A Man With a Stainless Steel Endoskeleton (like The Terminator) Fighting Cloaked Aliens Only He Can SeeNovel from the 80s: Brain harvested and forced to fight in a warTV show about a man investigating murders, starts seeing a woman that only he can seeBook series where only people with the right ability can do things like operate machineryshort story of post-apocalypse survivor with stainless steel denturesStory about a rainstorm that only the blind can seeYA(?) book with crab-like aliensAnime with boy who can see fighting mecha robots in parallel worldWhat is this '90s–'00s sf movie with a Guyver-like, Max Steel-like bio suit?Radio show where only drunks can see goblinsAnime with humans fighting aliens and telepathy involvedOld movie with aliens that look like humans except they have only two splayed toes
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A Man With a Stainless Steel Endoskeleton (like The Terminator) Fighting Cloaked Aliens Only He Can See
Novel from the 80s: Brain harvested and forced to fight in a warTV show about a man investigating murders, starts seeing a woman that only he can seeBook series where only people with the right ability can do things like operate machineryshort story of post-apocalypse survivor with stainless steel denturesStory about a rainstorm that only the blind can seeYA(?) book with crab-like aliensAnime with boy who can see fighting mecha robots in parallel worldWhat is this '90s–'00s sf movie with a Guyver-like, Max Steel-like bio suit?Radio show where only drunks can see goblinsAnime with humans fighting aliens and telepathy involvedOld movie with aliens that look like humans except they have only two splayed toes
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
The story was published in the mid 1960s, around 1967-68 in Analog or The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. I delivered both subscriptions to a young guy in Belfast when I was a paper boy and he would pass me his read copies when I delivered the new ones.
The character is bio-engineered, a bit like the Terminator, but with normal sentient self awareness, working as a kind of vigilante detective who can, because of extremely advanced biologically engineered senses, see the otherwise cloaked 'normal' aliens and kills them by whatever means possible.
Like the story Eight O’Clock in the Morning by Ray Nelson, first published in the November 1963 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. Which was later made into a film in 1988, They Live, by John Carpenter. He also has narrow escapes, when he crushes one against a wall with a car when he's ambushed.
He also escapes from them when he's trapped on a ship and has to swim a mile under water (with a stainless steel endoskeleton - go figure) to escape them. I thought it was The Stainless Steel Rat by Harry Harrison but apparently not...
story-identification
add a comment |
The story was published in the mid 1960s, around 1967-68 in Analog or The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. I delivered both subscriptions to a young guy in Belfast when I was a paper boy and he would pass me his read copies when I delivered the new ones.
The character is bio-engineered, a bit like the Terminator, but with normal sentient self awareness, working as a kind of vigilante detective who can, because of extremely advanced biologically engineered senses, see the otherwise cloaked 'normal' aliens and kills them by whatever means possible.
Like the story Eight O’Clock in the Morning by Ray Nelson, first published in the November 1963 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. Which was later made into a film in 1988, They Live, by John Carpenter. He also has narrow escapes, when he crushes one against a wall with a car when he's ambushed.
He also escapes from them when he's trapped on a ship and has to swim a mile under water (with a stainless steel endoskeleton - go figure) to escape them. I thought it was The Stainless Steel Rat by Harry Harrison but apparently not...
story-identification
Hi there. That's some very good info already, though if you could take a look at these guidelines, see if they trigger any more memories you could edit in, that'd be even better! For instance - that's a short story, right? Or maybe a novella? (also, today I learned that They Live was an adaptation :) )
– Jenayah
Mar 30 at 15:04
possibly the same as scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/189308/…
– Otis
Mar 31 at 1:17
add a comment |
The story was published in the mid 1960s, around 1967-68 in Analog or The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. I delivered both subscriptions to a young guy in Belfast when I was a paper boy and he would pass me his read copies when I delivered the new ones.
The character is bio-engineered, a bit like the Terminator, but with normal sentient self awareness, working as a kind of vigilante detective who can, because of extremely advanced biologically engineered senses, see the otherwise cloaked 'normal' aliens and kills them by whatever means possible.
