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#eando binder
chernobog13 · 2 months
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Fantastic Adventures (vol. 3) #3 (May, 1941).
The shadow dragon on the cover resembles a Chinese dragon exactly as it's described in the story. However, author Eando Binder (the pseudonym used by brothers Earl AND Otto Binder) assures us later that it's really a dinosaur akin to a Tyrannosaurus rex.
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cantsayidont · 3 months
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June 1938. Aside from its Margaret Brundage cover painting and the Seabury Quinn story advertised on the cover, this issue of WEIRD TALES features, in no particular order: the short story "Slave of the Flames" by Robert Bloch; the first installment of "The Black Drama" by Manly Wade Wellman (under the pseudonym Gans T. Field); "From the Beginning" by Otto Binder (as Eando Binder, a pseudonym he shared with his brother); "Song of Death" by A.W. Calder; "The Doom That Came to Sarnath" by H.P. Lovecraft; "The Gray Champion" by Nathaniel Hawthorne; "Death Dallies Awhile" by Leslie F. Stone; the second installment of "Thunder in the Dawn" by Henry Kuttner; a Robert E. Howard poem; and various interior illustrations by Virgil Finlay.
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"I, Robot" was a short story by Eando Binder (Earl and Otto Binder) about a robot named Adam Link who was constructed by Dr. Charles Link. The story was published in Amazing Stories, January 1939. Several sequel stories featuring Adam Link would follow.
Over a decade later, Isaac Asimov's famous collection of robot tales would be published under the title "I, Robot". This was over the objections of Asimov who had read the Binders' story before starting his own robot short story "Robbie".
Adam Link would show up in two episodes of the sci fi anthology series The Outer Limits and again in the 1990s revival of the show. The illustration is from the January-February 1955 issue of EC Comics' Weird Science-Fantasy, adapted by Al Feldstein and illustrated by Joe Orlando. Two more Adam Link tales would be featured in subsequent issues of the comic in that same year.
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thehauntedrocket · 2 years
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Vintage Pulp - Startling Stories (Jan1939) (Standard)
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tvserie-film · 2 months
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Title: I robot (Adam Link robot) (1939) Author: Eando Binder Vote: 7/10
A story that follows Frankenstein's monster and that in some ways I liked even more. In a homicidal fury but in a cold and logical manner he decides to isolate himself, aware that the outside world will not accept him and awaits the arrival of the Pets crowd to carry out the last action of his existence, to put an end to it.
The story was also the inspiration for Asimov's most famous book.
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70sscifiart · 1 month
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John Cayea's 1971 cover for "Night of the Saucers," by Eando Binder
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Adam Link: Robot Vol 1 by Eando Binder Professor Link creates a self aware, thinking mechanical man, then dies. Adam Link fights first for acceptance, then next to be regarded as human. #robots #ScienceFiction #scifi www.pulpfictionbook.store https://www.instagram.com/p/Cpv8K4Nr-Lq/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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pulpsandcomics2 · 2 years
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Astounding Science Fiction     April 1939
Worlds Don’t Care by Nat Schachner
Catalyst Poison by Malcolm Jameson
One Against the Legion by Jack Williamson
Rope Trick by Eando Binder
The Cache by Harry Walton
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hyperwave · 3 years
Link
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thefugitivesaint · 5 years
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Virgil Finlay (1914-1971), 'Elixir of Death', ''Weird Tales'', Vol. 29, #3, 1937 Source
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galaxinaa · 6 years
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Secret of the Red Spot, by Eando Binder
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obsidian-sphere · 6 years
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Son of the Stars by Eando Binder from Famous Fantastic Mysteries, February 1940.
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“I, Robot” (1964) from The Outer Limits. Despite the title, this is not a story taken from the famous Isaac Asimov book but is an adaption of Eando Binder’s -- Earl and Otto Binder’s -- “Adam Link” stories. 
The story “I, Robot” appeared in the January 1939 issue of “Amazing Stories” and predates the Asimov compilation novel which was published in 1950.
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thehauntedrocket · 6 years
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Vintage Pulp - Weird Tales (June1938)
Art by Margaret Brundage
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the25centpaperback · 7 years
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Anton York, Immortal by Eando Binder, cover by Unknown Artist (1965)
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70sscifiart · 4 years
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Art by Charles Moll. 
Fun fact: Eando Binder was the pen name of the Binder brothers Earl and Otto, and a compression of the phrase “E and O.”
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