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         Cadigan Pat:     more books (99)
  1. Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine January 1988 (Jan.) by Connie / SIlverberg, Robert / Cadigan, Pat & others Willis, 1989-01-01
  2. Letters from Home by Pat Cadigan, Karen Joy Fowler, et all 1991-10
  3. Home by the Sea by Pat Cadigan, David R. Works, 1992-05
  4. Blood Is Not Enough by Ellen Datlow, Fritz Leiber, et all 1994-10-01
  5. Vous avez dit virtuel? by Pat Cadigan, 1999-04-15
  6. Lost in Space: Promised Land (Lost in Space (Digest)) by Pat Cadigan, 1999-04-01
  7. Making of Lost in Space by Pat Cadigan, 1998-03-16
  8. New Dimensions 11 by Suzy McKee Charnas, Craig Strete, et all 1980-06-01
  9. Jason X #2: The Experiment by Pat Cadigan, 2005-01-25
  10. Cellular (New Line Cinema) by Pat Cadigan, 2004-10-05
  11. Tea From An Empty Cup by Pat Cadigan, 1999-09-15
  12. Space of Her Own (Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Anthology, 8) by Connie Willis, Pat Cadigan, et all 1983
  13. Cyberpunk Writers: Neal Stephenson, William Gibson, Bruce Sterling, Pat Cadigan, Cory Doctorow, John Shirley, Rudy Rucker, Charles Stross
  14. People From Schenectady, New York: George Westinghouse, Irving Langmuir, Charles Proteus Steinmetz, John Sayles, Ron Rivest, Pat Cadigan

21. Pat Cadigan
Pat Cadigan. Books Reviewed Fools Vector, Apr 1994 by Paul KincaidLetters From Home with Karen Joy Fowler Pat Murphy Vector, Feb
http://www.santaroga.uklinux.net/ShowAuthor.php3?selected_author=Cadigan,Pat

22. SFBookcase.com - Pat Cadigan
Pat Cadigan, About Author. No details are known about this author. Add details.Books, 1 books listed. Misc. Dervish Is Digital, 2001, Add a book. Related Sites.
http://www.sfbookcase.com/author.asp?forename=Pat&surname=Cadigan

23. SYNNERS, By Pat Cadigan
Pat Cadigan Synners. As the only twotime winner of the Arthur C. ClarkeAward, Pat Cadigan is the undisputed queen of cyberpunk.
http://www.fourwallseightwindows.com/bookcadigan1.html
Pat Cadigan
Synners
"All Cadigan's work is typified by a hard-bitten but evocative prose, an understanding of the bleaker side of the human psyche, and an undergirding compassion." — Michael Bishop " Synners is a knock-out. Witty, rude, and rich with ideas." — Ellen Datlow As the only two-time winner of the Arthur C. Clarke Award, Pat Cadigan is the undisputed queen of cyberpunk. Recently, however, the BBC took a broader view, proclaiming Cadigan "the queen of modern science fiction." Her novels and short story collections have sold over a million copies worldwide, winning both the World Fantasy Award and the Locus Award, and her work has been translated into more than a dozen languages. Originally published in 1991, Synners Written with a narrative energy and a cinematic immediacy worthy of Philip K. Dick, Synners is a fast, intelligent, and exhilarating indictment of a future we're building for ourselves. Try to imagine Pat Cadigan writing greeting cards for Hallmark. Well, she did, for ten years. Since quitting that to become a full-time writer in 1987, she's written five novels, including Dervish Is Digital and Tea From an Empty Cup

24. Zero News Datapool, An Interview With Pat Cadigan
At the occasion of the Virtual Futures 96 Datableed conference.
http://www.t0.or.at/pcadigan/intervw.htm
An Interview with Pat Cadigan
interviewed by Miss M. at the occasion of Virtual Futures 96 Datableed
    Pat Cadigan is the author of Mindplayers , Synners and Fools ; the latter two are both winners of Britain's Arthur C. Clarke Award, she considers herself a Science Fiction Writer interested in the near future. PC: Hello World, this Pat Cadigan. I guess I could present myself as a Science Fiction Writer, I think this how I'm bets known. Last year I decided to abdicate being a female SF Writer and just be a SF Writer, for various reasons, because I decided that was too much segregation. I suppose, I like to think of myself as someone interested in the near future in a very substantial way. At first it was just for the sake of the work, I discovered that I liked writing about the near future, more than anything else. What it is with writers is that I think the best writing comes from writing your passion and what you're most interested in. Often I think this sort of semi mis-expressed as writing what you know, but with me it's write what you're interested in and what you want to know. I often choose subjects not because I know so much about them, but because I want to learn about them