Like the story Eight O’Clock in the Morning by Ray Nelson, first published in the November 1963 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. Which was later made into a film in 1988, They Live, by John Carpenter. He also has narrow escapes, when he crushes one against a wall with a car when he's ambushed.
He also escapes from them when he's trapped on a ship and has to swim a mile under water (with a stainless steel endoskeleton - go figure) to escape them. I thought it was The Stainless Steel Rat by Harry Harrison but apparently not...
story-identification
The story was published in the mid 1960s, around 1967-68 in Analog or The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. I delivered both subscriptions to a young guy in Belfast when I was a paper boy and he would pass me his read copies when I delivered the new ones.
The character is bio-engineered, a bit like the Terminator, but with normal sentient self awareness, working as a kind of vigilante detective who can, because of extremely advanced biologically engineered senses, see the otherwise cloaked 'normal' aliens and kills them by whatever means possible.
Like the story Eight O’Clock in the Morning by Ray Nelson, first published in the November 1963 issue of The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. Which was later made into a film in 1988, They Live, by John Carpenter. He also has narrow escapes, when he crushes one against a wall with a car when he's ambushed.
He also escapes from them when he's trapped on a ship and has to swim a mile under water (with a stainless steel endoskeleton - go figure) to escape them. I thought it was The Stainless Steel Rat by Harry Harrison but apparently not...
story-identification
story-identification
edited Mar 30 at 15:03
Jenayah
23.5k5109150
23.5k5109150
asked Mar 30 at 14:59
Edward Paul CampbellEdward Paul Campbell
712
712
Hi there. That's some very good info already, though if you could take a look at these guidelines, see if they trigger any more memories you could edit in, that'd be even better! For instance - that's a short story, right? Or maybe a novella? (also, today I learned that They Live was an adaptation :) )
– Jenayah
Mar 30 at 15:04
possibly the same as scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/189308/…
– Otis
Mar 31 at 1:17
add a comment |
Hi there. That's some very good info already, though if you could take a look at these guidelines, see if they trigger any more memories you could edit in, that'd be even better! For instance - that's a short story, right? Or maybe a novella? (also, today I learned that They Live was an adaptation :) )
– Jenayah
Mar 30 at 15:04
possibly the same as scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/189308/…
– Otis
Mar 31 at 1:17
Hi there. That's some very good info already, though if you could take a look at these guidelines, see if they trigger any more memories you could edit in, that'd be even better! For instance - that's a short story, right? Or maybe a novella? (also, today I learned that They Live was an adaptation :) )
– Jenayah
Mar 30 at 15:04
Hi there. That's some very good info already, though if you could take a look at these guidelines, see if they trigger any more memories you could edit in, that'd be even better! For instance - that's a short story, right? Or maybe a novella? (also, today I learned that They Live was an adaptation :) )
– Jenayah
Mar 30 at 15:04
possibly the same as scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/189308/…
– Otis
Mar 31 at 1:17
possibly the same as scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/189308/…
– Otis
Mar 31 at 1:17
add a comment |
1 Answer
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This is A Plague of Demons' by Keith Laumer
From fantasy literature review.....
http://www.fantasyliterature.com/reviews/a-plague-of-demons/
A Plague of Demons is narrated by John Bravais, an agent who is asked to come to Algeria to meet his old friend Felix Severance, of the CBI (a combination of the CIA and FBI, we can only infer).
Bravais learns that for many years, war combatants around the world have been going missing, seemingly vanishing from their fields of battle. Severance asks him to investigate, and it is not long before Bravais witnesses, during a campaign between Moroccan and Algerian troops, just what has been going on: Seven-foot-tall, skull-faced, occasionally bipedal aliens, vaguely canine in appearance, have been surreptitiously killing soldiers on Terran battlefields, slicing out their brains and storing them in vitro for some reason unknown!
For the next 2/3 of Laumer’s book, the aliens, and their human cat’s-paws, chase Bravais from Algeria to Jacksonville, Florida, and then on to Coffeyville, Kansas and to Chicago; a nightmarish pursuit that Bravais survives only because of the PAPA (Power Assisted Personal Armament) modifications that Severance had made on his body, turning him into a superwarrior of sorts.
