Lee Harding (1937–2023)
Author of The Altered I
About the Author
Works by Lee Harding
Quest 2 copies
Dancing Gerontius 2 copies
Salesforce Platform Governance Method: A Guide to Governing Changes, Development, and Enhancements on the Salesforce Platform (2022) 2 copies
The Evidence 1 copy
Las Rojas Arenas de Marte 1 copy
Wasabi 1 copy
Pressure 1 copy
The Cage of Flesh 1 copy
Limbo from Displaced Person 1 copy
Love In The City 1 copy
Associated Works
Worlds of If Science Fiction 152, January/February 1971 (Vol. 20, No. 9) (1971) — Contributor — 11 copies
Top Drawer: Unique Collection of Short Stories, Chosen by the Authors, for Adolescent Readers (1992) — Contributor — 6 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Harding, Lee John
- Other names
- Harding, Leo
- Birthdate
- 1937-02-19
- Date of death
- 2023-04-19
- Gender
- male
- Occupations
- photographer
fiction writer
editor - Organizations
- Melbourne Science Fiction Club (founder member)
Australian Science Fiction Review (cofounder) - Awards and honors
- A. Bertram Chandler Memorial Award (2006)
- Nationality
- Australia
- Birthplace
- Colac, Victoria, Australia
- Associated Place (for map)
- Victoria, Australia
Members
Discussions
Found: Dystopian vibe: boy who everyone forgets, world turns grey, finds a red rose, meets a girl in an alternate reality in Name that Book (August 2021)
British YA novel, science fiction, parallel universe/alternate world, 1970s in Name that Book (March 2019)
Boy slowly fades into another dimension in Name that Book (November 2010)
Reviews
One of the few genuine horror novels written for young adults that can be appreciated by older readers. When an inexplicable event cuts Graeme Davis from contact with the real world, he finds that the only way out of the place he's now in may be far worse...
A better-than-average collection of short SF stories, with some old favourites and some new ones for me. Poul Anderson's "The Man Who Came Early" was one of those old favourites, and impressed even more on this second reading, and there was a great deal of nostalgic pleasure in finding "The Garden of Time" again (plus surprise that it was by JG Ballard.) The Commuter was pure PK Dick.
A bit like The Iron Giant. ?áRL 3, ages 7-10. ?áSimplistic and awkwardly written, but considering the dearth of SF for children, especially back then, I found it worth reading. ?áI do think it was engaging enough it might have turned some kids onto William Sleator and then to Asimov, Heinlein, etc.
Lists
Awards
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 28
- Also by
- 13
- Members
- 415
- Popularity
- #58,724
- Rating
- 3.3
- Reviews
- 5
- ISBNs
- 42
- Languages
- 2















