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A collection of around 3, 300 works by 103 different authors, all of whom have received major recognition.

From the list of authorrs: Aldiss, Brian Alexander, Lloyd Anderson, Poul Asaro, Catherine Asimov, Isaac Atwood, Margaret Bacigalupi, Paolo Baxter, Stephen Beagle, Peter S Bear, Greg Benford, Gregory Bishop, Michael and many others The contributions of the above-mentioned writers are given as,Fiction The Rain Will Stop (1942) but first published by The Pretentious Press in (2000) The Brightfount Diaries (1955) Space, Time and Nathaniel (1957) Short story collection; all his published science fiction to that date, including T, his first published story, and Not For an Age. Aldiss had only had thirteen stories published at that time, and a fourteenth was hurriedly written to make up the numbers. Non-Stop (1958) A member of a culturally-primordial tribe investigates the dark, jungle filled corridors that surround him to ultimately uncover the true nature of the universe he inhabits. This was published in the US as Starship. Equator (1958), published in the United States as Vanguard from Alpha The Canopy of Time (1959) Short story collection: published in slightly different format in the US as Galaxies like Grains of Sand No Time Like Tomorrow (1959) Short story collection published for the US market by New American Library imprint Signet Books. (Includes the following stories: T, Not for an Age, Poor Little Warrior!, The Failed Men, Carrion Country, Judas Danced, Psyclops, Outside, Gesture of Farewell, The New Father Christmas, Our Kind of Knowledge) The Interpreter (1960; US title Bow down to Nul) A short novel about the huge, old galactic empire of Nuls, a giant, three-limbed, civilised alien race. Earth is just a lesser-than-third-class colony ruled by a Nul tyrant whose deceiving devices together with good willing but ineffective attempts of a Nul signatory to clarify the abuses and with the disorganised earthling resistance reflect the complex relationship existing between imperialists and subject races which Aldiss himself had the chance of seeing at first hand when serving in India and Indonesia in the forties. The Male Response (US: 1959, UK 1961) The Primal Urge (1961) Hothouse (1962) Set in a far future Earth, where the earth has stopped rotating, the Sun has increased output, and plants are engaged in a constant frenzy of growth and decay, like a tropical forest enhanced a thousandfold; a few small groups of elvish humans still live on the edge of extinction, beneath the giant banyan tree that covers the day side of the earth. The Airs of Earth (1963 short story collection; American title Starswarm)

The Dark Light Years (1964): the encounter of humans with the utods, gentle aliens whose physical and mental health requires wallowing in mud and filth, who are not even recognised as intelligent by the humans. Greybeard (1964) Set decades after the Earths population has been sterilised as a result of nuclear bomb tests conducted in Earths orbit, the book shows an emptying world, occupied by an ageing, childless population. Best SF stories of Brian Aldiss (1965); Published in the US as But who can replace a Man? Earthworks (1965) The Impossible Smile (1965); Serial in Science Fantasy magazine, under the pseudonym Jael Cracken The Saliva Tree and other strange growths (1966) Story collection. The title story of the collection, The Saliva Tree was written to mark the centenary of H.G. Wellss birth, and received the 1965 Nebula award for the best short novel An Age (1967: also published in the US as Cryptozoic!) a dystopic time-travel novel. Report On Probability A (1968) Described by Aldiss as an anti-novel, this book had its origins some years earlier, before being serialised in New Worlds under Michael Moorcocks editorship. The bulk of the book is the Report, describing in minute, obsessive and often repetitive detail, three characters G, S, and C as they secretly watch a house, each from a separate outbuilding with peripheral views of the houses windows, catching occasional glimpses of its occupant, Mrs Mary. As the Report is being read by a character called Domoladossa, he is secretly being observed from other universes, and these observers in their turn are being observed, all of them engaged in futile speculation about the exact nature of Probability A, and the exact meaning of the Victorian painting, The Hireling Shepherd (by Pre-Raphaelite William Holman Hunt; Holman Hunts paintings also feature in Aldisss short story The Secret of Holman Hunt and the Crude Death Rate, published in 1975), which occurs in the Report. Later we learn that Mrs. Mary is watching a screen of her own, although this may just be a television set, and it is suggested that the painting may be a window into a world where time is standing still. ed. Farewell Fantastic Venus (1968) Barefoot in the Head (1969) Perhaps Aldisss most experimental work, this first appeared in several parts as the Acid Head War series in New Worlds. Set in a Europe some years after a flare-up in the Middle East led to Europe being attacked with bombs releasing huge quantities of long-lived hallucinogenic drugs. Into an England with a population barely maintaining a grip on reality comes a young Serb, who himself starts coming under the influence of the ambient aerosols, and finds himself leading a messianic crusade. The narration and dialogue reflects the shattering of language under the influence of the drugs, in mutating phrases and puns and allusions, in a deliberate echo of Finnegans Wake. Neanderthal Planet (1970) Collection of four short stories. The Horatio Stubbs saga The Hand-Reared Boy (1970) A Soldier Erect (1971) A Rude Awakening (1978) The Moment of Eclipse (1971: short story collection) British Science Fiction Award winner, 1971[3] The Book of Brian Aldiss (1972) (UK title The Comic Inferno) Short story collection Frankenstein Unbound (1973) A 21st century politician is transported to 19th century Switzerland where he encounters both Frankenstein and Mary Shelley. It was the basis for the

1990 film of the same title, directed by Roger Corman. The 80 minute Hour (1974) The Malacia Tapestry (1976) Brothers of the Head (1977) This was a large-format book, illustrated by Ian Pollock, telling the strange story of the rock stars Tom and Barry Howe, Siamese twins with a third, dormant head, which eventually starts to awaken. Also adapted for film by Keith Fulton and Lou Pepe, released in 2006. Last Orders and Other Stories (1977) Enemies of the System (1978) Pile (1979; Poem) New Arrivals, Old Encounters (1979) Moreaus Other Island (1980) The Squire Quartet Life In The West (1980) Forgotten Life (1988) Remembrance Day (1993) Somewhere East Of Life (1994) The Helliconia Trilogy Helliconia Spring (1982) BSFA winner, 1982; Nebula Award nominee, 1982; Campbell Award winner, 1983 Helliconia Summer (1983) BSFA nominee, 1983;[citation needed] Locus Award nominee, 1984[citation needed] Helliconia Winter (1985) BSFA winner, 1985;[3] Nebula Award nominee, 1985;[citation needed] Locus Award nominee, 1986[citation needed] Seasons in Flight (1984) Courageous New Planet (c. 1984) The Year before Yesterday (1987); A fix-up of Equator from 1958 combined with The Impossible Smile from 1965. Ruins (1987) Dracula Unbound (1990) A Tupolev too Far (1994) Somewhere East of Life: Another European Fantasia (1994) The Secret of This Book (1995) (Common Clay: 20-Odd Stories US) (with Roger Penrose) White Mars Or, The Mind Set Free (1999) Super-Toys Last All Summer Long and Other Stories of Future Time (2001) The title story was the basis for the Steven Spielberg film A.I. Super-State (2002) The Cretan Teat (2002) Affairs at Hampden Ferrers (2004) Cultural Breaks (2005); his last collection of short stories. Jocasta (2005); A re-telling of Sophocles Theban tragedies concerning Oedipus and Antigone. In Aldiss novel, myth and magic are vibrantly real, experienced through an evolving human consciousness. Amidst various competing interpretations of reality, including the appearance of a time-travelling Sophocles, Aldiss provides an engaging alternative explanation of the Sphinx riddle. Sanity and the Lady (2005)

HARM (2007) 2008 Campbell Award nominee[citation needed] [edit]Poetry Home Life With Cats (1992) At The Caligula Hotel (1995) Songs From The Steppes Of Central Asia (1995) A Plutonian Monologue on His Wifes Death (The Frogmore Papers, 2000) At A Bigger House (2002) The Dark Sun Rises (2002) A Prehistory of Mind (2008) Mortal Morning (2011) [edit]Non-fiction Cities and Stones A Travellers Yugoslavia (1966) The Shape of Further Things (1970) Item Eighty Three (with Margaret Aldiss) (1972): a comprehensive bibliography of all books and short works published to that date. (The book is number 83 in its own list). Billion Year Spree: The History of Science Fiction (1973) in which he argues that Mary Shelleys Frankenstein was the first true science fiction novel. Revised and expanded as Trillion Year Spree (with David Wingrove)(1986) Hells Cartographers (1975, edited with Harry Harrison): a collection of short autobiographical pieces by a number of science fiction writers, including Aldiss. The title is a reference to Kingsley Amiss book about science fiction, New Maps of Hell The Pale Shadow Of Science (1986) This World and Nearer Ones: Essays exploring the familiar (1979) The Detached Retina: Aspects of SF and Fantasy (1995) The Twinkling of an Eye or My Life as an Englishman (1998) When the Feast is Finished (with Margaret Aldiss) (1999) Art after Apogee: The Relationships between an Idea, a Story, a Painting (with Rosemary Phipps) (2000) Bury My Heart at W.H. Smiths A Writing Life (1990) an autobiography [edit]Short story collections ( As editor ) Penguin Science Fiction (1961) More Penguin Science Fiction (1963) Yet More Penguin Science Fiction (1964) The Years Best Science Fiction No.1 (with Harry Harrison) (1968) The Years Best Science Fiction No.2 (with Harry Harrison) (1969) The Years Best Science Fiction No.3 (with Harry Harrison) (1970) The Years Best Science Fiction No.4 (with Harry Harrison) (1971) The Years Best Science Fiction No.5 (with Harry Harrison) (1972) The Years Best Science Fiction No.6 (with Harry Harrison) (1973) The Penguin Science Fiction Omnibus (1973) Space Opera (1974) Decade: the 1950 s (with Harry Harrison) (1976) Galactic Empires, Volume 1 (1976) Galactic Empires, Volume 2 (1976) Mini Sagas from the Daily Telegraph Competition (1998) ISBN 9780750915946