25. The Pat Cadigan Home Page
pat cadigan The Queen of Cyberpunk (Guardian). pat cadigan was bornin Schenectady, New York, and grew up in Fitchburg, Massachusetts.
http://users.wmin.ac.uk/~fowlerc/patcadigan.html
Pat Cadigan - "The Queen of Cyberpunk" ( Guardian
Pat Cadigan, acclaimed by the London Guardian as "The Queen of Cyberpunk", is the author of four novels, Mindplayers Synners Fools and Tea from an Empty Cup ; and three short story collections, Patterns Home By The Sea , and Dirty Work . Some of her short stories also appeared in Letters from Home , alongside work by Karen Joy Fowler and Pat Murphy. Pat continues to publish short fiction. Recent stories are in New Worlds Dark Terrors 3 Disco 2000 and the Christmas issue of Interzone Pat Cadigan was born in Schenectady, New York, and grew up in Fitchburg, Massachusetts. Attending the University of Massachusetts on a scholarship, she eventually transferred to the University of Kansas where she received her degree. Pat was an editor and writer for Hallmark Cards in Kansas City for ten years before embarking on her careers as a fiction writer in 1987. Since that time her Hugo and Nebula Award-nominated short stories have appeared in such magazines as Omni The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction , and Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine , as well as numerous anthologies. Her first collection

26. Pat Cadigan Author Page At Mostly Fiction - Review, Bibliography, Bio
Quick Links HOME SCI FI TODAY This Day in SF SF Weekly SCI FI Wire SCI FI Stream PRESENTS Exposure Series SCI FICTION S.E.T. Mindprobe SCI FI CHANNEL Schedule Movies Shows Events Prime WEB GUIDE New Sites
http://mostlyfiction.com/scifi/cadigan.htm
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"Dervish is Digital"
"...nothing was true, everything was a lie and all of it in billable time." onfidence games, all which she privately refers to as "aggravated mopery and dopery," further exasperated since nothing in AR constitutes a legal contract. On this particular morning, her AR caseload consists of a meeting with an arms dealer with "a very serious weapon" in a cheesy hotel and a visit to the casinos with a cyborg called Darwin who believes that low-down Hong Kong is involuntarily brainwashing visitors. She's successful on nailing the arms dealer with counterfeit charges, but on the other case, only seems to have attracted the attention of Japanese-Occidental blackjack dealer who accuses her of interrupting his stakeout in low-down Hong Kong. After what would have been lunch, if she had remembered to eat before suiting up again, her assistant, tells her that they have one case that could be related to the brainwashing complaint. A clothing designer named Susannah Ell claims that she is being stalked in artificial reality by her extraordinarily rich ex-husband, Hasting Dervish. In fact, she believes he's done the old "switch-ola" exchanging places with an AI giving Dervish enough processing power to do some very creative harassing. Konstantin doesn't believe anything, really, but that's her job, so she investigates. Before she's done she's feeling like a Looney Tune cartoon character and comes close to being brainwashed herself.

27. Index
Basic guides and some background information for the author's novels Mindplayers and Fools, and an extrapolation of some elements of the world they share.
http://www.anotherscene.com/suspense/cadigan/
Notes on Pat Cadigan
Earl Jackson, Jr.

Another Scene

University of California, Santa Cruz Science fiction seems particularly well suited to certain kinds of inquiries into the relations between how the notion of "person" is imagined in any given culture, and the technology prevalent in that culture. The concept of the Cartesian cogito is certainly enmeshed in the technologies of Renaissance geometrical realism, perspectivism , etc. And it was further fortified through the camera obscura, and other technologies of vision. The same homunuculus is shattered by stereoscope and the cinema. And now what of cyberspace, virtual reality, artificial intelligence, etc.? This is another reason why I distinguish between "self," which I consider basically a Renaissance concept, and "subject," a term more malleable and useful in terms of contemporary thought, critical practice , and modes of representation.
Among contemporary science fiction writers, I find Pat Cadigan's work particularly rewarding exploration of technosubjectivities - at once provocative, engaging, and poetic. Here I will provide background information and basic guides for two related novels, Mindplayers and Fools . While I am chiefly concerned with Fools , I begin with Mindplayers in order to introduce the world that Fools presumes.

