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Terry Bisson (1942–2024)

Author of The Fight to Survive

120+ Works 4,063 Members 100 Reviews 4 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Terry Bisson (2009)
Photo: George Kelly

Series

Works by Terry Bisson

The Fight to Survive (2002) 660 copies, 5 reviews
Crossfire (2002) 483 copies, 1 review
Bears Discover Fire and Other Stories (1993) 336 copies, 8 reviews
Fire on the Mountain (1988) 334 copies, 11 reviews
The Fifth Element (1997) 209 copies, 3 reviews
Voyage to the Red Planet (1990) 170 copies, 3 reviews
Talking Man (1986) 145 copies, 3 reviews
The Pickup Artist (2001) 128 copies, 8 reviews
Johnny Mnemonic: Film Novelization (1995) 121 copies, 3 reviews
Pirates of the Universe (1996) 120 copies, 2 reviews
Nat Turner: Slave Revolt Leader (1988) 99 copies, 1 review
They're Made Out of Meat (1991) 96 copies, 12 reviews
Numbers Don't Lie (2001) 80 copies, 8 reviews
Galaxy Quest (1999) 79 copies, 1 review
The Left Left Behind (2009) 74 copies, 4 reviews
Wyrldmaker (1981) 74 copies, 1 review
Any Day Now: A Novel (2012) 64 copies, 5 reviews
TVA Baby and Other Stories (2011) 48 copies, 1 review
Greetings: & Other Stories (2005) 42 copies
The 6th Day (2000) 24 copies
Dear Abbey (2003) 23 copies, 1 review
Virtuosity (1995) 22 copies, 1 review
Miracle Man (2000) 21 copies
Bears Discover Fire [short fiction] (1990) 19 copies, 2 reviews
Tomorrowing (Practices) (2024) 14 copies
Billy's Book (2009) 14 copies
Planet of Mystery (2008) 13 copies, 5 reviews
Catch 'em In The Act (2008) 12 copies, 2 reviews
TVA Baby [short story] (2009) 10 copies
Scout's Honor 6 copies
First Fire 5 copies
Meucs (2003) 5 copies, 1 review
Press Ann (1991) 4 copies
Almost Home 4 copies
Billy and the Unicorn (2006) 4 copies, 1 review
Necronauts 3 copies
He Loved Lucy 3 copies
About It 3 copies
Are There Any Questions? 2 copies, 1 review
By Permit Only 2 copies, 1 review
Teen Love Science Club (2010) 2 copies
The Message 2 copies
Partial People 2 copies
Private Eye 2 copies, 1 review
The Two Janets 2 copies
Open Close 1 copy
Creepy #55 1 copy, 1 review
George 1 copy
Next 1 copy
Death's Door 1 copy
The Stamp 1 copy

