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The consultant editor was fantasy and science fiction author Robert Holdstock [2] who also contributed a chapter on modern perceptions of science fiction. The foreword was written by Isaac Asimov . Other notable contributors include novelists Brian Stableford , Harry Harrison , and Christopher Priest , the editor and publisher Malcolm Edwards ...
During the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s Holdstock wrote many fantasy and science fiction novels along with a number of short stories, most of which were published under a pseudonym. Robert Holdstock's pseudonyms included Robert Faulcon, Chris Carlsen, Richard Kirk, Robert Black, Ken Blake, and Steven Eisler. [6]
Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, 1978 ... Supernatural Fiction Writers (2nd ed.). Charles Scribner's Sons. ... Robert Holdstock bibliography.
The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (first edition published 1979; now online), edited by Peter Nicholls and John Clute; Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, with consultant editor Robert Holdstock; The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy (2005), edited by Gary Westfahl; Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, by Don D'Ammassa
A useful book for looking up authors is A Reader's Guide to Science Fiction, by Baird Searles, Martin Last, Beth Meacham, and Michael Franklin (1979). It also tells you whom else you might like if you like one author. Other invaluable works include The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, edited by John Clute
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The Greenwood Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Fantasy: Themes, Works, and Wonders is an English language reference work on science fiction and fantasy, published in 2005 by Greenwood Press. It was edited by Gary Westfahl and consists of three volumes of 200 entries each.
Lavondyss rises above the generic nature of genre fiction and approaches literary fiction in its complexity. John Clute gives the work mixed praise and describes Lavondyss as "half pedantry and proselytizing , half an epiphany of metamorphosis that reads like braille , it is a book whose appalling sincerity puts to shame the Celtic junk it ...