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Alien Minds

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This book has been considered by academicians and scholars of great significance and value to literature. This forms a part of the knowledge base for future generations. So that the book is never forgotten we have represented this book in a print format as the same form as it was originally first published. Hence any marks or annotations seen are left intentionally to preserve its true nature.

208 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1955

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E. Everett Evans

36 books3 followers
Edward Everett Evans

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Joseph Carrabis.
Author 59 books123 followers
March 1, 2021
I'm sitting in Mrs. Woodbury's 4th grade class at Webster School on Manchester's North End. It is late Spring, mid-afternoon, and bright, dreamy, drowsy sunlight fills the room putting most of the class and even Mrs. Woodbury into a slow-moving torpor.
All except me. I'm reading Edward Everett's Man of Many Minds and loving it.
Flash forward some sixty years. I'm going through Gutenberg's books and select Alien Minds because I like Golden Age SF and it fits the bill.
Gosh it seems familiar. A space cadet who can read minds (a little) must use his special gift to advance the causes of justice and rightness throughout the known universe. His name is Hanlon.
Where have I heard that name before?
Well, I heard it in Mrs. Woodbury's class on that drowsy afternoon. Man of Many Minds is a sequel (kind of) to Alien Minds. It was like meeting an old friend again.
Beyond that, Alien Minds is an okay book. A bit pedantic and cliched but what genre novels weren't back then? The characters are shallow without being two-dimensional (a neat trick, that), the plot is predictable, the climax and outcome expected. But I'll bet it would still be a good read for a 4th grade student on a sunny, lazy afternoon.
Profile Image for John JJJJJJJJ.
199 reviews
May 31, 2025
An excellent novel by a friend of E. E. "Doc" Smith (they also wrote a novel together).

The plot closely resembles "Call Me Joe," a short story by Poul Anderson, which inspired the film Avatar.

George Hanlon, a secret agent with the power to read minds, is sent to Estrella, an Earth-like planet, to bring it into the Federation. But what to do when the inhabitants don't care about the Federation?

A short, easy-to-read novel.
Profile Image for La La.
1,143 reviews161 followers
January 1, 2026
This was better than the first one! I'll have to lower the first one to four stars, ha ha!

The first book in this duology, Man of Many Minds, was the vintage Science Fiction title for my Sci-Fi Month reading this year. I loved it so much I wanted to read this sequel right away.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews