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Her Smoke Rose Up Forever

Jr., James Tiptree

Her Smoke Rose Up Forever Jr., James Tiptree Amazon Price: $10.85
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By: Tachyon Publications
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 9 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

A Look into a Dark Soul 4 out of 5 stars.
10 of 12 people found this review helpful.

Some of the blurbs about Alice Sheldon, writing as James Tiptree, Jr., indicate that her real gender was a mystery and, in fact, some commented that `he had to be a man' because of the writing. I have a hard time, in retrospect, seeing that. All of these stories seem to me to have easily been seen as a woman writing, if you were so inclined to think about those things. The other thing is that Alice Sheldon is described as an `ardent' feminist. Again I don't see that, but I do see a somewhat clinical misanthrope. The men in these stories tend to be ineffectual neuters or sexual-sociopaths. The women tend to be background or professional victims (with the exception of `Slow Music,' probably the best story in the collection).

Having said that I did find the stories very well written and I can well understand the awards and critical acclaim at the time. However they do tend to take on a rather common theme of hopelessness and profound melancholy at the future aspects of humans. One or two of the stories made a passing attempt at uplifting the future of humans, but mostly these are, to me, the writings of a deeply depressed person. I found it no surprise to learn that Ms Sheldon died at her own hand after killing her husband, probably as a suicide pact.

I do recommend these, especially if you are a fan of the SciFi short story. All are well written but the best way to appreciate them is to read one story at a time over a long interval. These have such a common `feel' to them that if you read them one after another you start to get the feeling that you've been there, done that.

Editorial Review:

These 18 darkly complex short stories and novellas touch upon human nature and perception, metaphysics and epistemology, and gender and sexuality, foreshadowing a world in which biological tendencies bring about the downfall of humankind. Revisions from the author's notes are included, allowing a deeper view into her world and a better understanding of her work. The Nebula Award–winning short story Love Is the Plan, the Plan Is Death, the Hugo Award–winning novella The Girl Who Was Plugged In, and the Hugo and Nebula Award–winning novella Houston, Houston, Do You Read? are included.

Her Smoke Rose Up Forever: The Great Years of James Tiptree, Jr

James Tiptree Jr [Alice B Sheldon]

Her Smoke Rose Up Forever: The Great Years of James Tiptree, Jr James Tiptree Jr [Alice B Sheldon] List Price: $25.95
By: Arkham House Publishers
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 4 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

My Favorite Book in the World 5 out of 5 stars.
22 of 22 people found this review helpful.

Do you have a favorite book in the world? This book, quite simply, is mine. This is a posthumously-published collection of eighteen stories by James Tiptree, Jr. (pseudonym for Alice Sheldon). It contains most of her best short fiction. It also contains a compelling introduction by John Clute. Mark Richard Siegel, who wrote the Starmont Reader's Guide on James Tiptree, Jr., wrote the sentence that I think best captures the essence of what is distinctive and special about Tiptree's work. He wrote: "Her stories showed that, for the individual, the most significant thing is passionate experience, the intensity of certain moments, good and bad, when she is most truly alive." Do you crave passionate experiences? Tiptree will put you through them. But be warned that Tiptree often put her characters through mercilessly gut-wrenching passionate experiences, wrenching THIS reader's gut right along the way. Tiptree is not for readers who like their fiction safe and cozy, knowing everything will turn out all right in the end. Here are a few words on my five favorite stories in the book.

My own personal favorite Tiptree story is "The Screwfly Solution." In this story a sort of psychological plague has broken out in various parts of the world where men are murdering women wholesale. Tiptree introduces us to (and makes us care about) one particular family. In 21 pulse-pounding pages Tiptree gives us the stunning macro-story of the fate of humanity in the face of this terrifying "plague," along with the heart-wrenching micro-story of its effect on one family. It is a masterpiece of economical storytelling, and no SF story has an ending which packs a bigger wallop.

