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Trouble on Triton is not to be confused with the 1941 Henry Kuttner novel or the 1954 Alan E. Nourse novel Trouble on Titan. The title of the novel was inspired by Leonard Bernstein's 1952 opera, Trouble in Tahiti. Fred Pohl, the editor at Bantam, made Delany shorten the title to Triton to avoid confusion. [6]
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.
Additionally, movement among writers concerned with feminism and gender roles sprang up, leading to a genre of "feminist science fiction" including Joanna Russ' 1975 The Female Man, Samuel R. Delany's 1976 Trouble on Triton: An Ambiguous Heterotopia, and Marge Piercy's 1976 Woman on the Edge of Time.
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 ...
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
The Jewels of Aptor is a 1962 science fantasy novel by Samuel R. Delany, his first published novel.It first appeared in shortened form as an Ace Double F-173 together with Second Ending by James White.
The Einstein Intersection won the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 1967, [4] and was a finalist for the 1968 Hugo Award for Best Novel. [5]Algis Budrys, after noting that Delany "has about as little discipline as any writer who has tried his hand" at science fiction and that The Einstein Intersection was a book "whose structure and purpose on its own terms are not realized", declared that the ...
The Towers of Toron is a 1964 science fantasy novel by Samuel R. Delany, and is the second novel in the "Fall of the Towers" trilogy. [1] The novel was originally published as Ace Double F-261, together with The Lunar Eye by Robert Moore Williams.