Mini Sagas From the Daily Telegraph Competition 2001 (2001) ISBN 978-1-900564-77-9 [edit]Other Umwelts for Hire, a Doctor Who short story published in Doctor Who Brilliant Book 2011 (BBC Books, 2010, ISBN 978-1-846-07991-7) The Chronicles of Prydain Main article: The Chronicles of Prydain The Book of Three (1964) The Black Cauldron (1965) Winner of the 1966 Newbery Honor The Castle of Llyr (1966) Taran Wanderer (1967) The High King (1968) Winner of the 1969 Newbery Medal The Foundling and Other Tales from Prydain (1970) [edit]The Westmark Trilogy Westmark (1981) The Kestrel (1982) The Beggar Queen (1984) [edit]The Vesper Holly series Main article: Vesper Holly The Illyrian Adventure (1986) The El Dorado Adventure (1987) The Drackenberg Adventure (1988) The Jedera Adventure (1989) The Philadelphia Adventure (1990) The Xanadu Adventure (2005) [edit]Other And Let the Credit Go (1955) (first published book) My Five Tigers (1956) August Bondi: Border Hawk (1958) Janine (my wife, that is) is French (1960) Aaron Lopez: The Flagship Hope (1960) Fifty Years in the Doghouse (1963) Time Cat: The Remarkable Journeys of Jason And Gareth (1963) The Truthful Harp (1967) The Marvelous Misadventures of Sebastian (1970) The Kings Fountain (1971) The Four Donkeys (1972) The Cat Who Wished to Be a Man (1973) The Wizard in the Tree (1974) The Town Cats and Other Tales (1977) The First Two Lives of Lukas-Kasha (1978) The Remarkable Journey of Prince Jen (1991) The Fortune-Tellers (1992) The Arkadians (1995) The House Gobbaleen (1995) The Iron Ring (1997) Gypsy Rizka (1999)

How the Cat Swallowed Thunder (2000) The Gawgon and the Boy (2001) (UK title The Fantastical Adventures of the Invisible Boy) The Rope Trick (2002) Dream-of-Jade: The Emperors Cat (2005) The Golden Dream of Carlo Chuchio (2007) [edit]Translations The Diary of Antoine Roquentin (John Lehmann, 1949). This was the first English translation of the celebrated existentialist novel La Nause by Jean-Paul Sartre (Gallimard 1938). Science fiction [edit]Hoka Earthmans Burden (1957) with Gordon R. Dickson Star Prince Charlie (1975) with Gordon R. Dickson Hoka! (1983) with Gordon R. Dickson Reissued by Baen as: Hoka! Hoka! Hoka! (1998) with Gordon R. Dickson Hokas Pokas! (2000) with Gordon R. Dickson [edit]The Psychotechnic League Star Ways (also known as The Peregrine) (1956) The Snows of Ganymede (1958) Virgin Planet (1959) The Psychotechnic League (1981) Cold Victory (1982) Starship (1982) [edit]Tomorrows Children Tomorrows Children (1947) with F. N. Waldrop Chain of Logic (1947) [edit]Technic History The Saturn Game (1989) [edit]Polesotechnic League period of Nicholas van Rijn (by internal chronology): War of the Wing-Men (original book publication heavily edited; authors preferred text [and title] later issued as The Man Who Counts) (1958) Trader to the Stars (1964) (Prometheus Award), collects: Hiding Place (1961) Territory (1961) The Master Key (1971) The Trouble Twisters (features David Falkayn, not Van Rijn) (1966), collects: The Three-Cornered Wheel (1963) A Sun Invisible (1966) The Trouble Twisters (also known as Trader Team) (1965) Satans World (1969) The Earth Book of Stormgate (many stories do not feature Van Rijn) (1978). It collects: Wings of Victory (1972) The Problem of Pain (1973) How to be Ethnic in One Easy Lesson (1974) Margin of Profit (1956)

Esau (also known as Birthright) (1970) The Season of Forgiveness (1973) The Man Who Counts (first appearance of the unedited version of War of the Wing-Men) (1958) A Little Knowledge (1971) Day of Burning (also known as Supernova) (1967) Lodestar (1973) Wingless (also known as Wingless on Avalon) (1973) Rescue on Avalon (1973) Mirkheim (1977) The People of the Wind (does not feature Falkayn or Van Rijn) (1973) Hugo and Locus SF Awards nominee, 1974 [10] Nebula Award nominee, 1973[11] [edit]Terran Empire period of Dominic Flandry (by internal chronology): The Imperial Stars, collects: Ensign Flandry (1966) A Circus of Hells (1970) The Rebel Worlds (1969) Young Flandry (2010) The Day of Their Return (does not feature Flandry) (1973) Agent of the Terran Empire (1965), collects: Tiger by the Tail (1951) The Warriors From Nowhere (1954) Honorable Enemies (1951) Hunters of the Sky Cave (also known as A Handful of Stars and We Claim These Stars) (1959) Flandry of Terra (1965), collects: The Game of Glory (1958) A Message in Secret (also known as Mayday Orbit) (1959) The Plague of Masters (also known as A Plague of Masters and Earthman, Go Home!) (1960) A Knight of Ghosts and Shadows (1974) A Stone in Heaven (1979) The Game of Empire (features a daughter of Flandry) (1985) The Long Night (features a Dark Age after Flandrys era) (1983), collects: The Star Plunderer (1952) Outpost of Empire (1967) A Tragedy of Errors (1967) The Sharing of Flesh (1968) (Hugo, Nebula) Starfog (1967) Let the Spacemen Beware (also known as The Night Face, does not feature Flandry) (1963) [edit]Time Patrol Time Patrol (1955) Brave to be a King (1959) Gibraltar Falls (1975) The Only Game in Town (1960) Delenda Est (1955)

Ivory, and Apes, and Peacocks (1983) The Sorrow of Odin the Goth (1983) Star of the Sea (1991) The Year of the Ransom (1988) The Shield of Time (1990) (Although the cover of the book said The Shield of Time, the credits said Shield. The preamble/dedication appearing in a scanned version of the book indicates A short version of this novel appeared serially in Fantastic Stories of Imagination, JuneJuly, 1962. Copyright # 1962, Berkley Medallion edition / October 1974 Berkley edition / April 1982. Copyright # 1963 by Poul Anderson.) Death and the Knight (1995) The shorter works in the series have been collected numerous times over the years, in Guardians of Time (1960, contains 1, 2, 4 and 5; expanded 1981 edition adds 3), Time Patrolman (1983, contains 6 and 7), Annals of the Time Patrol (1983, contains 1-7), The Time Patrol (1991, contains 1-9), and Time Patrol (2006, contains 1-9 and 11). [edit]History of Rustum Orbit Unlimited (1961) Fix-up novel created from Rustum short stories first published in magazines from 1959 to 1961.[12] New America (1982) Collection that includes four Rustum stories plus two unrelated stories.[13] My Own, My Native Land Rustum story first published in the anthology Continuum 1 (1974) edited by Roger Elwood. Passing the Love of Women Rustum story first published in Continuum 2 (1974) A Fair Exchange Rustum story first published in Continuum 3 (December 1974) To Promote the General Welfare Rustum story first published in Continuum 4 (September 1975) The Queen of Air and Darkness First published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April 1971 and the winner of the Nebula Award for Best Novelette (1971), Hugo Award for Best Novella (1972), and Locus Poll Award, Best Short Fiction (1972). Home (1966) First published in the anthology Orbit One (1966). Also published as The Disinherited. [edit]Maurai Maurai and Kith (1982), collects: Ghetto (1954) The Sky People (1959) Progress (1961) The Horn of Time the Hunter (also known as Homo Aquaticus, 1963) Windmill (1973) Orion Shall Rise (1983) Related: There Will Be Time [edit]Kith The Kith, a persecuted starfaring civilization, is featured in: Ghetto (1954) The Horn of Time the Hunter (also known as Homo Aquaticus, 1963) The novel Starfarers (1998) Campbell Award nominee, 1999 [14] [edit]Harvest of Stars Harvest of Stars (1993)

The Stars Are Also Fire (1994) (Prometheus Award) Harvest the Fire (1995) The Fleet of Stars (1997) [edit]Other novels Flight to Forever (1950) Vault of the Ages (1952) Brain Wave (1954) Question and Answer (also known as Planet of No Return) (1954) No World of Their Own (1955) The Long Way Home (1958) Perish by the Sword (1959) War of Two Worlds (1959) The Enemy Stars (also known as We have fed our sea) (1959) Hugo Award nominee, 1959 [15] The High Crusade (1960) Hugo Award nominee, 1961 [16] Murder in Black Letter (1960) Twilight World (1961)[17] After Doomsday (1962) The Makeshift Rocket (1962) (expansion of A Bicycle Built for Brew) Murder Bound (1962) Shield (1963) Three Worlds to Conquer (1964) The Corridors of Time (1965) The Star Fox (1965) Nebula award nominee, 1965,[18] Prometheus Award winner The Fox, the Dog and the Griffin: A Folk Tale Adapted from the Danish of C. Molbeck (1966) World Without Stars (1966) Tau Zero (1970) (expansion of To Outlive Eternity) Hugo Award nominee, 1971 [19] The Byworlder (1971) Nebula Award nominee, 1971 [19] The Dancer from Atlantis (1971) There Will Be Time (1972) Hugo Award nominee, 1973 [11] NOTE: One of the characters in this novel, Leonce, is from the Maurai culture, as noted in the book. She is from a much earlier era than the Maurai stories, however. Fire Time (1974) Hugo Award nominee, 1975 [20] Inheritors of Earth (1974) with Gordon Eklund The Winter of the World (1975) The Avatar (1978) The Demon of Scattery (1979) with Mildred Downey Broxon The Devils Game (1980) The Boat of a Million Years (1989) Hugo Award nominee, 1990;[14] Nebula Award nominee, 1989 [21] The Longest Voyage (1991) War of the Gods (1997) Genesis (2000) John W. Campbell Memorial Award, 2001 [22] Mother of Kings (2001) For Love and Glory (2003) [edit]Collections