My (close) second favorite story in the book is "A Momentary Taste of Being." In his introduction to the book, John Clute writes of this story: "...word-perfect over its great length, and almost unbearably dark in the detail and momentum of the revelation of its premise...[it] may be the finest densest most driven novella yet published in the [science fiction] field." I can tell you it is my all-time favorite novella. The story concerns a space mission, a desperate attempt by humanity to find a habitable planet (for colonization) to relieve some pressure from a horrendously overpopulated and polluted Earth. The pressure in the story just builds and builds to a climax as intense as any you are likely to experience in fiction.

I think "Love is the Plan the Plan is Death," a story of alien love, is a one-of-a-kind masterpiece of style. Not everybody agrees. Gardner Dozois in his excellent and mostly laudatory essay, "The Fiction of James Tiptree, Jr.," writes of this story: "I can never read [its] galumphing, ungrammatical, childishly-rapturous narration without hearing it in the accents of the Cookie Monster...." Tiptree herself, in typical self-depreciating fashion, described it as being written in "the style of 1920 porno." I think the highly unusual style helps us understand and feel the true alien-ness of the viewpoint character, and I believed totally while I was reading. As John Clute writes, "...[it] has a juggernaut drive, a consuming melancholy of iron, a premise the author never backed away from...."

In "Houston, Houston, Do You Read?" three astronauts return from a trip around the sun only to find they have somehow been transported hundreds of years into the future. What they find in the future, and more important, how they react to what they find there, constitutes the most powerful story I've ever read dealing with the gulf between the sexes.

In "The Girl Who Was Plugged In" a horribly-deformed young woman gets a chance at a happy life. This is another story with an unusual narrative style, and frankly, when I first read this story over two decades ago, I found it a bit disconcerting. It works for me now, though. This is a heartbreaking story, fiercely told.

One caution is that I would encourage you to read the stories in the book before reading John Clute's introduction, as Clute gives away some of the story endings in his introduction. And surprise endings are not uncommon in Tiptree stories. I am not talking about gimmicky, meaningless surprises, there for the sake of having a surprise. Tiptree's surprises often ENLARGE her stories, altering the meaning of what has gone before, increasing their power to move us. The book gets my most passionate recommendation.

Screwtop/the Girl Who Was Plugged in (Tor Double, No 7)

James Tiptree Jr., Vonda N. McIntyre

Screwtop/the Girl Who Was Plugged in (Tor Double, No 7) James Tiptree Jr., Vonda N. McIntyre List Price: $2.95
By: Tor Books
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

A science fictions set for women 4 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

Of the two I liked "Screwtop" more, as the characterizations and plot seem more realistic than the Hugo award winning "The Girl who was plugged in".
The Tiptree novel invents a new technology of wireless remote control of a human clone by a controller. He has the "imprinting" of personality from controller to the blank clone, in a way that breaks your heart,
but the prose is rough and raggedly hard to read.
McIntyre seems to be an underrated author: both the novels I've read by her were very good.
The prison in this novel is like a southern road gang of the worst sort with women prisoners. Some people are even good at winning while losing?
A future "marriage" of a group sort is a plot element.
I liked both novels.

Meet Me At Infinity: The Uncollected Tiptree: Fiction and Nonfiction

James Tiptree Jr., Jeffrey D. Smith

Meet Me At Infinity: The Uncollected Tiptree: Fiction and Nonfiction James Tiptree Jr., Jeffrey D. Smith List Price: $16.95
By: Tor Books
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 4 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Editorial Review:

The last collection of the fiction and nonfiction of Alice Sheldon, a.k.a. James Tiptree Jr., is introduced by Jeffrey D. Smith, who tells the reader that, by its very nature, this collection is less a book by Tiptree than one about her. Although the essays and stories and articles here were assembled by Tiptree before her death, Smith has interleaved Tiptree's words with notes of his own, including quotes from private correspondence between the two. The results are revealing and surprisingly moving.

