Barry B. Longyear

Barry B. Longyear (born 1942) is an award-winning US science fiction author and screenwriter.

He is best known for the Hugo and Nebula Award winning novella "Enemy Mine" which was subsequently made into an identically titled movie, and a novelization in collaboration with David Gerrold. The story tells of an encounter between a human and an alien soldier, whose races are in a state of war. They are marooned together in space and have to come to grips with the universal problem of facing and accepting Xenophobia.

This story in part helped Longyear to win the John W. Campbell Award for best new writer. He is the only writer to win the Hugo, the Nebula, and the Campbell in the same year. (Contrast the other SF "triple crown" winner: William Gibson with the Hugo, Nebula, and Phillip K. Dick Award in 1984.)

He also wrote the "Circus World" series (among his first published works), several stand-alone novels and numerous short stories, and two books for the Alien Nation novelisation series.


Contents

Published works

incomplete

Novels

  1. Sea of Glass
  2. The God Box

Short story collections

  1. Manifest Destiny (including "Enemy Mine" and others in the same future history)
  2. It Came from Schenectady

Dracon stories

  1. Enemy Mine (1979)
  2. The Last Enemy (1997)
  3. The Tomorrow Testament (1983)

Collected in The Enemy Papers

Circus World

  1. Circus World (1980)
  2. City of Baraboo (1980)
  3. Elephant Song (1981)


External links


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