![]() ![]() ![]() I have finally found an inexpensive copy of her only collection published during her life ( an omnibus edition with never before seen stories was recently self-published by her descendants). Mildred Clingerman was regularly featured in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction in the 50s and early 60s. In case you missed it, I reviewed Don’t Bite the Sun(1976) recently and procured a copy of Electric Forest(1979).Ĥ. This one more fantasy than SF (although SF elements crop up at the end). My Tanith Lee collection grows and grows. Hegira itself draws inspiration from the Ringworld and Riverworld-style SF novel.ģ. Compton, Karen Joy Fowler, and Norman Spinrad. Bear’s signature joins the ranks of Christopher Priest, D. ![]() I don’t track down signed copies–all the ones I owned were accidentally mislabeled or inexpensive volumes I wanted anyway. This late 70s novel was signed so I snatched it up. I have yet to ready any of Greg Bear’s work. Native Tongue (1984) is supposedly her strongest work. Years ago I read and reviewed Suzette Haden Elgin’s provocative At the Seventh Level (1972)–I praised the use of linguistics, the formulation of societal ideologies, and critiqued the ramshackle plot and Orientalism. ![]()
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