Associated Works

Saint Leibowitz and the Wild Horse Woman (1997) — Editor — 910 copies, 10 reviews
Wizards: Magical Tales From the Masters of Modern Fantasy (2007) — Contributor — 849 copies, 25 reviews
Octavia's Brood: Science Fiction Stories from Social Justice Movements (2015) — Contributor — 797 copies, 13 reviews
The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twenty-Second Annual Collection (2005) — Contributor — 578 copies, 11 reviews
The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twenty-First Annual Collection (2004) — Contributor — 573 copies, 6 reviews
The Mammoth Book of Comic Fantasy (1998) — Contributor, some editions — 537 copies, 1 review
Masterpieces: The Best Science Fiction of the Century (2001) — Contributor — 523 copies, 9 reviews
The Year's Best Science Fiction: Tenth Annual Collection (1993) — Contributor — 476 copies, 5 reviews
The Year's Best Science Fiction: Thirteenth Annual Collection (1996) — Contributor — 454 copies, 4 reviews
The Best of the Best: 20 Years of the Year's Best Science Fiction (2005) — Contributor — 436 copies, 20 reviews
Flights: Extreme Visions of Fantasy (2004) — Contributor — 430 copies, 2 reviews
The Year's Best Science Fiction: Eighth Annual Collection (1991) — Contributor — 416 copies, 6 reviews
The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twelfth Annual Collection (1995) — Author — 389 copies, 1 review
The Wild Girls (2011) — Editor, some editions — 389 copies, 12 reviews
The Locus Awards: Thirty Years of the Best in Science Fiction and Fantasy (2004) — Contributor — 290 copies, 11 reviews
Year's Best SF 7 (2002) — Contributor — 287 copies, 3 reviews
Year's Best SF 5 (2000) — Contributor — 284 copies, 2 reviews
Year's Best SF 2 (1997) — Contributor — 284 copies, 5 reviews
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Seventh Annual Collection (1994) — Contributor — 283 copies, 3 reviews
Year's Best SF 8 (2003) — Contributor — 281 copies, 3 reviews
Year's Best SF 3 (1998) — Contributor — 274 copies, 5 reviews
The Dog Said Bow-Wow (2007) — Introduction — 273 copies, 8 reviews
Year's Best SF 10 (2005) — Contributor — 248 copies, 6 reviews
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Seventeenth Annual Collection (2004) — Contributor — 241 copies, 9 reviews
Modern Classics of Fantasy (1939) — Contributor — 233 copies, 1 review
The Secret History of Fantasy (2010) — Contributor — 231 copies, 7 reviews
The Fantasy Hall of Fame (1998) — Contributor — 218 copies, 1 review
Year's Best SF 13 (2008) — Contributor — 206 copies, 5 reviews
The Best of R. A. Lafferty (2019) — Contributor — 206 copies, 4 reviews
Year's Best SF 12 (2007) — Contributor — 199 copies, 3 reviews
Car Talk (1991) — Author — 176 copies, 2 reviews
The Mammoth Book of Mindblowing SF (2009) — Contributor — 172 copies
Future Primitive: The New Ecotopias (1994) — Contributor — 161 copies, 1 review
The Very Best of Fantasy & Science Fiction: Sixtieth Anniversary Anthology (2009) — Contributor — 148 copies, 6 reviews
Year's Best SF 16 (2011) — Contributor — 143 copies, 1 review
The Playboy Book of Science Fiction (1998) — Contributor — 142 copies, 1 review
The New Hugo Winners, Volume 3 (1994) — Contributor — 139 copies, 2 reviews
Stars: Original Stories Based on the Songs of Janis Ian (2003) — Contributor — 133 copies, 1 review
Year's Best Fantasy 5 (2005) — Contributor — 130 copies, 3 reviews
The Complete Moon Trilogy (2002) — Introduction, some editions — 126 copies, 1 review
Year's Best Fantasy 4 (2004) — Contributor — 122 copies, 1 review
Starlight 3 (2001) — Contributor — 115 copies
The Mammoth Book of the Best of Best New SF (2008) — Contributor — 114 copies
The Cat's Pajamas & Other Stories (2004) — Introduction — 110 copies, 3 reviews
Asimov's Science Fiction: Hugo & Nebula Award Winning Stories (1995) — Contributor — 104 copies, 2 reviews
New Skies: An Anthology of Today's Science Fiction (2003) — Contributor — 96 copies, 2 reviews
Nebula Awards Showcase 2002: The Year's Best SF and Fantasy (2002) — Contributor — 95 copies, 1 review
Holt Anthology of Science Fiction (2000) — Contributor — 95 copies
Nebula Awards Showcase 2003 (2003) — Contributor — 95 copies, 1 review
Visions of Wonder (1996) — Contributor — 92 copies, 2 reviews
The Science of Herself Plus ... (2013) — Contributor — 90 copies, 5 reviews
Imagine: Living in a Socialist USA (2014) — Contributor — 81 copies, 1 review
Totalitopia (Outspoken Authors) (2017) — Interviewer — 75 copies, 4 reviews
Best Short Novels 2004 (2004) — Contributor — 62 copies
Isaac Asimov's SF-Lite (1993) — Contributor — 53 copies
Flights: Extreme Visions of Fantasy 2 (2006) — Contributor — 52 copies
Isaac Asimov's Valentines (1999) — Contributor — 50 copies, 1 review
Absolute Magnitude: SF Adventures For The 90's (1997) — Contributor — 42 copies, 1 review
Isaac Asimov's Moons (1997) — Contributor — 41 copies
Isaac Asimov's Ghosts (1995) — Contributor — 40 copies, 1 review
The Stories: Five Years of Original Fiction on tor.com (2013) — Contributor — 40 copies
Sense of Wonder: A Century of Science Fiction (2011) — Contributor — 37 copies, 1 review
Kafkaesque: Stories Inspired by Franz Kafka (2011) — Contributor — 34 copies
Worst Contact (2016) — Contributor — 22 copies, 1 review
The WisCon Chronicles, Vol.5: Writing and Racial Identity (2011) — Contributor — 21 copies
Across the Event Horizon (2013) — Introduction — 19 copies
Postscripts Magazine, Issue 15: Worldcon 2008 Special (2008) — Contributor, some editions — 15 copies
Golden Age SF: Tales of a Bygone Future (2006) — Contributor — 11 copies
Clarkesworld: Issue 105 (June 2015) (2015) — Contributor — 10 copies, 2 reviews
Star Wars: Boba Fett Set (2010) 4 copies
Infinity Plus Two (2002) — Contributor — 3 copies
Supernovæ (1993) — Contributor — 2 copies
Science Fiction Eye #10, June 1992 — Contributor — 1 copy

