H. H. Hollis
H. H. Hollis was a pseudonym of Ben Neal Ramey (7 October 1921 - May 1977),[1] who was an American science fiction short story writer and essayist. Ramey's "day-job" was as a lawyer in Texas; he wrote science fiction for fun. Two of his stories, The Guerrilla Trees (1968) and Sword Game (1968), were each nominated for a Nebula award.[2]
Bibliography
Short Stories
- "Ouled Nail" (1966)
- "Cybernia", If (July 1966)
- "The Long, Slow Orbits" (1967)
- "Travelers Guide to Megahouston" (1967)
- "The Guerrilla Trees" (1968)
- "Sword Game" (1968)
- "Eeeetz Ch" (1968)
- "Too Many People" (1971)
- "Stoned Counsel" (1972)
- "Different Angel" (1973)
- "Every Day in Every Way" (1976)
- "The Widow Figler Versus Ceramic Gardens of Memory, Inc." (1976)
- "Arachne" (1976)
- "Dark Body" (1976)
- "Inertia" (1976)
- "Even Money" (1979)
gollark: Ah, so not the omens. A shame.
gollark: Wait, which saltkins are we atalking about here?
gollark: Except honestly I'll probably forget but whatever.
gollark: MWAHAHAHA! Soon, I shall hopefully have a punny omen.
gollark: Monty Pythøn?
References
Notes
- H. H. Hollis at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Nicholls 1979, p. 289.
Bibliography
- Harlan Ellison (ed.), ed. (1972). Again, Dangerous Visions. New York: Doubleday. ISBN 0-575-04144-7.
- Peter Nicholls (ed.), ed. (1979). The Science Fiction Encyclopedia. London: Roxby Press Limited. ISBN 0-246-11020-1.
External links
- Contento, William G. (18 March 2015). "H.H. Hollis bibliography". Index to Science Fiction Anthologies and Collections, Combined Edition. Retrieved 26 December 2015.
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