Rob Chilson
Robert Chilson (born 1945) is a science fiction author who wrote memorable short stories during the 1980s.[1] Robert was born in Oklahoma, about age six he decided to be a writer.
He was discovered by John W. Campbell and wrote many stories for Analog, including collaborations with William F. Wu.[2]
Bibliography
- Chilson, Rob (1974). As the curtain falls. DAW Books.
- The Star-Crowned Kings (1975).[3]
- Isaac Asimov's Robot City: Refuge (1988)
- The Shores of Kansas (1976)
- Men Like Rats (1989)
- Rounded with Sleep (1990)
- Black as Blood (1998)
- — (January–February 2014). "The tansy tree". Analog Science Fiction and Fact. 134 (1–2): 76–90.[4]
gollark: Antifood will mutually annihilate with other matter and produce gamma rays.
gollark: Antispaghetti: the last cooking tool you'll ever need!
gollark: Alternately you can make spaghetti out of antimatter and bring it into contact with whatever you were cooking.
gollark: Well, if you want the blueshifting it does have to go quite fast.
gollark: The easiest way to cook things quickly is of course to vent a fusion reactor's plasma in its direction.
References
- Jay P. Pederson, St. James guide to science fiction writers
- Mike Ashley, Michael Ashley (2007), Gateways to forever: the story of the science-fiction magazines from 1970 to 1980, ISBN 978-1-84631-002-7
- References to Chilson writing The Star-Crowned Kings
- Review in SFF Chronicles forum.
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