Ted Reynolds (writer)

Theodore Andrus Reynolds (born October 8, 1938) is an American science fiction writer.

Two of his works were nominated for Hugo Awards in 1980: "Can These Bones Live?" for Best Short Story, and Ker-Plop for Best Novella. His only novel, The Tides of God (1989), concerns millennialism being inspired by extraterrestrials.

He was one of the winners of The Village Voice's "Sci-Fi Scenes" writing contest, held in 1980-81; the newspaper published his untitled story of (as the contest rules demanded) exactly 250 words.

He largely stopped writing in 1996 but, after retirement, resumed in 2010.

Bibliography

Short fiction

Stories[1]
Title Year First published Reprinted/collected Notes
Can these bones live? 1979 "Can these bones live?". Analog. Mar 1979.
View through the window 2012 "View through the window". Asimov's Science Fiction. 36 (8): 62–67. Aug 2012.
gollark: What are you doing with it?
gollark: When have you needed that?
gollark: It is, because nobody actually needs to print `y\n` at 120GB/s. In fact, you're not even PRINTING it, just... counting and devnulling it.
gollark: They were able to reach 120GB/s, vs 120MB/s with the naive implementation or 12GB/s with the GNU yes one.
gollark: https://www.reddit.com/r/unix/comments/6gxduc/how_is_gnu_yes_so_fast/

References

  1. Short stories unless otherwise noted.
  • The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, page 1007



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