Orbit Unlimited (1961) Strangers from Earth (1961) Twilight World (1961) Un-Man and Other Novellas (1962) Time and Stars (1964) The Fox, the Dog, and the Griffin (1966) The Horn of Time (1968) Beyond the Beyond (1969, contains: Memory [originally A World Called Maanerek], 1957; Brake, 1957; Day of the Burning [originally Supernova], 1967; The Sensitive Man, 1954; The Moonrakers, 1966; Starfog, 1967) Seven Conquests (1969) Tales of the Flying Mountains (1970) The Queen of Air and Darkness and Other Stories (1973) The Worlds of Poul Anderson (1974) The Many Worlds of Poul Anderson (also known as The Book of Poul Anderson) (1974) Edited by Roger Elwood Homeward and Beyond (1975) The Best of Poul Anderson (1976) Homebrew (1976) The Night Face & Other Stories (1979) The Dark Between the Stars (1981) Explorations (1981) Fantasy (1981) The Guardians of Time (1981) Winners (1981) (a collection of Andersons Hugo-winners) Cold Victory (1982) The Gods Laughed (1982) New America (1982) Starship (1982) The Winter of the World / The Queen of Air and Darkness (1982) Conflict (1983) (including, among other stories, the 1966 High Treason) The Long Night (1983) Past Times (1984) The Unicorn Trade (1984) with Karen Anderson Dialogue With Darkness (1985) Space Folk (1989) The Shield of Time (1990) Alight in the Void (1991) The Armies of Elfland (1991) Inconstant Star (1991) Stories set in Larry Nivens Man-Kzin Wars universe. Kinship with the Stars (1991) All One Universe (1996) Going for Infinity [edit]Fantasy [edit]King of Ys Roma Mater (1986) with Karen Anderson

Gallicenae (1987) with Karen Anderson Dahut (1987) with Karen Anderson The Dog and the Wolf (1988) with Karen Anderson [edit]Operation Otherworld Operation Chaos (1971) Operation Luna (1999) Operation Otherworld (1999) omnibus containing Operation Chaos and Operation Luna [edit]Other novels Three Hearts and Three Lions (1953) The Broken Sword (1954, revised in 1971) Hrolf Krakis Saga (1973) British Fantasy Award, 1974 [10] A Midsummer Tempest (1974) Nebula and World Fantasy Awards nominee, 1975 [20] NOTE: One character who appears in this novel is Valeria Matucheck, eldest daughter of Steve and Ginny Matuchek, protagonists of Operation Chaos and Operation Luna. Though written between these two books, A Midsummer Tempest takes place after both. Holger Carlsen, of Three Hearts and Three Lions, also appears. The Mermans Children (1979) Locus Fantasy Award nominee, 1980 [23] Conan the Rebel (1980) War of the Gods (1997) [edit]Historical novels [edit]The Last Viking (biography of King Harald Hardrde) The Golden Horn (1980) with Karen Anderson The Road of the Sea Horse (1980) with Karen Anderson The Sign of the Raven (1980) with Karen Anderson [edit]Other novels The Golden Slave (1960) Historical novel Rogue Sword (1960) Historical novel [edit]Anthologies Nebula Award Stories Four (1969) The Day the Sun Stood Still (1972) with Gordon R. Dickson and Robert Silverberg A World Named Cleopatra (1977) [edit]Non-Fiction Is There Life on Other Worlds? (1963) The Infinite Voyage (1969) [edit]Fictional appearances Philip K. Dicks story Waterspider features Poul Anderson as one of the main characters. Saga of the Skolian Empire [edit]Reading order by date of publication Note that the stories were published in non-chronological sequence, from the perspective of the characters. Light and Shadow (novelette appearing in Analog, ed. Stanley Schmidt) (1994) Primary Inversion (1995) exclusive updated version available free at WebScription.net Catch the Lightning (1996) The Last Hawk (1997)

The Radiant Seas (1999) Aurora in Four Voices (novella appearing in Analog, ed. Stanley Schmidt) (1998) Ascendant Sun (2000) A Roll of the Dice (novella appearing in Analog, ed. Stanley Schmidt) (2000) The Quantum Rose (2000) (also serialized in Analog, ed. Stanley Schmidt) (1999) Ave de Paso (short story appearing in anthology Redshift: Extreme Visions of Speculative Fiction, ed. Al Sarrantonio, (2001), and in Fantasy: the Best of 2001, ed. Robert Silverberg and Karen Haber, (2002)) Spherical Harmonic (2001) The Moons Shadow (2003) Skyfall (2003) Stained Glass Heart (novella appearing in anthology Irresistible Forces, ed. Catherine Asaro) (2004) Walk in Silence (novella appearing in Analog, ed. Stanley Schmidt) (2004) Schism (2004) The Edges of Never-Haven (short story appearing in anthology Flights: Extreme Visions of Fantasy, ed. Al Sarrantonio) (2004) The City of Cries (novella appearing in Down These Dark Spaceways, ed. Mike Resnick) (2005) The Shadowed Heart (novelette appearing in anthology The Journey Home, ed. Mary Kirk (2005), and Best New Paranormal Romance, ed. Paula Guran, (2006)) The Final Key (2005) The Ruby Dice (novella appearing in Jim Baens Universe, ed. Eric Flint) (2006) The Ruby Dice (2008) Diamond Star (2009) [edit]Reading order by internal chronology Note: the name(s) between the parentheses denotes the main character. Skyfall (Roca Skolia, Eldrinson Althor Valdoria, Kurj Skolia) The City of Cries (Major Bhaaj, P.I.) Stained Glass Heart (Havyrl Torcellei Valdoria) Schism (Sauscony Lahaylia Valdoria) The Final Key (Sauscony Lahaylia Valdoria/rest of her family) The Edges of Never-Haven (Denric Winward Valdoria) Light and Shadow (Kelricson Garlin Valdoria) Aurora in Four Voices (Sauscony Lahaylia Valdoria) Walk in Silence (Jess Fernandez) The Last Hawk (Kelricson Garlin Valdoria) Primary Inversion (Sauscony Lahaylia Valdoria) (This was the first published book) The Radiant Seas (Sauscony Lahaylia Valdoria/rest of her family) The Shadowed Heart (Jason Harrick) Aftermath of Radiant War the following stories have a great deal of overlap but follow different characters Ascendant Sun (Kelricson Garlin Valdoria) The Quantum Rose (Kamoj Argali, Havyrl Torcellei Valdoria) Spherical Harmonic (Dyhianna Selei) The Moons Shadow (Jaibriol Qox Skolia)

Diamond Star (Del-Kurj Arden Valdoria) A Roll of the Dice (Jeremiah Coltman) The Ruby Dice (novella, Kelricson Garlin Valdoria) The Ruby Dice (full length novel, Jaibriol Qox Skolia and Kelricson Garlin Valdoria) Ave de Paso (Akushtina Santis Pulivok) Catch the Lightning (Akushtina Santis Pulivok, Althor Vyan Selei) [20] [edit]Other works Lost Continent (aka Aronsdale) series (Romantic fantasy)[21] Moonglow novella (Charmed Destinies, ed. Mary Theresa Husey (2003)) The Charmed Sphere (2004) The Misted Cliffs (2005) The Dawn Star (2006) The Fire Opal (2007) The Night Bird (2008) Dance in Blue novelette (Christmas Forever, ed. David Hartwell, (1993) and Wondrous Beginnings, ed. Steven Silver (2003)) The Veiled Web (1999) The Phoenix Code (2000) Boot Hill short story (Civil War Fantastic, ed. Martin H. Greenberg, (2000)) Sunrise Alley (2004) Alpha (2006) (Sequel to Sunrise Alley) The Space-Time Pool (Analog novella, 2008) The Topaz Desert (Lace and Blade, ed. Deborah Ross, 2008) [edit]Inclusion in collections with works by other authors Civil War Fantastic, ed. Martin H. Greenberg (2000) Redshift: Extreme Visions of Speculative Fiction, ed. Al Sarrantonio, (2001) Fantasy: the Best of 2001, ed. Robert Silverberg and Karen Haber, (2002) Charmed Destinies, ed. Mary Theresa Hussey (2003) Nebula Awards Showcase 2003, ed. Nancy Kress (2003) Irresistible Forces, ed. Catherine Asaro (2004) Flights: Extreme Visions of Fantasy, ed. Al Sarrantonio) (2004) Projections: Science Fiction in Literature & Film, ed. Lou Anders Nonfiction (2004) The Journey Home, ed. Mary Kirk (2005) Down These Dark Spaceways, ed. Mike Resnick (2005) Year Million, ed. Damien Broderick Nonfiction (2008) ncluding all titles, charts, and edited collections, there are currently 515 items in Asimovs bibliographynot counting his individual short stories, individual essays, and criticism. For his 100th, 200th, and 300th books (based on his personal count), Asimov published Opus 100 (1969), Opus 200 (1979), and Opus 300 (1984), celebrating his writing; he did not choose to do this for his 400th book, however. Asimovs writings span across all major categories of the Dewey Decimal Classification except for Philosophy. However, if his foreword for The Humanist Way is included, he has been published in all categories.[3] According to UNESCOs Index Translationum database, Asimov is the worlds 17th mosttranslated author, just behind Arthur Conan Doyle and ahead of Pope John Paul II.[58] There is an online exhibit displaying features, visuals, and descriptions of some of the over 600

