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The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction

 
Wikipedia: The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction
Cover of the second edition

The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction is a reference work on science fiction.

Contents

Publication history

The first edition, edited by Peter Nicholls with John Clute and Brian Stableford appeared in 1979, published by Granada. It was retitled The Science Fiction Encyclopedia in the US when published by Doubleday.

A greatly expanded second edition, jointly edited by Nicholls and Clute, did not appear until 1993, published by Orbit in the UK and St. Martin's Press in the US. The paperback edition included an addendum, and the CD-ROM version, styled variously as The Multimedia Encyclopedia of Science Fiction and Grolier Science Fiction, contained text updates through 1995, hundreds of book covers and author photos, and author video clips taken from the TVOntario series Prisoners of Gravity. Note that this CD will not run by itself under Windows NT versions (Windows NT, Windows 2000, Windows XP or Windows Vista), but needs Windows 9x versions (Windows 95, Windows 98 or Windows ME). It will however also run on Apple computers. Contributing editor David Langford has built his own frontend on the data from the CD-ROM [1], so Linux and modern Windows users can still enjoy the multi-media experience of the CD.

Currently, all print and CD-ROM editions are out of print. It has been announced that future editions will be available exclusively online[2]. The companion volume is The Encyclopedia of Fantasy.

Contents

The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction consists of several different categories:

  • Author entries, including entries on writers who have written about science fiction or whose ideas fed into the genre
  • Theme entries, on subjects often encountered in science fiction, e.g. telepathy or robots, but also entries about science fiction itself (like the history of science fiction)
  • Terminology entries, similar to theme entries, explaining common words used in science fiction (e.g. ion drive) as well as terms used to describe science fiction
  • Science fiction in various countries, entries that describe science fiction in the non-English speaking world
  • Films. While the focus of the encyclopedia lies with written science fiction, over 500 films are mentioned in the 1992 hardcover edition
  • Television. Roughly 100 entries about TV series of science fiction interest have been included
  • Magazines. This includes the science fiction magazines, but also those pulp magazines that regularly featured sf content and academic magazines about science fiction.
  • Fanzines. certain fanzines are listed.
  • Comics. Entries here not only consist of various science fiction comics, but also of some publishers, writers and artists.
  • Illustrators. These entries only contain artists whose work is most closely associated with the science fiction genre, mostly book or magazine illustrators.[3]
  • Book publishers. Existing and historical science fiction publishers have their own entries. There are also several theme entries about publishing.
  • Original anthologies. Some original anthology series are given their own entries.
  • Awards. Certain science fiction awards have their own entries and there is also a more general entry on them.
  • Miscellaneous. Some 30 entries that didn't fit elsewhere, including on science fiction organisations, collections, publishing formats and even some character entries.

The first edition of the encyclopedia was awarded the 1980 Hugo Award for Best Non-Fiction Book, and the second edition awarded the Hugo in 1994.

See also

References

  1. ^ www.ansible.co.uk
  2. ^ www.sfsignal.com/archives
  3. ^ Clute, John, The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, 1995, p. xxi

Bibliography

External links


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