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  2. Way Station by Clifford D. Simak. Way Station is Clifford D. Simak’s 1964 Hugo Award-winning novel. By many readers it is considered his best, and it features some his favorite themes: a rugged Midwesterner who shuns society, human society flirting with nuclear disaster, a more enlightened galactic society that is wary of letting unruly ...

  3. Way Station by Clifford D. Simak was originally serialized under the name Here Gather the Stars. It won the 1963 Hugo Award, and it's one of the first books I read in my renewed push to read all the Hugo and Nebula winners by the end of 2016.

    • (27.9K)
    • Paperback
  4. Jul 21, 2015 · Simak was best known for the book City, a reaction to the horrors of World War II, and for his novel Way Station. In 1953 City was awarded the International Fantasy Award, and in following years, Simak won three Hugo Awards and a Nebula Award.

    • (8.2K)
    • Clifford D. Simak
  5. Jul 21, 2015 · Though he was an early writer published in Hugo Gernsback’s pulp magazines, his peak came in the 60’s and early 70’s when the revitalized boomer kids like myself were discovering his CITY and WAY STATION novels and The Big Front Yard novelette through The Science Fiction Book Club or Doubleday or Ballantine and Ace reissues.

    • Open Road Media Sci-Fi & Fantasy
    • $13.99
  6. Way Station. Clifford D. Simak. Open Road Media, Jul 21, 2015 - Fiction - 236 pages. Hugo Award Winner: In backwoods Wisconsin, an ageless hermit welcomes alien visitors—and foresees the...

    • 1504013182, 9781504013185
    • Clifford D. Simak
    • Open Road Media, 2015
  7. Way Station is a relatively short novel written by Clifford Simak in 1963, winner of a 1964 Hugo Award and barely mentioned today... except for the shameless borrowing of ideas later authors got from it, such as glowy beautiful humanoid aliens whose lifeforce manifests as an aura and become emaciated, ugly things when dead, holographic ...

  8. Way Station is a novel by Clifford D. Simak published in 1963 that first appeared under the title Here Gather the Stars as a two-part submission to Galaxy Magazine in the summer of that same year. Simak had already published multiple short stories and novels.

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