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Authors: Jo Walton
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THIS IS FOR PAM ADAMS, AND STEVEN HALTER, AND THE OTHER WONDERFUL PEOPLE I HAVE MET THROUGH THEIR COMMENTS ON
TOR.COM
.
Contents
3.
A Deepness in the Sky,
the Tragical History of Pham Nuwen
4.
The Singularity Problem and Non-Problem
5.
Random Acts of Senseless Violence:
Why isn’t it a classic of the field?
6.
From Herring to Marmalade: the perfect plot of
Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency
7.
“That’s just scenery”: What do we mean by “mainstream”?
9.
The Dystopic Earths of Heinlein’s Juveniles
10.
Happiness, Meaning and Significance: Karl Schroeder’s
Lady of Mazes
11.
The Weirdest Book in the World
12.
The Poetry of Deep Time: Arthur C. Clarke’s
Against the Fall of Night
13.
Clarke reimagined in hot pink: Tanith Lee’s
Biting the Sun
14.
Something rich and strange: Candas Jane Dorsey’s
Black Wine
15.
To trace impunity: Greg Egan’s
Permutation City
16.
Black and white and read a million times: Jerry Pournelle’s
Janissaries
17.
College as Magic Garden: Why Pamela Dean’s
Tam Lin
is a book you’ll either love or hate.
18.
Making the future work: Maureen McHugh’s
China Mountain Zhang
19.
Anathem:
What does it gain from not being our world?
21.
Knights Who Say “Fuck”: Swearing in Genre Fiction
22.
“Earth is one world”: C. J. Cherryh’s
Downbelow Station
23.
“Space is wide and good friends are too few”: Cherryh’s Merchanter novels
24.
“A need to deal wounds”: Rape of men in Cherryh’s Union-Alliance novels
26.
“Give me back the Berlin Wall”: Ken MacLeod’s
The Sky Road
27.
What a pity she couldn’t have single-handedly invented science fiction! George Eliot’s
Middlemarch
28.
The beauty of lists: Angelica Gorodischer’s
Kalpa Imperial
29.
Like pop rocks for the brain: Samuel R. Delany’s
Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand
30.
Between Two Worlds: S. P. Somtow’s
Jasmine Nights
31.
Lots of reasons to love these: Daniel Abraham’s Long Price books
32.
Maori Fantasy: Keri Hulme’s
The Bone People
33.
Better to have loved and lost? Series that go downhill
34.
More questions than answers: Robert A. Heinlein’s
The Stone Pillow
35.
Weeping for her enemies: Lois McMaster Bujold’s
Shards of Honor
36.
Forward Momentum: Lois McMaster Bujold’s
The Warrior’s Apprentice
37.
Quest for Ovaries: Lois McMaster Bujold’s
Ethan of Athos
38.
Why he must not fail: Lois McMaster Bujold’s
Borders of Infinity
39.
What have you done with your baby brother? Lois McMaster Bujold’s
Brothers in Arms
40.
Hard on his superiors: Lois McMaster Bujold’s
The Vor Game
41.
One birth, one death, and all the acts of pain and will between: Lois McMaster Bujold’s
Barrayar
42.
All true wealth is biological: Lois McMaster Bujold’s
Mirror Dance
43.
Luck is something you make for yourself: Lois McMaster Bujold’s
Cetaganda
44.
This is my old identity, actually: Lois McMaster Bujold’s
Memory
45.
But I’m Vor: Lois McMaster Bujold’s
Komarr
46.
She’s getting away! Lois McMaster Bujold’s
A Civil Campaign
47.
Just my job: Lois McMaster Bujold’s
Diplomatic Immunity
48.
Every day is a gift: Lois McMaster Bujold’s “Winterfair Gifts”
49.
Choose again, and change: Lois McMaster Bujold’s Vorkosigan saga
50.
So, what sort of series do you like?
51.
Time travel and slavery: Octavia Butler’s
Kindred
52.
America the Beautiful: Terry Bisson’s
Fire on the Mountain
54.
Scintillations of a sensory syrynx: Samuel Delany’s
Nova
56.
Faster Than Light at any speed
57.
Gender and glaciers: Ursula K. Le Guin’s
The Left Hand of Darkness
58.
Licensed to sell weasels and jade earrings: The short stories of Lord Dunsany
59.
The Net of a Million Lies: Vernor Vinge’s
A Fire Upon the Deep
60.
The worst book I love: Robert A. Heinlein’s
Friday
61.
India’s superheroes: Salman Rushdie’s
Midnight’s Children
62.
A funny book with a lot of death in it: Iain Banks’s
The Crow Road
63.
More dimensions than you’d expect: Samuel Delany’s
Babel-17
64.
Bad, but good: David Feintuch’s
Midshipman’s Hope
65.
Subtly twisted history: John M. Ford’s
The Dragon Waiting
66.
A very long poem: Alan Garner’s
Red Shift
67.
Beautiful, poetic and experimental: Roger Zelazny’s
Doorways in the Sand
68.
Waking the Dragon: George R. R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire
69.
Who reads cosy catastrophes?
70.
Stalinism vs Champagne at the opera: Constantine Fitzgibbon’s
When the Kissing Had To Stop
71.
The future of the Commonwealth: Nevil Shute’s
In the Wet
72.
Twists of the Godgame: John Fowles’s
The Magus
73.
Playing the angles on a world: Steven Brust’s Dragaera
74.
Jhereg feeds on others’ kills: Steven Brust’s
Jhereg
75.
Yendi coils and strikes unseen: Steven Brust’s
Yendi
76.
A coachman’s tale: Steven Brust’s
Brokedown Palace
77.
Frightened teckla hides in grass: Steven Brust’s
Teckla
78.
How can you tell? Steven Brust’s
Taltos
79.
Phoenix rise from ashes grey: Steven Brust’s
Phoenix
80.
I have been asking for nothing else for an hour: Steven Brust’s
The Phoenix Guards
81.
Athyra rules minds’ interplay: Steven Brust’s
Athyra
82.
What, is there more? Steven Brust’s
Five Hundred Years After
83.
Orca circles, hard and lean: Steven Brust’s
Orca
84.
Haughty dragon yearns to slay: Steven Brust’s
Dragon
85.
Issola strikes from courtly bow: Steven Brust’s
Issola
87.
The time about which I have the honor to write: Steven Brust’s
The Viscount of Adrilankha
88.
Dzur stalks and blends with night: Steven Brust’s
Dzur
89.
Jhegaala shifts as moments pass: Steven Brust’s
Jhegaala
90.
Quiet iorich won’t forget: Steven Brust’s
Iorich
91.
Quakers in Space: Molly Gloss’s
The Dazzle of Day
92.
Locked in our separate skulls: Raphael Carter’s
The Fortunate Fall
93.
Saving both worlds: Katherine Blake (Dorothy Heydt)’s
The Interior Life
94.
Yearning for the unattainable: James Tiptree Jr.’s short stories
96.
Incredibly readable: Robert A. Heinlein’s
The Door into Summer
97.
Nasty, but brilliant: John Barnes’s
Kaleidoscope Century
98.
Growing up in a space dystopia: John Barnes’s
Orbital Resonance
99.
The joy of an unfinished series