"James Patrick Kelly - On the Net" - читать интересную книгу автора (Kelly James Patrick)www.heinleinsociety.org] is not part of that ring.
1976: Although Jack Williamson appears to have no official website, you can read three different interviews with him at Science Fiction Weekly [www.scifi. com/sfw/issue284/interview.html], SF Site [www.sfsite.com/ 03b/jw77.htm], and SF Crowsnest [www.computercrowsnest. com/sfnews/news1099.htm]. 1977: Clifford D. Simak is an under-rated writer whose work slips in and out of print, alas. Start your journey to Simak Country at the Clifford Simak Fan Site [http: //www.tc.umn.edu/~brams007/ simak/default.htm] and continue on to a fine English language site based in the Czech Republic, Parallel Worlds of Clifford D. Simak [www.natur.cuni.cz/~vpetr/ Simak1.htm]. 1979: L. Sprague de Camp was an elegant man and he has an elegant official site at L. Sprague de Camp.com [www.lsprague decamp.com]. It offers biographical and bibliographical pages, scans of cover art and a generous helping of family photographs. 1982: A dedicated British fan of Fritz Leiber has created the Lank-hmar [www.lankhmar. demon. co.uk] site, but the best thing on the web about the creator of Fa-fhrd and the Gray Mouser is Justin Leiber's reminiscence [ www.hfac.uh.edu/phil/leiber/fritz. htm] of his father and grandfather. 1984: Andre Norton fan Matt Zaleski has built the comprehensive Andre-Norton.org [www. andre-norton.org]. His links page points to thirteen other Norton sites. 1986: Arthur C. Clarke readers have their pick of many fine sites. Although the Arthur C. Clarke Unauthorized Homepage is Google's top link [www.lsi. usp.br/~rbianchi/clarke], it was last updated bet. The Arthur C. Clarke Foundation [ www.clarkefoundation.org] is worth a look if you're interested in Sir Arthur's extra-literary projects. 1987: There is no better resource on Isaac Asimov than the Isaac Asimov Home Page [ www.asimovonline.com], although I must say that the ambition of Jenkins├втВмтДв Spoiler-Laden Guide to Isaac Asimov [home page.mac.com/jhjenkins/Asimov/ Asimov.html] has always impressed me. 1988: I was disappointed to discover that the great Alfred Bester is not well represented on the web. There are the beginnings of a wiki-pedia entry [en.wikipedia. org/wiki/AlfredBester%28author % 29 ], an all-too-short Templeton Gate page [members.tripod. com/templetongate/bester.htm], and a couple of appreciations [www.ansible.co.uk/writing /bester.html] by the irreplaceable Dave Langford [www. ansible.co.uk/index.html]. Alfred Bester was one of the most influential of all the Grand Masters. He deserves better! 1989: Ray Bradbury's [ www.raybradbury.com] site has major wow factor. This is the kind of site every writer dreams of having; lots of free and interesting content, including generous excerpts from many of Ray's classics. It even has Quicktime clips of Ray discussing his life and work. 1991: Lester del Rey is another Grand Master whose work has been unjustly overlooked by netizens. There's a glance at his career at Spacelight [www.gwillick. com/Spacelight/delrey.html] and a decent CyberSpace Spinner Bibliography [www.hycyber. com/SF/delreylester.html]. Perhaps the most interesting del Rey site is Lester's pungent and wrong-headed review of 2001, a Space Odyssey [ www.visual-memory.co.uk/amk/doc/0045. html]. ├втВм┼УIt will probably be a box-office disaster, too, and thus set major science-fiction movie making back another ten years." |
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