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Edgar Pangborn (1909-1976) was an American writer of science fiction, mystery, and literary fiction whose best work is remembered for its humanity, moral seriousness, and emotional depth. Although he worked within the magazine and paperback traditions of twentieth-century popular fiction, Pangborn brought an unusually reflective and compassionate sensibility to science fiction. His stories often turn on conscience, mercy, loneliness, trust, cultural survival, and the possibility of understanding between people-or beings-who might otherwise remain divided by fear.Pangborn's science fiction stands apart from much mid-century genre work because it is less interested in machinery, conquest, or technical problem-solving than in the moral consequences of discovery. In stories of alien contact, postwar survival, social collapse, and human rebuilding, he repeatedly asks how decent behaviour can endure under pressure and whether intelligence without compassion is enough. This gives his work a quiet but lasting power, especially for readers drawn to classic science fiction that values character, ethical choice, and emotional truth alongside speculative invention.His major works include A Mirror for Observers, which won the International Fantasy Award, the post-apocalyptic novel Davy, The Company of Glory,Angel's Egg shows one of Pangborn's characteristic strengths: treating first contact not as spectacle, but as a fragile encounter shaped by curiosity, fear, tenderness, and responsibility. His fiction remains an important part of the humane tradition in classic science fiction and continues to appeal to readers interested in alien contact, philosophical science fiction, postwar speculative literature, and emotionally intelligent genre writing.
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