But matters grow even more nightmarish for Bravais in the book’s final 1/3, in which he is captured by the aliens, has his own gray matter removed, and awakens on an alien moon in the midst of a battle, his brain being used to power and control a 70-foot-high, massive supertank, in concert with other tanks being propelled by the minds of Earth soldiers from many nations, some from as far back as 1,000 years ago
I love that book.
– Ring
Mar 30 at 17:56
1
@Ring yeah, it's good isn't it? I've got it as an ebook and might well have myself a reread tonight
– DannyMcG
Mar 30 at 19:03
add a comment |
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This is A Plague of Demons' by Keith Laumer
From fantasy literature review.....
http://www.fantasyliterature.com/reviews/a-plague-of-demons/
A Plague of Demons is narrated by John Bravais, an agent who is asked to come to Algeria to meet his old friend Felix Severance, of the CBI (a combination of the CIA and FBI, we can only infer).
Bravais learns that for many years, war combatants around the world have been going missing, seemingly vanishing from their fields of battle. Severance asks him to investigate, and it is not long before Bravais witnesses, during a campaign between Moroccan and Algerian troops, just what has been going on: Seven-foot-tall, skull-faced, occasionally bipedal aliens, vaguely canine in appearance, have been surreptitiously killing soldiers on Terran battlefields, slicing out their brains and storing them in vitro for some reason unknown!
For the next 2/3 of Laumer’s book, the aliens, and their human cat’s-paws, chase Bravais from Algeria to Jacksonville, Florida, and then on to Coffeyville, Kansas and to Chicago; a nightmarish pursuit that Bravais survives only because of the PAPA (Power Assisted Personal Armament) modifications that Severance had made on his body, turning him into a superwarrior of sorts.
But matters grow even more nightmarish for Bravais in the book’s final 1/3, in which he is captured by the aliens, has his own gray matter removed, and awakens on an alien moon in the midst of a battle, his brain being used to power and control a 70-foot-high, massive supertank, in concert with other tanks being propelled by the minds of Earth soldiers from many nations, some from as far back as 1,000 years ago
I love that book.
– Ring
Mar 30 at 17:56
1
@Ring yeah, it's good isn't it? I've got it as an ebook and might well have myself a reread tonight
– DannyMcG
Mar 30 at 19:03
add a comment |
This is A Plague of Demons' by Keith Laumer
From fantasy literature review.....
http://www.fantasyliterature.com/reviews/a-plague-of-demons/
A Plague of Demons is narrated by John Bravais, an agent who is asked to come to Algeria to meet his old friend Felix Severance, of the CBI (a combination of the CIA and FBI, we can only infer).
Bravais learns that for many years, war combatants around the world have been going missing, seemingly vanishing from their fields of battle. Severance asks him to investigate, and it is not long before Bravais witnesses, during a campaign between Moroccan and Algerian troops, just what has been going on: Seven-foot-tall, skull-faced, occasionally bipedal aliens, vaguely canine in appearance, have been surreptitiously killing soldiers on Terran battlefields, slicing out their brains and storing them in vitro for some reason unknown!
For the next 2/3 of Laumer’s book, the aliens, and their human cat’s-paws, chase Bravais from Algeria to Jacksonville, Florida, and then on to Coffeyville, Kansas and to Chicago; a nightmarish pursuit that Bravais survives only because of the PAPA (Power Assisted Personal Armament) modifications that Severance had made on his body, turning him into a superwarrior of sorts.
But matters grow even more nightmarish for Bravais in the book’s final 1/3, in which he is captured by the aliens, has his own gray matter removed, and awakens on an alien moon in the midst of a battle, his brain being used to power and control a 70-foot-high, massive supertank, in concert with other tanks being propelled by the minds of Earth soldiers from many nations, some from as far back as 1,000 years ago
I love that book.
– Ring
Mar 30 at 17:56
1
@Ring yeah, it's good isn't it? I've got it as an ebook and might well have myself a reread tonight
– DannyMcG
Mar 30 at 19:03
add a comment |
This is A Plague of Demons' by Keith Laumer
From fantasy literature review.....
http://www.fantasyliterature.com/reviews/a-plague-of-demons/
A Plague of Demons is narrated by John Bravais, an agent who is asked to come to Algeria to meet his old friend Felix Severance, of the CBI (a combination of the CIA and FBI, we can only infer).
