Hiccup and Toothless Concept Art Left 4 Dead Lake House

British science fiction author

Brian Aldiss


OBE

Aldiss at Interaction in Glasgow, 2005

Aldiss at Interaction in Glasgow, 2005

Born Brian Wilson Aldiss
(1925-08-18)18 August 1925
E Dereham, Norfolk, England
Died xix August 2017(2017-08-19) (aged 92)
Oxford, England
Pen proper noun
  • Jael Cracken
  • Dr. Peristyle
  • C. C. Shackleton
Occupation
  • Writer
  • editor
  • creative person
Period 1954–2017
Genre Science fiction
Notable works
  • Helliconia trilogy
  • "Supertoys Concluding All Summer Long"
Website
brianaldiss.co.uk

Brian Wilson Aldiss OBE (; 18 Baronial 1925 – 19 August 2017) was an English author, creative person, and album editor, best known for scientific discipline fiction novels and short stories. His byline reads either Brian W. Aldiss or simply Brian Aldiss, except for occasional pseudonyms during the mid-1960s.

Greatly influenced past science fiction pioneer H. G. Wells, Aldiss was a vice-president of the international H. Thousand. Wells Society. He was (with Harry Harrison) co-president of the Birmingham Science Fiction Grouping. Aldiss was named a M Master by the Science Fiction Writers of America in 2000 and inducted by the Science Fiction Hall of Fame in 2004. He received two Hugo Awards, one Nebula Award, and one John W. Campbell Memorial Award.[1] He wrote the brusque story "Supertoys Last All Summer Long" (1969), the footing for the Stanley Kubrick-developed Steven Spielberg movie A.I. Bogus Intelligence (2001). Aldiss was associated with the British New Wave of science fiction.[2]

Life and career [edit]

Early life, teaching, and military service [edit]

Aldiss was born on 18 August 1925,[three] above his paternal grandfather'due south draper'due south shop in Dereham, Norfolk. When Aldiss's grandfather died, his father, Pecker (the younger of ii sons), sold his share in the shop and the family unit left Dereham. Aldiss'south mother, Dot, was the daughter of a builder.[four] He had an older sis who was stillborn, and a younger sister. Every bit a 3-year-erstwhile, Aldiss started to write stories which his mother would demark and put on a shelf.[half-dozen]

At the age of 6, he went to Framlingham College but moved to Devon and was sent to board at West Buckland School in Devon in 1939 subsequently the outbreak of the war.[4] Every bit a child he discovered the lurid magazine Astounding Science Fiction. He somewhen read all the novels by H. G. Wells and Robert Heinlein, and later Philip K. Dick.[7] In 1943, during the Second World State of war, he joined the Royal Signals[8] and saw action in Burma.[nine]

Writing and publishing [edit]

His Ground forces experience inspired the novel Hothouse [10] and the Horatio Stubbs second and third books, A Soldier Erect and A Rude Enkindling, respectively.[xi]

Afterward the state of war, he worked equally a bookseller in Oxford.[12] He also wrote a number of short pieces for a booksellers' trade periodical virtually life in a fictitious bookshop, which attracted the attention of Charles Monteith, an editor at the publisher Faber and Faber.[13] As a result, Faber and Faber published Aldiss'south first book, The Brightfount Diaries (1955), a 200-folio novel in diary form nigh the life of a sales assistant in a bookshop.

About this fourth dimension he also began to write science fiction for various magazines. According to ISFDB, his first speculative fiction in print was the short story Criminal Tape, published by John Carnell in the July 1954 outcome of Science Fantasy.[fourteen] Several of his stories appeared in 1955, including three in monthly issues of New Worlds,[fourteen] also edited by Carnell.

In 1954, The Observer newspaper ran a contest for a brusque story fix in the twelvemonth 2500. Aldiss's story Not For An Age was ranked tertiary following a reader vote.[15]

The Brightfount Diaries had been a small-scale success, and Faber asked Aldiss if he had whatsoever more writing they could look at with a view to publishing. Aldiss confessed to being a science fiction author, to the delight of the publishers, who had a number of science fiction fans in high places, and so his beginning scientific discipline fiction volume was published, a drove of brusk stories entitled Space, Time and Nathaniel (Faber, 1957). By this time, his earnings from writing matched his wages in the bookshop, and he made the conclusion to get a full-fourth dimension author.[ citation needed ]

Aldiss led the voting for Most Promising New Author of 1958 at the next year's Worldcon, but finished behind "no award".[1] He was elected president of the British Scientific discipline Fiction Clan in 1960. He was the literary editor of the Oxford Mail newspaper from 1958 to 1969.[12] Around 1964, he and long-time collaborator Harry Harrison started the first ever journal of scientific discipline fiction criticism, Science Fiction Horizons, which during its cursory span of ii issues published articles and reviews past such authors as James Blish, and featured a discussion among Aldiss, C. S. Lewis, and Kingsley Amis in the first issue[16] and an interview with William S. Burroughs in the second.[17] In 1967 Algis Budrys listed Aldiss, J. Grand. Ballard, Roger Zelazny, and Samuel R. Delany every bit "an earthshaking new kind of" writers, and leaders of the New Wave.[18] Aldiss supported the New Wave movement, helping the magazine New Worlds to become financial bankroll from a 1967 Arts Council grant and publishing some of his more than experimental work in the magazine.[19]

Besides his own writings, he edited a number of anthologies. For Faber he edited Introducing SF, a collection of stories typifying various themes of science fiction, and Best Fantasy Stories. In 1961, he edited an anthology of reprinted short science fiction for the British paperback publisher Penguin Books under the title Penguin Scientific discipline Fiction. This was remarkably successful, went into numerous reprints, and was followed up past two farther anthologies: More than Penguin Science Fiction (1963) and Yet More Penguin Science Fiction (1964). The later anthologies enjoyed the same success as the start, and all three were eventually published together equally The Penguin Science Fiction Bus (1973), which besides went into a number of reprints. In the 1970s, he produced several large collections of classic 1000-scale scientific discipline fiction, under the titles Space Opera (1974), Space Odysseys (1975), Galactic Empires (1976), Evil Earths (1976), and Perilous Planets (1978). Around this time, he edited a large-format book Science Fiction Art (1975), with selections of artwork from the magazines and pulps.

In response to the results from the planetary probes of the 1960s and 1970s, which showed that Venus was completely unlike the hot, tropical jungle usually depicted in science fiction, Aldiss and Harrison edited an anthology Farewell, Fantastic Venus!, reprinting stories based on the pre-probe ideas of Venus. He also edited, with Harrison, a serial of anthologies The Year's Best Science Fiction (Nos. one–ix, 1968–1976).[20]

Aldiss invented a class of extremely short story called the mini-saga. The Daily Telegraph hosted a competition for the all-time mini-saga for several years, and Aldiss was the guess.[21] He edited several anthologies of the best mini-sagas.

'Metropolis' express edition print by Brian Aldiss

Aldiss travelled to Yugoslavia, where he met fans in Ljubljana, Slovenia and published a travel book about Yugoslavia entitled Cities and Stones (1966), his only piece of work in the genre.[22] He published an culling-history fantasy story, "The Day of the Doomed Rex" (1968), near Serbian kings in the Middle Ages, and wrote a novel chosen The Malacia Tapestry, almost an alternative Dalmatia.

Art [edit]

In addition to a highly successful career as a writer, Aldiss was an accomplished artist. His offset solo exhibition, The Other Hemisphere, was held in Oxford, Baronial–September 2010, and the exhibition's centrepiece Metropolis (meet figure) has since been released every bit a limited edition art impress.[23] (The exhibition title denotes the writer/artist's notion, "words streaming from one side of his brain inspiring images in what he calls 'the other hemisphere'".)[23]

Personal life [edit]

In 1948, Aldiss married Olive Fortescue, secretarial assistant to the possessor of Sanders' bookseller'southward in Oxford, where he had worked since 1947.[12] He had two children from his starting time matrimony: Clive in 1955 and Caroline Wendy in 1959, but the marriage "finally collapsed" in 1959 and dissolved in 1965.[12] [24]

In 1965, he married his second wife, Margaret Christie Manson (girl of John Alexander Christie Manson, an aeronautical engineer),[25] a Scottish woman and secretary to the editor of the Oxford Postal service; Aldiss was xl, and she 31.[12] They lived in Oxford and had two children together, Tim and Charlotte.[12] [24] She died in 1997.[12]

Death [edit]

Aldiss died on nineteen August 2017, the day afterward his 92nd birthday.[26] [27]

Awards and honours [edit]

He was elected a Beau of the Imperial Society of Literature in 1990.[28]

Aldiss was the "Permanent Special Guest" at the annual International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts (ICFA) from 1989 through 2008. He was also the Guest of Honor at the conventions in 1986 and 1999.[29]

The Scientific discipline Fiction Writers of America made him its 18th SFWA M Master in 2000[30] and the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame inducted him in 2004.[31]

He was awarded the title of Officeholder of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) for services to literature in the 2005 Altogether Honours listing.[32]

In Jan 2007 he appeared on Desert Island Discs. His choice of record to 'save' was "Old Rivers" sung past Walter Brennan, his choice of volume was John Heilpern's biography of John Osborne, and his luxury a banjo. The full pick of viii favourite records is on the BBC website.[33]

On 1 July 2008 he was awarded an honorary doctorate by the Academy of Liverpool in recognition of his contribution to literature.[34] The Brian W Aldiss Archive at the university holds manuscripts from the menses 1943–1995.[35]

In 2013, Aldiss was recipient of the World Fantasy Convention Award[36] at the World Fantasy Convention in Brighton, England.