Tagged

2008 (54) 2008s (46) alternate history (61) bears discover fire (20) Boba Fett (26) C (26) collection (42) done (32) ebook (60) fantasy (150) fiction (268) free sf reader (25) humor (23) not free sf reader (39) novel (39) paperback (30) read (40) science fiction (502) sf (206) sff (48) short (26) short fiction (20) short stories (194) short story (52) speculative fiction (22) Star Wars (142) to-read (148) unread (29) year's best (30) young adult (18)

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Reviews

204 reviews
An sci-fi-ish alternate history where John Brown's raid was successful and he led America to be a socialist utopia.

Loved this. Mainly because the author never lost the sense of optimism or hope, even when displaying the horrors that arise from racism and war. The three parallel stories, which occur in three different times, bounce and flow off each other. The only downside is that it's very easy to miss the point of the "current" storyline, because the other two are so dramatic. Which is a show more shame because it's a gorgeous tale.

Reminded me of "The Man in the High Castle" for a lot of obvious reasons, so I'd recommend highly for anyone looking for something similar.
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"How close the past looms, circling the present like a dead moon, lifting slow repetitious tides on the living planet."

Alternate history has, itself, a long history. I've not been particularly a fan, but Bisson's short novel from 1988 is the best I've ever read of the genre.

In an alternate year of 1959, North America includes the nations of Nova Africa and the United Socialist States of America - plus Mexico, and one or more Native nations, mentioned briefly. Clean cars cruise the roads, show more nonpolluting airships amble through the skies, and the Pan African Space Administration is about to land humans on Mars.

Yasmin Abraham Martin Odinga crosses the now-peaceful border, from Nova Africa into Virginia, with much on her mind - the death of her husband on a space expedition five years earlier, and an awkward bit of news to convey to her 12 year old daughter, Harriet. Also, in the car with her, Yasmin carries the 50 year old, typed manuscript of the memoir of her great-grandfather, Dr. Abraham, who, from when he was himself 12, served under John Brown and Harriet Tubman in the Independence War - for the historical turning point in Yasmin's world is that John Brown's raid on the Federal arsenal at Harper's Ferry, Virginia succeeded, igniting the slave revolt that he had hoped for.

