Almost Complete Short Fiction by George Zebrowski (.ePUB)
File Size: 6.1 MB
Almost Complete Short Fiction by George Zebrowski (Jerry eBooks, 2024)
Requirements: .ePUB reader, 6.1mb
Overview: George Zebrowski (b.1945) Austrian-born author of Polish descent, born Jerzy Tadeus Zebrowski; in the USA from 1951, one of the first alumni of the Clarion Science Fiction Writers’ Workshop to achieve recognition in the sf world. He has lived with Pamela Sargent for many years. After two short collaborations with Jack Dann – “Traps” (March 1970 If) and “Dark, Dark, the Dead Star” (July 1970 If) – Zebrowski began publishing sf stories solo with “The Water Sculptor of Station 233” for Infinity One (anth 1970) edited by Robert Hoskins. He remained active as a short-story writer, releasing nearly 100 titles by 2012; they have been assembled in The Monadic Universe (coll 1977; exp 1985), Swift Thoughts (coll 2002), In the Distance, and Ahead in Time (coll 2002) and Black Pockets and Other Dark Thoughts (coll 2006). A metaphysical bent of mind, usually for good, informs much of this work (see Eschatology; Religion). He was editor of the SFWA Bulletin from 1970 to winter 1974-1975, and from 1983 to 1991 with Pamela Sargent.
Finalist for Nebula Award of Science Fiction Writers of America, 1971, for short story, “Heathen God,” and 1984, for the story “The Eichmann Variations”; Nebula citation, 1975, for editorial work at SFWA Bulletin; “Best Books for Young Adults” citation, American Library Association, and named one of the best books of the year, Omni magazine, and The Good Book Guide recommendation, all 1983, all for Creations; Books for the Teen Age selection, 1985, for Sunspacer; named one of the one hundred all-time best works of science fiction, Library Journal, 1988, for Macrolife; Notable Book of the Year citation, New York Times Book Review, 1991, for Stranger Suns; one of the best novels of 1995 citations, Locus and Science Fiction Chronicle, for The Killing Star; John W. Campbell Award for best novel of the year, 1999, for Brute Orbits; Service Award Euom, Science Fiction Writers of America, 2000, for work as a Grievance Officer and Chairman of the Nebula Awards Anthology Committee from 1983–96; finalist for the Nebula Award, 2002, for short story “Wound the Wind.”
Genre: Fiction > Sci-Fi/Fantasy
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