<p>Those who yearn for the Good Old Days are bound to like it.&#8230; Those who insist on the close reasoning and satirical wit of modern science fiction will find surprising amounts of both here; and if like myself you have a foot in both camps you're sure to be delighted by this connoisseur's blend of the quaint and the ageless&#8230; not dated writing and is never likely to be; it's lucid didactic analytical and above all zestful. &#8212;Damon Knight <i>In Search of Wonder</i></p><p>First published in the fabulously rare pulp magazine <i>The Thrill Book</i> in 1919 this masterful blend of time-travel fantasy alternate realities and social satire propels early 20th century characters into the Philadelphia of the year 2118 in which the city is an isolated dystopia run by a corrupt oligarchy the Liberty Bell has been transformed into a disintegration machine and William Penn is worshiped as a god. For readers actually familiar with the Quaker City there is the added pleasure of seeing an eerily recognizable rendition of the past (1918) projected into a strange future. For anyone it is still an exciting melodrama filled with striking images and vivid characters.</p><p>One of the genuine classics of early pulp science fiction.</p><p>Francis Stevens was a pseudonym of Gertrude Barrows Bennett (1883-1948) the first woman to be a major contributor of fantastic fiction to the pulp magazines. She wrote primarily for <i>The Argosy</i> and <i>All-Story</i> but also appeared in <i>Weird Tales</i> and elsewhere. Her other novels include <i>The Citadel of Fear</i> and <i>Claimed</i>. Her shorter works have been collected as <i>The Nightmare and Other Tales of Dark Fantasy</i>.</p>