Aldiss sat on the Council of the Gild of Authors.[37]

He won ii Hugo awards: in 1962 for the Hothouse series; and in 1987 for Trillion Year Spree.[38] [39] Aldiss too won a Nebula honor in 1965 for "The Saliva Tree".[40]

Works [edit]

Aldiss was the author of over lxxx books and 300 brusque stories, besides as several volumes of poetry.[5]

Novels [edit]

  • The Brightfount Diaries (1955, Faber)
  • Non-Stop (1958, Faber), (1959, Digit), (1976, Pan), (2000, Millennium), US title Starship (1960, Signet S1779), (1969, Avon V2321)
    A member of a culturally primordial tribe investigates the night, jungle-filled corridors that environs him to ultimately uncover the truthful nature of the universe he inhabits.
  • The Interpreter (1960, Digit R506), (1967, Four Foursquare 1970), US championship Bow Down to Nul Ace D-443
    A brusque novel about the huge, old galactic empire of Nuls, a behemothic, three-limbed, civilised alien race. Earth is simply a lesser-than-tertiary-grade colony ruled past a Nul tyrant whose deceiving devices together with good willing but ineffective attempts of a Nul Signatory (roughly equivalent to Prime number Minister) to clarify the abuses and with the disorganised earthling resistance reverberate the complex relationship existing between imperialists and subject races which Aldiss himself had the chance of seeing at first paw when serving in India and Indonesia in the forties.
  • The Male person Response (1959, Buoy 45), (1961, Four Square 1623)
  • The Primal Urge (1961, Ballantine F555), (1967, Sphere), (1976, Panther)
  • Hothouse (1962, Faber), (1965, Four Square 1147), (1979, Panther), published in abridged form in the American market as The Long Afternoon of Globe (1962, Signet D2018). A fix-up novel based on short stories "Hothouse", "Nomansland", "Undergrowth", "Timberline" and "Evergreen". This assemblage of stories won the Hugo Laurels for short fiction in 1962.[ane]
    Set in a far future Earth, where the earth has stopped rotating, the Sun has increased output, and plants are engaged in a constant frenzy of growth and decay, similar a tropical forest enhanced a thousandfold; a few small groups of elvish humans nonetheless alive on the border of extinction, beneath the giant banyan tree that covers the day side of the world.
  • Greybeard (1964, Harcourt, Caryatid & World), (1964, Faber), (1965, Signet P2689), (1968, Panther)
    Set decades after the Earth's population has been sterilised as a result of nuclear bomb tests conducted in Earth'southward orbit, the volume shows an emptying world, occupied by an aging, childless population.
  • The Dark Light Years (1964, Signet D2497), (1964, Faber), (1966, Four Square 1437), (1979, Panther)
    The meet of humans with the utods, gentle aliens whose physical and mental wellness requires wallowing in mud and filth, and who – though they achieved interstellar space flight – are not even recognized every bit intelligent by the humans. The critic Fredric Jameson described The Dark Light Years as, along with Ursula K. Le Guin's The Word for Globe Is Wood, "i of the major SF denunciations of the American genocide in Vietnam."[41]
  • Earthworks (1965, Faber), (1966, Doubleday), (1967, Four Foursquare), (1967, Signet P3116), (1979, Panther), (1980, Avon)
  • An Age (1967, Faber), (1969, Sphere), (1979, Panther), US title Cryptozoic! (1969, Avon), (1978, Panther), a dystopic time-travel novel
  • Report on Probability A (serialized 1967), (1968, Faber), (1969, Sphere). (1969, Doubleday), (1970, Lancer), (1980, Avon)
  • Barefoot in the Head (1969, Faber), (1970, Doubleday), (1972, Ace), (1974, Corgi), (1981, AVON), (1990, Gollancz VGSF Classics), a fix-up novel based on short stories: "But Passing Through", "Multi-Value Motorway", "Still Trajectories", "The Ophidian of Kundalini", "Drake-Homo Route", and novelettes: "Auto-Ancestral Fracture", "Ouspenski's Astrabahn"
    Perhaps Aldiss'due south virtually experimental piece of work, this first appeared in several parts equally the Acid Head State of war series in New Worlds. Ready in a Europe some years subsequently a flare-up in the Middle East led to Europe beingness attacked with bombs releasing huge quantities of long-lived hallucinogenic drugs. Into an England with a population barely maintaining a grip on reality comes a immature Serb, who himself starts coming nether the influence of the ambient aerosols, and finds himself leading a messianic crusade. The narration and dialogue reflects the shattering of linguistic communication under the influence of the drugs, in mutating phrases and puns and allusions, in a deliberate repeat of Finnegans Wake.
  • Horatio Stubbs serial:
    1. The Hand-Reared Boy (1970, Weidenfeld & Nicolson),[nineteen] (1971, Signet T4575), (1971, Corgi)
    2. A Soldier Erect (1971, Weidenfeld & Nicolson),[19] (1972, Corgi)
    3. A Rude Awakening (1978, Weidenfeld & Nicolson),[19] (1979, Corgi)
    Motorcoach edition, The Horatio Stubbs Saga (1985, Panther)[19]
  • Frankenstein Unbound (1973, Jonathan Cape), (1974, Random House), (1975, Fawcett Crest), (1975, Pan)
    A 21st century political leader is transported to 19th century Switzerland where he encounters Victor Frankenstein, the Frankenstein Monster, and Mary Shelley.
  • The Lxxx Minute Hour, or The eighty minute 60 minutes (1974, Jonathan Greatcoat), (1974, Doubleday), (1975, Leisure), (1975, Pan)
    A weird and aggressive "infinite opera" whose characters actually sing. The globe is in chaos later nuclear war causes time slips and fifty-fifty those that believe they dominion the earth have trouble knowing where and when they are.
  • The Malacia Tapestry (1976, Jonathan Cape), (1977, Harper & Row), (1978, Panther), (1978, Ace), (1985, Berkley)
    A picaresque novel with fantasy elements, set in a city non unlike Venice. All the same, information technology is a Venice without Christianity or monotheism, existing within an alternate version of Renaissance or Early Bizarre Italian republic.
  • Brothers of the Head (1977, Pierrot), (1979, Panther)
    A large-format book, illustrated by Ian Pollock, tells the strange story of the rock stars Tom and Barry Howe, Siamese twins with a third, dormant head that eventually starts to awaken.
  • Enemies of the Organization (1978, Jonathan Greatcoat), (1978, Harper & Row), (1980, Panther), (1981, Avon)
  • Moreau's Other Island (1980, Jonathan Greatcoat), (1982, Panther), or An Isle Called Moreau (1981, Simon & Schuster), (1981, Timescape)
  • Squire Quartet series:
    1. Life in the West (1980, Weidenfeld & Nicolson), (1982, Corgi)
    2. Forgotten Life (1988, Gollancz), (1989, Atheneum / Macmillan), (1989, Mandarin)
    3. Remembrance Day (1993, HarperCollins United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland), (1993, St. Martin'southward Press), (1994, Flamingo)
    4. Somewhere East of Life (1994, Carroll & Graf), (1994, Flamingo)
  • Helliconia Trilogy
    1. Helliconia Spring (1982, Atheneum), (1982, Jonathan Cape), (1983, Berkley), (1983, Granada)
      BSFA Award;[42] Campbell Memorial Honor;[43] Nebula Accolade finalist[1]
    2. Helliconia Summer (1983, Atheneum), (1983, Jonathan Cape), (1984, Berkley), (1985, Granada)
      BSFA finalist; Locus Honor, fourth place[one]
    3. Helliconia Winter (1985, Atheneum), (1985, Jonathan Cape), (1986, Berkley), (1986, Granada)
      BSFA;[42] Nebula finalist; Locus, fifth place[ane]
    Omnibus edition, Helliconia (2010, Gollancz SF Masterworks)
  • Ruins (1987), novella
  • The Year Earlier Yesterday, or Cracken at Critical (1987, Franklin Watts), (1987, Kerosina), (1988, St. Martin's), (1989, New English Library), a fix-upwards novel based on novelette "Equator" and novella "The Impossible Grinning"
  • Dracula Unbound (1990, HarperCollins), (1991, Graftton)
  • White Mars or, the Mind Set Free Piddling (1999, Piddling, Brown Britain), (2000, St. Martin's), with Roger Penrose OCLC 905903045
  • Super-State (2002, Orbit)
  • The Cretan Teat (2002)
  • Diplomacy at Hampden Ferrers (2004)
  • Sanity and the Lady (2005, PS Publishing)
  • Jocasta (2006, Rose Press)
    A re-telling of Sophocles's Theban tragedies concerning Oedipus and Antigone.[44] In Aldiss'due south novel, myth and magic are vibrantly real, experienced through an evolving human consciousness. Amid various competing interpretations of reality, including the advent of a time-travelling Sophocles, Aldiss provides an alternative caption of the Sphinx'southward riddle.
  • HARM (2007, del Rey), (2007, Duckworth)
    Campbell Laurels nominee[45]
  • Walcot (2010, Goldmark)[46]
    Family saga spanning the 20th century
  • Finches of Mars (2012)[47]
  • Comfort Zone (2013)[9]

Short stories [edit]

Collections:

  • Space, Time and Nathaniel (1957, Faber), (1966, Four Square 1496), (1979, Panther), collection of xiv brusque stories:
    "T", "Our Kind of Knowledge", "Psyclops", "Conviction", "Non for an Age", "The Shubshub Race", "Criminal Record", "The Failed Men", "Supercity", "There Is a Tide", "Pogsmith", "Outside", "Panel Game", "Dumb Show"
  • The Canopy of Fourth dimension (1959, Faber), (1963, Iv Square 821), collection of 10 short stories and 1 novelette:
    "Iii's a Cloud", "All the World's Tears", "Who Tin Replace a Man?", "Blighted Profile", "Judas Danced", "O, Ishrail!", "Incentive", "Factor-Hive", "Surreptitious of a Mighty City", "They Shall Inherit", "Visiting Amoeba" (novelette)
    The U.s. title Galaxies Like Grains of Sand (1960, Signet S1815), (1979 Panther), was a different version, which Aldiss preferred.
  • No Fourth dimension Similar Tomorrow (1959, Signet S1683), collection of xi short stories and 1 novelette:
    "T", "Not for an Historic period", "Poor Fiddling Warrior!", "The Failed Men", "Carrion Country", "Judas Danced", "Psyclops", "Outside", "Gesture of Farewell" (novelette), "The New Father Christmas", "Blighted Contour", "Our Kind of Noesis"
  • Equator, or Equator and Segregation (1963), drove of two novellas/novelettes:
    "Equator" (novella), "Segregation, AKA The Game of God" (novelette)
  • The Airs of Earth (1963, Faber), (1965, Four Square 1325), collection of 4 short stories and 4 novelettes:
    "A Kind of Artistry" (novelette), "How to Be a Soldier", "Basis for Negotiation" (novelette), "Shards", "O Moon of My Delight!" (novelette), "The International Grin", "The Game of God" (novelette), "Old Hundredth"
  • Starswarm (1963, Signet D2411), drove of 4 brusque stories and 4 novelettes:
    "Sector Vermilion: A Kind of Artistry" (novelette), "Sector Gray: Hearts and Engines", "Sector Violet: The Underprivileged", "Sector Diamond: The Game of God" (novelette), "Sector Greenish: Shards", "Sector Yellow: Legends of Smith's Burst" (novelette), "Sector Azure: O Moon of My Delight!" (novelette), "The Rift: Quondam Hundredth"
  • Best SF stories of Brian Aldiss (1965, Faber); US title Who Can Supercede a Man? (1965, Harcourt, Brace & World), (1967, Signet P3311), collection of xi short stories and three novelettes:
    "Who Can Replace a Homo?", "Not for an Historic period", "Psyclops", "Outside", "Dumb Evidence", "The New Begetter Christmas", "Ahead", "Poor Little Warrior!", "Man on Bridge", "The Impossible Star" (novelette), "Footing for Negotiation" (novelette), "Old Hundredth", "A Kind of Artistry" (novelette), "Human being in His Fourth dimension"
  • The Saliva Tree and Other Strange Growths (1966, Faber), (1968, Sphere), collection of 7 short stories and three novellas/novelettes:
    "The Saliva Tree" (novella), "Danger: Faith!" (novella), "The Source", "The Lonely Addiction", "A Pleasure Shared", "One Role with Relish", "Legends of Smith's Burst" (novelette), "The Mean solar day of the Doomed Rex", "Paternal Intendance", "Girl and Robot with Flowers"
    Championship story "The Saliva Tree" was written to mark the centenary of H. One thousand. Wells's nativity, and shared the Nebula Award for the all-time novella of 1964.[one] While set in a Wellsian milieu, it contains two plot elements also institute in the stories of H.P. Lovecraft: an object from space which causes crops and livestock to grow prolifically, but be unpalatable (The Colour out of Space); and a monster which is visible just when sprayed with an opaque pulverisation (The Dunwich Horror).
  • Intangibles Inc. and Other Stories (1969, Faber), (1971, Corgi), collection of 5 novellas/novelettes:
    "Neanderthal Planet" (novelette), "Randy's Syndrome" (novelette), "Send Her Victorious or the War Against the Victorians, 2000 A.D." (novelette), "Intangibles, Inc." (novelette), "Since the Assassination" (novella)
  • The Moment of Eclipse (1970, Faber), (1972, Doubleday), (1973, Panther), collection of 12 brusque stories and 2 novelettes:
    "The Moment of Eclipse", "The Day We Embarked for Cythera...", "Orgy of the Living and the Dying" (novelette), Super-Toys Last All Summertime Long", "The Village Swindler", "Down the Up Escalation", "That Uncomfortable Pause Betwixt Life and Fine art", "Confluence", "Heresies of the Huge God", Clement Yale series (#1 "The Circulation of the Blood" (novelette), #ii "...And the Stagnation of the Heart"), "The Worm That Flies", "Working in the Spaceship Yards", "Swastika!"
    British Science Fiction Association (BSFA) Award[42]
  • Neanderthal Planet (1970, Avon), drove of 4 novellas/novelettes:
    "Neanderthal Planet" (novelette), "Danger: Faith!" (novella), "Intangibles, Inc." (novelette), "Since the Assassination" (novelette)
  • Best Scientific discipline Fiction Stories of Brian W. Aldiss (1971), collection of 14 brusque stories and two novelettes:
    "Who Tin Supplant a Man?", "Not for an Age", "Outside", "Poor Footling Warrior!", "Human being on Bridge", "The Incommunicable Star" (novelette), "Former Hundredth", "Man in His Fourth dimension", "Shards", "Girl and Robot with Flowers", "The Moment of Eclipse", "Swastika!", "Sober Noises of Morning in a Marginal Land" (novelette), "Judas Danced", "However Trajectories", "Another Little Boy"
  • The Book of Brian Aldiss (1972, DAW 29), UK title The Comic Inferno (1973, New English Library), drove of v short stories and 4 novelettes:
    "Comic Inferno" (novelette), "The Underprivileged", "Cardiac Arrest" (novelette), "In the Arena", "All the World'south Tears", "Amen and Out", "The Soft Predicament" (novelette), "As for Our Fatal Continuity...", "Send Her Victorious" (novelette)
  • Last Orders and Other Stories (1977, Jonathan Greatcoat), (1979, Panther), collection of 23 short stories and 1 novelette:
    "Last Orders", "Creatures of Apogee", Enigma serial, Three Mortiferous Enigmas: V: Twelvemonth by Year the Evil Gains (#1 "Within the Blackness Circle", #2 "Killing Off the Large Animals", #3 "What Are You Doing? Why Are You lot Doing It?"), Enigma series, Diagrams For Iii (Enigmatic) Stories (#one "The Daughter in the Tau-Dream", #two "The Immobility Crew", #three "A Cultural Side-Event"), "Alive? Our Computers Will Practise That for United states", "The Monsters of Ingratitude IV", Enigma serial, The Discontinuity Moment (#one "Waiting for the Universe to Brainstorm", #2 "But Without Orifices", #3 "Aimez-Vous Holman Hunt?"), "Backwater", Enigma series, Three Enigmas II: The Eternal Theme Of Exile (#1 "The Eternal Theme of Exile", #2 "All Those Indelible Old Charms", #3 "Nobody Spoke Or Waved Goodbye"), "The Expensive Delicate Transport", Enigma series, 3 Enigmas Four: 3 Coins in [Enigmatic|Clockwork] Fountain (#i "Advisedly Observed Women", #2 "The Daffodil Returns the Smile", #iii "The Year of the Tranquility Calculator"), "Advent of Life", "Wired for Sound", "Journey to the Heartland" (novelette)
  • Galaxies Like Grains of Sand (1979, Panther), drove of nine short stories:
    "The State of war Millennia", "The Sterile Millennia", "The Robot Millennia", "The Mingled Millennia", "The Dark Millennia", "The Star Millennia", "The Mutant Millennia", "The Megalopolis Millennia", "The Ultimate Millennia"
  • Brothers of the Head and Where the Lines Converge (1979), collection of ane novel, 1 novelette and 6 poems:
    Brothers of the Head (novel), "Large Lover" (poem), "Love Is a Forest" (poem), "Bacterial Activeness" (poem), "Star-Time" (poem), "Only for a Moment" (poem), "I Was Never Deafened or Bullheaded to Her Music" (verse form), "Where The Lines Converge" (novelette)
  • New Arrivals, Old Encounters (1979, Jonathan Greatcoat), (1980, Harper & Row), (1981, Avon), collection of 9 short stories and 3 novelettes:
    "New Arrivals, Sometime Encounters", "The Small Stones of Tu Fu", "Three Ways" (novelette), "Amen and Out", "A Spot of Konfrontation", "The Soft Predicament" (novelette), "Non-Isotropic", "One Blink of the Moon", "Space for Reflection", "Song of the Silencer", "Indifference" (novelette), "The Impossible Boob Show"
  • Strange Bodies (1981), collection of 5 brusk stories and 1 novelette:
    "A Romance of the Equator", "Boat Animals", "Strange Bodies", "Frontiers", "The Skeleton", "Simply Back From Java" (novelette)
  • Bestsellers Vol. iii No. ix: Best of Aldiss (1983), drove of x short stories and ii novelettes:
    "Oh, For a Closer Brush with God", "Advent of Life", "The Modest Stones of Tu Fu", "The Game with the Big Heavy Ball", "A Romance of the Equator", Enigma series, Three Revolutionary Enigmas (#1 "The Fall of Species B", #2 "In the Halls of the Hereafter", #3 "The Ancestral Home of Thought"), "The Blue Background", "A Individual Whale" (novelette), "Consolations of Age", "The Girl Who Sang" (novelette)
  • Seasons in Flight (1984, Jonathan Cape), (1986, Atheneum), (1986, Grafton), (1988, Ace), drove of viii short stories (x in 1986) and 1 novelette:
    "The Gods in Flying", "A Romance of the Equator", "The Blueish Background", "The Daughter Who Sang" (novelette), "Igur and the Mountain", "The O in JosƩ", "The Other Side of the Lake", "The Evidently, the Endless Plain", "Incident in a Far Country"
    Added in 1986: "Consolations of Age", "Juniper"
  • Science Fiction Blues Program Volume (1987), drove of three brusk stories and two poems:
    "Traveller, Traveller, Seek Your Wife in the Forests of This Life", "The Ascension of Humbelstein", "At the Caligula Hotel" (verse form), "'Rhine Locks are Closed in Battle Confronting Poison'" (poem), "Those Shouting Nights"
  • The Magic of the By (1987), collection of 2 short stories:
    "Northward Scarning", "The Magic of the Past"
  • All-time SF Stories of Brian W. Aldiss (1988), collection of 18 short stories and three novellas/novelettes:
    "Exterior", "All the Earth's Tears", "Poor Little Warrior!", "Who Tin Supercede a Human being?", "Human being on Bridge", "The Daughter and the Robot with Flowers", "The Saliva Tree" (novella), "Homo in His Fourth dimension", "Heresies of the Huge God", "Confluence", "Working in the Spaceship Yards", The Supertoys Trilogy (#ane "Super-Toys Last All Summertime Long"), "Sober Noises of Morning in a Marginal Country" (novelette), "The Dark Soul of the Night", "Appearance of Life", "Terminal Orders", "Door Slams in Fourth World", "The Gods in Flying", "My Country 'Tis Not But of Thee" (novelette), "Infestation", "The Difficulties Involved in Photographing Nix Olympica"
  • Best SF Stories (1988), collection of 18 brusk stories and 3 novellas/novelettes:
    "Outside", "The Failed Men", "Poor Little Warrior!", "Who Can Supersede a Homo?", "Homo on Bridge", "Girl and Robot with Flowers", "The Saliva Tree" (novella), "Man in His Time", "Heresies of the Huge God", "Confluence", "Working in the Spaceship Yards", The Supertoys Trilogy (#1 "Super-Toys Final All Summertime Long"), "Sober Noises of Morning in a Marginal Land" (novelette), "The Dark Soul of the Dark", "Appearance of Life", "Final Orders", "Door Slams in 4th World", "The Gods in Flight", "My Country 'Tis Not Just of Thee" (novelette), "Infestation", "The Difficulties Involved in Photographing Zip Olympica"
  • Man in His Fourth dimension: The All-time Science Fiction Stories of Brian West. Aldiss (1988, Atheneum) ISBN 0-689-12052-4, (1990, Collier), drove of xix brusque stories and 3 novellas/novelettes:
    "Outside", "The Failed Men", "All the World'due south Tears", "Poor Little Warrior!", "Who Tin can Supercede a Man?", "Man on Bridge", "The Girl and the Robot with Flowers", "The Saliva Tree" (novella), "Homo in His Time", "Heresies of the Huge God", "Confluence", "Working in the Spaceship Yards", The Supertoys Trilogy (#ane "Super-Toys Last All Summer Long"), "Sober Noises of Morning in a Marginal Land" (novelette), "The Dark Soul of the Night", "Appearance of Life", "Final Orders", "Door Slams in Fourth World", "The Gods in Flight", "My Country 'Tis Not Only of Thee" (novelette), "Infestation", "The Difficulties Involved in Photographing Nix Olympica"
  • Science Fiction Blues (1988), collection of 3 short stories, 15 poems and 11 plays:
    "Scientific discipline Fiction Dejection (play)" (play), "Super-Toys Concluding All Summertime Long (play)" (play), "The Death of Art? (play)" (play), "The Expensive Delicate Send (play)" (play), "Don't Become To Jupiter" (poem), "Star-Time" (verse form), "The True cat Improvement Company" (verse form), "Progression of the Species" (verse form), "Juniper (play)" (play), "Conversation on Progress (play)" (play), "Drinks with the Spider King (play)" (play), "Three Serials (play)" (play), "Final Orders (play)" (play), "Pecker Carter Takes Over (play)" (play), "Talking Heads (play)" (play), "Traveller, Traveller, Seek Your Wife in the Forests of This Life", "The Ascent of Humbelstein", "Those Shouting Nights", "The Lying Truth" (poem), "Destruction of the Fifth Planet" (poem), "The Expanding Universe" (poem), "Bacterial Action" (poem), "To a Triceratops Skull in the British Museum" (poem), "Femalien" (poem), "Space Burial" (poem), "Taking Exit of a Northern Institution" (poem), "Thomas Hardy Considers the Newly-Published Special Theory of Relativity" (verse form), "Parting Tardily in Life" (poem), "Happiness and Suffering" (poem)
  • A romance of the Equator. Best Fantasy Stories (1989, Gollancz), (1990, Atheneum / Macmillan) ISBN 0-689-12053-2, collection of 22 short stories and 4 novelettes:
    "Former Hundredth", "Day of the Doomed King", "The Source", "The Village Swindler", "The Worm That Flies", "The Moment of Eclips", "So Far from Prague", "The Day Nosotros Embarked for Cythera", "Castle Scene with Penitents", "The Game with the Big Heavy Brawl", "Creatures of Apogee", "The Small Stones of Tu Fu", "But Back From Java" (novelette), "A Romance of the Equator", "Journey to the Goat Star" (novelette), "The Girl Who Sang" (novelette), "Consolations of Historic period", "The Blue Groundwork", "The Plainly, the Endless Manifestly", "You Never Asked My Proper noun", "Lies!" (novelette), "North Scarning", "The Big Question", "The Ascension of Humbelstein", "How an Inner Door Opened to My Heart", "Bill Carter Takes Over"
  • Bodily Functions (1991), collection of 2 short stories, 2 novelettes, 2 poems and 1 essay:
    "To Sam" (poem), "Iii Degrees Over" (novelette), "A Tupolev Also Far" (novelette), "Going for a Pee", "Amend Morphosis", "Alphabetic character on the field of study of Bowel Movement" (essay), "Envoi" (poem)
  • A Tupolev Too Far and Other Stories (1993, HarperCollins UK), (1994, St. Martin's), drove of six short stories, 5 novelettes and 2 poems:
    "Short Stories" (verse form), "A Tupolev Too Far" (novelette), "Ratbird", "Foam" (novelette), "Summertime Was Nearly Over", "Improve Morphosis", "Three Degrees Over" (novelette), "A Life of Thing and Death" (novelette), "A Twenty-four hour period in the Life of a Galactic Empire", "Confluence", "Confluence Revisited", "N of the Abyss" (novelette), "Alphabet of Ameliorating Hope" (verse form)
  • The Secret of This Book (1995, HarperCollins Britain), US title Common Dirt: 20-Odd Stories (1996, St. Martin's), collection of 20 short stories and 3 novelettes:
    "Common Clay", "The Mistakes, Miseries and Misfortunes of Mankind", "How the Gates Opened and Airtight", "Headless", "Travelling Towards Humbris", "If Hamlet's Uncle Had Been a Nicer Guy", "Else the Isle with Calibans", "A Swedish Altogether Present", Enigma series, Three Moon Enigmas (#1 "His Seventieth Heaven", #ii "Rose in the Evening", #iii "On the Inland Ocean"), "A Dream of Antigone", "The God Who Slept With Women" (novelette), "Evans in His Moment of Glory", "Horse Meat" (novelette), "An Unwritten Beloved Note", "Making My Father Read Revered Writings", "Sitting With Sick Wasps", "Becoming the Full Butterfly" (novelette), "Traveller, Traveller, Seek Your Married woman in the Forests of This Life", Enigma series, Her Toes Were Cute on the [Hilltops|Mountains] (#1 "Another Fashion Than Death", #two "That Particular Green of Obsequies"), Enigma serial, Three Revolutionary Enigmas (#3 "The Ancestral Home of Thought")
  • Supertoys Last All Summertime Long and Other Stories of Future Time (2001, Orbit), (2001, St. Martin'south), collection of 18 short stories and 1 novelette:
    The Supertoys Trilogy (#ane "Supertoys Last All Summer Long", #two "Supertoys When Winter Comes", #3 "Supertoys in Other Seasons"), "Apogee Once more", "Iii", "The Old Mythyology", "Headless", "Beef", "Null in Life Is Ever Enough", "A Matter of Mathematics", "The Pause Button", "Three Types of Confinement", "Steppenpferd", "Cerebral Ability and the Light Bulb", "Dark Society", "Galaxy Zee", "Marvells of Utopia", "Becoming the Total Butterfly" (novelette), "A Whiter Mars: A Socratic Dialogue of Times to Come"
  • Cultural Breaks (2005, Tachyon Publications), drove of 9 short stories and 3 novellas/novelettes:
    "Tarzan of the Alps", "Tralee of Man Young", "The Eye Opener", "Aboard the Beatitude" (novelette), "The Man and a Man with His Mule", "Dusk Flight", "Commander Calex Killed, Fire and Fury at the Edge of Globe, Scones Perfect", "The Hibernators", "The National Heritage", "How the Gates Opened and Closed", "Full Environment" (novelette), "A Chinese Perspective" (novella)
  • A Prehistory of Mind (2008, Mayapple Press), collection of
    55 poems in three sections:
    • Far Away: "The Deceptive Truth", "Flight 063", "Breugel's Hunters in the Snowfall", "Tien Shan", "The Kremlin, Moscow, ca. 1950", "Of All the Places", "The Moment", "Winter", "Journeying", "Rapide des morts", "The Cynar, Istanbul", "Exmoor in September", "On Passing a Roadside Auction of Featherbeds", "April in East Coker", "Gaughin's Tahiti", "Monemvasia"
    • Affection: "The Heavy Cup", "Spinal Metaphors", "Comfort Me, Sweetheart", "Go Out of My Life", "Being a Little Well", "This Chocolate-brown Leafage", "Leaving Our Common Bed", "Rest Your Weary Head Upon Your Pillow", "The Empty Boxes", "Greed", "The Get-go of March 1998", "Margaret'southward Questions", "Song: In Bed She Like a Lily Lay", "Jocasta", "Lu Tai", "Rondeau After Leigh Hunt", "A Piece of Cleopatra", "Aral Seasons", "At the Caligula Hotel"
    • Observation: "The Prehistory of the Mind", "Volcano", "Perspectives", "The Cat Comeback Company", "Wintertime Bites Deep", "The Bonfire of Fourth dimension", "Iceberg Music", "The Bellowings", "Jackie", "The Bare Facts", "Nocturne", "An Interval", "Fairy Tales", "The Foot Speaks", "The Women", "Bosom Friends", "Colour Contrasts", "Uzbecks in London", "Antigone's Song", "A. E. van Vogt"
    1 short story: "Mortistan"
  • The Invention of Happiness (2013), collection of 33 short stories:
    "The Invention of Happiness", "Beyond Plato's Cavern", "Old Mother", "Belief", "Later the Party", "Our Moment of Appearance", "The Bone Show", "The Great Plains", "What Befell the Tadpole", "The Sand Castle", "The Village of Stillthorpe", "Peace and State of war", "The Vintage Cottage", "Moderns on Ancient Ancestors", "The Hungers of an Old Language", "How High is a Cathedral?", "A Middle Form Dinner", "Flying Singapore Airlines", "The Apology", "CamƵes", "The Question of Atmosphere", "Illusions of Reality", "Lady with Apple Trees", "Flying and Bombing", "Molly Smiles Forever", "Days Gone By", "The Last of the Hound-Folk", "Munch", "The Music of Sound", "The Silent Creation", "Writings on the Stone", "The Light Really", "The Mistake They Made"
  • The Brian Aldiss Collection:
    1. The Consummate Curt Stories: The 1950s (2013), collection of 57 short stories and viii novellas/novelettes:
      "A Book in Time", "Criminal Record", "Breathing Space", "The Great Time Hiccup", "Not for an Age", "Our Kind of Cognition", "Outside", "Console Game", "Pogsmith", "Conviction", "Dumb Show", "The Failed Men", "Non-Stop" (novelette), "Psyclops", "T", "There Is a Tide", "Tradesman'south Leave", "With Esmond in Listen", "The Flowers of the Woods", "Gesture of Farewell" (novelette), "The Ice Mass Cometh", "Let'southward Be Frank", "No Gimmick", "The War Millennia", "Out of Attain", "The Sterile Millennia", "All the Globe'due south Tears", "The Dark Millennia", "O Ishrail!", "The Ultimate Millennia", "Visiting Amoeba" (novelette), "The Shubshub Race", "Supercity", "Judas Danced", "Ten-Storey Jigsaw", "The Pit My Parish" (novelette), "Blighted Profile", "Who Can Replace a Human?", "The Carp That One time ...", "Carrion State", "Equator" (novella), "Fourth Cistron" (novelette), "The Megalopolis Millennia", "Secret of a Mighty City", "The Star Millennia", "Incentive", "The Mutant Millennia", "Gene-Hive", "The New Begetter Christmas", "Ninian's Experiences", "Poor Piddling Warrior!", "Sector Diamond", "Sight of a Silhouette", "They Shall Inherit", "Are You lot an Android?", "The Arm", "The Bomb-Proof Bomb", "Fortune'south Fool", "Intangibles, Inc." (novelette), "Sector Yellowish", "The Lieutenant", "The Other I" (novelette), "Safety Valve", "The Towers of San Ampa", "Three'southward a Cloud"
    2. The Consummate Brusk Stories: The 1960s (Part 1) (2015), collection of 11 short stories and 6 novellas/novelettes:[48]
      "Faceless Card", "Neanderthal Planet" (novelette), "One-time Hundredth", "Original Sinner", "Sector Grey", "Stage-Struck!", "Nether an English language Heaven", "Hen'south Eyes", "Sector Azure" (novelette), "A Pleasance Shared", "Basis for Negotiation" (novelette), "Conversation Piece", "Danger: Religion!" (novella), "The Green Leaves of Space", "Sector Green", "Sector Vermilion" (novelette), "Tyrants' Territory" (novelette)
    3. The Complete Short Stories: The 1960s (Part ii) (2015), collection of 10 curt stories and 6 novellas/novelettes:[49]
      "Comic Inferno" (novelette), "The Impossible Star" (novelette), "In the Arena", "The International Smile", "Sector Violet", "Skeleton Crew" (novella), "The Affair Under the Glacier", "Counter-Feat", "Jungle Substitute" (novelette), "Lazarus", "Human being on Bridge", "'Never Allow Get of My Manus!'", "No Moon To-night!" (novelette), "One-Way Strait", "Pink Plastic Gods", "Unauthorised Persons" (novelette)
    4. The Complete Brusk Stories: The 1960s (Part three) (2015), drove of 18 short stories, 3 novellas/novelettes and 1 essay:[l]
      "The Day of the Doomed King", "The Girl and the Robot with Flowers", "'How are they All on Deneb IV?'" (essay), "The Incommunicable Grinning" (novelette), "Man in His Fourth dimension", "Former Time's Sake", "The Saliva Tree" (novella), "Scarfe's World", "The Minor Betraying Detail", "The Source", "Amen and Out", "Another Piddling Boy", "Burning Question", Cloudless Yale series (#1 "The Circulation of the Blood" (novelette)), "The Optics of the Blind King", "Heresies of the Huge God", "Lambeth Blossom", "The Alone Habit", "The O in JosƩ", "I Part with Savor", "Paternal Care", "The Plot Sickens"
    5. The Complete Curt Stories: The 1960s (Office 4) (2015), collection of 28 curt stories, 7 novellas/novelettes and i essay:[51]
      "A Difficult Age", "A Taste for Dostoevsky", "Auto-Ancestral Fracture" (novelette), "Confluence", "The Dead Immortal", "Down the Up Escalation", "Total Sun", "Just Passing Through", "Multi-Value Motorway", "The Night That All Time Broke Out", "Randy's Syndrome" (novelette), "Yet Trajectories", "Two Modern Myths: Reflection on Mars and Ultimate Construction", "Wonder Weapon", Cloudless Yale series (#2 "...And the Stagnation of the Centre"), "Drake-Human being Road", "Dreamer, Schemer", "Dream of Distance" (essay), "Send Her Victorious" (novelette), "The Snake of Kundalini", "The Tell-Tale Center-Auto", "Total Environment" (novelette), "The Village Swindler", "When I Was Very Jung", "The Worm That Flies", Jerry Cornelius serial ("The Firmament Theorem"), "Greeks Bringing Articulatio genus-High Gifts", "The Humming Heads", "The Moment of Eclipse", "Ouspenski's Astrabahn" (novelette), "Since the Assassination" (novella), "So Far from Prague", "The Soft Predicament" (novelette), The Supertoys Trilogy (#ane "Supertoys Last All Summer Long"), "That Uncomfortable Pause Between Life and Art", "Working in the Spaceship Yards"
    6. The Complete Brusk Stories: The 1970s (Part 1) (2016)[52]
    7. The Complete Short Stories: The 1970s (Part 2) (2016)[53]
    8. The Complete Curt Stories: The 1980s (Part 1) (2016)[54]
    9. The Consummate Short Stories: The 1980s (Part ii) (2016)
    10. The Complete Brusk Stories: The 1990s (2016)[55]