During the 10 years Sheldon wrote and interacted with others using the Tiptree persona, she became known as one of the finest SF writers in the world. Her short fiction (perhaps the most notable collection is Her Smoke Rose Up Forever) has always been more highly regarded than her full-length pieces, and it was during the years 1967 to 1976 that her most famous work, mainly in novella form, was conceived and written. Once the male Tiptree was exposed as the female Sheldon, her work--and her relationships with colleagues and fans and critics, previously conducted solely by mail--changed.

This change lies at the heart of the nonfiction and is the strength of the book. The breezy "Tiptree" letters and articles written from Central America depict a wiry older man who is nonetheless still active--vigorous enough to notice attractive women--making his way capably through a sometimes dangerous environment. It is fascinating to superimpose upon this picture that of the "real" writer--the small, rather vulnerable, middle-aged woman. It becomes clear that both pictures are true, and the reader is left desperately wanting to learn more about Sheldon and Tiptree and the strange intersection of truth, art, and lies that was their life. Until we get a full-scale Tiptree biography, however, this is all we have. --Luc Duplessis.

Houston, Houston, Do You Read?/Souls (Tor Double, No 11)

James Tiptree Jr., Joanna Russ

Houston, Houston, Do You Read?/Souls (Tor Double, No 11) James Tiptree Jr., Joanna Russ List Price: $3.50
By: Tor Books
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Star Songs of an Old Primate

Jr. James Tiptree

Star Songs of an Old Primate Jr. James Tiptree List Price: $1.75
By: Del Rey
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

Solid collection -- with 1 all-time CLASSIC! 4 out of 5 stars.
4 of 13 people found this review helpful.

This is as solid as NE Tiptree collection, but worth it all 4 "A Momentary Taste of Being," 1 of THE most devastating SF stories U'll ever read. Impossible 2 Dscribe, it takes 70 pages, but U'll B knocked out. Should've won an award, Cms 2 B completely overlooked, even by Tiptree's fans -- would make a great movie: the enormity & the Dspair, as U discover what Man's Ultimate Goal really is. Vivid, riveting, totally involving. A tough read, but what an impact! "Her Smoke Rose Up Forever" is pretty powerful, 2. Tiptree's suicide was a big loss 2 the SF field. I also recommend her novel BRIGHTNESS FALLS FROM THE AIR, & many of the stories in her earlier collection, WARM WORLDS AND OTHERWISE.

The Hugo Winners, Volume 4: Thirteen Prizewinning Stories (1976 - 1979)

Roger Zelazny, Larry Niven, Fritz Lieber, James Tiptree Jr.

The Hugo Winners, Volume 4: Thirteen Prizewinning Stories (1976 - 1979) Roger Zelazny, Larry Niven, Fritz Lieber, James Tiptree Jr. List Price: $4.98
By: Doubleday Books
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 1 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

Not Free SF Reader 5 out of 5 stars.
0 of 0 people found this review helpful.

An exceptional anthology, obtaining the platinum standard of a 4 average, including two 5s. The only weak spot is the Leiber.

Hugo Winners 4 : Home Is the Hangman - Roger Zelazny
Hugo Winners 4 : The Borderland of Sol - Larry Niven
Hugo Winners 4 : Catch That Zeppelin! - Fritz Leiber
Hugo Winners 4 : By Any Other Name - Spider Robinson
Hugo Winners 4 : Houston Houston Do You Read? - James Tiptree Jr.
Hugo Winners 4 : The Bicentennial Man - Isaac Asimov
Hugo Winners 4 : Tricentennial - Joe W. Haldeman
Hugo Winners 4 : Stardance [short story] - Spider Robinson and Jeanne Robinson
Hugo Winners 4 : Eyes of Amber - Joan D. Vinge
Hugo Winners 4 : Jeffty Is Five - Harlan Ellison
Hugo Winners 4 : The Persistence of Vision - John Varley
Hugo Winners 4 : Hunter's Moon - Poul Anderson
Hugo Winners 4 : Cassandra - C. J. Cherryh


Telepresence party prank has terrible results, robot killer wrongly represented afterwards, but does his duty despite detective.

5 out of 5


Indestructible interstellar ship interference.

