|    Login    |    Register

Slow Sculpture: Volume XII: The Complete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Slow Sculpture: Volume XII: The Complete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon

Contributors:

By (Author) Theodore Sturgeon
Edited by Noel Sturgeon
Foreword by Connie Willis
Afterword by Spider Robinson

ISBN:

9781556438349

Series Number:

12

Publisher:

North Atlantic Books,U.S.

Imprint:

North Atlantic Books,U.S.

Publication Date:

15th July 2011

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Main Subject:
Dewey:

813.54

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

312

Dimensions:

Width 160mm, Height 236mm, Spine 29mm

Weight:

612g

Description

Theodore Sturgeon was a model for his friend Kurt Vonnegut's legendary character Kilgore Trout, and his work was an acknowledged influence on important younger writers from Harlan Ellison and Robert Silverberg to Stephen King and Octavia Butler. His work has long been deeply appreciated for its sardonic sensibility, dazzling wordplay, conceptual brilliance, memorable characters, and unsparing treatment of social issues such as sex, war, and marginalized members of society. Sturgeon also authored several episodes of the original Star Trek TV series and originated the Vulcan phrase "Live long and prosper." This twelfth volume of North Atlantic's ambitious series reprinting his complete short stories includes classic works such as the award-winning title story, which won both the Hugo and Nebula Awards in 1971, as well as "Case and the Dreamer," a well-crafted tale of an encounter with a trans-spatial being that is also a meditation on love, and "The Widget , the Wadget , and Boff," a creative exploration of the human ability to achieve self-realization in response to crisis. The book includes a new Foreword, an illuminating section of Story Notes, and a comprehensive index for the entire series.

Reviews

A consummate storyteller and someone whose stories had not only heart, but brains and depth.
Connie Willis, from the foreword

One of the all-time masters of the sci-fi short story. This multivolume project to bring many of his classic tales back into print is long overdue.
Publishers Weekly

Sturgeons often tender explorations of alien minds were as carefully worked out as Faulkners exploration of the mind of the idiot in The Sound and the Fury. His emphasis on psychology instead of blasters prepared the way for most modern masters of the science fiction genre.
Stephen King

Sturgeon was, in several senses, the conscience of modern science fiction.
The New York Times

Sturgeons stories have an emotional impact unmatched by almost any other writer.
Arthur C. Clarke

One of the best writers in America Sturgeon is a master storyteller certain to fascinate all sorts of readers, not only science fiction fans.
Kurt Vonnegut

Intelligent, humane, tantalizing stories, every one of which evokes the sense of wonder. Sturgeons stories are treasures from Elfland.
Carl Sagan

A terrific writer; I enjoyed every word he published.
Robert Heinlein

Sturgeon wrote miraculous short stories. He found his urgency directed in becoming the John Dos Passos, the William Faulkner, the Ring Lardner, the James Thurber, the Virginia Woolf of science fiction.
Jonathan Lethem

The most literate and lyrical writer science fiction ever had.
Spider Robinson, from the afterword

Author Bio

Theodore Sturgeon (1918-1985) was one of the most influential writers of the Golden Age of science fiction, and is ranked with classic contemporaries such as Isaac Asimov, Robert Heinlein, Ray Bradbury, and Arthur C. Clarke. He received the International Fantasy Award for his novel More Than Human, which has been continuously in print since 1953, but is primarily known for his short stories. Sturgeon received both the Hugo and Nebula awards for his story "Slow Sculpture" (included in this volume) and was posthumously inducted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame. Sturgeon wrote several Star Trek episodes, one of which introduced the famous Vulcan hand greeting and the phrase "Live long and prosper." James Blish wrote that Sturgeon was the "finest conscious artist science fiction ever produced." Sturgeon was a model for his friend Kurt Vonnegut's memorable character Kilgore Trout, and his work was an acknowledged influence on important younger writers such as Harlan Ellison, Robert Silverberg, Brian W. Aldiss, Stephen King, Octavia Butler, and Jonathan Lethem, many of whom have written introductions for previous volumes of The Complete Stories of Theodore Sturgeon.

See all

Other titles by Theodore Sturgeon

See all

Other titles from North Atlantic Books,U.S.