Uncollected short stories:

  • "Alphabetize to Life" (1954)
  • "Ultimate Construction" (1967), as C. C. Shackleton
  • "The Hunter at His Ease" (1970)
  • "The Secret of Holman Hunt and the Crude Death Rate" (1970)
  • "The Weather on Demansky Isle" (1970)
  • "The Day Equality Broke Out" (1971)
  • "Manuscript Establish in a Police State" (1972)
  • "The Ergot Show" (1972)
  • "Strange in a Familiar Mode" (1973)
  • "The Planet at the Bottom of the Garden" (1973)
  • "Serpent Burning on an Altar" (1973)
  • "The Immature Soldier'southward Horoscope" (1973)
  • "Woman in Sunlight with Mandolin" (1973)
  • Enigma series:
    • Three Enigmas I:
      1. "The Enigma of Her Voyage" (1973)
      2. "I Ching, Who You?" (1973)
      3. "The Great Chain of Being What?" (1973)
    • Iii Enigmas 2: The Eternal Theme Of Exile:
      1. "The Eternal Theme of Exile" (1973)
      2. "All Those Enduring Quondam Charms" (1973)
      3. "Nobody Spoke Or Waved Cheerio" (1973)
    • Three Enigmas Iii: All in God's Mind:
      1. "The Unbearableness of Other Lives" (1974)
      2. "The Sometime Fleeing and Fleeting Images" (1974)
      3. "Looking on the Sunny Side of an Eclipse" (1974)
    • Diagrams For Iii (Enigmatic) Stories:
      1. "The Girl in the Tau-Dream" (1974)
      2. "The Immobility Crew" (1974)
      3. "A Cultural Side-Effect" (1974)
    • Three Songs for Enigmatic Lovers:
      1. "A 1-Human Expedition Through Life" (1974)
      2. "The Gustation of Shrapnel" (1974)
      3. "40 1000000 Miles from the Nearest Blonde" (1974)
    • Iii Enigmas IV: Three Coins in [Enigmatic|Clockwork] Fountain:
      1. "Carefully Observed Women" (1975)
      2. "The Daffodil Returns the Smile" (1975)
      3. "The Year of the Tranquility Computer" (1975)
    • Three Deadly Enigmas: 5: Year by Yr the Evil Gains:
      1. "Inside the Black Circle" (1975)
      2. "Killing Off the Large Animals" (1975)
      3. "What Are You Doing? Why Are You Doing Information technology?" (1975)
    • The Aperture Moment:
      1. "Waiting for the Universe to Begin" (1975)
      2. "But Without Orifices" (1975)
      3. "Aimez-Vous Holman Chase?" (1975)
    • Three Revolutionary Enigmas:
      1. "The Fall of Species B" (1980)
      2. "In the Halls of the Hereafter" (1980)
      3. "The Ancestral Home of Thought" (1980)
    • Her Toes Were Cute on the [Hilltops|Mountains]:
      1. "Another Way Than Death" (1992)
      2. "That Detail Light-green of Obsequies" (1992)
    • Iii Moon Enigmas:
      1. "His Seventieth Heaven" (1995)
      2. "Rose in the Evening" (1995)
      3. "On the Inland Body of water" (1995)
  • "I dreamed I was Jung last night" (1974)
  • "Melancholia has a Plastic Cadre" (1974)
  • "Always Somebody In that location" (1975)
  • "Excommunication" (1975)
  • "How Did the Dinosaurs Do It?" (1976)
  • "In the Mist of Life" (1977)
  • "The Bang-Blindside" (1977), novelette
  • "My Lady of the Psychiatric Sorrows" (1977)
  • "Yin, Yang and Jung: Iii Galactic Enigmas" (1978)
  • "Modernisation" (1980)
  • "Cease Game" (1981)
  • "Phone call Yourself a Christian" (1982)
  • "How the Male child Icarus Grew Up and, Later on a Legendary Disaster, Learnt New Things About Himself and the External World, Until He Was Able to Comprehend the Magic That Had Been His in His Earliest Years /or/ 2nd Flight" (1982)
  • "Parasites of Passion" (1982)
  • "The Captain's Analysis" (1982)
  • "An Admirer of Einstein" (1983)
  • "The Immortal Storm Strikes Again" (1983)
  • "Another Story on the Theme of the Final Homo on Earth" (1985)
  • "Domestic Catastrophe" (1985)
  • "Operation Other Cheek" (1985)
  • "Possessed past Love" (1985)
  • "Silence After the Silence" (1985)
  • "The Greatest Saga of All Time" (1985), as C. C. Shackleton
  • "The Monster of Loch Awe" (1985)
  • "The Fatal Pause" (1987)
  • "The Hero" (1987)
  • "The Merdeka Hotel" (1987)
  • "The Toll of Cabbages" (1987)
  • "Thursday" (1987)
  • "Tourney" (1987)
  • "Conversation on Progress" (1988)
  • "Hess" (1988)
  • "Sexual activity and the Black Motorcar" (1988)
  • "Wordsworth Halucinates" (1988)
  • "The Day the Earth Caught Fire" (1989)
  • "Adventures in the Fur Trade" (1990)
  • "People—Lone—Injury—Artwork" (1991)
  • "Kindred Claret in Kensington Gore" (1992)
  • "Softly - As in an Evening Sunrise" (1992)
  • "English language Garden" (1993)
  • "Friendship Bridge" (1993), novelette
  • "The Retainer Problem" (1994)
  • "The Monster of Everyday Life" (1994)
  • "The Madonna of Futurity" (1994), novella
  • "Into the Tunnel!" (1995)
  • "Compulsory Holidays For All" (1995)
  • "The Police Against Trivia" (1996)
  • "The Enigma of the Three Moons" (1997)
  • "Decease, Shit, Love, Transfiguration" (1997)
  • "An Apollo Asteroid" (1999)
  • "The Rain Will End" (2000, The Pretentious Printing), written in 1942
  • "A Single-Minded Artist" (2001)
  • "Happiness in Reverse" (2001)
  • "Talking Cubes" (2001)
  • Supertoys serial:
    • "Supertoys: Play Can Be And so Deadly" (2001)
    • "Supertoys: What Fun to Be Reborn" (2001)
  • "A New (governmental) Begetter Christmas", or "A New (governmental) Father Christmas: A Moral Tale for All in Headington" (2002)
  • "Near Earth Object" (2002)
  • "Ten Billion of Them" (2005)
  • "Pipeline" (2005), novelette
  • "Building 16" (2006)
  • "Tiger in the Night" (2006)
  • "Rubber!" (2006)
  • "Life, Learning, Leipzig and a Librarian" (2007)
  • "Four Ladies of the Apocalypse" (2007)
  • "Peculiar Bone, Unimaginable Key" (2008)
  • "Fandom at the Palace" (2008)
  • "The First-Born" (2010)
  • "Hapless Humanity" (2010)
  • Doctor Who series:
    • "Umwelts for Rent" (2010), Doctor Who Brilliant Book 2011 (2010, BBC Books, ISBN 978-ane-84607-991-7)
  • "Benkoelen" (2011)
  • "Less Than Kin, More Than Kind" (2011)
  • "The Mighty Mi Tok of Beijing" (2013)
  • "Abundances Above" (2016)