books, games, audio recordings, videos, and wall charts included in the West Virginia University Libraries virtually complete Asimov Collection. Many first, rare, and autographed editions are in the Libraries Rare Book Room. Book jackets and autographs are presented online along with descriptions and images of childrens books, science fiction art, multimedia, and other materials in the collection.[59] For a listing of Asimovs books in chronological order within his future history, see the Foundation Series list of books. [edit]Science fiction [edit]Greater Foundation series The Robot series was originally separate from the Foundation series. The Galactic Empire novels were originally published as independent stories. Later in life, Asimov synthesized them into a single coherent history that appeared in the extension of the Foundation series. Main article: Foundation series Main article: Isaac Asimovs Robot Series Main article: Isaac Asimovs Galactic Empire Series The Robot series: The Caves of Steel. 1954. ISBN 0-553-29340-0. (first Elijah Baley SF-crime novel) The Naked Sun. 1957. ISBN 0-553-29339-7. (second Elijah Baley SF-crime novel) The Robots of Dawn. 1983. ISBN 0-553-29949-2. (third Elijah Baley SF-crime novel) Robots and Empire. 1985. ISBN 978-0-586-06200-5. (sequel to the Elijah Baley trilogy) Galactic Empire novels: Pebble in the Sky. 1950. ISBN 0-553-29342-7. The Stars, Like Dust. 1951. ISBN 0-553-29343-5. The Currents of Space. 1952. ISBN 0-553-29341-9. Original Foundation trilogy: Foundation. 1951. ISBN 0-553-29335-4. Foundation and Empire. 1952. ISBN 0-553-29337-0., Published with the title The Man Who Upset the Universe as a 35c Ace paperback, D-125, in about 1952 Second Foundation. 1953. ISBN 0-553-29336-2. Extended Foundation series: Foundations Edge. 1982. ISBN 0-553-29338-9. Foundation and Earth. 1986. ISBN 0-553-58757-9. (last of the Foundation series) Prelude to Foundation. 1988. ISBN 0-553-27839-8. (occurs before Foundation) Forward the Foundation. 1993. ISBN 0-553-40488-1. (occurs after Prelude to Foundation and before Foundation) [edit]Lucky Starr series (as Paul French) Main article: Lucky Starr series David Starr, Space Ranger (1952) Lucky Starr and the Pirates of the Asteroids (1953) Lucky Starr and the Oceans of Venus (1954) Lucky Starr and the Big Sun of Mercury (1956) Lucky Starr and the Moons of Jupiter (1957) Lucky Starr and the Rings of Saturn (1958) [edit]Norby Chronicles (with Janet Asimov) Main article: Norby Norby, the Mixed-Up Robot (1983)

Norbys Other Secret (1984) Norby and the Lost Princess (1985) Norby and the Invaders (1985) Norby and the Queens Necklace (1986) Norby Finds a Villain (1987) Norby Down to Earth (1988) Norby and Yobos Great Adventure (1989) Norby and the Oldest Dragon (1990) Norby and the Court Jester (1991) [edit]Novels not part of a series Novels marked with an asterisk * have minor connections to the Foundation series. The End of Eternity (1955) * Fantastic Voyage (1966) (a novelization of the movie) The Gods Themselves (1972) Fantastic Voyage II: Destination Brain (1987) (not a sequel to Fantastic Voyage, but a similar, independent story) Nemesis (1989) * Nightfall (1990), with Robert Silverberg The Ugly Little Boy (1992), with Robert Silverberg (aka: Child of Time) The Positronic Man (1993) *, with Robert Silverberg [edit]Short story collections See also List of short stories by Isaac Asimov I, Robot. 1950. ISBN 0-553-29438-5. The Martian Way and Other Stories. 1955. ISBN 0-837-60463-X. Earth Is Room Enough. 1957. ISBN 0-449-24125-4. Nine Tomorrows. 1959. ISBN 0-449-24084-3. The Rest of the Robots. 1964. ISBN 0-385-09041-2. Through a Glass, Clearly. 1967. ISBN 0-860-25124-1. Nightfall and Other Stories. 1969. ISBN 0-449-01969-1. The Early Asimov. 1972. ISBN 0-449-02850-X. The Best of Isaac Asimov. 1973. ISBN 0-722-11256-4. Buy Jupiter and Other Stories. 1975. ISBN 0-385-05077-1. The Bicentennial Man and Other Stories. 1976. ISBN 0-575-02240-X. The Complete Robot. 1982. The Winds of Change and Other Stories. 1983. ISBN 0-385-18099-3. The Alternate Asimovs. 1986. ISBN 0-385-19784-5. The Best Science Fiction of Isaac Asimov. 1986. Robot Dreams. 1986. ISBN 0-441-73154-6. Azazel. 1988. Robot Visions. 1990. ISBN 0-451-45064-7. Gold. 1995. ISBN 0-553-28339-1. Magic. 1996. ISBN 0-002-24622-8. [edit]Mysteries [edit]Novels The Death Dealers (1958), republished as A Whiff of Death Murder at the ABA (1976), also published as Authorized Murder

[edit]Short story collections [edit]Black Widowers series Tales of the Black Widowers (1974) More Tales of the Black Widowers (1976) Casebook of the Black Widowers (1980) Banquets of the Black Widowers (1984) Puzzles of the Black Widowers (1990) The Return of the Black Widowers (2003) [edit]Other mysteries Asimovs Mysteries (1968) The Key Word and Other Mysteries (1977) The Union Club Mysteries (1983) The Disappearing Man and Other Mysteries (1985) The Best Mysteries of Isaac Asimov (1986) [edit]Nonfiction [edit]Popular science Collections of Asimovs essays originally published as monthly columns in the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction Fact and Fancy (1962) View from a Height (1963) Adding a Dimension (1964) Of Time, Space, & Other Things (1965) From Earth to Heaven (1966) Science, Numbers and I (1968) The Solar System and Back (1970) The Stars in Their Courses (1971) The Left Hand of the Electron (1972) The Tragedy of the Moon (1973) Of Matters Great & Small (1975) The Planet that Wasnt (1976) Quasar, Quasar, Burning Bright (1977) Road to Infinity (1979) The Sun Shines Bright (1981) Counting the Eons (1983) X Stands for Unknown (1984) The Subatomic Monster (1985) Far as Human Eye Could See (1987) The Relativity of Wrong (1988) Out of the Everywhere (1990) The Secret of the Universe (1990) Other science books by Asimov The Chemicals of Life (1954) ISBN 9780451624185 Inside the Atom (1956) ISBN 978-0-200-71444-0 Only a Trillion (1957) ISBN 978-0441631216 Building Blocks of the Universe (1957; revised 1974) ISBN 0200710990 ISBN 978-0200710992 The World of Carbon (1958) ISBN 978-0020913504

The World of Nitrogen (1958) ISBN 978-0020914006 Words of Science and the History Behind Them (1959) ISBN 978-0395065716 The Clock We Live On (1959) ISBN 978-0200711005 Asimov on Numbers (1959) ISBN 978-0517371459 The Wellsprings of Life (1960) ISBN 978-0-451-03245-4 Life and Energy (1962) ISBN 978-0380009428 The Human Body: Its Structure and Operation (1963) ISBN 978-0451024305, ISBN 9780451627070 (revised) The Human Brain: Its Capacities and Functions (1963) ISBN 978-0451628671 Planets for Man (with Stephen H. Dole) (1964, reprinted by RAND 2007) ISBN 978-0-83304226-2 [1] The Intelligent Mans Guide to Science (1965) The title varied with each of the four editions, the last being Asimovs New Guide to Science (1984) ISBN 978-0140172133 The Universe: From Flat Earth to Quasar (1966) ISBN 9780380015962 The Neutrino (1966) ASIN B002JK525W Is Anyone There? (1967), ISBN 0385084013 where he used the term Spome Photosynthesis (1968) ISBN 978-0465057030 Our World in Space (1974) ISBN 978-0821204344 Please Explain (1975) ISBN 978-0440968047 Asimov On Astronomy (1975) ISBN 978-0517279243 Asimov On Physics (1976) ISBN 978-0385009584 The Collapsing Universe (1977), ISBN 0-671-81738-8 Extraterrestrial Civilizations (1979) ISBN 978-0449900208 Visions of the Universe with coauthor Kazuaki Iwasaki (1981) ISBN 978-0939540013 Exploring the Earth and the Cosmos (1982) ISBN 978-0517546673 Understanding Physics (1988) [1966] ISBN 978-0880292511 Vol. I, Motion, Sound, and Heat ISBN 978-0451003294 Vol. II, Light, Magnetism, and Electricity ISBN 978-0451619426 Vol. III, The Electron, Proton, and Neutron ISBN 978-0451626349 Asimovs Chronology of Science and Discovery (1989), second edition adds content thru 1993, ISBN 9780062701138 Asimovs Chronology of the World (1991) ISBN 9780062700360 Isaac Asimovs Guide to Earth and Space (1991) ISBN 9780449220597 Atom: Journey Across the Subatomic Cosmos (1991) ISBN 9781439509005 Mysteries of deep space: Quasars, Pulsars and Black Holes (1994) ISBN 9780836811339 The Moon (2003), revised by Richard Hantula ISBN 978-1591021223 The Sun (2003), revised by Richard Hantula ISBN 978-1591021223 Jupiter (2004), revised by Richard Hantula ISBN 978-1591021230 The Earth (2004), revised by Richard Hantula ISBN 978-1591021773 Venus (2004), revised by Richard Hantula ISBN 978-0-8368-3877-0 [edit]Annotations Asimovs Annotated Don Juan Asimovs Annotated Paradise Lost Asimovs Annotated Gilbert and Sullivan Asimovs The Annotated Gullivers Travels

