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Books by Michael Bishop

Born: 11/12/1945

Michael Bishop Biography & Notes


Michael Lawson Bishop (born November 12, 1945 in Lincoln, Nebraska) is an award-winning American writer. Over four decades and thirty books, he has created a body of work that stands among the most admired in modern science fiction and fantasy literature.

Bishop received a bachelor's degree from the University of Georgia in 1967 before going on to complete a master's degree in English. He taught English at the United States Air Force Academy Preparatory School in Colorado Springs from 1968 to 1972, and later at the University of Georgia. Bishop left teaching in 1974 to become a full-time writer.

Bishop has twice been awarded the Nebula: in 1981 for “The Quickening” (Best Novelette) and in 1982 for No Enemy But Time (Best Novel). He has also received four Locus Awards and his work has been nominated for numerous Hugo Awards. He and British author Ian Watson collaborated on a novel set in the universe of one of Bishop’s earlier works. He has also written two mystery novels with Paul Di Filippo, under the joint pseudonym Philip Lawson. His work has been translated into more than a dozen languages.

Bishop has published more than 125 pieces of short fiction which have been gathered in seven collections. His stories have appeared in such publications as Playboy, Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine, Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, the Missouri Review, the Indiana Review, the Chattahoochee Review, the Georgia Review, Omni, and Interzone.

In addition to his fiction, Bishop has published poetry (gathered in two collections) and won the 1979 Rhysling Award for his poem “For the Lady of a Physicist.” He has also had essays and reviews published in numerous newspapers and magazines, including the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer, Omni Magazine, and the New York Review of Science Fiction. A collection of his nonfiction, A Reverie for Mister Ray, was published in 2005 by PS Publishing.

He has written introductions to books by Philip K. Dick, Theodore Sturgeon, James Tiptree, Jr., Pamela Sargent, Gardner Dozois, Lucius Shepard, Andy Duncan, Paul Di Filippo, Bruce Holland Rogers, and Rhys Hughes. He has edited six anthologies, including A Cross of Centuries: Twenty-five Imaginative Tales about the Christ, forthcoming from Thunder’s Mouth Press.

In recent years, Bishop has returned to teaching and is writer-in-residence at LaGrange College located near his home in Pine Mountain, Georgia. He and his wife, Jeri, have two children and two grandchildren.

Early Work

Michael Bishop’s first published professional fiction sale was the short story "Piñon Fall" to Galaxy Science Fiction in 1970. It was shortly followed by “If a Flower Could Eclipse,” the first story in his UrNu sequence (which is the only series of related stories in Bishop’s career.) While Galaxy Science Fiction and If magazines were publishing his sf stories, the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction became Bishop’s venue for his slightly off-kilter fantasy/horror stories. This early period is also noted for a number of high profile novellas: in 1973 “Death and Designation Among the Asadi” and “The White Otters of Childhood” appeared on the shortlist ballots for both the Hugo and Nebula awards. The 1974 gonzo novella “On the Street of the Serpents” (including a character named “Michael Bishop”) first appeared in an anthology of original stories. It would eventually lead to a contract for his first novel from Ballantine Books, the anthology’s publisher.


Six of Bishop’s first eight novels are set on other worlds (the other two are the part of his UrNu sequence of stories.) Critic and author John Clute writes that “…his early stories and novels display considerable intellectual complexity, and do not shirk the downbeat implications of their anthropological treatment of aliens and alienating milieux…”[1] In his major essay on these early novels, author Ian Watson writes “Michael Bishop is both an exoticist and a moralist. He is sometimes guilty, in the first respect, of a certain over-writing – underlying exotic venue by exotic diction – though the two become more organically integrated as his work progresses; and in the second respect of what one might call an over-scrupulousness on the part of his characters and his perceived attitude to them… These, however, are merely the consequence of aspiration and conscience; and as more of Bishop’s work has appeared – and his reputation has grown – he has shown…a more coherent melding of exotic vision, ethics and style.