Poems [edit]

Collections:

  • Adieu to a Kid (1982), drove of 10 poems:
    "Plant", "Lost", "The Commitment", "When We Were Four", "With Vacant Possession", "The Child Departs: a dialogue", "The Eternal Child", "The Frozen Boy", "The Haunting", "The Malediction"
  • Home Life With Cats (1992), collection of 34 poems:[56]
    "Out of the Dark", "The Cats' Heaven", "Kittens (Two)", "Slaves", "Where Take Y'all Been?", "Yum-Yum", "Heatwave", "Cats' Nerves", "Foxie", "Jackson", "Town-Life", "Nickie", "The 2-Kitten Trouble", "MacramƩ'south Lament", "Travelling Cats", "The Cat Improvement Company", "On a Favourite Goldfish Drowned in a Bowl of Cats", "Portrait of a Cat with Lady", "An Evening at Home", "Tatty's Tie-Shop", "Snacks", "Who Owns the Business firm?", "A Riddle", "How I Swam Out to Sea with My Cat", "A Lion for Tea", "The Cat in the Cathedral", "The Poor Man's Cat", "Mutual Regard", "First Birthday", "Rules", "Relating to the Pet", "The Cat Speaks", "Michael, the Cycling Cat", "The Lost Grave"
  • At the Caligula Hotel and Other Poems (1995), drove of 74 poems, grouped in 4 sections:[57]
    I. Imagery?: "At the Caligula Hotel", Chinese Exercises ("Lu Tai", "Nocturne", "Interval", "Indecision", "Journeying", "Poems from a After Dynasty 3: Who Hears My Voice?"), "Exit Aquascutum", "While Feeding Parrots", "Wintertime Bites Deep", "Breughel's Hunters in the Snow", "Anau: The Well", "The Cynar, Istanbul", "Dawn in Kuala Lumpur", "Gauguin's Tahiti"
    Two. Everyday?: "No, I was Never Deaf or Blind to Her Music", "Toledo: Three Ladies", "Authorities", "Moonglow: for Margaret", "Alfie Cogitates on Life", "Memories of Palic", "Boars Hill: the Sycamores and the Oaks", "All Things Transfigure", "Trapped in the Present", "The Path", "Suburban Dominicus", "Nature Notes: Early September", "Willow Cottage", "Cold Snap", "Stoney Ground", "The Triumph of the Superficial", "The Twentieth Camp", "Expert Fortune", "Communication", "A Summery Meditation on Coin", "A Moment of Suspense", "Fragment of a Longer Poem"
    Three. Literary?: "Brusque Stories", "What Did the Policeman Say?", "Hamlet Folk", "The Poor", "On Reading Poesy in Berkhamsted", "Poem Inspired by Scott Meredith", Two Painters ("I: Francis Bacon", "Two: Fernand Khnopff"), "Low-cal of Aboriginal Days", "Mary Shelley, 1916", "Victor Frankenstein on the Mer de Glace", "The Shelleys - To a Lady who spoke of their 'Mystery'", "The Created One Speaks", "Mary in Italia", "Looking It Up", "Rice Pudding", "Author'southward Life"
    IV. Scientific?: "Greenhouse Sex", "Lunar Anatomy", "Monemvasia", "Establish", "Destruction of the Fifth Planet", "Femalien", "Thomas Hardy Considers the Newly-Published Special Theory of Relativity", "'Rhine Locks are Closed in Boxing Against Poison'", "The Cat Improvement Visitor", "The Expanding Universe", "To a Triceratops Skull in the British Museum", "The Low-cal", "Flight 063", Precarious Passions ("I: A Encephalon Pursues its Vanished Dream", "II: A Woman Marries the Southern Ocean", "III: Ascension Isle Courts a Whale", "4: A Refrigerator Proposes to a Musk Ox", "Five: A Book Falls in Love with its Reader", "Vi: A Lamp Standard Courts the Stars"), "Alphabet of Ameliorating Hope"
  • Songs from the Steppes of Central Asia: The Nerveless Poems of Makhtumkuli: Eighteenth Century Poet-Hero of Turkmenistan (1995)
  • A Plutonian Monologue on His Wife'due south Decease (2000,[36] The Frogmore Papers), collection of 7 poems
  • At a Bigger House (2002), drove of 48 poems:
    "Hazards of the Trail", "Perspectives", "Presentiments of Dawn", "Now Showing: 'Killing Father'", "The World of Lost Content", "Flying 063", "Railway Engine Pulling Slowly", "The Deceptive Truth", "Colour Contrasts", "Fairy Tales", "The Women", "They Who Waited", "The Bonfire of Time", "The Foot Speaks", "The Ghost Koi", "Rapide des Morts", "The Teeth of Time", "Elizabeth Jennings (Died October 2001)", "'War and Peace': A Song for Mathilde Mauguiere", "Her Beautiful Thing", "The Hunters in the Snow", "Aral Seasons", "Uzbecks in London", "Poem from Life in the Westward", "Many Mansions", "The Horse Unburied", "The Red Pavilion", "Blythborough Church, A Hardyesque Dialogue", "Insomnia", "Awake at Three A.M.", "The Showtime of Something", "Retrospection: At the Temple of Aphaia, on the Island of Aegina, Greece", "Hors d'Oeuvres for my Lady", "The Barney", "Dawn in KL", "A Funeral Service: Kingsley Amis, 31st October 1995", "On Passing a Roadside Sale of Featherbeds, Lake District, 1845", "City Scene", "The Prehistory of the Heed", "Apr in Due east Coker", "Seeking Love", "The New Wing", "Xenophilia", "Proper name-Dripping", "Dora/Dinah", "Volcano", "Monemvasia", "The Moment"
  • The Dark Dominicus Rises (2002), drove of 50 poems:
    "The Nighttime Sun Rises", "Venice and Istanbul", "Perspectives", "Monemvasia", "The Deceptive Truth", "The Moment", "On Passing a Roadside Sale of Featherbeds, Lake Commune, 1845", "Retrospection: At the Temple of Aphaia, on the Island of Aegina, Hellenic republic", "Rapide des Morts", "Flying 063", "Aral Seasons", "Uzbecks in London", "Poem from Life in the West", "Indisposition", "Meum Tuumque", "Partings from Oedipus on Mars", "The Barney", "Blythborough Church, A Hardyesque Dialogue", "Not Speaking of You", "The Silent Dear", "'War and Peace': A Vocal for Mathilde Mauguiere", "Her Cute Matter", "Rondeau later Leigh Chase", "Jocasta", "Jane Eyre at Elsinore", "The Carnivores", "The Garden at Number 30-Nine", "The Horse Unburied", "The Garden", "In the RA Friends' Room June '95", "They Who Waited", "Colour Contrasts", "The Red Pavilion", "The Women", "Hazards of the Trail", "Many Mansions", "The Start of Something", "The Prehistory of the Mind", "The World of Lost Content", "Volcano", "Dendrochronology", "The Human foot Speaks", "Fairy Tales", "Now Showing: 'Killing Father'", "A Piece of Cleopatra", "ClichƩ Love", "'Eatin' Regular Over again': A Pop Song", "The Cat Improvement Company", "At the Caligula Hotel", "untitled (re: myth of Santa Claus)"
  • Mortal Morning (2011)[58]

