|
Greg Egan (born August 20, 1961) is an Australian (Perth-based) computer
programmer and science fiction author. He has a
Bachelor of Science in Mathematics from the University of Western Australia.
Egan specialises in hard science fiction stories with
mathematical and metaphysical themes, including the nature of consciousness. Other themes include genetics, simulated reality, mind transfer, asexuality and artificial intelligence. Some of his earlier short stories
feature strong elements of supernatural horror.
Works
Novels
Collections
- Axiomatic (1995)
- Our Lady of Chernobyl
- Luminous (1998)
- Oceanic and Other Stories
Stories
- 'Singleton'
- 'Oracle'
- 'Only Connect'
- 'Border Guards'
- 'Oceanic'
- 'The Planck Dive'
- 'Yeyuka'
- 'Reasons to Be Cheerful'
- 'Silver Fire'
- 'TAP'
- 'Mister Volition'
- 'Luminous'
- 'Wang's Carpets'
- 'A Kidnapping'
- 'Seeing'
- 'Mitochondrial Eve'
- 'Cocoon'
- 'Our Lady of Chernobyl'
- 'Chaff'
- 'Transition Dreams'
- 'The Walk'
- 'Reification Highway'
- 'Closer'
- 'Worthless'
- 'Unstable Orbits in the Space of Lies'
- 'Dust'
- 'Before'
- 'The Hundred Light-Year Diary'
- 'Into Darkness'
- 'Fidelity'
- 'Appropriate Love'
- 'The Demon's Passage'
- 'The Infinite Assassin'
- 'The Moat'
- 'In Numbers'
- "Blood Sisters" (1991)
- 'The Vat'
- 'The Moral Virologist'
- 'Axiomatic'
- 'The Extra'
- 'The Safe-Deposit Box'
- 'Learning to Be Me'
- 'Eugene'
- 'The Caress'
- 'Beyond the Whistle Test'
- 'The Cutie'
- 'Scatter My Ashes'
- 'Neighbourhood
Watch'
- 'Mind Vampires'
- 'Tangled Up'
- 'The Way She Smiles, The Things She Says'
- 'Artifact'
Awards
- Permutation City: John W.
Campbell Memorial Award (1995)
- Oceanic: Hugo Award, Locus Award, Asimov's Readers Award (1998)
External links
|