Difference between revisions of "The Ship Who Sang"
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'''McCaffrey, Anne. ''The Ship Who Sang.''''' New York: Walker, 1969. New York: Ballantine, 1969. Also see title story, "The Ship Who Sang." ''F&SF'' April 1961. Rpt. ''Women of Wonder''. Pamela Sargent, ed. New York: Random, 1975. See Contento, ''Index'', for other rpts. [[Category: Fiction]] | '''McCaffrey, Anne. ''The Ship Who Sang.''''' New York: Walker, 1969. New York: Ballantine, 1969. Also see title story, "The Ship Who Sang." ''F&SF'' April 1961. Rpt. ''Women of Wonder''. Pamela Sargent, ed. New York: Random, 1975. See Contento, ''Index'', for other rpts. [[Category: Fiction]] | ||
− | Coll. of AM's Helva stories. (Cf. and contrast J. McElroy's ''Plus'', and K. O'Donnell's ''Mayflies''). Helva, who "was born a thing" becomes an "encapsulated 'brain'" to be partnered with a "brawn" to act "as the mobile half." The other stories in ''TSWS'' continue Helva's story. See under Literary Criticism the ''TMG'' essay by A. H. Jones.[[http://www.clockworks2.org/wiki/index.php?title=Mechanical_God,_The:_Machines_in_Science_Fiction]]{{DEFAULTSORT:Ship Who Sang}} | + | Coll. of AM's Helva stories. (Cf. and contrast J. McElroy's ''[[Plus]]'', and K. O'Donnell's ''[[Mayflies]]''). Helva, who "was born a thing" becomes an "encapsulated 'brain'" to be partnered with a "brawn" to act "as the mobile half." The other stories in ''TSWS'' continue Helva's story. See under Literary Criticism the ''TMG'' essay by A. H. Jones.[[http://www.clockworks2.org/wiki/index.php?title=Mechanical_God,_The:_Machines_in_Science_Fiction]]{{DEFAULTSORT:Ship Who Sang}} |
Revision as of 16:36, 3 December 2017
McCaffrey, Anne. The Ship Who Sang. New York: Walker, 1969. New York: Ballantine, 1969. Also see title story, "The Ship Who Sang." F&SF April 1961. Rpt. Women of Wonder. Pamela Sargent, ed. New York: Random, 1975. See Contento, Index, for other rpts.
Coll. of AM's Helva stories. (Cf. and contrast J. McElroy's Plus, and K. O'Donnell's Mayflies). Helva, who "was born a thing" becomes an "encapsulated 'brain'" to be partnered with a "brawn" to act "as the mobile half." The other stories in TSWS continue Helva's story. See under Literary Criticism the TMG essay by A. H. Jones.[[1]]