Greg Egan

Greg Egan
Born 20 August 1961 (1961-08-20) (age 50)
Perth, Western Australia
Occupation Writer, former Programmer
Nationality Australian
Period 1990s-present
Genres Science fiction

www.gregegan.net

Greg Egan (born 20 August 1961) is an Australian science fiction author.

Egan published his first work in 1983.[1] He specialises in hard science fiction stories with mathematical and quantum ontology themes, including the nature of consciousness. Other themes include genetics, simulated reality, posthumanism, mind uploading, sexuality, artificial intelligence, and the superiority of rational naturalism over religion. He is known for his tendency to deal with complex technical material, like inventive new physics and epistemology, in an unapologetically thorough manner. He is a Hugo Award winner (with eight other works shortlisted for the Hugos[2]), and has also won the John W Campbell Memorial Award for Best Novel. His early stories feature strong elements of supernatural horror.

Egan's short stories have been published in a variety of genre magazines, including regular appearances in Interzone and Asimov's Science Fiction.

Egan holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Mathematics from the University of Western Australia, and currently lives in Perth. He has recently been active on the issue of refugees' mandatory detention in Australia.[3] Egan is a vegetarian.[4]

Egan does not attend science fiction conventions,[5] does not sign books, and appears in no photographs on the Web.[6]

Contents

Works

Novels

Collections

Short stories

Stories collected in Axiomatic

Stories collected in Our Lady Of Chernobyl

Stories collected in Luminous

Stories collected in Dark Integers and Other Stories

Stories collected in Crystal Nights and Other Stories

Stories collected in Oceanic

Other stories

Academic papers

Awards

Egan is a multiple Seiun Award winner.

Teranesia was nominated for the 2000 Ditmar Award for best novel. Egan declined the award.

Usenet newsgroups

Egan occasionally contributes posts to a variety of (mostly scientific and/or technical) Usenet newsgroups, using his own name. From December 1994 to September 1999 he contributed regularly to the group rec.arts.sf.written, where he engaged in dialogue with his readers about his work, and science fiction in general.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Bibliography
  2. ^ The Locus Index to SF Awards
  3. ^ Commentary on the issue of mandatory detention in The Age newspaper
  4. ^ Iran Trip Diary
  5. ^ Interviews
  6. ^ Photos of Greg Egan
  7. ^ Singleton introduced the concept of the Qusp, which was later used in the novel Schild's Ladder.
  8. ^ Wang refers to the mathematician Hao Wang – the carpets are living embodiments of Wang tiles. This story, minorly reworked, became a section of the novel Diaspora.
  9. ^ Dust was incorporated into the novel Permutation City as the first few chapters in one narrative thread.
  10. ^ Event symmetry note on Egan's Dust Theory

External links