3.5 out of 5


Airship transport changes.

3 out of 5


Genius' common cold cure provokes civilisation smelling overload suicide slaughter.

4 out of 5


Solar flare spaceship time lost in space, plague earth now has paucity of separatist clone chick population.

4.5 out of 5


Robot evolution legal test case.

4 out of 5


SETI success spurs space dwellers to sneaky space mission.

4 out of 5


Showing a bit of galactic leg.

3.5 out of 5


I am the Music Man, and I talk to people who don't come from down your way.

4 out of 5


Parents eventual terminal lack of patience with kid with the brilliant new old stuff.

5 out of 5


Communication fuller but lots weirder with fewer senses.

4.5 out of 5


Xenology swarm study feedback a bit two-way.

3.5 out of 5


Ghost ruins.

3.5 out of 5




Tales of the Quintana Roo

James Tiptree Jr.

Tales of the Quintana Roo James Tiptree Jr. List Price: $17.95
By: Arkham House Publishers
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 3 Average rating: 5.0 of 5

magical 5 out of 5 stars.
5 of 5 people found this review helpful.

This is one of the most striking books I have read in the last year. It contains three short stories, all set in the Yucatan with the same main character. All three deal with ambiguous, mysterious, and "magical" events that were told to the main character. The stories are told in a way that leaves you wondering if the events they tell of happened or if they came from the fevered minds and imaginations of the tellers. I read a lot and buy very few books, but this is a book that I will keep and lend to anyone who will accept it. The closest genre I can think of to Tales of the Quintana Roo is "urban fantasy", it has the same "maybe it could happen" feeling to it, but the setting, the Yucatan Peninsula, is much more romantic and evocative than the settings of the urban fanatasies I've read.

Just amazing. 5 out of 5 stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful.

"Tales of the Quintana Roo", a fictional book set in the Yucatan peninsula (back in the 70's or so...) is a masterpiece. While there are only three stories, they are all good... and the title story is simply amazing. All of them deal with the mystical nature of the state of Quintana Roo, in Mexico (Cancun resides in it, for reference), and the mystical things that happen to those who venture there. While I don't want to give away plot, I'll take a moment to quote (from memory: hope I get it right) a poem from the beginning, which really sets the tone:

Tourists throw spent Polaroid
Where Spaniards threw spent slaves;
And now and then a tourist joins
Four thousand years of graves.
For loves it's wiser to avoid
Smiles from those brilliant waves.

Byte Beautiful: Eight Science Fiction Stories

James Tiptree Jr.

Byte Beautiful: Eight Science Fiction Stories James Tiptree Jr. List Price: $12.95
By: Doubleday
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The Starry Rift

James Tiptree Jr.

The Starry Rift James Tiptree Jr. List Price: $14.95
By: Tor Books
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Customer Reviews:
Total reviews: 6 Average rating: 4.0 of 5

The Starry Rift 5 out of 5 stars.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful.

I found the stories here a beautiful collection. Each story is original and different from many science fiction works, concentrating not on epic battles and races and wars, but instead on noble characters who are, despite their heroics, still human at their core. This collection is about characters with incomplete desires, who are empty at their heart for something found in the stars, and while they find what they are searching for it draws a sacrifice from each. They are very easy to connect with on different levels for different reasons, and Tiptree is a master at putting such well-developed characters into so few pages.

My favorite part of Tiptree's writing is her style. It was strange to get used to at first, because her stories here are told in a tense not many toy with, but the words are so powerful and strong and contain the same type of yearning with which her characters are wrought.

All the works in this collection are extremely bittersweet and sentimental, so I wouldn't suggest it for fans of purely happy endings.

Editorial Review:

Before her death, Alice Sheldon--writing under the name James Tiptree, Jr.--repeatedly won Hugo and Nebula Awards for excellence in science fiction. In this, her last published work, she offers three tales of danger, heroism, and adventure. "A truly great writer, perhaps the greatest in science fiction today."--The Baltimore Sun.

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