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Ancient of Days by Michael Bishop ( 1995)
Paul Lloyd and his ex-wife, RuthClaire, discover a living descendant of a hominid species long thought extinct, homo habilis.
And Strange at Ecbatan the Trees by Michael Bishop ( 1976)
An Anthology of Nineteenth-century Women's Poetry from France An Anthology of Nineteenth-century Women's Poetry from France by ( 2008)
At the City Limits of Fate by Michael Bishop ( 1996)
A collection of 15 short stories ranging from science fiction to fantasy to contemporary fiction with a fantastic edge.
Blooded on Arachne by Michael Bishop ( 1982)
This biography of Elizabeth Barrett Browning is centered around her personal life with Robert Browning.
Blue Kansas Sky Four Short Novels of Memory, Magic, Surmise & Estrangement by Michael Bishop ( 2000)
Spans the past and future with a collection of the author's four short novels, including a coming-of-age tale set in Kansas in the late 1950s, an apartheid story from 1980s South Africa, and a twenty-first century spaceship adventure.
Brittle Innings by Michael Bishop ( 1994)
In 1943, with the country at war, seventeen-year-old shortstop Danny Boles signs with a class C baseball farm club and heads into strange relationships, dramatic escapades, and lessons about life, dreams, and desire.
Close Encounters With the Deity by Michael Bishop ( 1986)
Fourteen stories deal with alien hierogylphics, a young ventriloquist's contact with a mysterious force, the arrival of a mantis savior, and encounters with extraterrestrials.
Cold Water Shielded Selected Poems by Michael Bishop, Salah Stetie ( 2000)
Drawn from work produced between 1973 and 1995, this selection of poems by the French-Lebanese poet borrows its themes and force from German Romanticism. The English translations face the French originals.
The Color of Neanderthal Eyes/and Strange at Ecbatan the Trees by Michael Bishop, James Tiptree ( 1989)
Two stories deal with the furthest reaches of humankind's endeavors.
Contemporary French Art 1 Contemporary French Art 1 Eleven Studies by Michael Bishop ( 2008)
Contemporary French Women Poets From Chedid and Dohollau to Tellermann and Bancquart by Michael Bishop ( 1995)
Count Geiger's Blues by Michael Bishop ( 1992)
An art critic for a great metropolitan newspaper reluctantly becomes a superhero in a novel of heroism. By the author of The Secret Ascension, Unicorn Mountain, and No Enemy But Time.
A Cross of Centuries A Cross of Centuries Twenty-five Imaginative Tales About the Christ by Michael Bishop ( 2007)
A collection of short tales about Christ and Christ-like characters includes pieces by such writers as Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Ray Bradbury, and Ernest Hemingway and considers the ways in which such works have influenced popular beliefs about the Jesus archetype. Original.
Dante's Disciples by Harlan Ellison, Michael Bishop, Gene Wolfe, Max Allan Collins ( 1996)
The stories we tell are not limited to monsters and harsh otherworlds. Yet the fiction books in the Borealis imprint certainly belong to a world other than our own. This line encompasses our science fiction, fantasy and horror novels and anthologies.
Desgraciadamente Philip K. Dick ha muerto/ Philip K. Dick is Dead, Alas by Michael Bishop ( 2009)
Detailing Cars & Trucks A Mini-Course for the Do-It-Yourselfer Who Wants to Learn How to Do It Right by Michael Bishop, Dennis Holmes, Brad Zimmerman ( 1994)
Emphatically Not Sf, Almost by Michael Bishop ( 1991)
Eyes of Fire by Michael Bishop ( 1983)
Families Are Murder Point Blank by Philip Lawson ( 2005)
Geographic Information Science and Mountain Geomorphology Geographic Information Science and Mountain Geomorphology by Michael Bishop, John F. Shroder, Michael P. Bishop ( 2004)
Jaguar Hunter Jaguar Hunter by Lucius Shepard ( 2001)
Presents a collection of fantasy stories dealing with such topics as futuristic war, wind spirits, parallel worlds, and a six-thousand-foot dragon.
Kenneth Grahame's the Wind in the Willows Kenneth Grahame's the Wind in the Willows by Michael Bishop, Kenneth Grahame ( 1996)
Describes the escapades of Toad, Mole, Rat, and Badger--four animal friends who live alongside the river bank.
The Keyhole Opera by Michael Bishop, Bruce Holland Rogers ( 2005)
The Language of Poetry Crisis and Solution Studies in Modern Poetry of French Expression, 1945 to the Present by ( 1980)
Michel Deguy by Michael Bishop ( 1988)
Nebula Awards 24 Sfwa's Choices for the Best Science Fiction and Fantasy, 1988 by ( 1990)
Presents the winning stories for best science fiction and fantasy of 1988, featuring works by Bradbury, Dickson, Frazier, McDevitt, and others.
Nebula Awards 25 Sfwa's Choice for the Best Science Fiction and Fantasy 1989 by Michael Bishop ( 1991)
