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Chad Oliver (1928–1993)

Autor(a) de The Winds of Time

52+ Works 735 Membros 14 Críticas 2 Favorited

About the Author

Inclui os nomes: Chad Oliver, Chad Oliver -

Séries

Obras por Chad Oliver

The Winds of Time (1957) 127 exemplares
Shadows in the Sun (1954) 111 exemplares
Unearthly Neighbors (1960) — Autor — 106 exemplares
The Shores of Another Sea (1971) 101 exemplares
Another Kind (1955) — Autor — 37 exemplares
A Star Above It and Other Stories (2003) 31 exemplares
Giants in the Dust (1976) 28 exemplares
Mists of Dawn (1952) 27 exemplares
The Wolf Is My Brother (1967) 22 exemplares
From Other Shores: An Omnibus (2008) 18 exemplares
Broken Eagle (1989) 10 exemplares
Welten der Zukunft 4 (1985) — Contribuidor; Contribuidor — 7 exemplares
Welten der Zukunft 10 (1986) — Contribuidor — 7 exemplares
Cannibal Owl (1994) 6 exemplares
Discover of Humanity (1980) 6 exemplares
King Of The Hill 5 exemplares
Blood's a Rover [novella] (1952) 3 exemplares
Les Vents du temps (1957) 2 exemplares
Sombras en el sol 1 exemplar
Sternenstaub [Erzählung] (1952) 1 exemplar
Old Four-eyes 1 exemplar
Oliver 1 exemplar
Rite of Passage [novelette] (1954) 1 exemplar
The Life Game [novelette] (1953) 1 exemplar
Didn't He Ramble 1 exemplar
Of Course 1 exemplar
Ghost Town 1 exemplar
A Lake Of Summer 1 exemplar
The Last Word 1 exemplar

