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