Uncollected poems:

  • "There Are No More Good Stories Nearly Mars Because We Need No More Good Stories About Mars" (1963)
  • "Bridging Hours in Wesciv" (1969)
  • "Drama on the River Cherwell" (1974)
  • "Epitaph for a Writer" (1974)
  • "In Some other Town: Bologna" (1974)
  • "Innovation in the Arts" (1974)
  • "Mon FrĆØre" (1974)
  • "Taking Leave of a Cold Country" (1974)
  • "The Lady Literary Agent" (1974)
  • "Verse in a State Garden" (1974)
  • "Summer: 1773" (1976)
  • "Pile: Petals from St. Klaed's Figurer" (1979)
  • "Sleep" (1983)
  • "Tra La" (1994)

Plays [edit]

  • Patagonia's Delicious Filling Station: Three One-human activity Plays (1975), collection
  • Enigma series:
    • The Bones of Bertrand Russell: A Tryptich of Absurd Enigmatic Plays:
      1. "Futurity Takes a Paw" (1976)
      2. "Through a Galaxy Backwards" (1976)
      3. "Where Walls Are Hung with Multi-Media Portraits" (1976)
  • Distant Encounters (1978)

Not categorized fiction [edit]

  • Courageous New Planet (c. 1984)

Non-fiction [edit]

Autobiographies
  • ... And the Pulp Glare of the Comet (1986), articles and autobiography
  • Bury My Middle at W.H. Smith's: A Writing Life (1990)[36]
  • The Twinkling of an Eye, or My Life equally an Englishman (1998)[36]
  • When the Banquet is Finished (1999),[36] with Margaret Aldiss
  • An Exile on Planet Earth: Articles and Reflections (2012), articles and autobiography
Science fiction
  • The Shape of Further Things, or The Shape of Further Things: Speculation on Modify (1970)
  • Billion Twelvemonth Spree serial:
    1. Billion Year Spree: The History of Scientific discipline Fiction (1973)
      BSFA special honor[42]
    2. Trillion Year Spree: The History of Science Fiction (1986), with David Wingrove, a revised and expanded version of Billion Year Spree
      Winner of the 1987 Hugo Award for Best Non-Fiction Book.[1] At the awards ceremony, Aldiss began his acceptance speech past property the Hugo aloft and proclaiming, to full general approbation, "It's been a long fourth dimension since you've given me i of these, you lot bastards!"[59]
  • SF Horizons (1975), with Harry Harrison
  • Science Fiction equally Science Fiction (1978)
  • Science Fiction Quiz (1983)
  • The Pale Shadow of Scientific discipline, or Pale Shadow of Science (1985), collected essays
  • The Detached Retina: Aspects of SF and Fantasy (1995)[36]
Others
  • Cities and Stones: A Traveller's Yugoslavia (1966)
  • Particular Eighty-Three: Brian Westward. Aldiss - A Bibliography 1954-1972 (1972), with Margaret Aldiss, a bibliography of Aldiss'southward published works, this book being number 83
  • Science Fiction Art (1975)
  • This Earth and Nearer Ones: Essays Exploring the Familiar (1979)
  • Fine art After Apogee (2000), with Rosemary Phipps, essays
  • Researches and Churches in Serbia (2002), collection of 9 articles

Anthologies edited [edit]

  • Penguin Science Fiction series:
    1. Penguin Science Fiction (1961)
    2. More than Penguin Science Fiction (1963)
    3. Yet More Penguin Science Fiction (1964)
    Double-decker edition, The Penguin Science Fiction Omnibus (1973)
  • Best Fantasy Stories (1962)
  • Introducing SF (1964)
  • Nebula Award Stories Ii (1967), with Harry Harrison
  • Cheerio, Fantastic Venus (1968)
  • The Year's All-time Science Fiction series, with Harry Harrison:
    1. The Year's All-time Science Fiction No. 1 (1968)
    2. The Yr's Best Science Fiction No. 2, or All-time SF: 1968 (1969)
    3. The Yr's Best Scientific discipline Fiction No. 3, or Best SF: 1969 (1970)
    4. The Year's Best Science Fiction No. 4 (1971)
    5. The Year's Best Science Fiction No. 5 (1972)
    6. The Twelvemonth's Best Science Fiction No. 6, or Best SF: 1972 (1973)
    7. The Yr's Best Science Fiction No. 7, or All-time SF: 1973 (1974)
    8. The Year's Best Science Fiction No. 8 (1976)
    9. The Year'south Best Scientific discipline Fiction No. ix, or The Year's All-time SF nine (1976)
  • Space Opera (1974)
  • Infinite Odysseys (1975)
  • Hell's Cartographers: Some Personal Histories of Science Fiction Writers (1975), with Harry Harrison, a collection of brusk autobiographical pieces by a number of science fiction writers, including Aldiss. The title is a reference to Kingsley Amis's survey of science fiction, New Maps of Hell.
  • Decade series, with Harry Harrison:
    1. Decade: the 1940s (1975)
    2. Decade: the 1950s (1976)
    3. Decade: the 1960s (1979)
  • Evil Earths (1976)
  • Galactic Empires series:
    1. Galactic Empires. Volume 1 (1976)
    2. Galactic Empires. Volume Two (1976)
  • Perilous Planets (1978)
  • Mini Sagas: From The Daily Telegraph Contest series:
    • Mini Sagas: From The Daily Telegraph Competition (1998) ISBN 978-0-7509-1594-6
    • Mini Sagas: From The Daily Telegraph Contest 2001 (2001) ISBN 978-one-900564-77-9
  • A Science Fiction Omnibus (2007) ISBN 978-0-14-118892-viii
  • The Page Science Fiction Album (2016)

Adaptations [edit]

  • Frankenstein Unbound (1990), pic directed past Roger Corman, based on novel Frankenstein Unbound
  • A.I. Bogus Intelligence (2001), picture show directed by Steven Spielberg, based on short story "Supertoys Last All Summer Long"
  • Brothers of the Head (2005), movie directed past Keith Fulton and Louis Pepe, based on novel Brothers of the Head

