collection features seven of these stories, including the titular story, a classic tale of an alien who can perfectly mimic earthly life forms, "a fine paranoid fantasy" (Barron). "Far more skillfully wrought than his space operas, these stories laid the groundwork for the editorial philosophy Campbell applied to the sophistication of Astounding… the extrapolative ingenuity of 'Who Goes There?'… bore much richer and stranger fruit" (Barron). This collection also includes the "classic elegiac fantasies 'Twilight' and 'Night'" (Barron), as well as "Blindness," "Frictional Losses," "Dead Knowledge," and "Elimination." First edition stated on copyright page. Currey, 79. See Barron, Anatomy of Wonder II-211. Bookplate.
Book fine, dust jacket with very mild toning to spine and a few minuscule corner rubs, near-fine. A lovely copy, scarce and desirable signed by Campbell.