Gregory Benford

Regular price €25.99
Title
A01=George Slusser
Across the Sea of Suns
Against Infinity
alternate history
Arthur C. Clarke
Artifact
Asimov
astrophysics
Author_George Slusser
authors
Beyond Infinity
Beyond the Fall of Night
Campbell Award
Category=FL
Cosm
creative process
criticism
Eater
Edgar Rice Burroughs
editor
eq_bestseller
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_science-fiction
essay
essayist
Furious Gulf
Gordon Eklund
Great Sky River
Gregory Benford
hard sci-fi
hard science fiction
Human Being
In the Ocean of Night
Nebula Award
novel
novelist
Philip K. Dick
Sailing Bright Eternity
Samuel R. Delany
sci fi
science fiction authors
science fiction writers
SF
SF authors
speculative fiction
speculative fiction writers
Terry Carr
The Martian Race
The Sunborn
Tides of Light
Time's Rub
Timescape
Under the Wheel
writing
writing science fiction
writing speculative fiction

Product details

  • ISBN 9780252079801
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Jan 2014
  • Publisher: University of Illinois Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Gregory Benford is perhaps best known as the author of Benford's law of controversy: "Passion is inversely proportional to the amount of real information available." That maxim is a quotation from Timescape, Benford's Nebula and Campbell Award-winning 1980 novel, which established his work as an exemplar of "hard science fiction," dedicated to working out the consequences of modern science rather than substituting pseudoscience for fantasy.

Like many other current science fiction writers, Benford has tackled the major genres: space travel, time travel, technology running amok, prolonged longevity, searing apocalyptic cosmic events, and alien life, which he theorizes to be more likely viral than intelligent. An astrophysicist by training and profession, Benford has published more than twenty novels, over one hundred short stories, some fifty essays, and myriad articles that display both his scientific rigor as well as a recognition of literary traditions.

In this study, George Slusser explores the extraordinary, seemingly inexhaustible display of creative energy in Gregory Benford's life and work. Presenting Benford's ideas on science and the writing of science fiction, the volume addresses the writer's literary production and his place in contemporary science fiction. By identifying direct sources and making parallels with other works and writers, Slusser reveals the vast scope of Benford's knowledge, both of literature and of the major scientific and philosophical issues of our time. Slusser also discusses Benford's numerous scientific articles and nonfiction books and includes a new interview with Benford.

George Slusser is a professor of comparative literature and the curator of the J. Lloyd Eaton Collection of Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror Literature at the University of California, Riverside. His books include Science Fiction: Canonization, Marginalization and the Academy.