See also [edit]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d eastward f 1000 h "Aldiss, Brian Westward." Archived 5 Baronial 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Locus Index to SF Awards: Index of Literary Nominees. Locus Publications. Retrieved 2 April 2013.
  2. ^ Scholes, Robert; Rabkin, Eric Due south. (1977). "Bibliography I: History and Criticism of Scientific discipline Fiction". Scientific discipline Fiction: History, Science, Vision . London: Oxford University Press. ISBN978-0-19-502174-v.
  3. ^ "Obit: Brian Aldiss". The New York Times. Eu: Britain. Associated Press. 22 August 2017.
  4. ^ a b Brown, Andrew (16 June 2001). "Contour: Brian Aldiss". The Guardian. London.
  5. ^ a b Roberts, Sam (24 August 2017). "Brian Aldiss, Author of Scientific discipline Fiction and Much More, Dies at 92". The New York Times . Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  6. ^ Cooper, Charlie (13 Apr 2013). "My Hugger-mugger Life: Brian Aldiss, 87, writer". The Independent. London.
  7. ^ Roberts, Sam (24 August 2017). "Brian Aldiss, Author of Science Fiction and Much More, Dies at 92". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  8. ^ Kelly, Guy (31 October 2015). "Brian Aldiss at 90: 'British readers had a prejudice against science fiction'". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  9. ^ a b Kelly, Stuart (13 Dec 2013). "Brian Aldiss: 'These days I don't read whatever scientific discipline fiction. I but read Tolstoy'". The Guardian . Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  10. ^ Henderson, Caspar (2008). "Q&A: Turning up the heat on sci-fi". Nature. 454 (7205): 698. Bibcode:2008Natur.454..698H. doi:10.1038/454698a. S2CID 5161949.
  11. ^ Clute, John; Pringle, David (22 August 2017). "Aldiss, Brian West". SFE: The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction . Retrieved 22 Baronial 2017.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g Brown, Andrew (xv June 2001). "Master of the universes: Brian Aldiss". The Guardian . Retrieved 21 Baronial 2017.
  13. ^ Brian Aldiss (xv May 2003). Brian Aldiss - Creating 'The Brightfount Diaries' (37/79) (Motility picture). Web of Stories. Archived from the original on 23 November 2021. So finally, I wrote to the Editor and said, you know y'all don't have a comic column. Don't you think that 'The Bookseller' would do ameliorate if it had a comic column every week? I would like to write such a column for you. He wrote dorsum and said, come and run across me. Bring some of your comic columns. I wrote six of them, and since I was working, in fact, for Blackwells, Blackwell became Brightfount and my bookshop was Brightfounts... The Brightfount Diaries, and my pseudonym was not Aldiss, simply Pica, a small type. OK. ... I received a very dainty letter from Faber & Faber, saying, 'Dearest Mr Aldiss, We all enjoy 'The Brightfount Diaries'. Nosotros wondered if y'all'd care to make them into a book'. Make them into a book! You know, I didn't have to submit anything – they asked me! Well, I mean, there's the root of arrogance for you lot.
  14. ^ a b Brian Aldiss at the Cyberspace Speculative Fiction Database (ISFDB). Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  15. ^ "Short Story, Ballot". The Observer. 16 January 1955. p. 9.
  16. ^ "SF Horizons, No. 1". isfdb.org. Al von Ruff. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  17. ^ "SF Horizons, No. 2". isfdb.org. Al von Ruff. Retrieved 24 August 2017.
  18. ^ Budrys, Algis (October 1967). "Galaxy Bookshelf". Galaxy Science Fiction. pp. 188–194.
  19. ^ a b c d due east "Authors : Aldiss, Brian West : SFE : Science Fiction Encyclopedia".
  20. ^ "Locus Online: Brian Aldiss interview (excerpts)". locusmag.com . Retrieved 21 Baronial 2017.
  21. ^ "Your chance to enter the Daily Telegraph Mini-saga Competition 1999". The Daily Telegraph. London. 27 Apr 1999. Archived from the original on 16 April 2015.
  22. ^ "Brian Aldiss - Cities & Stones". brianaldiss.co.uk. 7 May 2011. Retrieved 21 Baronial 2017.
  23. ^ a b "wire-frame • giclĆ©e prints". Wire-frame fine art publishing (wire-frame.net). Archived from the original on 27 December 2012. Retrieved 18 Apr 2013.
  24. ^ a b "HOW WE MET: BRIAN ALDISS AND ANTHONY STORR". The Independent. 22 Oct 1995. Retrieved 21 Baronial 2017.
  25. ^ Science Fiction and Fantasy Literature, vol. 2, R. Reginald, 1979, pg 793
  26. ^ @brianaldiss (21 August 2017). "It is with great sadness we announce the death of our honey begetter & granddaddy. Brian died peacefully at abode on his 92nd altogether ^TA" (Tweet). Retrieved 21 August 2017 – via Twitter. [ not-primary source needed ]
  27. ^ "Science fiction author Brian Aldiss dies aged 92". The Guardian. 21 August 2017. Retrieved 27 January 2022.
  28. ^ "Royal Society of Literature » Current RSL Fellows". rsliterature.org . Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  29. ^ "Past ICFA Guests". International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts. Retrieved 24 January 2013.
  30. ^ "Damon Knight Memorial Thousand Master" Archived 1 July 2011 at the Wayback Auto. Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA). Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  31. ^ "Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame" Archived 21 May 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Mid American Scientific discipline Fiction and Fantasy Conventions, Inc. Retrieved 25 April 2012. This was the official website of the hall of fame to 2004.
  32. ^ "The London Gazette". 11 June 2005. Retrieved 3 May 2014.
  33. ^ "Desert Island Discs – Castaway : Brian Aldiss". BBC. Retrieved xviii Apr 2013.
  34. ^ "University of Liverpool announces 2008 honours". Retrieved 2 February 2009.
  35. ^ "Visions of the Future: Brian Aldiss - Archives Hub". archiveshub.air conditioning.uk . Retrieved 21 Baronial 2017.
  36. ^ a b c d eastward f "Brian Aldiss - Literature".
  37. ^ "Near - The Society of Authors". societyofauthors.org. Archived from the original on 19 October 2015. Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  38. ^ "Brian Aldiss - Literature". literature.britishcouncil.org . Retrieved half-dozen September 2017.
  39. ^ tweet_btn(), Iain Thomson in San Francisco 21 August 2017 at 21:xx. "Scientific discipline fiction great Brian Aldiss, 92, dies at his Oxford home". The Register . Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  40. ^ "Nebula Laurels Winners: 1965 - 2011". SFWA . Retrieved 6 September 2017.
  41. ^ Jameson, Fredric (2000) [1975]. "World-reduction in Le Guin: The Emergence of Utopian Narrative". In Hardt, Michael; Weeks, Kathi (eds.). The Jameson Reader. Blackwell. p. 375.
  42. ^ a b c d "BSFA Awards: Past Awards". Archived from the original on 19 May 2011. Retrieved 17 October 2012. . British Science Fiction Association. Archived 2011-05-19. Retrieved 2013-04-25.
  43. ^ "Brian Aldiss - Literature". literature.britishcouncil.org . Retrieved 21 August 2017.
  44. ^ "Brian Aldiss unpicks the Jocasta complex | the Spectator".
  45. ^ "John W. Campbell Memorial Accolade Finalists". Gunn Centre for the Written report of Science Fiction (sfcenter.ku.edu). Archived from the original on 30 August 2018. Retrieved 18 April 2013.
    The Award recognises second and 3rd-identify runners-upwardly. Recent lists of finalists are long, fourteen in 2008.
  46. ^ Greenland, Colin (7 August 2010). "Walcot past Brian Aldiss". Retrieved 12 September 2017.
  47. ^ "Finches of Mars : Brian Aldiss - HarperCollins". Archived from the original on xiv December 2013.
  48. ^ Aldiss, Brian (2015). The Complete Short Stories: The 1960s (Role 1). HarperCollins Britain. ISBN9780007482290.
  49. ^ Aldiss, Brian (2015). The Consummate Curt Stories: The 1960s (Function ii). HarperCollins UK. ISBN9780007586394.
  50. ^ Aldiss, Brian (2015). The Complete Short Stories: The 1960s (Part 3). HarperCollins U.k.. ISBN9780008148959.
  51. ^ Aldiss, Brian (2015). The Complete Short Stories: The 1960s (Role 4). HarperCollins UK. ISBN9780008148973.
  52. ^ Aldiss, Brian (2016). The Consummate Brusque Stories: The 1970s (Role 1). HarperCollins United kingdom. ISBN9780007482504.
  53. ^ Aldiss, Brian (2016). The Consummate Short Stories: The 1970s (Part ii). HarperCollins UK. ISBN9780008174033.
  54. ^ Aldiss, Brian (2016). The Complete Short Stories: The 1980s (Part 1). HarperCollins UK. ISBN9780007482733.
  55. ^ Aldiss, Brian (2016). The Complete Short Stories: The 1990s. HarperCollins Uk. ISBN9780008113162.
  56. ^ Aldiss, Brian (1992). Home Life With Cats. HarperCollins U.k.. ISBN0-586-21428-3.
  57. ^ Aldiss, Brian (1995). At the Caligula Hotel and Other Poems. Sinclair-Stevenson. ISBN1-85619-568-6.
  58. ^ "Mortal Morning by Brian Aldiss". Flambard Printing. Archived from the original on 10 Baronial 2013. Retrieved 18 April 2013.
  59. ^ David Langford, The Sex Column and Other Misprints, Cosmos Books, 2005, p. 82. The quotation may non be reported exactly.

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Brian Aldiss at IMDb
  • Brian W. Aldiss at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  • Brian Aldiss at British Council: Literature
  • Brian W. Aldiss at the Internet Book List
  • Portraits of Brian Aldiss at the National Portrait Gallery, London Edit this at Wikidata
  • "Brian W. Aldiss biography". Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame.
  • Obituary in The Independent by Marcus Williamson
  • Guardian newspaper profile
  • Brian Aldiss's online fiction at Free Speculative Fiction Online
  • "Supertoys Last All Summer Long" story past Brian Aldiss (Jan 1997)
  • Brian Aldiss Collection at the University of South Florida
  • Brian Aldiss Papers at the Kenneth Spencer Research Library, Academy of Kansas.
  • Works of Brian Due west. Aldiss at La Tercera Fundación (in Spanish)
  • Works of Brian W. Aldiss at FantLab ru (in Russian)

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