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  1. Poul William Anderson (November 25, 1926 – July 31, 2001) was an American fantasy and science fiction author who was active from the 1940s until his death in 2001. Anderson also wrote historical novels.

    • American
    • 1948–2001
    • Writer
  2. 16 de abr. de 2024 · Poul Andersons “Flight to Forever” recalls many of those same ideas. “Flight to Forever” was first published in Super Science Stories, the November 1950 issue. You can read it here, or listen here. I first read it in Year’s Best Science Fiction Novels: 1952 edited by Bleiler and Dikty.

  3. 14 de abr. de 2024 · Sunday 14 April 2024. A Proto-Future History. The first, although only the first, step towards retroactively recategorizing Poul Anderson's The Enemy Stars as the opening instalment of a future history series is taken in the opening sentence of the same author's subsequent short story, "The Ways of Love":

  4. 23 de abr. de 2024 · by Poul Anderson Preface by Eric Flint Poul Anderson had a career that lasted as long as Robert Heinlein's, and overlapped it a great deal, allowing for a ten-year difference when they got started. The parallels are rather striking: Heinlein's first story was published in 1939, Anderson's in 1948. ("Life-Line" and "Genius," respectively.)

  5. 16 de abr. de 2024 · Poul Anderson, "Epilogue" IN Anderson, Explorations (New York, 1981), pp. 177-240. The opening paragraph: "His name was a set of radio pulses. Converted into equivalent sound waves, it would have been an ugly squawk; so because he, like any consciousness, was the center of his own coordinate system, let him be called Zero."

  6. 17 de abr. de 2024 · This game is not animals with edible flesh and potable blood but "motiles" with concentrated energy and reusable parts. One helps Zero to fasten a carrier rack on his shoulders. He has shoulders. We still do not know whether he is wheeled, winged, bipedal, quadrupedal etc. He also carries weapons.

  7. Hace 3 días · Harlan Ellison has received the most Hugos for Best Short Story at four, Arthur C. Clarke, Larry Niven, Mike Resnick, Michael Swanwick, and Connie Willis have each won three times, and Poul Anderson, Joe Haldeman, and Ken Liu have won twice, the only other authors to win more than once.