Familiar Poems, Annotated [edit]Guides Asimovs Guide to the Bible, vols I and II (1981), ISBN 0-517-34582-X Asimovs Guide to Shakespeare, vols I and II (1970), ISBN 0-517-26825-6 [edit]Autobiography In Memory Yet Green: The Autobiography of Isaac Asimov, 19201954, (1979, Doubleday) In Joy Still Felt: The Autobiography of Isaac Asimov, 19541978, (1980, Doubleday) I. Asimov: A Memoir, (1994, Doubleday) Its Been a Good Life, (2002), condensation of Asimovs three volume biography by his widow, Janet Jeppson Asimov [edit]Other Nonfiction Opus 100 (1969), ISBN 0-395-07351-0 Isaac Asimovs Treasury of Humor (1971) The Sensuous Dirty Old Man (1971), ISBN 0-451-07199-9 Asimovs Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology (1972), ISBN 0-385-17771-2 Lecherous Limericks (1976), ISBN 0-449-22841-X More Lecherous Limericks (1976), ISBN 0-802-77102-5 Still More Lecherous Limericks (1977), ISBN 0-802-77106-8 Opus 200 (1979), ISBN 0-395-27625-X Our Federal Union (1975), ISBN 0-395-2283-3 Isaac Asimovs Book of Facts (1979), ISBN 0-517-36111-6 A Grossery of Limericks, with John Ciardi (1981), ISBN 0-393-33112-1 The Roving Mind (1983) (collection of essays). New edition published by Prometheus Books, 1997, ISBN 1-573-92181-5 Opus 300 (1984), ISBN 0-395-36108-7 Limericks, Two Gross, with John Ciardi (1985), ISBN 0-393-04530-7 Asimov Laughs Again (1992) [edit]Selected Books by Dewey Decimal Category Hallucination Orbit: Psychology In Science Fiction, (000) Asimovs Guide to the Bible, (200) Why are the Rain Forests Vanishing?, (300) Words from History, (400) Realm of Numbers, (500) The Human Body: Its Structure and Operation, (600) Visions of the Universe, (700) The Do-It-Yourself Bestseller: A Workbook, (800) The Greeks: A Great Adventure, (900) Novels The Edible Woman (1969) Surfacing (1972) Lady Oracle (1976) Life Before Man (1979, finalist for the Governor Generals Award) Bodily Harm (1981) The Handmaids Tale (1985, winner of the 1987 Arthur C. Clarke Award and 1985 Governor Generals Award, finalist for the 1986 Booker Prize) Cats Eye (1988, finalist for the 1988 Governor Generals Award and the 1989 Booker Prize)

The Robber Bride (1993, finalist for the 1994 Governor Generals Award) Alias Grace (1996, winner of the 1996 Giller Prize, finalist for the 1996 Booker Prize and the 1996 Governor Generals Award) The Blind Assassin (2000, winner of the 2000 Booker Prize and finalist for the 2000 Governor Generals Award) Oryx and Crake (2003, finalist for the 2003 Booker Prize and the 2003 Governor Generals Award) The Penelopiad (2005, longlisted for the 2007 IMPAC Award) The Year of the Flood (September 2009, Oryx and Crake followup) [edit]Short fiction collections Dancing Girls (1977, winner of the St. Lawrence Award for Fiction and the award of The Periodical Distributors of Canada for Short Fiction) Murder in the Dark (1983) Bluebeards Egg (1983) Wilderness Tips (1991, finalist for the Governor Generals Award) Good Bones (1992) Good Bones and Simple Murders (1994) The Labrador Fiasco (1996) The Tent (2006) Moral Disorder (2006) [edit]Poetry collections Double Persephone (1961) The Circle Game (1964, winner of the 1966 Governor Generals Award) Expeditions (1965) Speeches for Doctor Frankenstein (1966) The Animals in That Country (1968) The Journals of Susanna Moodie (1970) Procedures for Underground (1970) Power Politics (1971) You Are Happy (1974) Selected Poems (1976) Two-Headed Poems (1978) True Stories (1981) Love Songs of a Terminator (1983) Snake Poems (1983)[25] Interlunar (1984) Selected Poems 1966-1984 (Canada) Selected Poems II: 1976-1986 (USA) Morning in the Burned House, McClelland & Stewart (1995) Eating Fire: Selected Poems, 1965-1995 (UK,1998) You Begin. (1978) as recited by Margaret Atwood; included in all three most recent editions of her Selected Poems as listed above (USA, CA, UK) The Door (2007) [edit]Anthologies edited The New Oxford Book of Canadian Verse (1982) The Canlit Foodbook (1987)

The Oxford Book of Canadian Short Stories in English (1988) The Best American Short Stories 1989 (1989) (with Shannon Ravenel) The New Oxford Book of Canadian Short Stories in English (1995) [edit]Childrens books Up in the Tree (1978) Annas Pet (1980) (with Joyce C. Barkhouse) For the Birds (1990) (with Shelly Tanaka) Princess Prunella and the Purple Peanut (1995) Rude Ramsay and the Roaring Radishes (2003) Bashful Bob and Doleful Dorinda (2006) [edit]Non-fiction Survival: A Thematic Guide to Canadian Literature (1972) Days of the Rebels 1815-1840 (1977) Second Words: Selected Critical Prose (1982) Through the One-Way Mirror (1986) Strange Things: The Malevolent North in Canadian Literature (1995) Negotiating with the Dead: A Writer on Writing (2002) Moving Targets: Writing with Intent, 1982-2004 (2004) Writing with Intent: Essays, Reviews, Personal Prose1983-2005 (2005) Payback: Debt and the Shadow Side of Wealth (2008) [edit]Drawings Kanadian Kultchur Komix featuring Survivalwoman in This Magazine under the pseudonym, Bart Gerrard 1975-1980 Others appear on her website. [edit]Television scripts The Servant Girl (1974) Snowbird (1981) Heaven on Earth (1987) [edit]Libretto The Trumpets of Summer (1964) (with composer John Beckwith) Frankenstein Monster Song (2004, with rock band One Ring Zero) [26] [edit]Audio recordings The Poetry and Voice of Margaret Atwood (1977) Margaret Atwood Reads Unearthing Suite (1985) Margaret Atwood Reading From Her Poems (2005) Novels The Windup Girl (Night Shade Books, 2009) Ship Breaker (Little, Brown and Company, 2010) [edit]Collections Pump Six and Other Stories (Night Shade Books, 2008) [edit]Novellas The Alchemist (Subterranean Press, 2011) with J. K. Drummond [edit]Short stories Pocketful of Dharma (1999) The Fluted Girl (2003) The People of Sand and Slag (2004)

The Pasho (2004) The Calorie Man (2005) The Tamarisk Hunter (2006) Pop Squad (2006) Yellow Card Man (2006) Softer (2007) Small Offerings (2007) Pump Six (2008) The Gambler (2008) Xeelee Sequence Title Year ISBN Notes Raft 1991 ISBN 0-246-13706-1 Arthur C. Clarke Award nominee, 1992[6] Timelike Infinity 1992 ISBN 0-00-224016-5 Flux 1993 ISBN 0-00-224025-4 Ring 1993 ISBN 0-00-224026-2 Vacuum Diagrams 1997 ISBN 0-00-225425-5 Philip K. Dick Award winner, 1999[5] Short story collection. Reality Dust 2000 ISBN 1-902880-10-2 ISBN 1-902880-11-0 Novella (first published by PS Publishing as trade paperback and hardcover; both limited; later collected in Resplendent) Riding the Rock 2002 ISBN 1-902880-60-9 ISBN 1-902880-59-5 Novella (first published by PS Publishing as trade paperback and hardcover; both limited; later collected in Resplendent) Mayflower II 2004 ISBN 1-904619-16-9 ISBN 1-904619-17-7 Novella (first published by PS Publishing as trade paperback and hardcover; both limited; later collected in Resplendent) Starfall 2009 ISBN 978-1-906301-59-0 ISBN 978-1-906301-60-6 Novella (published by PS Publishing as hardcover and jacketed hardcover; both limited) [edit]NASA Trilogy Title Year ISBN Notes Voyage 1996 ISBN 0-00-648037-3 Arthur C. Clarke Award nominee, 1997[7] Titan 1997 ISBN 0-06-105713-4 Arthur C. Clarke Award nominee, 1998[8] Moonseed 1998 ISBN 0-06-105903-X [edit]The Web Series See The Web (series) [edit]Manifold Trilogy Title Year ISBN Notes Manifold: Time 1999 ISBN 0-345-43076-X Arthur C. Clarke Award nominee, 2000[9] Manifold: Space 2000 ISBN 0-345-43077-8 Manifold: Origin 2001 ISBN 0-345-43079-4 Phase Space 2002 ISBN 0-00-651185-6 Short story collection. [edit]The Mammoth Trilogy

