Amazons: Difference between revisions

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* Margaret Weis. New Amazons.
* Margaret Weis. New Amazons.
* Marion Zimmer Bradley's ''[[Sword and Sorceress]]'' series of anthologies
* Marion Zimmer Bradley's ''[[Sword and Sorceress]]'' series of anthologies
* [[Marion Zimmer Bradley]]'s [[Darkover]] series anthologies
* [[Marion Zimmer Bradley]]'s [[Darkover]] series anthologies, esp. ''[[Free Amazons of Darkover]]'' (free amazon stories show up throughout the series but this volume is concentrated)
* Esther Friesner's anthology Chicks in Chainmail
* [[Esther Friesner]], ''[[Chicks in Chainmail series]]'' of anthologies, sometimes described as "amazon comedy" or "amazon humor":
* --. Did You Say Chicks?
** ''[[Chicks in Chainmail]]''
* --. Chicks and Chained Males
** ''[[Did You Say Chicks?]]''
* --. The Chick is In the Mail
** ''[[Chicks and Chained Males]]''
** ''[[The Chick is In the Mail]]''
** ''[[Turn the Other Chick]]''


==See also==
==See also==
* [http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/AmazonBrigade The Amazon Brigade] at TVTropes.org for examples of all-woman bands of warriors
* [http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/AmazonBrigade The Amazon Brigade] at TVTropes.org for examples of all-woman bands of warriors

Revision as of 07:14, 12 April 2008

The Amazons were a mythical or semi-historical tribe of women warriors. They have often been portrayed in fiction, as in Xena: Warrior Princess, and have had many characters and groups named after them.

Semi-historical portrayals

These are semi-historical portrayals: SF-based, but at least intending to be more or less, sort of, about the fabled / historical actual Amazons.

Women warrior groups named after Earth amazons

Tribes of women warriors

Anthologies

See also