From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Driftglass
First edition.
Author Samuel R. Delany
Cover artistDavid Wilcox
LanguageEnglish
Genre Science fiction, fantasy
Publisher Nelson Doubleday
Publication date
1971
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages278

Driftglass is a 1971 collection of science fiction short stories by American writer Samuel R. Delany. The stories originally appeared in the magazines Worlds of Tomorrow, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, If and New Worlds or the anthologies Quark/3, Dangerous Visions and Alchemy & Academe. In 2019, Driftglass was selected as one of the "50 Unapologetically Queer Authors Share the Best LGBTQ Books of All Time" in O, The Oprah Magazine. [1]

Contents

References

  1. ^ Hart, Michelle (4 June 2019). "50 Queer Authors Share Their All-Time Favorite LGBTQ Books". Oprah Magazine.
  2. ^ This story is dedicated to Roger Zelazny, of whose work it is a pastiche. Zelazny also appears as a character. "'My name's Roger...' followed by something Polish and unpronounceable that began with Z and ended with Y." (p. 141) It also contains a pre-Internet reference to "a worldwide computer system." (p.155)

Sources

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Driftglass
First edition.
Author Samuel R. Delany
Cover artistDavid Wilcox
LanguageEnglish
Genre Science fiction, fantasy
Publisher Nelson Doubleday
Publication date
1971
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages278

Driftglass is a 1971 collection of science fiction short stories by American writer Samuel R. Delany. The stories originally appeared in the magazines Worlds of Tomorrow, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, If and New Worlds or the anthologies Quark/3, Dangerous Visions and Alchemy & Academe. In 2019, Driftglass was selected as one of the "50 Unapologetically Queer Authors Share the Best LGBTQ Books of All Time" in O, The Oprah Magazine. [1]

Contents

References

  1. ^ Hart, Michelle (4 June 2019). "50 Queer Authors Share Their All-Time Favorite LGBTQ Books". Oprah Magazine.
  2. ^ This story is dedicated to Roger Zelazny, of whose work it is a pastiche. Zelazny also appears as a character. "'My name's Roger...' followed by something Polish and unpronounceable that began with Z and ended with Y." (p. 141) It also contains a pre-Internet reference to "a worldwide computer system." (p.155)

Sources


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