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Terry Bisson

    February 12, 1942 – January 10, 2024

    Terry Bisson is an American science fiction and fantasy author, primarily celebrated for his masterful short stories. His work often delves into the boundaries of human experience and technological advancement with a distinctive, subtly absurd touch. Bisson's style is marked by its conciseness and remarkable ability to provoke profound contemplation on the nature of reality.

    Terry Bisson
    Year's Best SF 7
    Fire On The Mountain
    The Fifth Element
    The Year's Best Science Fiction
    Any Day Now
    Talking Man
    • Any Day Now

      • 288 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      Publishers Weekly has called Bisson's prose "a wonder of seemingly effortless control and precision," and John Crowley hails Bisson as a "national treasure!" Any Day Now is truly a literary tour de force. It is a poignant excursion into the last days of the Beats and the emerging radicalized culture of the sixties from Kentucky to New York City and daringly unique. This road movie of a novel, which begins as a fifties coming-of-age story and ends in an isolated hippy commune under threat of revolution, provides a transcendent commentary on America then and now.

      Any Day Now
      4.0
    • The Year's Best Science Fiction

      Twelfth Annual Collection

      • 590 pages
      • 21 hours of reading

      Now a dozen years old, the award-winning collection continues to provide dozens of the best stories of the year, including work by renowned veterans and exciting newcomers, including Stephen Baxter, Michael Bishop, Terry Bisson, Pat Cadigan, Greg Egan, Eliot Fintushel, Michael F. Flyn, Lisa Goldstein, Jose Haldemnan, Katherine Kerr, Nancy Kress, Ursula K. Le Guin, Maureen F. McHugh, Robert Reed, Mike Resnick, Mary Rosenblum.

      The Year's Best Science Fiction
      4.1
    • The Fifth Element

      • 256 pages
      • 9 hours of reading

      Every five thousand years, a door opens between the dimensions. In one dimension lies the universe and all of its multitude of varied life forms. In another exists an element made not of earth, air, fire or water, but of an anti-energy, anti-life. This "thing", this darkness, waits patiently at the threshold of the universe for an opportunity to extinguish all life and all light. Every five thousand years, the universe needs a hero, and in New York City of the 23rd Century, a good hero is hard to find. The Fifth Element, a timeless story about love and survival, heroes and villains, good and evil, set in a strangely familiar yet intoxicatingly different 23rd Century. The film stars Bruce Willis, Gary Oldman, Ian Holm, Milla Jovovich. The Fifth Element is written directed by Luc Besson, the visually innovative director of La Femme Nikita and The Professional.

      The Fifth Element
      4.1
    • Fire On The Mountain

      • 156 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      The controversial novel, once banned in the US, which tells the tale of what had happended if the civil war had been started by the abolitionists, not the slave owners.

      Fire On The Mountain
      4.0
    • Once again, the year's finest flights of speculative imagination are gathered in one extraordinary volume, compiled by acclaimed editor and anthologist David G. Hartwell. From some of the most renowned visionaries of contemporary SF -- as well as new writers who are already making an indelible mark -- comes an all-new compendium of unparalleled tales of the possible that will enthrall, astonish, terrify, and elate. Stories of strange worlds and mind-boggling futures, of awesome discoveries and apocalyptic disasters, of universes light years distant and deep within the human consciousness, are collected here as SF's brightest lights shine more radiantly than ever before.

      Year's Best SF 7
      3.8
    • Young Boba, the one clone that bounty hunter Jango Fett is raising himself, grows up without a mother or friends, learning many hard lessons about life and survival which he will have to put to the test when he least expects it.

      Star Wars. Boba Fett: The Fight to Survive
      3.7
    • Tomorrowing

      • 168 pages
      • 6 hours of reading

      Tomorrowing collects twenty years of Terry Bisson’s “This Month in History” columns for the science fiction magazine Locus, in which he imagines memorable events, each set in a totally different, imaginary yet possible, inevitable yet avoidable future.

      Tomorrowing
      3.4
    • Johnny is a courier. He carries data, uploaded into his brain through a jack implanted in his skull. And so Johnny's troubles begin. The data is stolen, and to get it back the owners have hired the Yakuzza who intend to get hold of Johnny. But all they really need is his cryogenically frozen head.

      Johnny Mnemonic
      2.9
    • Billy's Book: True Crime for Kids

      • 84 pages
      • 3 hours of reading

      True crime for kids. Or is it the happy childhood you never had? Thirteen tales. A wry, fantasy children's book to make adults laugh. Reminiscent of such greats as James Thurber and Lemony Snicket. Penned by SF troublemaker Terry Bisson. This is a text-only paperback ecition. Also available in an illustrated ebook edition as "Billy's Book," and as the color illustrated large-format "Billy's Picture Book," with the illustrations by Rudy Rucker.

      Billy's Book: True Crime for Kids