Download The Face of the Deep: Captain Future #13 AudioBook Free
Carried far outside the solar system, and wrecked on the volcanic planetoid in company with a shipload of condemned criminals, Captain Future faces the supreme test of his courage! Captain Future does not have any shortage of opponents. Beings from over the universe and beyond plot to dominate planets, to destroy galaxies, and find themselves defeated by Captain Future. Only 1 of his foes, however, demonstrated evil enough to face Captain Future twice, Ull Quorn, the Magician of Mars. As Captain Future reviews stayed written, it likely became essential for Newton and the Futuremen to make their way beyond our own solar system, even our own galaxy. To this end, Captain Future eventually invents the "vibration drive", a tool that essentially allows the band of heroes to go anywhere they have to protect the universe. New planets get explored and galaxies unusual spring and coil into life, all teeming with some puzzle and evil for Captain Future to face. Travel between sizes even becomes possible, as does time travel! With each Captain Future storyline, the restrictions of where in fact the hero might go grew, eventually only being tied to the followers' imaginations. Although Captain Future was in the beginning modeled on Doc Savage, suggestions and affects of other heroes make their way in to the reviews as well. For instance, the Planet Law enforcement officials summon Captain Future with a signal flare fired in to the sky, much like Batman, the Phantom Detective, and more. Also, Captain Future has a lady interest, although he never completely admits that she might be a romantic one. An associate of the Space Patrol, Joan Randall shows in storyline after storyline that she can stand alongside the Futuremen which she also evidently has love for Curt Newton. Rocket into research fiction adventure and find out new worlds. Ripped from the webpages of the wintertime 1943 issue of Captain Future journal, "The Face of the Deep" is read with question and thrills by Milton Bagby.