In our history, Harriet Tubman became ill as the time for the raid approached. When Brown finally attacked, in October, she was no longer involved. The raid failed and Brown was hanged. In Yasmin's world, the raid happened on July 4th, 1859 as originally planned, and Tubman's contribution was crucial. The raiders escaped into the surrounding mountains, and every night burned a great beacon fire, taunting the slave holders and shining like a star in the eyes of free and enslaved Black people.

The story of the revolt is told partly through the thoughts of the contemporary characters, but mainly via textual sources. Of Dr. Abraham's recollection of his younger self, we mostly get the first year of the war, before young Abraham fully joins the fight. We see very little of Brown and Tubman themselves. We also get some of the letters of Thomas Hunt, MD, a young heir to a Southern plantation who is convinced of the evil of slavery. There is no direct narration set in 1859; the past may be known only through what history has preserved.

I enjoyed imagining the alternation of texts and present day bits as a Ken Burns documentary - seeing the panning camera and hearing the voiceovers representing combatants in a long-ago war. Long ago, but not gone - the echoes of Independence continued in Yasmin's world, as those of the Civil War do in ours. One of the characters is a disabled veteran of the 1948 civil war that added that "Socialist" to the name of the USA. Bisson is unsparing about the brutality of the Independence War, from both sides. Be warned that there are many uses of the n-word, as quoted by Dr. Abraham.

Bisson contrasts his story with rosier views of the Civil War. One character owns a trashy novel, John Brown's Body, which lays out an alternate story that is, of course, our own: a war, not for Black freedom, but for preservation of the Union, in which the freed slaves find their bondage continued in new modes. Yasmin finds this prospect quite dystopian and white-supremacist. She knows Abraham Lincoln as a freebooter who tried to reconquer the freed territories; his is remembered as the Lost Cause. It's my understanding that current historians have moved toward Bisson's 1988 view, but there's a lot of history here, both real and imagined, that I don't know nearly well enough to critique. Nova Africa is helped by brigades from Haiti, Garibaldi's Italy, and Native American nations. The world's leading nation appears to be a united, socialist Africa. Credible? Don't know.

Mumia Abu-Jamal contributed an introduction to the 2009 edition I have.

As Yasmin's world feels the tides of history raised by her Independence War, so ours is pulled by the gravity of the long contest between racism and justice. The American Civil War is possibly the most popular subject for alternate history fiction in the USA. Frequently these are fat triologies of novels, or even longer. Yet for such a huge subject, whole libraries would not suffice. Bisson's short novel captures all that vast sweep in 155 pages, by refracting an implied epic through the eyes of a handful of people. Outstanding.
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I had such a good time reading this book!

Though I read all of it, I was tempted to skip the parts that were "present day" (in the 1950s Socialist United States) in favor of reading more about the Harriet Tubman and John Brown's guerrilla war turning into the US Civil War instead of confederate seceding states doing so.

What blew my mind was the how international solidarity could have played a part in such a real life situation: troops came by the hundreds from the Molly Maguires in show more Pennsylvania, the Cree, the Garibaldini, the Haitians, the Paris Communards, etc. etc. show less
"How close the past looms, circling the present like a dead moon, lifting slow repetitious tides on the living planet."

I admit to being very partial to this, even before starting - it would be hard for me not to like a story about a New Africa forming in the USA. But I think the book is good even leaving aside my biases. It's told through 3 perspectives - the letters of a radicalising white abolitionist from the time of the revolution, the recollections of a Black doctor who was enslaved at show more the time, and a modern day perspective in a world where there's an attempted landing on Mars and a widespread socialist international and pan-African league. The book doesn't go into super detail on the "contemporary world" - enough to know it's mostly Good - but quite a lot on the Tubman/Brown army. There's a decent amount of the n-word, although it's understandable given the historical context it's about. show less

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Statistics

Works
120
Also by
90
Members
4,063
Popularity
#6,194
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
100
ISBNs
146
Languages
6
Favorited
4

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