The Science Fiction Foundation
Foundation: The International Review of Science Fiction
Number 72, Spring 1998
CONTENTS
Edward James
- Suzy McKee Charnas, with Ildney Cavalcanti: The Profession of Science Fiction, 52: A Literature of Unusual Ideas
- Douglas Barbour: The Violent Logic of Late Capitalism: Jack Womack's Sf
- Michael M. Levy: Ophelia Triumphant: The Survival of Adolescent Girls in Recent Fiction by Butler and Womack
- Joan Gordon: Two Sf Diaries at the Intersection of Subjunctive Hopes and Declarative Despair
- Rebecca J. Holden: The High Costs of Cyborg Survival: Octavia Butler's Xenogenesis Trilogy
- Andrew Osmond: Nausicaa and the Fantasy of Hayao Miyazaki
- Andrew M. Butler: Modelling Sf: Fred Pfeil's Embarrassment
- Ahrvid Engholm: A Magazine of the Fantastic from 1682
- Cornel Robu: Great SF Short Fiction, 4: "Kyrie" by Poul Anderson
- Steve Jeffrey: On Foundation 70
- Antony Croghan: George Hay and the Foundation
- Gwyneth Jones: Diaspora by Greg Egan
- Douglas Barbour: Phoenix Cafe and Seven Tales and a Fable by Gwyneth Jones
- Paul J. McAuley: Saint Leibowitz and the Wild Horse Woman by Walter M. Miller Jr.
- Brian Baker: Mainline by Deborah Christian
- Gary Westfahl: Lightpaths by Howard V. Hendrix
- L.J. Hurst: Think Like a Dinosaur by James Patrick Kelly
- David Seed: Political Science Fiction ed. Donald M. Hassler and Clyde Wilcox
- Chris Gilmore: Cultural Babbage ed. Francis Spufford and Jenny Uglow
- Andy Sawyer: Recent titles published by Borgo Press
- plus Notes on Books by Moorcock and Druillet, Ballard, Strathern, Grant and Tiner, Straczynski and Hall