Bravais learns that for many years, war combatants around the world have been going missing, seemingly vanishing from their fields of battle. Severance asks him to investigate, and it is not long before Bravais witnesses, during a campaign between Moroccan and Algerian troops, just what has been going on: Seven-foot-tall, skull-faced, occasionally bipedal aliens, vaguely canine in appearance, have been surreptitiously killing soldiers on Terran battlefields, slicing out their brains and storing them in vitro for some reason unknown!
For the next 2/3 of Laumer’s book, the aliens, and their human cat’s-paws, chase Bravais from Algeria to Jacksonville, Florida, and then on to Coffeyville, Kansas and to Chicago; a nightmarish pursuit that Bravais survives only because of the PAPA (Power Assisted Personal Armament) modifications that Severance had made on his body, turning him into a superwarrior of sorts.
But matters grow even more nightmarish for Bravais in the book’s final 1/3, in which he is captured by the aliens, has his own gray matter removed, and awakens on an alien moon in the midst of a battle, his brain being used to power and control a 70-foot-high, massive supertank, in concert with other tanks being propelled by the minds of Earth soldiers from many nations, some from as far back as 1,000 years ago
This is A Plague of Demons' by Keith Laumer
From fantasy literature review.....
http://www.fantasyliterature.com/reviews/a-plague-of-demons/
A Plague of Demons is narrated by John Bravais, an agent who is asked to come to Algeria to meet his old friend Felix Severance, of the CBI (a combination of the CIA and FBI, we can only infer).
Bravais learns that for many years, war combatants around the world have been going missing, seemingly vanishing from their fields of battle. Severance asks him to investigate, and it is not long before Bravais witnesses, during a campaign between Moroccan and Algerian troops, just what has been going on: Seven-foot-tall, skull-faced, occasionally bipedal aliens, vaguely canine in appearance, have been surreptitiously killing soldiers on Terran battlefields, slicing out their brains and storing them in vitro for some reason unknown!
For the next 2/3 of Laumer’s book, the aliens, and their human cat’s-paws, chase Bravais from Algeria to Jacksonville, Florida, and then on to Coffeyville, Kansas and to Chicago; a nightmarish pursuit that Bravais survives only because of the PAPA (Power Assisted Personal Armament) modifications that Severance had made on his body, turning him into a superwarrior of sorts.
But matters grow even more nightmarish for Bravais in the book’s final 1/3, in which he is captured by the aliens, has his own gray matter removed, and awakens on an alien moon in the midst of a battle, his brain being used to power and control a 70-foot-high, massive supertank, in concert with other tanks being propelled by the minds of Earth soldiers from many nations, some from as far back as 1,000 years ago
edited Mar 30 at 18:55
answered Mar 30 at 17:44
DannyMcGDannyMcG
3,07122783
3,07122783
I love that book.
– Ring
Mar 30 at 17:56
1
@Ring yeah, it's good isn't it? I've got it as an ebook and might well have myself a reread tonight
– DannyMcG
Mar 30 at 19:03
add a comment |
I love that book.
– Ring
Mar 30 at 17:56
1
@Ring yeah, it's good isn't it? I've got it as an ebook and might well have myself a reread tonight
– DannyMcG
Mar 30 at 19:03
I love that book.
– Ring
Mar 30 at 17:56
I love that book.
– Ring
Mar 30 at 17:56
1
1
@Ring yeah, it's good isn't it? I've got it as an ebook and might well have myself a reread tonight
– DannyMcG
Mar 30 at 19:03
@Ring yeah, it's good isn't it? I've got it as an ebook and might well have myself a reread tonight
– DannyMcG
Mar 30 at 19:03
add a comment |
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Hi there. That's some very good info already, though if you could take a look at these guidelines, see if they trigger any more memories you could edit in, that'd be even better! For instance - that's a short story, right? Or maybe a novella? (also, today I learned that They Live was an adaptation :) )
– Jenayah
Mar 30 at 15:04
possibly the same as scifi.stackexchange.com/questions/189308/…
– Otis
Mar 31 at 1:17