About Robert Charles Wilson
Robert Charles Wilson lives in Toronto, Canada. His Darwinia was a Hugo finalist and won the Canadian national SF award for novel of the year; his latest novel, The Chronoliths, was a New York Times Notable Book.
Novels
A Hidden Place (1986)
Memory Wire (1987)
Gypsies (1988)
The Divide (1990)
A Bridge of Years (1991)
The Harvest (1992)
Mysterium (1994)
Darwinia (1998)
Bios (1999)
The Chronoliths (2001)
Blind Lake (2003)
Julian: A Christmas Story (2006)
Memory Wire (1987)
Gypsies (1988)
The Divide (1990)
A Bridge of Years (1991)
The Harvest (1992)
Mysterium (1994)
Darwinia (1998)
Bios (1999)
The Chronoliths (2001)
Blind Lake (2003)
Julian: A Christmas Story (2006)
Collections
Series contributed to
Anthologies containing stories by Robert Charles Wilson
The UFO Files (1997)
Eternal Lovecraft: The Persistence of H P Lovecraft in Popular Culture (1998)
The Year's Best Science Fiction Sixteenth Annual Collection (1999)
Star Colonies (2000)
Eternal Lovecraft: The Persistence of H P Lovecraft in Popular Culture (1998)
The Year's Best Science Fiction Sixteenth Annual Collection (1999)
Star Colonies (2000)
Short stories
| Equinocturne (1975) | |||
| The Blue Gularis (1985) | |||
| Boulevard Life (1985) | |||
| State of the Art (1985) | |||
| A Knight of Antiquity (1986) | |||
| Ballads in 3/4 Time (1987) | |||
| Extras (1987) | |||
| The Perseids (1995) | World Fantasy (nominee) Nebula (nominee) | ||
| The Inner Inner City (1997) | World Fantasy (nominee) | ||
| Protocols of Consumption (1997) | |||
| Divided by Infinity (1998) | |||
| Divided by Infinity (1998) | Hugo (nominee) | ||
| The Observer (1998) | |||
| The Dryad's Wedding (2000) |
Awards
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Links to other websites
| Official Web Page of Robert Charles Wilson |
Robert Charles Wilson recommends
Hominids (2002) (Neanderthal Parallax, book 1) Robert J Sawyer "Sawyer has carried the banner of Asimovian science-fiction into the twenty-first century. Hominids is based in cutting-edge contemporary science--paleoanthropology, quantum computing, neutrino astronomy, among others--and furnished at the same time with touching human (and parahuman) stories. Precise, detailed, and accomplished. The next volume is eagerly anticipated." |
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