
Factory in the Sky
Factory in the Sky drops listeners into a massive industrial world suspended in the asteroid belt, where twenty million people live among spinning metal levels, crowded transport tubes, and the constant thunder of wartime production. Basil Wells turns an ordinary work shift into a pressure cooker of suspicion, fatigue, and danger as rumors of sabotage creep through the factory floor. Every whistle blast and clattering machine feels dangerous once one worker realizes the enemy may already be inside.
The story captures the gritty side of life in space long before sleek starships and polished space stations became common science fiction settings. Workers punch clocks, argue politics during lunch breaks, and ride overcrowded buses through the void while an interplanetary war threatens to spread beyond the Jovian moons. Wells keeps the tension tight and personal. The danger does not arrive with a fleet of invading ships. It hides inside lunch kits, whispered conversations, and nervous glances near the time clock.
Factory in the Sky originally appeared in Planet Stories in 1942, during a period when wartime anxieties heavily shaped pulp-era science fiction. The story combines industrial realism with espionage suspense, creating a fast-moving tale where ordinary workers become the first line of defense against catastrophe. Listeners who enjoy giant space habitats, undercover agents, and blue-collar science fiction will find plenty to enjoy here.
Basil Wells fiction often focused on isolated workers, explorers, and outsiders trapped in dangerous situations far from Earth. Stories such as The Doorstep and Revolt of the Outworlders helped establish Wells as a reliable contributor to action-driven science fiction magazines, and Factory in the Sky remains one of his strongest blends of industrial space opera and wartime suspense.
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