Title Year ISBN Notes Silverhair 1999 ISBN 0-06-105132-2 Longtusk 1999 ISBN 0-380-81898-1 Icebones 2001 ISBN 0-380-81899-X Behemoth 2004 ISBN 0-575-07604-6 Omnibus of the Mammoth trilogy [edit]Destinys Children Title Year ISBN Notes Coalescent 2003 ISBN 0-345-45786-2 Arthur C. Clarke Award nominee, 2004[10] Exultant 2004 ISBN 0-345-45788-9 Transcendent 2005 ISBN 0-345-45792-7 John W. Campbell Memorial Award nominee, 2006[11] Resplendent 2006 ISBN 0-575-07896-0 Short story collection. [edit]A Time Odyssey (Co-authored with Arthur C. Clarke) Title Year ISBN Notes Times Eye 2003 ISBN 0-345-45248-8 Sunstorm 2005 ISBN 0-345-45250-X Firstborn 2007 ISBN 978-0-345-49157-2 [edit]Times Tapestry series Title Year ISBN Notes Emperor 2006 ISBN 0-575-07432-9 Conqueror 2007 ISBN 0-575-07673-9 Navigator 2007 ISBN 978-0-441-01559-7 Weaver 2008 ISBN 978-0-575-08204-5 [edit]Un-named disaster series Title Year ISBN Notes Flood 2008 ISBN 978-0575080584 British Science Fiction Association Award nominee, 2008[12] Ark 2009 ISBN 978-0575080577 [edit]Northland trilogy Title Year ISBN Notes Stone Spring 2010 ISBN 978-0-575-08919-8 Bronze Summer 2011 ISBN 978-0-575-08923-5 Iron Winter 2012 ISBN 978-0-575-08928-0 [edit]Unrelated novels Title Year ISBN Notes Anti-Ice 1993 ISBN 0-06-105421-6 Alternate History The Time Ships 1995 ISBN 0-06-105648-0 BSFA Award winner, 1995;[3] Campbell Award winner, 1996;[4] Hugo, Locus, Clarke, British Fantasy, and Philip K. Dick Awards nominee, 1996[4] Alternate History. An authorised sequel to H. G. Wellss The Time Machine The Light of Other Days 2000 ISBN 0-312-87199-6 Co-authored with Arthur C. Clarke. Evolution 2003 ISBN 0-345-45783-8 The H-Bomb Girl 2007 ISBN 0-571-23279-5 Young adult [edit]Unrelated collections Title Year ISBN Notes Traces 1998 ISBN 0-00-649814-0 Short story collection.

The Hunters of Pangaea 2004 ISBN 1-886778-49-3 18 stories and five essays on science and science fiction. [edit]Short fiction Title Year First published in Reprinted in Formidable caress 2009 Analog 129/12 (Dec 2009) The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year : Volume Four, ed. Jonathan Strahan (Night Shade Books, 2010) [edit]Non-fiction Title Year ISBN Notes Deep Future 2001 ISBN 1-85798-844-2 Mainly articles on science. Omegatropic 2001 ISBN 0-95407-881-0 Mainly science fiction criticism. Revolutions in the Earth Ages in Chaos 2003 (UK) 2004 (United States) ISBN 0-29782-975-0 ISBN 0-76531-238-7 James Hutton and the True Age of the World[13] James Hutton and the Discovery of Deep Time The Science of Avatar[14] 2011 ISBN 0297863436 Examines the concepts used in the 2009 film Avatar. A Fine and Private Place, 1960 (novel) I See By My Outfit: Cross-Country by Scooter, an Adventure, 1965 (nonfiction) The Last Unicorn, 1968 (novel) The California Feeling, 1969 (with photographer Michael Bry, nonfiction) Lila the Werewolf, 1974 (chapbook edition of previously-published novelette) American Denim, 1975 (nonfiction art book) The Lady and Her Tiger, 1976 (with Pat Derby, nonfiction) The Fantasy Worlds of Peter S. Beagle, 1978 (omnibus collection including A Fine and Private Place, The Last Unicorn, Come Lady Death, and Lila the Werewolf) The Garden of Earthly Delights, 1982 (nonfiction art book) The Folk of the Air, 1986 (novel, currently being rewritten and expanded for new release) The Innkeepers Song, 1993 (novel) In the Presence of the Elephants, 1995 (nonfiction photo book) The Unicorn Sonata, 1996 (young adult novel, currently being rewritten and expanded into a 4book series) Giant Bones, 1997 (collection of original stories set in the world of The Innkeepers Song) The Rhinoceros Who Quoted Nietzsche and Other Odd Acquaintances, 1997 (collection of fiction and nonfiction essays) The Magician of Karakosk and Other Stories, 1999 (foreign edition title for Giant Bones collection) Tamsin, 1999 (novel) A Dance for Emilia, 2000 (hardcover giftbook edition of novella) The Line Between, 2006 (story collection) Your Friendly Neighborhood Magician: Songs and Early Poems, 2006 (limited edition chapbook collection of song lyrics and poetry) The Last Unicorn: The Lost Version, 2007 (original novella length draft, from Subterranean Press) Strange Roads 2008 (3-story chapbook collaboration with Lisa Snellings-Clark for Dreamhaven Books)

We Never Talk About My Brother, 2009 (short fiction collection for Tachyon Publications) Mirror Kingdoms: The Best of Peter S. Beagle, 2010 (Subterranean Press, edited by Jonathan Strahan) Return, 2010 (limited edition novella chapbook from Subterranean Press) Sleight of Hand, 2011 (short fiction collection for Tachyon Publications) [edit]As editor Peter S. Beagles Immortal Unicorn, 1995 (co-editor, original story anthology, split into two volumes when reprinted in paperback: Peter S. Beagles Immortal Unicorn in 1998 and Peter S. Beagles Immortal Unicorn 2 in 1999) The Secret History of Fantasy, 2010 (anthology from Tachyon Publications) [edit]Audiobooks The Last Unicorn, 1990 (abridged, cassette only, read by Peter) A Fine and Private Place, 2002 (unabridged CD & cassette, read by Peter) Giant Bones, 2002 (unabridged CD & cassette, read by Peter) Tamsin, 2002 (unabridged CD & cassette, read by Peter) The Last Unicorn, 2005 (unabridged CD & download, read by Peter, with original music by Jeff Slingluff) [edit]Produced screenplays The Dove, 1974 The Greatest Thing That Almost Happened, 1977 The Lord of the Rings, 1978 The Last Unicorn, 1982 Sarek (for Star Trek: The Next Generation), 1990 A Whale of a Tale (pilot episode for TV series version of The Little Mermaid), 1992 Camelot, 1996 A Tale of Egypt, 1996 [edit]Upcoming books Two Hearts, 2011 (limited chapbook edition of Hugo and Nebula Award-winning novelette sequel to The Last Unicorn) Writing Sarek, 2011 (Star Trek nonfiction with annotated Sarek teleplay)[4] Smagol, Dagol, and Beagle: Essays From the Headwaters of My Voice, 2011 (nonfiction essay collection) Summerlong, 2011 (magical realist novel set in modern-day Seattle) The First Last Unicorn and Other Beginnings, 2011 (story collection with additional essay material) Three Faces of The Lady, 2011 (collection centered on Come Lady Death) Im Afraid Youve Got Dragons, 2011 (YA novel) Green-Eyed Boy: Three Schmendrick Stories, 2011 (story collection with additional essay) Six Unicorns, 2011 (story collection with additional essay) Four Years, Five Seasons, 2011 (story collection) Sweet Lightning, 2012 (1950s baseball fantasy novel) Darwin Darwins Radio (1999) Nebula Award winner, Hugo, Locus SF, and John W. Campbell

Memorial Awards nominee, 2000[5] Darwins Children (2003) Locus SF, Arthur C. Clarke, and John W. Campbell Memorial Awards nominee, 2004[6] [edit]The Forge of God The Forge of God (1987) Hugo, and Locus SF Awards nominee, 1988;[7] Nebula Award nominee, 1986[8] Anvil of Stars (1992) [edit]Songs of Earth and Power The Infinity Concerto (1984) Locus Fantasy Award nominee, 1985[9] The Serpent Mage (1986) Songs of Earth and Power (1994 combines The Infinity Concerto and The Serpent Mage) [edit]Quantico (Queen of Angels prequels) Quantico (2005) Mariposa (2009) [edit]Queen of Angels Queen of Angels (1990) Hugo, Locus, and John W. Campbell Memorial Awards nominee, 1991[10] / (also known as Slant; 1997) John W. Campbell Memorial Award nominee, 1998[11] [edit]The Way Eon (1985) Arthur C. Clarke Award nominee, 1987[12] Eternity (1988) Legacy (1995) Locus SF Award nominee, 1996[13] The Way of All Ghosts (1999) [edit]Series (non-originating author) [edit]The Foundation Series Foundation and Chaos (1998) (Second Foundation series: book 2) [edit]Man-Kzin Wars The Man Who Would Be Kzin (with S.M. Stirling) (1991) [edit]Halo Cryptum (2011) (Forerunner trilogy: book 1) [edit]Star Trek: The Original Series Corona (1984) [edit]Star Wars Rogue Planet (2000) [edit]Non-series Hegira (1979) Psychlone (1979) Beyond Heavens River (1980) Strength of Stones (1981) Blood Music (1985) Hugo, and John W. Campbell Memorial Awards nominee, 1986;[8] British Science Fiction Award nominee, 1986;[8] Nebula Award nominee, 1985 [9] Sleepside Story (1988) Heads (1990) Moving Mars (1993) Nebula Award winner; Hugo, Locus SF, and John W. Campbell Memorial Awards nominee, 1994[14] New Legends (1995)

