The hate disease by Murray Leinster
Let's set the scene. The planet is called Tallien Three. It's a backwater world with a small human medical research base. Their job is to study the local fauna and flora. Things are routine until people start getting sick. But this isn't your standard fever-and-cough situation. The infected become consumed by an intense, violent hatred for the people around them. Friends turn into enemies in an instant. Paranoia and rage spread faster than any physical symptom.
The Story
Enter Med Service man Calhoun (a classic Leinster hero—capable, pragmatic, and a bit of a lone wolf). He arrives to find the station in chaos. The "hate disease" is ripping the community apart. His mission is simple: find the cause and stop it. The plot follows his race against time as he uses logic and deduction, not phasers or force fields, to solve the mystery. He has to work while distrust infects everyone, including his own crew. The solution is clever and rooted in the planet's unique ecosystem, making it a satisfying puzzle-box of a story.
Why You Should Read It
What grabbed me was how this book uses a sci-fi premise to talk about something very real: how easily society can fracture. Leinster isn't just writing about space germs; he's asking what happens when the bonds of trust and cooperation—the very things that let humans work together—are chemically severed. The characters aren't deeply psychological, but they serve the idea perfectly. You feel the claustrophobia and the dread as the infection spreads. It's a story about a man using cold science to fight a hot, emotional plague, and that contrast is where all the tension lives.
Final Verdict
This is a gem for fans of classic, idea-driven science fiction from the Asimov or Clarke era. It's also perfect if you love a good scientific mystery in an isolated setting (think 'The Andromeda Strain' but with more interpersonal drama). At under 200 pages, it's a tight, no-fuss story that delivers a great concept, a logical solution, and a chilling look at human nature. Don't go in expecting modern character arcs or epic world-building. Go in for a smart, suspenseful, and strangely timely tale about the worst parts of us, and the science that might save us from ourselves.
This book is widely considered to be in the public domain. Access is open to everyone around the world.
Anthony Thompson
1 year agoI didn't expect much, but the clarity of the writing makes this accessible. A valuable addition to my collection.
Matthew Young
11 months agoThe formatting on this digital edition is flawless.
James Ramirez
11 months agoComprehensive and well-researched.