- Source: 1956 in science fiction
- The Naked Sun
- Hans Stefan Santesson
- The Last Question
- The Demolished Man
- Fiksi ilmiah feminis
- Startling Stories
- Vy Russell
- The Man Who Turned to Stone
- Penghargaan Hugo untuk Novel Terbaik
- Stand on Zanzibar
- 1956 in science fiction
- List of science-fiction authors
- Science fiction film
- Science Fiction Adventures (1956 magazine)
- Analog Science Fiction and Fact
- Golden Age of Science Fiction
- List of science fiction films of the 1950s
- The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction
- Super-Science Fiction
- Science fiction fandom
The year 1956 was marked, in science fiction, by the following events.
Births and deaths
= Births
=K. A. Applegate
Gillian Bradshaw
Simon Brown
Aleksandr Bushkov
Jack Campbell
Storm Constantine (d. 2021)
Hugh Cook (d. 2008)
Nabil Farouk (d. 2020)
Richard Foss
Mary Gentle
Rick Kennett
Tom Kratman
Jean-Marc Ligny
Ian R. MacLeod
R. M. Meluch
Robert A. Metzger
Brian Plante
Robert Reed
Shauna S. Roberts
Joan Slonczewski
Sonny Whitelaw
Jack Womack
= Deaths
=Archibald Low (b. 1888)
Vladimir Obruchev (b. 1863)
Bob Olsen (b. 1884)
Fletcher Pratt (b. 1897)
F. Orlin Tremaine (b. 1899)
Literary releases
= Serialized novels
=The Naked Sun by Isaac Asimov, Astounding Science Fiction (October–December), published in book form in 1957.
The Power by Frank M. Robinson, Blue Book (March), published in book form in May.
= Novels
=The City and the Stars by Arthur C. Clarke, a man questions the perfect but stagnant future city of Diaspar.
The Crossroads of Time by Andre Norton, an agent travels between parallel worlds to prevent a catastrophic war.
The Death of Grass by John Christopher, a global famine leads to societal collapse and desperate survival.
Double Star by Robert A. Heinlein, an actor impersonates a politician in a complex political scheme.
Highways in Hiding by George O. Smith, intertwines ESP, a disease that turns people to stone, and a secret society with a hidden cure.
The Man Who Japed by Philip K. Dick, a satirical novel about rebellion in a totalitarian society.
No Man Friday by Rex Gordon, a science fiction robinsonade set on Mars.
The Power by Frank M. Robinson, a thriller that explores the concept of a man with the ability to control others.
The Shrinking Man by Richard Matheson, a man battles to survive as he inexplicably shrinks in size.
Slave Ship by Frederik Pohl, explores the psychological impact of futuristic warfare and slavery.
Tiger! Tiger! by Alfred Bester, a man seeks revenge across the galaxy using newfound teleportation powers.
To Live Forever by Jack Vance, society is divided by the quest for immortality and a man's struggle against it.
The World Jones Made by Philip K. Dick, a man who can see a year into the future grapples with his power and destiny.
= Short stories
="The Country of the Kind" by Damon Knight, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (February).
"The Last Question" by Isaac Asimov, Science Fiction Quarterly (November).
"The Man Who Came Early" by Poul Anderson, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (June).
"The Minority Report" (novella) by Philip K. Dick, Fantastic Universe.
= Juveniles
=Danny Dunn and the Anti-Gravity Paint by Raymond Abrashkin and Jay Williams, a lab mishap leads to the creation of anti-gravity paint and an unintended space voyage.
Time for the Stars by Robert A. Heinlein (juvenile), telepathic twins communicate across vast distances during space exploration.
= Children's books
=The Domes of Mars by Patrick Moore, second of a six-book series following Mission to Mars (1955).
Stowaway to the Mushroom Planet by Eleanor Cameron, children embark on another adventure to the Mushroom Planet.
Movies
Awards
Double Star by Robert A. Heinlein won the Hugo Award for Best Novel.
See also
1956 in science