Warm Worlds and Otherwise: Difference between revisions

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'''Warm Worlds and Otherwise''' is a [[short story]] collection by [[James Tiptree, Jr]] that was first published in [[1975]]. This collection is notable for its introduction, in which [[Robert Silverberg]] wrote that he found the theory that Tiptree was female "absurd", that the author of these stories could only be a man. When it was later revealed that Tiptree was a woman, a postscript by Silverberg was added to the collection.
'''Warm Worlds and Otherwise''' is a [[short story]] collection by [[James Tiptree, Jr.]] that was first published in [[1975]]. This collection is notable for its introduction, in which [[Robert Silverberg]] wrote that he found the theory that Tiptree was female "absurd", that the author of these stories could only be a man. When it was later revealed that Tiptree was a woman, a postscript by Silverberg was added to the collection.


== Contents ==
== Contents ==


*Who Is Tiptree, What Is He? (introduction by [[Robert Silverberg]])
*[[Who Is Tiptree, What Is He?]] (introduction by [[Robert Silverberg]])
*All the Kinds of Yes
*[[All the Kinds of Yes]]
*The Milk of Paradise
*[[The Milk of Paradise]]
*And I Have Come Upon This Place by Lost Ways
*[[And I Have Come Upon This Place by Lost Ways]]
*The Last Flight of Dr. Ain
*[[The Last Flight of Dr. Ain]]
*Amberjack
*[[Amberjack]]
*Through a Lass Darkly
*[[Through a Lass Darkly]]
*[[The Girl Who Was Plugged In]] (winner of the [[Hugo Award]] for [[novella]] in [[1974]])
*[[The Girl Who Was Plugged In]] (winner of the [[Hugo Award]] for [[novella]] in [[1974]])
*The Night-Blooming Saurian
*[[The Night-Blooming Saurian]]
*The Women Men Don't See
*[[The Women Men Don't See]]
*Fault
*[[Fault]]
*[[Love Is the Plan the Plan Is Death]] (winner of the [[Nebula Award]] for [[short story]] in [[1974]])
*[[Love Is the Plan the Plan Is Death]] (winner of the [[Nebula Award]] for [[short story]] in [[1974]])
*On the Last Afternoon
*[[On the Last Afternoon]]

Revision as of 19:45, 26 April 2006

Warm Worlds and Otherwise is a short story collection by James Tiptree, Jr. that was first published in 1975. This collection is notable for its introduction, in which Robert Silverberg wrote that he found the theory that Tiptree was female "absurd", that the author of these stories could only be a man. When it was later revealed that Tiptree was a woman, a postscript by Silverberg was added to the collection.

Contents