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For other people with the name Robert or Bob
Shaw, see
Robert
Shaw.
Bob Shaw, born Robert Shaw,[1]
(31 December 1931 - 12 February 1996) was a science fiction
author and fan from Northern
Ireland. He was noted for his originality and wit. He was
two-time recipient (in 1979 and 1980) of the Hugo Award for Best Fan
Writer. His short
story "Light of Other Days" was a Hugo Award nominee in 1967, as was his novel
The Ragged Astronauts in 1987.
Life
Shaw was born and raised in Belfast, one of three brothers. He originally
trained as a structural engineer, but also
worked as an aircraft designer and journalist. He and his first wife Sadie and
their children left Northern Ireland for Ulverston, England in the mid-1970s, because
they were worried about the political situation. They subsequently
moved to Grappenhall
in Warrington, where
Shaw lived for some years after Sadie's death. Throughout this
period they were members of the Liverpool Science Fiction Group
(LiG).
Works
Shaw is perhaps best known for "Light of Other Days", the story
that introduced the concept of slow glass, through which the past can be
seen; Shaw expanded on the slow glass concept in the novel
Other Days, Other Eyes, and the concept was adopted by the
Marvel Comics/Curtis
Magazines anthology magazine Unknown Worlds of Science
Fiction.
His work ranged from essentially mimetic stories with fantastic
elements far in the background (Ground Zero Man) to van Vogtian
extravaganzas (The Palace of Eternity). Later in his
career he began writing trilogies: The Land trilogy (The Ragged
Astronauts, The Wooden Spaceships and The
Fugitive Worlds) was set on a world with no metals. (Because
the inhabitants had no way of knowing what they lacked and thus
could not discuss it, Shaw asked his publishers to mention the lack
of metals on the cover.)
Most of Shaw's novels are serious, but he was known in the fan
community for his wit. Every year at the British science fiction convention
Eastercon, he would
deliver a humorous speech (often part of his famous series known by
the tongue-in-cheek label of "Serious Scientific Talks"); these
were eventually collected in The Eastercon Speeches (1979)
and A Load of Old Bosh (1995). With Walt Willis, he was the author of the allegorical The Enchanted Duplicator,
an oft-reprinted 1954 piece of fiction about science fiction fandom
explicitly modeled on John Bunyan's The
Pilgrim's Progress. He was also (with Brian Aldiss and Harry Harrison)
co-president of the Birmingham Science Fiction
Group.
Bibliography
- Night Walk (1967).
London : Gollancz.
- The Two-Timers (1968). New York : Ace Books.
- The Palace Of Eternity (1969). New York : Ace
Pub. Corp.
- The Shadow Of Heaven (1969). New York :
Avon.
- One Million Tomorrows
(1970). New York : Ace books.
- Ground
Zero Man (1971). New York: Avon Books. - revised edition
published as The Peace Machine (1985). London :
Gollancz.
- Other Days, Other Eyes (1972). New York : Ace
Books.
- Tomorrow Lies
In Ambush (1973). New York : Ace Books. -
collection.
- Tomorrow Lies In Ambush (1973). London: Gollancz. -
collection.
- The Orbitsville Trilogy
- A Wreath of Stars (1976). London : Gollancz.
- Cosmic Kaleidoscope (1976).
London: Gollancz. - collection.
- Cosmic Kaleidoscope (1977). New York: Doubleday -
collection.
- Medusa's Children (1977). New York: Doubleday.
- The Warren Peace saga
- Who Goes Here? (1977). London : Gollancz. -
reissued in 1988 with a short story The Giaconda
Caper.
- Warren Peace (1993). London : Gollancz. -
reissued in 1994 as Dimensions
- Ship Of Strangers (1978). London : Gollancz -
collection.
- Vertigo (1978). London : Gollancz. reissued in
1991 as Terminal Velocity by the same publisher.
- Dagger of the Mind (1979). London :
Gollancz.
- The Ceres Solution (1981). London : Granada.
- Galactic Tours (1981, with David A. Hardy).
- Courageous New planet (1981). Birmingham Science
Fiction Group - limited-edition chapbook.
- A
Better Mantrap (1982). London : Gollancz -
collection.
- Fire Pattern (1984). London : Gollancz.
- Messages Found in an Oxygen Bottle (1986). Cambridge,
Mass. : Nesfa. - collection. Bound double format with
Between Two Worlds by Terry Carr
- Land and
Overland Trilogy
- The Ragged Astronauts (1986). London :
Gollancz.
- The Wooden Spaceships (1988). London :
Gollancz.
- The Fugitive Worlds (1989). London :
Gollancz.
- Killer Planet (1989). London : Gollancz.
- Dark Night In Toyland (1989). London : Gollancz -
collection.
- Overload (1995). Birmingham Science Fiction Group -
limited-edition chapbook.
Nonfiction
- The Best of the Bushel (1979)
- The Eastercon Speeches (1979)
- How to Write Science Fiction (1993)
- A Load of Old BoSh (1995) (includes The Eastercon
Speeches)
Partial list of short
stories
- Light of Other Days (1967)
- Skirmish on a Summer Morning (1976)
- Unreasonable Facsimile (1974)
- A Full Member of the Club (1974)
- The Silent Partners (1959)
- The Element of Chance (1969)
- The Gioconda Caper (1976)
- An Uncomic Book Horror Story (1975)
- Deflation 2001 (1972)
- Waltz of the Bodysnatchers (1976)
- A Little Night Flying (Dark Icarus) (1975)
See also
References
- ^ Nicholls (Gen. Ed.), Peter (1981). The
Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. St Albans: Granada Publishing
Ltd. ISBN
0586053808.
External
links