Presents the winning stories for best science fiction and fantasy of 1989, featuring works by Elizabeth Ann Scarborough, Geoffrey A. Landis, and Connie Willis.
Nebula Awards, 23 Sfwa's Choices for the Best Science Fiction and Fantasy 1987 by ( 1989)
The Science Fiction Writers of America present their selections for the best science fiction and fantasy of 1987, a collection featuring works by Asimov, Benford, Haldeman, Robinson, Shepard and Wilhelm.
Nineteenth-Century French Poetry Nineteenth-Century French Poetry by Michael Bishop ( 1993)
Perhaps the most difficult task in undertaking a study of nineteenth-century French poetry would be the selection of poets to study: who among us would care to choose only one from among Mallarme, Vigny, Hugo - and literally dozens of others - who so thoroughly and powerfully interpreted, shaped, and challenged the art forever more? Author Michael Bishop, charged with that forbidding duty, has concentrated his study on ten central figures of that century: Desbordes-Valmore, Lamartine, Vigny, Baudelaire, Hugo, Mallarme, Verlaine, Rimbaud, Laforgue, and Lautreamont. And while the list of subjects is compact, Bishop's intense critical and personal analysis of th ese extraordinary giants is astounding. Not only has he delved deeply into the complex structure of each of these ten poetic oeuvres, but in so doing has introduced to the discussion a number of those poets seemingly excluded from the book. Indeed, his thoughts on Nerval, Gautier, and others are frequently as perspicacious and comprehensive as those put forth in works devoted solely to those poets. In examining the clearest and most distinct voices of nineteenth-century French poetry, Bishop has shrewdly probed a tradition, come to terms with modern criticisms, imparted truly fresh details of coherence resulting from intimate and informed readings, and joined hands across the ages - all the while preserving (and occasionally solidifying) the exquisite, individual integrity of particular oeuvres. As he canvasses the charm and strength of Desbordes-Valmore's unaltered passion, Baudelaire's unsurpassed powers of versification, the stunning descriptive-narrative specificity of Hugo's lexicon, or the interplay of fiction and reality inMallarme, Bishop constantly reflects the teeming fascinations and elan of the poets themselves.
No Enemy but Time by Michael Bishop ( 1989)
John Monegal, who has been haunted from his youth by dreams of primitive peoples, is recruited for a top-secret government mission and travels back two million years to encounter the ancestors of mankind.
One Winter in Eden by Michael Bishop ( 1984)
Philip K. Dick Is Dead, Alas Philip K. Dick Is Dead, Alas by Michael Bishop ( 1994)
Pierre Reverdy A Bibliography by Michael Bishop ( 1976)
Robin Hood by Michael Bishop ( 1991)
Robin Hood, Maid Marian, and the merry outlaws of Sherwood Forest repeatedly outwit the sheriff of Nottingham and befriend the poor.
The Secret Ascension by Michael Bishop ( 1987)
In an alternate universe, Richard M. Nixon, in the fourth term of the "imperial presidency," is about to undertake a fateful meeting.
Secret Garden Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett ( 1993)
An illustrated edition of this children's classic follows Mary Lennox, a spoiled, ill-tempered girl living at her uncle's house, as she discovers a secret garden that seems to work magic.
Stich And His Critics Stich And His Critics by ( 2009)
Stich and His Critics Stich and His Critics by Dominic Murphy ( 2009)
Stich and His Critics by ( 2009)
Stolen Faces by Michael Bishop ( 1977)
Thirty Voices in the Feminine Beauvoir, Ernaux, Yourcenar .. by Michael Bishop ( 1996)
Time Pieces Poems by Michael Bishop ( 1998)
Touch-Up & Dent Repair A Mini-Course for the Do-It-Yourselfer Who Wants to Learn How to Do It Right by Michael Bishop, Dennis Holmes ( 1994)
Tune-Up & Electrical Service A Mini-Course for the Do-It-Yourselfer Who Wants to Learn How to Do It Right by Michael Bishop, Dennis Holmes ( 1994)
Unicorn Mountain by Michael Bishop ( 1989)
The appearance of unicorns on a Colorado cattle ranch joins a dying man, the ranch owner, and a Ute man and his daughter in a test of courage and humanity.
Who Made Stevie Crye by Michael Bishop ( 1984)
Women's Poetry in France, 1965-1995 Women's Poetry in France, 1965-1995 A Bilingual Anthology by ( 1997)
Women's Poetry in France, 1965-1995 is the first bilingual anthology of modern French women poets yet published. Michael Bishop's translations are true to each of the twenty-eight distinctive voices in this volume. His translations thereby free the poems themselves to justify their place, not only in this bilingual volume but also in the realm of international poetry. This anthology could reshuffle canons, alter the international perception of French poetry, and bring pleasure to many individual readers.

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