28. [Flashpoint Transcript: Pat Cadigan 12/10/98]
Transcript of an online chat with the author on December 10, 1998. From the Event Horizon web site.
http://www.eventhorizon.com/sfzine/chats/transcripts/pages/121098.html
Transcript of Chat with
Pat Cadigan
on December 10, 1998
Well, greetings from pre-Apocalyptic New Yawk Sitty. Are you there, Pat? Yes, I'm here. I got ambushed in the kitchen by the cat, who demanded a treat for acknowledging my existence.:) Great! I just finished reading Tea From An Empty Cup and really loved it. Was it fun to write? (Kitties are like that.) Could you give us a brief precis/synopsis? Well, I've been telling everyone it's a near-future locked-room murder mystery. :) But there are two intertwining narratives. Or two narratives that intertwine eventually, anyway. When elements that didn't seem to be common to both turn out to be related. Or even the same thing. :) Is that too general? Nope. We'll get into specifics. Obviously a lot of the book is about online experiences. Were there any specific things that brought about your conception of Artificial Reality? Well, Artificial Reality (AR) is something I've been writing about for a long time, even before I'd had a computer to have any online experiences with. But I can't say that there was anything in particular that really shaped my own conception. It's something that developed over a long period of time, really, though I imagine a lot of it was informed by my own experiences in conferencing via computer on the Delphi network. I'd been doing that since 1987. And it was something that I got used to very quickly. But I pretty much had my own vision of what Artificial Reality would be like in the futures I was writing about. I figure that AR the real thing can be as individual an experience as people want to make it. At least, the AR in the hypothetical future. So I do whatever I want with it.

29. InterContact '98 PR2_3
Interview by Stefanie Jenssen at the occasion of the InterContact '98 SF convention in Norway, where the author was a guest of honor.
http://www.ii.uib.no/~bjornts/ICW/PR2/PR2_3.html
English version. Norwegian version. - Your first successful story, "Rock On", included in the cyberpunk anthology "Mirrorshades", was the only story in the anthology which dealt extensively with music. Today the CYBER in cyberpunk is still discussed, but the PUNK has strangely disappeared. Or hasn't it? What is your connection to rock and/or punk culture as a writer ? Do you use it for inspiration? P.C.: Actually, now that I live in England I really don't think that the punk is gone from cyber. In London, anyway, it seems like music and literature are moving closer together. There's a pub called Filthy McNasty's that sponsors something called Vox n Roll, where a writer reads from his or her work and intersperses the readings with hisher choices in music. Participants have included Kathy Acker and Mark Timlin perhaps not "classic" cyberpunk writers but certainly writers whose work falls into the category of "related." Sony music just signed a poet to a recording contract. A bit closer to my own experience I recently received a tape from a Swiss "musical collective" called The Table, with a cut on it called "Allie the Sphinx," which is how the German translation of Mindplayers renders "Deadpan Allie." I also came across a handsome young Goth on the web whose username, bless his heart, is Synner. I think that it may be truer - in America, anyway - that cyberpunk is moving away from science fiction or at least science fiction in its classic form as a genre. This is not the sort of shift that writers can control - - rather it is steered by many elements, including (but not exclusively) the readership. Cyberpunk at least for me was never as much about sf the genre as it was about the impact of technology on culture and its people - or should I say cultures and their people. Yes, I probably should. SF was always the vehicle for me, the way to express my ideas about the future, technology, and the human race, not an end in itself.

30. Event Horizon: Visible Stars: Little Latin Larry By Pat Cadigan (page 1 Of 7)
A 1998 short story by the author, published online at the Event Horizon web site.
http://www.eventhorizon.com/sfzine/fiction/latin_larry/index.html

31. Pat Cadigan Interview
cadigan's Future. Although pat cadigan has been selling her short fiction professionallysince 1980, What I Got For Christmas is her first story in Interzone.
http://users.wmin.ac.uk/~goffinl/pat_cadigan_iz.html
Japan Futures,
Cadigan's Future
Although Pat Cadigan has been selling her short fiction professionally since 1980, "What I Got For Christmas" is her first story in Interzone. It is also her first published story to use as a background her new local area, Haringey in North London. Pat moved there after many years living in Overland Park, a suburb of the greater Kansas City area, in the American Midwest. We thought this would be an appropriate moment to find out more about the writer whom the Guardian described as "the Queen of cyberpunk", and BBC TV's Future Fantastic called "the Queen of modern science fiction". Laurie Bee gathered up her notebook, her Sony Walkman Professional and her well-read copies of Pat Cadigan's books, and headed off to Haringey. When I reach the nearest underground station to Pat Cadigan's home - following the detailed directions she has provided - I experience a frisson of excitement as I get off the train. Paul Brazier has let me see Pat's new story in the Christmas Interzone, and I know that the story starts here, on the platform at Manor House tube station. However, everything is normal - or, at least, as normal as London gets these days - and I catch the bus that takes me close to her house without anyone offering to sell me a mindcap. I do look carefully at the new sign outside Maqsood Newsagents, just in case I can see strange patterns, but it's just a regular bright yellow shopsign. I get off the bus on a busy shopping street - "Watch out for the W Bar and get off after that" say my instructions. "The W Bar?" I think. "So what kind of drinks do they sell there?" I expect to find, after reading Pat's hard-edged, street-smart novels (Mindplayers, Synners, Fools) that she lives in some blasted urban wasteland, filled with screaming sirens and shouting punks. But, in fact, the street where she lives is a quiet tree-lined one, and her home takes up most of an elegant three-storey Edwardian terrace.

