From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Warm Worlds and Otherwise
First edition
Author Alice Sheldon (as James Tiptree Jr.)
Cover artist Don R. Smith
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Genre Science fiction
Publisher Ballantine
Publication date
February 1975
Media typePrint (paperback)
Pagesxviii + 222
ISBN 0-345-24380-3
OCLC 1259947

Warm Worlds and Otherwise is a short story collection by American writer Alice Sheldon, first published in 1975 under her pen name James Tiptree Jr. In its introduction, "Who is Tiptree, What is He?", fellow science fiction author Robert Silverberg wrote that he found the theory that Tiptree was female "absurd", and that the author of these stories could only be a man. After Sheldon wrote him that Tiptree was a pseudonym she assumed, Silverberg added a postscript to his introduction in the second edition of the book, published in 1979.

According to David Pringle, the collection contains:

Twelve furiously imaginative, occasionally explosive SF stories, the best of which are quite brilliant [1]

Contents

References

  1. ^ Pringle, David (1990). "Warm Worlds and Otherwise". The Ultimate Guide to Science Fiction. p.  350.

Sources

External links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Warm Worlds and Otherwise
First edition
Author Alice Sheldon (as James Tiptree Jr.)
Cover artist Don R. Smith
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Genre Science fiction
Publisher Ballantine
Publication date
February 1975
Media typePrint (paperback)
Pagesxviii + 222
ISBN 0-345-24380-3
OCLC 1259947

Warm Worlds and Otherwise is a short story collection by American writer Alice Sheldon, first published in 1975 under her pen name James Tiptree Jr. In its introduction, "Who is Tiptree, What is He?", fellow science fiction author Robert Silverberg wrote that he found the theory that Tiptree was female "absurd", and that the author of these stories could only be a man. After Sheldon wrote him that Tiptree was a pseudonym she assumed, Silverberg added a postscript to his introduction in the second edition of the book, published in 1979.

According to David Pringle, the collection contains:

Twelve furiously imaginative, occasionally explosive SF stories, the best of which are quite brilliant [1]

Contents

References

  1. ^ Pringle, David (1990). "Warm Worlds and Otherwise". The Ultimate Guide to Science Fiction. p.  350.

Sources

External links


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