Amy Thomson

Amy Thomson (born October 28, 1958) is an American science fiction writer.[1] In 1994 she won the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer. Most of her work is considered hard science fiction and contains feminist[2] and environmental themes.

Amy Thomson
Born (1958-10-28) October 28, 1958
Miami, Florida
OccupationWriter
Spouse(s)Edd Vick
ChildrenKatherine

Bibliography

Novels

Short fiction

Stories[3]
Title Year First published Reprinted/collected Notes
Buddha nature 2013 "Buddha nature". Analog Science Fiction and Fact. 133 (1&2): 76–93. Jan–Feb 2013.
gollark: Wokerer: modulate some kind of neutrino generation thing, and have a detector on the other end, so you can just send signals straight through the earth.
gollark: Really? That would be better, then.
gollark: I do wonder how well they're actually going to work in practice, though. I heard that each satellite could handle 6Gbps or so of traffic, and there are maybe 500 of them, which means if they roll it out to 100 000 people they'll get an amazing 4MB/s each.
gollark: SpaceX is apparently going to provide its own hardware.
gollark: Starlink transceivers will apparently be too large to conveniently fit in phones.

References

  1. "Thomson, Amy". Revised June 4, 2014. The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (sf-encyclopedia.com). Retrieved 2014-07-28. Entry by 'JC', John Clute.
  2. Annalee Newitz. "The Fembot Mystique". Popular Science. August 10, 2006.
  3. Short stories unless otherwise noted.
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