Paul Di Filippo Popular Books

Paul Di Filippo Biography & Facts

Paul Di Filippo (born October 29, 1954) is an American science fiction writer. He is a regular reviewer for print magazines Asimov's Science Fiction, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Science Fiction Eye, The New York Review of Science Fiction, Interzone, and Nova Express, as well as online at Science Fiction Weekly. He is a member of the Turkey City Writer's Workshop. Antonio Urias writes that Di Filippo's writing has a "tradition of the bizarre and the weird". His novella A Year in the Linear City was nominated for a Hugo Award for Best Novella. Early life Di Filippo was born in Woonsocket, Rhode Island. Critical reception Antonio Urias praised the collection The Steampunk Trilogy (1995) in a brisk review, writing in summary that the tripartite book "contains three bizarre and occasionally humorous novels taking the reader from Queen Victoria's amphibian doppelganger to racist naturalists and black magic, and finally the interdimensional love story of Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman." The first novella, simply entitled "Victoria" follows Cosmo Cowperhwait the inventor of a human-amphibian hybrid that bares (sic) an uncanny resemblance to Her Majesty, Queen Victoria, as well as an insatiable sexual appetite. This is a satire of Victorian mores, politics, and, of course, of the stereotypical mad scientist. ...The second novella is Hottentots is (sic) less outrageously funny, at least on the surface. This is in part due to the fact that the story is told, for the most part through the eyes of Swiss-born naturalist Louis Agassiz, who is apart from pompous and self-aggrandizing, also a proud unrepentant racist. As a result, Di Filippo adopts a more satirical tone as Agassiz confronts anarchists, voodoo, academic maneuverings, swordfights, and a Lovecraftian horror all without losing a hint of his arrogance or smug assurances. The final novella, Walt and Emily, follows Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman's blossoming love as they join a spiritualist and scientific expedition into the afterlife. More than either of the previous stories, "Walt and Emily" delights in literary references and games. The story is saturated with poetic quotations and the unrepentant silly fun not only of a love story between Dickenson and Whitman but the idea of them visiting the afterlife. Bibliography References External links Official website Weird Universe created by Di Filippo, Alex Boese & Chuck Shepherd Paul Di Filippo at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Paul Di Filippo at The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction Paul Di Filippo's online fiction at Free Speculative Fiction Online Golden Gryphon Press site for Strange Trades 2006 interview with Paul Di Filippo at small WORLD podcast. Discover the Paul Di Filippo popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Paul Di Filippo books.

Best Seller Paul Di Filippo Books of 2024

  • Charlie Tells Another One synopsis, comments

    Charlie Tells Another One

    Andy Duncan

    At the turn of the twentieth century, nobody played better banjo than the hermit Daner Johnson, who just might have sold his soul for the privilege. When elevenyearold Charlie Pool...

  • The Boarder synopsis, comments

    The Boarder

    Alexander Jablokov

    With the delicate touch and deep sympathies of Ray Bradbury, Karen Joy Fowler or Jeff Ford, Alex Jablokov guides us through the remembered days of the 1960s when a teen boy and his...

  • The Tell synopsis, comments

    The Tell

    David Brin

    Not too far from now, the world is in a new arms race for predictive algorithms, a la Hari Seldon. The government who knows the future, controls the future. Can it be possible that...

  • Mary of the New Dispensation synopsis, comments

    Mary of the New Dispensation

    F. Brett Cox

    F. Brett Cox delivers a supremely eerie steampunk adventure in which heretical religious beliefs fuse with outrageous fringe science to propel a kind of touchingly creepy Victorian...

  • The Great Pan-American Airship Mystery synopsis, comments

    The Great Pan-American Airship Mystery

    David Gerrold

    This alluring dieselpunk alternatehistory romp features a stellar cast of the famous and the nosofamous persons of the 1930s, as they travel aboard the luxury airship Liberty on a ...

  • One of the Secret Masters synopsis, comments

    One of the Secret Masters

    Darrell Schweitzer

    The prescient Mr. Schweitzer delivers a poignant and hardhitting adventure about friendship, conspiracy theories and secret cabals that takes a writer of kids books from naif to ru...

  • Muskrat Courage synopsis, comments

    Muskrat Courage

    Philip Lawson

    A compelling mix of colorful characters, vividly drawn locales, and edgeoftheseat action, Muskrat Courage builds on the promise of Philip Lawson's first Will Keats Novel, Would It ...

  • Flying to Byzantium synopsis, comments

    Flying to Byzantium

    Lisa Tuttle

    Pity poor Sheila Stoller, writer of some small stature, lured by her ego to a tiny scifi convention. She expects boredom and annoyance, but fails to anticipate the actual fannish a...

  • The Tympanist of the Berlin Philharmonic, 1942 synopsis, comments

    The Tympanist of the Berlin Philharmonic, 1942

    Kim Stanley Robinson

    One glorious, horrifying night in the middle of World War II finds a group of musicians fusing into a gestalt consciousness shaped by Beethoven's artistry, a cosmic mind that will ...

  • Teardrop synopsis, comments

    Teardrop

    Lisa Mason

    On the exotic planet dubbed XYK834, rogue human John Dixon has fallen in love with the alluringly alien NanaNinibut that puts him in bad with the corporate Network goons. Yet maybe...

  • The Logs synopsis, comments

    The Logs

    David Brin

    A heroic young girl named Sasha must negotiate oldschool czarist animosity, alien overlords, harsh planetary conditions, and her own family obligations, all to endure bravely into ...