Introduction by Kim Stanley Robinson
Eileen Gunn - "Michael Swanwick and Samuel R. Delany at the Joyce Kilmer Service Area, March 2005"
Nick Harkaway - "Billy Tumult"
devorah major - "Voice Prints"
Isiah Lavender, III - "Delany Encounters: Or, Another Reason Why I Study Race and Racism in
Science Fiction"
Anil Menon - "Clarity"
Ellen Kushner - "When Two Swordsmen Meet"
Chesya Burke - "For Sale: Fantasy Coffin (Ababuo Need Not Apply)"
Haralambi Markov - "Holding Hands with Monsters"
Carmelo Rafala - "Song for the Asking"
Kit Reed - "Kickenders"
Walidah Imarisha - "Walking Science Fiction: Samuel Delany and Visionary Fiction"
Alex Jennings - "Heart of Brass"
Claude Lalumière - "Empathy Evolving as a Quantum of Eight-Dimensional Perception"
Jewelle Gomez - "Be Three"
Ernest Hogan - "Guerilla Mural of a Siren’s Song"
Hal Duncan - "An Idyll in Erewhyna"
L. Timmel Duchamp - "Real Mothers, a Faggot Uncle, and the Name of the Father: Samuel R.
Delany’s Feminist Revisions of the Story of SF"
Junot Díaz - "Nilda"
Benjamin Rosenbaum - "The First Gate of Logic"
Thomas M. Disch - "The Master of the Milford Altarpiece"
Sheree Renée Thomas - "River Clap Your Hands"
Roz Clarke - "Haunt-type Experience"
Fábio Fernandes - "Eleven Stations"
Kai Ashante Wilson - ""
Michael Swanwick - "On My First Reading of The Einstein Intersection"
Kathryn Cramer - "Characters in the Margins of a Lost Notebook"
Vincent Czyz - "Hamlet’s Ghost Sighted in Frontenac, KS"
Tenea D. Johnson - "Each Star a Sun to Invisible Planets"
Alex Smith - "Clones"
Geetanjali Dighe - "The Last Dying Man"
Geoff Ryman - "Capitalism in the 22nd Century"
Nalo Hopkinson & Nisi Shawl - "Jamaica Ginger"
Chris Brown - "Festival"
Nisi Shawl is a writer whose work has been published at Strange Horizons, in Asimov's SF Magazine, and in anthologies including Dark Faith 2, Dark Matter, The Moment of Change, and The Other Half of the Sky. Her story collection, Filter House, was one of two winners of the 2009 James Tiptree Jr. Award. She is a cofounder of the Carl Brandon Society and serves on the Board of Directors of the Clarion West Writers Workshop. She lives in Seattle. Bill Campbell is the founder of Rosarium Publishing and the author the novels Koontown Killing Kaper, My Booty Novel, and Sunshine Patriots as well as the essay collection, Pop Culture: Politics, Puns, and "Poohbutt" from a Liberal Stay-at-Home Dad. He coedited, with Edward Austin Hall, the groundbreaking anthology Mothership: Tales from Afrofuturism and Beyond. He lives in Washington, DC.
“I read The Jewels of Aptor in 1962, when I was fourteen.
Samuel Delany had written it when he was nineteen, and I
totally got that, the fantastic youth of the thing, but I was
also blown away by what I didn’t yet understand was the style.
It induced one of the most persistent and global somatic
memories of reading I’ve ever had, to the point that I can
actually use it as a sort of time-travel device. And yes, I
know he’s written many novels since then, includingDhalgren, but
I’ve always wanted a chance to say that about The Jewels of
Aptor!”
—William Gibson, author of Pattern Recognition
“Samuel R. Delany sits at the crossroads of the story of SF.
Explore any path—why SF matters, how, to whom—and he is there,
beaming, either in person or reflected in the writers forging
ahead. This book of beautiful, brilliant stories, fiction and
nonfiction, shows us why he matters so much—and how, and to
whom. All of us, of course.”
—Nicola Griffith, author of Hild
“This anthology rocks your mind, rolls your heart, and
makes you tingle all over. Nisi Shawl and Bill Campbell have
curated an entertaining and provocative volume, a whirlwind
tour of the mythic, science fictional landscape that Delany
engendered. These stories, essays, and memoirs are sensuous
encounters with Delany, an ongoing conversation in the
delanyesque universe. A polymath geek fest! Stories for Chip
is a perfect tribute to a creative genius, a theoretical
titan, and a great adventurer.”
—Andrea Hairston, author of Redwood and Wildfire
“This lovingly made tribute to Samuel R. Delany is packed
with tiny delights. Stories that are as diverse as they are
refreshing to the palate. A blend of so many different voices
and takes on the influence of this great author--one could
only dream that in the winter of one’s career such a
collection could be constructed in one’s honor.”
—Jennifer Marie Brissett, author of Elysium
“A powerful testimonial to the impact Delany has had in
inspiring so many of this generation’s diverse voices.”
—Tobias Buckell, author of Arctic Rising
“A tribute to one of the great geniuses of science fiction, this
diamond of a book has stories as multi-faceted, brilliant, and
wickedly sharp as Delany himself.”
—Ellen Klages, author of The Green Glass Sea
"The vast majority of stories here are worthy of a Delany
tribute."
—Sam Tomaino, sfrevu.com
"What can a reader expect to get from these pages? A fan of
Delany’s writing, be it fiction or non-fiction, can expect a
wonderful diversity of authors who love his work and want to show
their ties and inspiration to the man."
—Karen Burnham, SF Signal
"Here’s a tribute anthology to one of the greatest living science
fiction authors, including works by Junot Diaz, Eileen Gunn, Chesya
Burke, Nalo Hopkinson and Geoff Ryman, which play with sexual
identity and race, while some essays also celebrate Delany’s
work. Publishers Weekly gave this book a starred review,
and SFSignal says these stories 'honor the man of the
hour in many of his facets without ever falling into kitsch or
fawning.'”
—i09.com
"It’s only fitting that Stories for Chip, an anthology
honoring professional polymath Samuel R. Delany would feature a
ridiculous variety of stories. It’s also only fitting that they
would be inventive, incisive, and filled with joy."
—Leah Schnelbach, tor.com
"If Stories for Chip invites us to read for Delany, to
see Delany’s influence, it would be best to look for places where
the stories’ sentences, ideas, and concerns resonate with Delany’s
landscapes. In The Semiology of Silence (in Silent
Interviews, 2011), Delany calls himself a 'sentence lover.' The
beauty of Stories for Chip is the way in which Shawl’s
and Campbell’s editorial call for work to celebrate Delany
generates new sentences full of possibility and danger."
—Mark C. Jerng, Los Angeles Review of Books
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