Dinosaur Summer (1998) (winner 1999 Endeavour Award) Country of the Mind (June 1998) Vitals (2002) John W. Campbell Memorial Award nominee 2003[15] Dead Lines (2004) City at the End of Time (Gollancz edition published 7/17/2008;[16] Del Rey Books edition August, 2008[17]) (Nominated for the Locus and Campbell Awards, 2009[18]) Hull Zero Three (2010) The Mongoliad (expected 2010[19]) [edit]Short Fiction [edit]Collections The Wind from a Burning Woman (1983) Early Harvest (February 1988) Tangents (1989) The Venging (1992) Bears Fantasies (1992) W3 Women in deep time (2003) Sleepside: The Collected Fantasies (November 2005) Galactic Center Saga Name Published ISBN Notes In the Ocean of Night Dial Press, 1976 Nebula Award nominee, 1977;[13] Locus Award nominee, 1978[14] Across the Sea of Suns Simon & Schuster, 1/1984 ISBN 978-0-671-44668-0 Great Sky River Bantam Books, 12/1987 ISBN 978-0-553-05238-1 reviewed by the LA Times[15] Nebula Award nominee, 1988[16] Tides of Light Bantam Books, 1/1989 ISBN 978-0-553-05322-7 reviewed by the LA Times[17] Locus Award nominee, 1990[18] Furious Gulf Bantam Spectra, 7/1994 ISBN 978-0-553-09661-3 reviewed by the LA Times[19] Sailing Bright Eternity Bantam Spectra, 8/1995 ISBN 978-0-553-08655-3 [edit]Jupiter Projects Name Published ISBN Notes Jupiter Project Thomas Nelson, 1975 ISBN 978-0-8407-6456-0 Against Infinity Ultramarine Press, March 1983 ISBN 978-0-671-46491-2 Nebula Award nominee, 1983[20] [edit]Other series contributions Man-Kzin Wars (with Larry Niven) Name Published ISBN Notes Man-Kzin Wars VI Baen Books, 1994 ISBN 978-0-671-87607-4 A Darker Geometry: A Man-Kzin Novel Baen Books, 8/1996 ISBN 978-0-671-87740-8 coauthored with Mark O. Martin Second Foundation Name Published ISBN Notes Foundations Fear Harper Prism, 1997 ISBN 978-0-06-105243-9 [edit]Non-series novels Name Published ISBN Notes Deeper Than the Darkness (a.k.a. The Stars in Shroud) Ace Books, 1970

If the Stars Are Gods Berkley Books, 1977 ISBN 978-0-399-11942-2 with Gordon Eklund Shiva Descending St. Martins Press, 1980 with William Rotsler Find the Changeling Dell Publishing, 1980 ISBN 978-0-440-12604-1 with Gordon Eklund Timescape Simon & Schuster, 1980 ISBN 978-0-671-25327-1 Nebula winner, 1980;[21] British SF Award winner, 1980;[21] Campbell Award winner, 1981;[22] Locus Award nominee, 1981[22] Times Rub Cheap Street, 1984 Artifact St. Martins Press, 6/1985 ISBN 978-0-312-93048-6 Heart of the Comet Bantam Spectra, 2/1986 ISBN 978-0-553-05125-4 with David Brin Locus Award nominee, 1987[23] Under the Wheel Baen Books, 1987 ISBN 978-0-671-65611-9 Alien Stars, volume 3 Iceborn Tor Double Novels, 11/1989 ISBN 0-812-50277-9 with Paul A. Carter Beyond the Fall of Night Putnam Publishing, 7/1990 ISBN 978-0-399-13499-9 with Arthur C. Clarke Chiller Bantam Books, 1993 ISBN 0-553-09376-2 as Sterling Blake Cosm Warner Aspect, 2/1998 ISBN 978-0-380-97435-1 The Martian Race Warner Aspect, 12/1999 ISBN 978-0-446-52633-3 Eater Eos, 5/2000 ISBN 978-0-380-97436-8 Locus Award nominee, 2001[24] Beyond Infinity Warner Aspect, March 2004 ISBN 978-0-446-53059-0 Human Being William Morrow and Company, 2003 ISBN 978-0-380-97716-1 The Sunborn Warner Aspect, 3/2005 ISBN 978-0-446-53058-3 [edit]Anthologies edited Hitler Victorious: Eleven Stories of the German Victory in World War II (1986), with Martin H. Greenberg Nuclear War (1988), with Martin H Greenberg Far Futures (1995) The New Hugo Winners Volume IV (1997), with Martin H. Greenberg Nebula Awards Showcase 2000 (2000) Microcosms (2004) [edit]Alternate histories Alternate Empires (1989) (with Martin H. Greenberg) Alternate Heroes (1989) Alternate Wars (1991) Alternate Americas (1992) (with Martin H. Greenberg) [edit]Non-fiction Habitats in Space (1998) Deep Time: How Humanity Communicates Across Millennia (1999) Skylife: Visions of Our Homes in Space (2000, with George Zebrowsk) Skylife: Space Habitats in Story and Science (2000, with George Zebrowski) Beyond Human: The New World of Cyborgs and Androids (2001) The Wonderful Future That Never Was (2010, with the Editors of Popular Mechanics) [edit]Short-story collections In Alien Flesh (1986) Matters End (1990) Amazing Stories No 7 (1992, with J. R. Dunn, James Alan Gardner and Kim Mohan

Worlds Vast and various (1999) Immersion and other Short Novels (2002) Merlin (2004) [edit]Short stories Stand-In The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (June 1965) Representative From Earth The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (January 1966) Flattop The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (May 1966) Deeper Than the Darkness The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (April 1969) Sociology Through Science Fiction (1974) Sons of Man Amazing Stories (November 1969) Nobody Lives on Burton Street Amazing Science Fiction (May 1970) Worlds Best Science Fiction (1971) Sociology Through Science Fiction (1974) Inside Information (1977) The Scarred Man Venture (May 1970) The Prince of New York Fantastic (June 1970) 3:02 p.m., Oxford If (September/October 1970) The Movement Fantastic (October 1970) Inalienable Rite Quark 1 (1970) But the Secret Sits Galaxy Science Fiction (March 1971) Star Crossing, with Donald Franson If (March/April 1971) Battleground, with Jim Benford If (May/June 1971) Guns of Darkness (1987) West Wind, Falling, with Gordon Eklund Universe 1 (1971) And the Sea Like Mirrors Again, Dangerous Visions (1972) Again, Dangerous Visions, Book 2 (1977) Masterpieces of Science Fiction (1978) In the Ocean of Night Worlds of If Science Fiction (May/Jun 1972) In the Ocean of Night (1977)

Jupiter Project Amazing Stories (September 1972) Icarus Descending The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (April 1973) In the Ocean of Night (1977) Man in a Vice Amazing Science Fiction (February 1974) Nobody Lives Around Here Vertex: The Magazine of Science Fiction (February 1974) If the Stars Are Gods, with Gordon Eklund Universe 4 (1974) Best SF of the Year 4 (1975) Nebula Award Stories 10 (1975) The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume IV (1986) The Science Fiction Century (1997) Threads of Time Threads of Time (1974) In the Ocean of Night (1977) Doing Lennon Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact (April 1975) Best SF of the Year 5 (1976) The Arbor House Treasury of Science Fiction Masterpieces (1983) Light Years and Dark (1984) In Alien Flesh (1986) Beyond Grayworld Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact (September 1975) Cambridge, 1:58 A.M Epoch (1975) John of the Apocalypse Tomorrow Today (1975) White Creatures New Dimensions 5 (1975) In Alien Flesh (1986) How It All Went Amazing Stories (March 1976) 100 Great Science Fiction Short Short Stories (1978) The Anvil of Jove, with Gordon Eklund The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (July 1976) Marauder! Alien Worlds (1976) Seascape (aka Pebble Among the Stars) Faster Than Light (1976) The Crash of Empire (1989) What Did You Do Last Year?, with Gordon Eklund Universe 6 (1976) Hellas is Florida, with Gordon Eklund

The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (January 1977) Homemaker Cosmos Science Fiction And Fantasy Magazine (May 1977) A Snark in the Night The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (August 1977) Knowing Her New Dimensions 7 (1977) Time of Passage (1978) Starswarmer Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact (June 1978) Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact (September 1978) In Alien Flesh The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (September 1978) Best Science Fiction Stories of the Year (1979) 1979 Annual Worlds Best SF (1979) Best SF Stories of the Year: Eighth Annual Collection (1979) The 1979 Annual Worlds Best SF (1979) In Alien Flesh (1986) Old Woman By the Road Destinies (November/December 1978) Thors Hammer (1979) The Best of Destinies (1980) A Hiss of Dragon, with Marc Laidlaw Omni, (December 1978) Best SF of the Year 8 (1979) Dragon Tales (1982) The Best of Omni Science Fiction, No. 3 (1982) Nooncoming Universe 8 (1978) In Alien Flesh (1986) Time Guide Destinies (January/February 1979) Dark Sanctuary Omni (May 1979) The Endless Frontier (1979) The Best of Omni Science Fiction, No. 4 (1982) Redeemer Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact (April 1979) Best Science Fiction Stories of the Year (1979) Best SF Stories of the Year: Ninth Annual Collection (1980) The Endless Frontier Vol. II (1982) In Alien Flesh (1986) Calibrations and Exercises New Dimensions 9 (1979) The Best of New Dimensions (1979) Time Shards

Universe 9 (1979) Best SF of the Year 9 (1980) In Alien Flesh (1986) Titan Falling Amazing Stories (August 1980) Pick an Orifice Destinies (Fall 1980) Slices Destinies (Spring 1981) Exposures Isaac Asimovs Science Fiction Magazine (July 1981) The Road to Science Fiction #4 (1982) Isaac Asimovs Wonders of the World (Anthology #6) (1982) Creations: The Quest for Origins in Story and Science (1983) In Alien Flesh (1986) Norton Book of SF (1993) The Ascent of Wonder: The Evolution of Hard SF (1994) Shall We Take a Little Walk? Destinies (Winter 1981) Cadenza New Dimensions 12 (1981) Valhalla The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (April 1982) Lazarus Rising Isaac Asimovs Science Fiction Magazine (July 1982) Relativistic Effects Perpetual Light (1982) Best SF of the Year 12 (1983) In Alien Flesh (1986) The Ascent of Wonder: The Evolution of Hard SF (1994) Sandy Lust The Berkley Showcase Volume 5 (1982) Swarmer, Skimmer Best SF of the Year 11 (1982) The Touch (based on Continuidad de los parques, from Final del juego by Julio Cortzar ) The Best of Omni Science Fiction, No. 5 (1983) R-A-M Random Access Messages of the Computer Age (1984) Me/Days Universe 14 (1984) In Alien Flesh (1986) Times Rub Times Rub (1984) Isaac Asimovs Science Fiction Magazine (April 1985) In Alien Flesh (1986) Mathenauts: Tales of Mathematical Wonder (1987) Future on Ice (1998)

