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Fred Pohl, the editor at Bantam, made Delany shorten the title to Triton to avoid confusion. [6] Trouble on Triton contains the first two parts of the five-part series "Some Informal Remarks Toward the Modular Calculus", which continues in several volumes of the Return to Nevèrÿon series. The novel as a whole is Part One, while Part Two is ...
The second chapter takes place sometime after the narrator has left Pedro's. It introduces Hogg, first seen raping a woman in an alley. Hogg calls the narrator to him to "finish him up" orally. Hogg takes the narrator to his truck where he explains that while he is a trucker by trade, he prefers getting paid to rape women.
Samuel R. "Chip" Delany (/ d ə ˈ l eɪ n i /, də-LAY-nee; born April 1, 1942) is an American writer and literary critic.His work includes fiction (especially science fiction), memoir, criticism, and essays on science fiction, literature, sexuality, and society.
Trouble on Triton, by K. Leslie Steiner; From 1976, [6] a review of Triton. Ruins/Foundations; or: The Fall of the Towers Twenty Years After; From 1981/1985, [7] a short version of the early chapters in The Motion of Light in Water. The Early Delany; Response to a panel given at Madison, Wisconsin, 1981. Tales of Nevèrÿon, by K. Leslie Steiner
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Neptune's largest moon Triton was discovered less than a month after the planet. [9] A few works in the 1930s depicted humans going to Triton, looking for minerals in Roman Frederick Starzl's 1932 short story "The Power Satellite" and a permanent home in John R. Pierce's 1930 short story "The Relics from the Earth". [2]
Trouble on Titan by Alan E. Nourse; Trouble on Triton by Samuel R. Delany; Trouble with Lichen by John Wyndham; A True Story by; The Truth Machine by James L. Halperin; Tunnel in the Sky by Robert A. Heinlein; The Twelve-Fingered Boy by John Hornor Jacobs; Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Seas by Jules Verne; The Two Faces of Tomorrow by James ...
An example of a "bonus material" style inner story is the chapter "The Town Ho's Story" in Herman Melville's novel Moby-Dick; that chapter tells a fully formed story of an exciting mutiny and contains many plot ideas that Melville had conceived during the early stages of writing Moby-Dick—ideas originally intended to be used later in the ...