Some net gobs. . .

Len Hatfield:
Science Fiction Resource Guide:
http://sundry.hsc.usc.edu/hazel/www/sfrg/sf-resource.guide.html
This very lively site (frequently updated) offers links to Archives, Art 'n Artists, Authors, Awards, Bibs, Bookstores, Movies, Publishers, Reviews 'n Crit, and Zines (among other things).

Marc Zaldivar:
http://sf.www.lysator.liu.se/sf_archive/
Linkoping SF Archive -- Book reviews, movie reviews, dbase of sf materials, graphix dbase. This is a source run out of the Netherlands (I think) that has a lot of source material all in one place. I've used this source pretty regularly to do some author and subject searches...

Tiffany Trent:

http://sf.www.lysator.liu.se/sf archive/sf-texts/authors/W/Wells, H.G.

I found it interesting because it talked a little about Wells, but it also mentioned the fact that Wells and Verne didn't get along too well. I like to know these little tidbits about authors, so I thought I'd share.

Alex Moffett:

http://www.uic.edu/~lauramd/sf/femsf.html.

It discusses feminist themes in speculative fiction and list some works with these themes.

Scott Wance:

http://www.yahoo.com/Art/Literature/Science_Fiction_Fantasy_Horror/

It's called Yahoo, and is a BIG collection of anything SF related, lots of info for research, etc.

Amy Brittain:

http://www.wsu.edu:8080/brains/science_fiction/Science_Fiction_guides.html

An internet version of Miller's novel, A Canticle for LeibowitzI also found a home page for X-file fans, with neat audio clips. I didn't copy down the address, but I can give directions to anybody who wants them. If anyone has problems for my one address, I can give directions for that too. Dr. Hatfield was right, there is a lot of useless junk on the net.

Scott Wance:

http://www.abdn.ac.uk/~src010/avsff.html

If you're into very poor, worship - SF sites, the Aberdeen university SF Fantasy Society has a droll, but amusing web page;if you have a deep desire to communicate with fans who do absolutely nothing except trade soundbites and pics, this is the place!

Rich Swenson:

http://www.umich.edu/`umfandsf/index2.html

This gives access to Michigan's "speculative fiction" course. It looks like it was designed by Erik Rabkin, and he has a few interesting papers here. It also posts papers from students there. Overall, this is another example of what we are trying to do here.

Jenn Lindberg:

http://pages.prodigy.com/NJ/capeman/mj7.htm

This is the online Sci-Fi Digest. It appears to be updated monthly.

http://rschp2.anu.edu.au:8080/scifi.html

This is the Sci-Fi page. It has a lot of links to other places. Granted many are more fan oriented, but it also had several links to book critiques and search engines and generally neat stuff.


http://julmara.ce.chalmers.se/stefan/WWW/saifai_search.html

Science Fiction Review Archive.

http://julmara.ce.chalmers.se/SF_archive/SFguide/
The Good Reading Guide - Index.

http://worcester.lm.com/lmann/awards/hugos/hugos.html

Really cool listing of lots of stuff like the Hugo Award winners for the last lots of years.

http://www.cs.cmu.edu/web/bookauthors.html

Book search engine. This is a search engine that services more than just Speculative Fiction, but I included it anyways.



Marc Petersen:

http://www.users.interport.net/~regulus/pkd/pkd-int.html

A Philip K Dick homepage with all sorts of nifty info concerning this amicable guy (biographic info, links to reviews of his work, links to critical writings about his work, links to criticism written by him, links to other sf "big guns" (such as Heinlein and, if I recall correctly, Le Guin). This may not be overly useful right now, but later when we hit the "New Wave" stuff and Dick in particular, this site is a real mother lode of PKD nodes.

http://www.cs.uidaho.edu/lal/cyberspace/cyberpunk/cyberpunk.html

Thought this might prove interesting (even though we won't actually be dealing with "cyberpunk" texts, right?) in light of the cyberpunk discussion going on in specfic. It's got links to William Gibson sites and Bruce Sterling sites, as well as stuff written on cyberpunk as literature and cyberpunk as "social movement"(no kidding).

http://ebbs.english.vt.edu/hthl/etuds/hall/hall.html

I have to plug this one. It's (arguably) the starting point of an impressive hypertext called The Lexicon of Infinite Mysteries. The Lexicon, besides containing many links to sf and hypertext related sites, is a wonderful piece of sf in and of itself. Here Fiction and criticism interweave in a delightful dance reminiscent of Borges' Ficciones and Pavic's Dictionary of the Khazars.


Piyush Mathur:

http://www-leland.stanford.edu/~nocturne/survey.html

The entry form to this conference is quite intriguing because it sets up a neat framework of binaries within which the respondent is supposed to define himself or herself in a very old style way. I find this rather anomalous with the spirit of science fiction criticism with its tilt toward deconstruction of the binaries. One of the binaries is between feeling and thinking . . .

Alex Moffet:

http://thule.mt.cs.cmu.edm:8001/sf-clearinghouse/bibliographies/author-index.html.

Very useful as a general resource..... be amazed at how prolific some of your favourite writers have been.

Jenn Lindberg:

The main x-files page is at http://www.rutgers.edu/x-files.html