Samuel R. DeLaney, Author, Samuel R. Delany, Author Wesleyan University Press $50 (476p) ISBN 978-0-8195-6368-2 Living up to essayist and science fiction author Delany's reputation for pushing ...
Sci-fi author Lavanya Lakshminarayan explains how cyberpunk continues to thrive in South Asian literature. Running low on reading material? Lucky for you, March is about to unleash a ton of new sci-fi ...
Aye, and Gomorrah, by Samuel R. Delaney, collects all the significant short SF and fantasy fiction this SF Hall of Famer published between 1965 and 1988, except for tales in his Return to Neveryon ...
Originally published by Doubleday in 1968, Delany's novel is viewed by many as an influential precursor to the cyberpunk movement. But over the past half-century, the work has also been recognized for ...
The author, whose second job was at a Barnes & Noble, has always found comfort on the page. Interview by Nicole Rudick When I lived in New York, I had a library that was very, very big. It was mostly ...
Celebrated author Samuel R. Delany turns 79 on April 1. With this in mind, we’re republishing the following piece from his book, The Motion of Light in Water: Sex and Science-Fiction Writing in the ...
Primarily known (where known at all) as a prolific sci-fi author, Samuel R. Delany gets props as a writer in myriad genres, a unique intellect and pretty interesting personality in "The Polymath." ...
You think your love affair is long lasting? Your romance is but an eyeblink compared to that of the characters in Samuel R. Delany’s new novel — which is finally coming out this fall. When we ...
The “Carte Blanche” film series at MOMA, programmed by the prodigious science-fiction writer Samuel R. Delany, concludes this week with two personal works. He discusses his childhood in Harlem and his ...
Mendo: How an Unlikely Group of Rebels Turned Cannabis into California’s Cash Crop Even as “we are staring down the end of all things,” there is still inspiration to be found in “ancient texts,” ...
The title of next week’s Northwestern University conference on black science fiction, “The Politics of the Paraliterary,” may say something about SF’s dubious rep in academe. Para? As in “paramilitary ...