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Through the dark labyrinth

Tag Archives: Greg Egan

Reprint: Transhumanity

10 Thursday Dec 2015

Posted by Paul Kincaid in science fiction

≈ 2 Comments

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Arthur C Clarke, Bruce Sterling, Charles Darwin, Christopher Evans, Frederik Pohl, Greg Egan, H.G. Wells, Iain Banks, Isaac Asimov, Jack Finney, James Tiptree Jr, John W. Campbell, Martin Caidin, Olaf Stapledon, Robert Silverberg, S Fowler Wright, T.H. Huxley

We’re getting close to the end of the series of Cognitive Mapping columns I wrote for Vector. This one first appeared in Vector 194, July-August 1997. Continue reading →

Reprint: The Clockwork Rocket

23 Monday Mar 2015

Posted by Paul Kincaid in Uncategorized

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Greg Egan

For some reason, I only ever end up reviewing the books by Greg Egan that I don’t like. This review, of The Clockwork Rocket, first appeared in BullSpec 7, Spring 2012: Continue reading →

Reprint: The Labyrinth Key

30 Monday Jun 2014

Posted by Paul Kincaid in books, science fiction

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Arthur C Clarke, Cordwainer Smith, Giordano Bruno, Greg Egan, Howard Hendrix, John Le Carre, Matteo Ricci, Michael Swanwick, William Gibson

I haven’t added a reprint to this blog for a little while, so here is a review of The Labyrinth Key by Howard V. Hendrix which first appeared in The New York Review of Science Fiction 195, November 2004. Continue reading →

Reprint: Gormenghast

25 Saturday Jan 2014

Posted by Paul Kincaid in science fiction

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Brian Aldiss, Carter Scholz, Cordwainer Smith, Daniel Defoe, Elizabeth Hand, Greg Egan, H.G. Wells, Iain Banks, Isaac Asimov, J.G. Ballard, James Lovegrove, Jorge Luis Borges, Lucius Shepard, Mervyn Peake, Michael Marshall Smith, Robert Silverberg, Steven Millhauser

It is, I promise you, pure coincidence that today’s reprint begins with the same writer featured in the last one, Steven Millhauser. But then, it is time to come to another of my Cognitive Mapping columns, this one was first published in Vector 213 (September-October 2000). Continue reading →

Reprint: Death

20 Wednesday Nov 2013

Posted by Paul Kincaid in science fiction

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Alasdair Gray, Bob Shaw, Bram Stoker, Brian Stableford, Colin Greenland, Dante, Greg Egan, Iain Banks, Ian Watson, Jeff Noon, John Bunyan, Lucius Shepard, Ludwig Wittgenstein, M.R. James, Michael Swanwick, Philip Jose Farmer, Rudy Rucker, Russell Hoban, Sheridan Le Fanu, T.S. Eliot, William Gibson

More and more, as I read science fiction, I have become aware that death is the most consistent theme. You could almost say that science fiction is a literature about death. I wrote this Cognitive Mapping piece back in 1997 (it appeared in Vector 195, September-October 1997), I could write a similar column now just using works published since that date. In fact I could write it several times over, so pervasive is the theme. So this is just one aspect of a very much bigger conversation. Continue reading →

Reprint: Hard Right

02 Monday Sep 2013

Posted by Paul Kincaid in science fiction

≈ 28 Comments

Tags

Arthur C Clarke, E.E. 'Doc' Smith, Greg Egan, Hal Clement, Iain Banks, Isaac Asimov, John W. Campbell, Robert Heinlein, Tom Godwin

My discussion of ‘The Cold Equations’ yesterday seemed to generate quite a bit of interest, so I thought I’d follow it up with this article, in which I consider why I characterise hard sf as intrinsically right wing. ‘Hard Right’ was first published in Argentus 8, December 2008. Continue reading →

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