To the Storming Gulf Afterwar (1985) The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (April 1985) In Alien Flesh (1986) Armageddon! (1989) Newton Sleep The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (January 1986) Heroes in Hell (1986) Nebula Awards 22 (1988) Of Space-Time and the River Isaac Asimovs Science Fiction Magazine (February 1986) Best SF of the Year 15 (1986) In Alien Flesh (1986) Freezeframe Interzone (Autumn 1986) Amazing Stories (May 1987) Nebula Awards 23 (1989) As Big as the Ritz Interzone, Winter 1986 (1986) Alien Stars III: Under The Wheel (1987) Snatching the Bot In Alien Flesh (1986) Effing the Ineffable Nebula Awards 21 (1987) The Gods of the Gaps Crusaders in Hell (1987) What Are You Going to Be When You Grow Up? Spaceships & Spells (1987) Proselytes Full Spectrum (1988) All the Beer on Mars Isaac Asimovs Science Fiction Magazine (January 1989) Alphas Amazing Stories (March 1989) The 1990 Annual Worlds Best SF (1990) The Years Best Science Fiction: Seventh Annual Collection (1990) We Could Do Worse Isaac Asimovs Science Fiction Magazine (April 1989) What Might Have Been? Vol I: Alternate Empires (1989) Roads Not Taken: Tales of Alternate History (1998) Mozart on Morphine The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (October 1989) Leviathan Omni (1989) Proserpinas Daughter with Paul A. Carter Synergy: New Science Fiction, Vol. 3 (1989)

The Rose and the Scalpel Time Gate (1989) Amazing Stories (January 1990) Warstory Isaac Asimovs Science Fiction Magazine (January 1990) Latter-Day Matian Chronicles Omni (July 1990) The Eagle and the Cross Dangerous Interfaces (1990) Manassas, Again Isaac Asimovs Science Fiction Magazine (October 1991) Centigrade 233 Isaac Asimovs Science Fiction Magazine (December 1991) Touches Amazing Stories (December 1991) Matters End Full Spectrum 3 (1991) The Years Best Science Fiction: Ninth Annual Collection (1992) Nebula Awards 28 (1994) Down the River Road Aboriginal Science Fiction (Summer 1992) Rumbling Earth Aboriginal Science Fiction (Summer 1992) World Vast, World Various Murasaki (1992) The Dark Backward Amazing Stories (February 1993) More Amazing Stories (1998) Doing Alien The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (March 1994) 100 Astounding Little Alien Stories (1996) The Bigger One Science Fiction Age (May 1994) Soon Comes the Night Asimovs Science Fiction (August 1994) Not of an Age Weird Tales from Shakespeare (1994) Strong Instinct with Mark O. Martin South From Midnight (1994) The Trojan Cat with Mark O. Martin Man-Kzin Wars VI (1994) Deep Eyes Analog Science Fiction and Fact (April 1995) Kollapse Interzone Science Fiction and Fantasy (April 1995) Science Fiction Age (May 1995)

A Worm in the Well Analog Science Fiction and Fact (November 1995) Years Best SF (1996) A Tapestry of Thought Amazing Stories (Winter 1995) A Desperate Calculus as Sterling Blake New Legends (1995) High Abyss New Legends (1995) Immersion Science Fiction Age (March 1996) The Years Best Science Fiction: Fourteenth Annual Collection (1997) Paris Conquers All with David Brin The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (March 1996) War of the Worlds: Global Dispatches (1996) Afterword: Retrospective with David Brin War of the Worlds: Global Dispatches (1996) Zoomers Future Net (1996) Years Best SF 2 (1997) The Voice Science Fiction Age (May 1997) Years Best SF 3 (1998) Galaxia Science Fiction Age (July 1997) A Cold Dry Cradle with Elisabeth Malartrez Science Fiction Age (November 1997) The Years Best Science Fiction: Fifteenth Annual Collection (1998) Early Bird Free Space (1997) A Dance to Strange Musics Science Fiction Age (November 1998) Ordinary Aliens Science Fiction Age (November 1998) Three Gods Interzone (September 2001) Menage a Trois Interzone (November 2001) Around the Curve of a Cosmos Published at scifi.com (2001) Brink Published at scifi.com (2001) The Clear Blue Seas of Luna Asimovs Science Fiction (October/November 2002) The Hydrogen Wall Asimovs Science Fiction (October/November 2003)

Years Best SF9 Anomalies At the Double Solstice A Hunger for the Infinite Immortal Night Mammoth Dawn with Kevin J. Anderson Mandikini Side Effect Shakers of the Earth Sleepstory Novels A Funeral for the Eyes of Fire (1975) Nebula Award nominee, 1975[12] And Strange at Ecbatan the Trees (1976) (later republished as Beneath the Shattered Moons) Stolen Faces (1977) A Little Knowledge (1977); the first book in the Urban Nucleus series Catacomb Years (1979) (fix-up); the second book in the Urban Nucleus series Transfigurations (1979) (expansion of novella Death and Designation Among the Asadi) BSFA nominee, 1980[18] Eyes of Fire (1980) (a complete revision of his first novel) Under Heavens Bridge (1981, with Ian Watson) No Enemy But Time (1982) Nebula Award winner, BSFA nominee, 1982;[1] Campbell Award nominee, 1983[33]) Who Made Stevie Crye? (1984) Ancient of Days (1985) Arthur C. Clarke Award nominee, 1988[39] The Secret Ascension (1987) (later republished with the authors original title: Philip K Dick Is Dead, Alas) Arthur C. Clarke Award nominee, 1989[43] Unicorn Mountain (1988) Mythopoeic Award winner, Locus Fantasy Award nominee, 1989[43] Count Geigers Blues (1992) Brittle Innings (1994) Locus Award winner, Campbell, World Fantasy and Hugo Awards nominee, 1995[59] Would It Kill You to Smile? (1998, with Paul Di Filippo, as Philip Lawson); the first book in the Will Keats series Muskrat Courage (2000, with Paul Di Filippo, as Philip Lawson); the second book in the Will Keats series [edit]Story Collections Blooded on Arachne (1982), includes the novellas The White Otters of Childhood and On the Street of the Serpents, nine stories and two poems from 19701978 One Winter in Eden (1984), includes twelve stories from 1978-1983 with an introduction by Thomas M. Disch Close Encounters With the Deity (1986), includes the novella The Gospel According to Gamaliel Crucis and thirteen stories from 1979-1986 with an introduction by Isaac Asimov Emphatically Not SF, Almost (1990), includes nine mainstream stories from 19821987 At the City Limits of Fate (1996) Philip K. Dick Award nominee, 1996,[60] includes fifteen stories from 19821996 Blue Kansas Sky (2000), four novellas from 19732000, including the first publication of the

title story Brighten to Incandescence: 17 Stories (2003), a compilation of previously uncollected stories from 19712003 [edit]Anthologies Changes (1983, with Ian Watson) Light Years and Dark (1984) (Locus Award winner) Nebula Awards 23 (1989) Nebula Awards 24 (1990) Nebula Awards 25 (1991) A Cross of Centuries (2007) Passing for Human (2009, with Steven Utley) [edit]Miscellaneous Books Windows and Mirrors (1977), poetry collection Apartheid, Superstrings, and Mordecai Thubana (1989), novella Time Pieces (1998), poetry collection (includes most of the selections from Windows and Mirrors) A Reverie for Mister Ray (2005), nonfiction collection [edit]Major Stories Death and Designation Among the Asadi (1973) (Hugo Award and Nebula Award nominee) The White Otters of Childhood (1973) (Hugo Award and Nebula Award nominee) Cathadonian Odyssey (1974) (Hugo Award nominee) On the Street of the Serpents (1974) (Nebula Award nominee) Rogue Tomato (1975) (Hugo Award nominee) The Samurai and the Willows (1976) (Locus Award winner; Hugo Award and Nebula Award nominee) The House of Compassionate Sharers (1977) (Hugo Award nominee) Old Folks at Home (1978) Within the Walls of Tyre (1978) (World Fantasy Award nominee) Vernalfest Morning (1978) (Nebula Award nominee) Seasons of Belief (1979) (dramatized on Tales from the Darkside) Cold War Orphans (1980) The Quickening (1981) (Nebula Award winner) The Gospel According to Gamaliel Crucis (1983) (Nebula Award nominee) Her Habiline Husband (1983) (Locus Award winner and Nebula Award nominee) The Monkeys Bride (1983) (World Fantasy Award nominee) Dogs Lives (1984) (reprinted in Best American Short Stories 1985) A Gift from the GrayLanders (1985) (Hugo Award and Nebula Award nominee) For Thus Do I Remember Carthage (1987) Apartheid, Superstrings, and Mordecai Thubana (1989) (World Fantasy Award nominee) The Ommatidium Miniatures (1989) (Nebula Award nominee) Life Regarded as a Jigsaw Puzzle of Highly Lustrous Cats (1991) (Nebula Award nominee) Cri de Coeur (1994) (Hugo Award nominee) I, Iscariot (1995) (Theodore Sturgeon Award nominee) Among the Handlers (1996) Sequel on Skorpis (1998) Blue Kansas Sky (2000) (World Fantasy Award nominee)

The Sacerdotal Owl (2003) The Door Gunner (2003) (Southeastern Science Fiction Achievement Award winner) The Road Leads Back (2003) Bears Discover Smut (2005) (Southeastern Science Fiction Achievement Award winner and British Science Fiction Association award nominee) Vingegar Peace, or, The Wrong-Way Used-Adult Orphange (2008) The Pile (2008) (Shirley Jackson Award winner) The City Quiet as Death (2009, with Steven Utley)

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