Associated Works

Again, Dangerous Visions (1972) — Contribuidor — 989 exemplares
The Science Fiction Century (1997) — Contribuidor — 534 exemplares
The Big Book of Science Fiction (2016) — Contribuidor — 422 exemplares
Deep Space (1973) — Contribuidor — 161 exemplares
3 to the Highest Power (1968) — Contribuidor — 140 exemplares
Continuum 1 (1974) — Contribuidor — 124 exemplares
The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 5th Series (1956) — Contribuidor — 122 exemplares
The Year 2000 (1970) — Contribuidor — 114 exemplares
Great Science Fiction by Scientists (1962) — Contribuidor — 113 exemplares
Continuum 3 (1974) — Contribuidor — 108 exemplares
The Bradbury Chronicles: Stories in Honor of Ray Bradbury (1991) — Contribuidor — 105 exemplares
An ABC of Science Fiction (1809) — Contribuidor — 104 exemplares
Continuum 2 (1974) — Contribuidor — 100 exemplares
Science Fiction Terror Tales (1955) — Contribuidor — 100 exemplares
Star Science Fiction Stories No. 3 (1955) — Contribuidor — 92 exemplares
Isaac Asimov Presents The Great SF Stories 16 (1954) (1987) — Contribuidor — 91 exemplares
Catastrophes! (1981) — Contribuidor — 89 exemplares
The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction: 7th Series (1958) — Contribuidor — 86 exemplares
Seven Come Infinity (1950) — Contribuidor — 85 exemplares
Continuum 4 (1975) — Contribuidor — 79 exemplares
California Sorcery (1999) — Contribuidor — 76 exemplares
The Best Science Fiction Stories (1977) — Autor, algumas edições67 exemplares
The Pseudo-People (1965) — Contribuidor — 55 exemplares
Laughing Space: An Anthology of Science Fiction Humour (1982) — Contribuidor — 55 exemplares
Cities In Space (1991) — Contribuidor — 53 exemplares
Anthropology Through Science Fiction (1974) — Contribuidor — 46 exemplares
SF: Authors' Choice 2 (1970) — Contribuidor — 42 exemplares
Operation Future (1955) — Contribuidor — 35 exemplares
Adventures in the Far Future / Tales of Outer Space (1954) — Contribuidor — 34 exemplares
The Best Science Fiction Stories and Novels: Ninth Series (1956) — Contribuidor — 34 exemplares
Future Quest (1973) — Contribuidor — 33 exemplares
Human? (1954) — Contribuidor — 29 exemplares
Man Against Tomorrow (1965) — Contribuidor — 28 exemplares
Bootcamp 3000 (1992) — Contribuidor — 26 exemplares
The Best from Fantastic (1973) — Contribuidor — 23 exemplares
Sociology Through Science Fiction (1974) — Contribuidor — 21 exemplares
Worlds of When (1962) — Autor — 21 exemplares
Synergy: New Science Fiction, Vol. 4 (1989) — Autor — 20 exemplares
Analog Science Fiction/Science Fact: Vol. CI, No. 5 (April 1981) (1981) — Contribuidor — 19 exemplares
The Human Zero (1967) — Contribuidor — 18 exemplares
Welten der Zukunft 6 (1987) — Contribuidor — 16 exemplares
The Gifts of Asti, and other stories of science fiction (1975) — Contribuidor — 11 exemplares
Astounding Science Fiction 1952 05 (1952) — Contribuidor — 11 exemplares
Things From Outer Space (2016) — Contribuidor — 8 exemplares
Adventures in the far future (1954) — Contribuidor — 7 exemplares
Future Kin (Anthology 8-in-1) (1974) — Contribuidor — 6 exemplares
Analog 2 (1982) — Contribuidor — 6 exemplares
Famous Fantastic Mysteries, Vol. 09, No. 3, February 1948 (1948) — Contribuidor — 2 exemplares
Astounding Science Fiction 1952 October (British Edition) (1952) — Contribuidor — 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome legal
Oliver, Symmes Chadwick
Data de nascimento
1928-03-30
Data de falecimento
1993-08-10
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
USA
Local de nascimento
Kenton, Ohio, USA
Local de falecimento
Austin, Texas, USA
Educação
University of California, Los Angeles (PhD - Anthropology)
University of Texas, Austin (BA, MA)
Organizações
Turkey City Writer's Workshop

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Chad Oliver est né en 1928 dans l'Ohio. Anthropologue et grand voyageur, il est resté fidèle à la passion de sa jeunesse : la science-fiction. Dans une œuvre abondante, on peut citer plus particulièrement Ombres sur le soleil...

Membros

Críticas

El joven sociólogo, Paul Ellery, decidió preparar su tesis estudiando la composición social de un típico pueblito del Oeste norteamericano. Y eligió Jefferson Springs, en Texas. Cuando terminó su investigación halló algo que lo inquietó: ese lugar era demasiado típico. Y cuando supo que ninguno de sus seis mil habitantes llevaba allí más de quince años, ese conocimiento alteró sus vigilias y aguijoneó sus insomnios.
El día que Paul Ellery tuvo la respuesta a sus preguntas supo que Jefferson Springs era la avanzada de un nuevo mundo. Y que él -como todos nosotros algún día- tenía que elegir cuál era el suyo. A quien debía su lealtad más profunda.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Natt90 | Apr 18, 2023 |
“Suppose that one day man landed on some distant planet. Why would he have come, what impulse would have driven him across the darkness and the light-years? Could he explain, and would he even try? If he set out to explore that fearful world, if he trapped some specimens, what would he do if he were attacked by monstrous beings he could not understand?”



