This article is rated Stub-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Exploring Ninth Wave origins
editThe Ninth Wave, title is taken from a poem by Tennyson
References
editThe Albums - The Ninth Wave.
...Burdick was co-author of Fail-Safe (1962).
The Ninth Wave (paperback) was published by Dell Books in 1956,
and sold over a million copies. ...
- Capitol Weekly: Holiday Book Guidenovel: The Ninth Wave, by Ed Burdick. The main character morphs ...
- 1967, University of California: In Memoriam... Burdick's interest in politics was not wholly academic. ... In 1956, when told that the Book-of-the-Month Club had selected The Ninth Wave for distribution, he ...
- Oceanic - Hawaii Surf ...I vaguely recall reading a novel in the 50’s ... the Ninth Wave by Eugene Burdick, 1956. ...
- 06.08.00 - UC Berkeley's 2000 Summer Reading ..."The Ninth Wave" by Eugene Burdick Houghton Mifflin, 1956 (out of print)
Eugene Burdick ... In 1956 his critically acclaimed novel The Ninth Wave was published. ...
- MSC/ToMsC600/MsC574/MsC574_burdickeugene.htm Eugene L. Burdick Papers - The University of Iowa In 1956 his critically acclaimed novel The Ninth Wave was published and in 1958 his ... This collection contains a typescript of Burdick's book ...
Scope and Contents: This collection contains a typescript of Burdick's book The Blue of Capricorn and the serialized version of his story Fail-Safe that appeared in the Saturday Evening Post in 1962.
Acquisition and Processing Information: The typescript of The Blue of Capricorn was given to the University of Iowa Libraries by Eugene Burdick in 1961.
Guide posted to Internet: August 2004
65.30.117.192 04:35, 15 January 2006 (UTC)
- Rather than being on this talkpage, this material looks to be the basis for a The Ninth Wave article. So why not? rags (talk) 16:18, 25 January 2018 (UTC)
SGSR
editI thoroughly enjoyed reading about the Society for General Systems Research, which has had many notable members, including Nobel laureates, and is now known as the ISSS, but note [3] nowhere mentions it, and Burdick is not mentioned in the WP article. Maybe the notes have gotten confused. It's not "link rot": the link still works. I'll leave it alone, for now, but I think it unlikely that we'll find another source. rags (talk) 01:26, 27 January 2018 (UTC)