Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kim Stanley Robinson (born March 23, 1952) is an American science fiction writer best known for his Mars trilogy. Many of his novels and stories have ecological, cultural, and political themes and feature scientists as heroes.
"Kim Stanley Robinson Is One of Our Greatest Ever Socialist Novelists; An Interview with Robert Markley". Jacobin; Markley, Robert (November 2019). Kim Stanley Robinson (Paper ed.). Urbana-Champaign: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-08458-4
Covers of the Mars trilogy by Harper Voyager 2009 (UK) The Mars trilogy is a series of science fiction novels by Kim Stanley Robinson that chronicles the settlement and terraforming of the planet Mars through the personal and detailed viewpoints of a wide variety of characters spanning 187 years, from 2026 to 2212.
Prolific science-fiction author Kim Stanley Robinson drops wisdom about the joys of nature, climate peril and his first nonfiction book, "The High Sierra."
The Three Californias Trilogy (also known as the Wild Shore Triptych and the Orange County Trilogy) is a book by Kim Stanley Robinson, which depict three different possible futures of Orange County, California. The books that make up the trilogy are The Wild Shore, The Gold Coast and Pacific Edge. Each of these books describes the life of young ...
Forty Signs of Rain (2004) is the first book in the hard science fiction "Science in the Capital" trilogy by Kim Stanley Robinson. (The following two novels are Fifty Degrees Below, (2005, and Sixty Days and Counting, 2007).
The Planet on the Table is a collection of science fiction stories by American writer Kim Stanley Robinson, published in hardcover by Tor Books in 1986. A British paperback edition appeared in 1987, as well as a Tor paperback reprint; a French translation was issued in 1988. [1]
"Green Mars" is a science fiction novella by the American writer Kim Stanley Robinson, first published in Asimov's Science Fiction in September 1985, eight years before his novel of the same name. [1] The author later said that he wrote the story "mainly to stake a claim – at least a moral claim – on the name.