In “The Shores of Another Sea” by Chad Oliver



Right after the Bishop’s “No Enemy but Time”, I re-read “The Shores of Another Sea” by Chad Oliver, a first contact story also set in Eastern Africa. Though it devoted a good deal of space to story elements arising from its Kenyan setting, the character setup was pretty minimal, a sympathetic protagonist built on a fairly standard “rugged outdoorsman” chassis. However there was a character arc which was economically worked into the story, its resolution arising from the experience of the alien contact. I didn’t think it was a great book, but it was an interesting contrast to the Bishop. Where Bishop tended to draw his non-SF elements from literary fiction, Oliver turned to another generic tradition, an adventure tale set on a wilderness frontier, a strategy that worked better for me as it seemed less dissonant when grafted onto an SF story.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
antao | 3 outras críticas | Sep 25, 2020 |
Shadows in the Sun is an odd little book. The blurb on the back coupled with the cover art suggests the book is about an anthropologist, Paul Ellery, studying the relatively small Texan town of Jefferson Springs and gradually coming to the shocking realisation that every single one of the town's inhabitants is in fact an alien.

The first couple of chapters support this hypothesis pretty well, since they introduce an anthropologist, Paul Ellery, who is studying the relatively small Texan town of Jefferson Springs and who has gradually come to the shocking realisation that every single one of the town's inhabitants is in fact an alien. It reads like the book has started in media res, and I waited for quite a few of the book's scant pages for the flashbacks to start and to find out what aroused Paul Ellery's suspicions. But the flashbacks never come, the book simply starts quite late in Paul's tale, a few hours before he gets the ultimate proof to confirm his hypothesis.

The rest of the story is essentially built around the notion that the aliens—who are in fact humans, with Chad Oliver trying to sell the unlikely notion that Earth-like planets abound in the Milky Way, and on each one humans have evolved to be the dominant species—are willing to let Paul become a member of their society, and him having to choose between a suddenly worthless existence on Earth or an overwhelming and inevitably never satisfactory life as a citizen of the Greater Galactic Commonwealth. He agonises about the choice up until the final page at which point the author, having done a jolly good job of convincing the reader that neither choice is a good one, seems to have flipped a coin and picked one of the roads for his character with the vague suggestion that merely deciding one course over the other is sufficient for Paul's happiness. I was about as convinced by that line of reasoning as I was by the story in general.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
imlee | 3 outras críticas | Jul 7, 2020 |
Shadows in the Sun is an odd little book. The blurb on the back coupled with the cover art suggests the book is about an anthropologist, Paul Ellery, studying the relatively small Texan town of Jefferson Springs and gradually coming to the shocking realisation that every single one of the town's inhabitants is in fact an alien.

The first couple of chapters support this hypothesis pretty well, since they introduce an anthropologist, Paul Ellery, who is studying the relatively small Texan town of Jefferson Springs and who has gradually come to the shocking realisation that every single one of the town's inhabitants is in fact an alien. It reads like the book has started in media res, and I waited for quite a few of the book's scant pages for the flashbacks to start and to find out what aroused Paul Ellery's suspicions. But the flashbacks never come, the book simply starts quite late in Paul's tale, a few hours before he gets the ultimate proof to confirm his hypothesis.

The rest of the story is essentially built around the notion that the aliens—who are in fact humans, with Chad Oliver trying to sell the unlikely notion that Earth-like planets abound in the Milky Way, and on each one humans have evolved to be the dominant species—are willing to let Paul become a member of their society, and him having to choose between a suddenly worthless existence on Earth or an overwhelming and inevitably never satisfactory life as a citizen of the Greater Galactic Commonwealth. He agonises about the choice up until the final page at which point the author, having done a jolly good job of convincing the reader that neither choice is a good one, seems to have flipped a coin and picked one of the roads for his character with the vague suggestion that merely deciding one course over the other is sufficient for Paul's happiness. I was about as convinced by that line of reasoning as I was by the story in general.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
leezeebee | 3 outras críticas | Jul 6, 2020 |

Prémios

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Estatísticas

Obras
52
Also by
55
Membros
735
Popularidade
#34,566
Avaliação
½ 3.7
Críticas
14
ISBN
42
Línguas
2
Marcado como favorito
2

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