32. Mark/Space: Anachron City: Library: Authors: Pat Cadigan
Author bibliography, biography, and many reviews. From Anachron City Library at Mark/Space.
http://www.euro.net/mark-space/PatCadigan.html
Pat Cadigan
  • Mindplayers
    (1987, novel, science fiction... featuring 'Deadpan Allie')
  • Patterns
    (1989, short stories, science fiction, horror)
  • Synners
    (1991, novel, science fiction)
  • Home By the Sea
    (1992, short story, science fiction)
  • Fools
    (1992, novel, science fiction)
  • Dirty Work
    (1993, short stories, science fiction, horror)
  • The Making of Lost in Space: The Movie
    (April 1998, non-fiction, illustrated... HarperCollins , New York, US, large format pbk... film tie-in)
  • Tea From an Empty Cup
    (forthcoming October 1998, novel... Tor , New York, US, hbk... was tentatively titled Bunraku
  • Doll Parts
    (forthcoming, novel)
  • Parasite
    (work-in-progress, novel)
*note: You'll notice that the title Indigo has been removed from the booklisting. Pat Cadigan has assured me that no such title ever existed, not even in thought or concept.
Pat Cadigan, Karen Joy Fowler Pat Murphy
Pat Cadigan Short Fiction
    A Deal with God " by Pat Cadigan (short story, in the anthology Grails: Visitations of the Night edited by Richard Gilliam, Martin H.Greenberg, and Edward E.Kramer, 1994...

33. Alpha Ralpha Boulevard: Pat Cadigan
Find a brief bibliography of the author, with a few links to other sites. pat cadigan. Other cadigan stuff on net
http://www.catch22.com/~espana/SFAuthors/SFC/Cadigan%2CPat.php3
Pat Cadigan
Other Cadigan links:
The Pat Cadigan Homepage
"The Final Remake of the Return of Little Latin Larry..."
at Event Horizon.
Bio:
Co-editor with her ex-husband Arnie Fenner of the semi- prozine Shayol (late 70's early 80's) which won the WF award in 1981. First sale in 1981. Born in Schenectadle, NY. Moved to England 1996 and currently resides in North London with her husband Chris Fowler and her son Bob Fenner.
Bibliography:
Fools
November 1992, Bantam Spectra Special Editions
Mindplayers
Patterns
sh.sts.
Synners
"Angel"
"Another one Hits the Road"
"The Boys In the Rain"
"The Coming of the Doll"
"The Day the Martels Got Cable"
"Dispatches from the Revolution"
novelette, July 1991 IASFM
"The Edge"
"The Final Remake of The Return of Little Latin Larry, with a Completely Remastered Soundtrack and the Original Audience
1998, Event Horizon eZine
"Headset"
Jan. 1988, Omni
"It Was the Heat"
"My Brother's Keeper"
"No Prisoners"
(c) 1992 by Pat Cadigan
1992 in Alternate Kennedys edited by Mike Resnick
"The Pond"
"The Power And the Passion"
"Pretty Boy Crossover"
sh.st. Jan 1986

34. Fragment.nl :: Cadigan, Pat 2000
New windows? Individual Entry. cadigan, pat (2000) Dervish is Digital. LondonPan MacMillan. Notes. Copyright © 1997 by . Powered by MovableType.
http://fragment.nl/resources/entries/000843.html
@import url("http://fragment.nl/css/resources.css"); This website looks much better in a web standards compliant browser. The reason you are reading this message is probably because you visit this site with an old, non-standards compliant browser. It's probably a good idea to update your browser. Visit the Web Standards Project for more information on web standards and which browsers support them. Although you're missing out on the fabulous ;-) design of this website, all the content should still be accessible, whatever browser you use. Cyberculture Resources Texts About Home Resources Resources Index
Fragments blog

Bibliography Complete

Online Articles
...
Game Research

New windows?
Individual Entry Cadigan , Pat (2000) Dervish is Digital. London: Pan MacMillan. Notes by . Powered by MovableType . W3C valid CSS

35. Pat Cadigan-intervjud
cadigan bes¶kte Stockholm i oktober 2001 och ber¤ttar i denna intervju om sitt f¶rh¥llande till cyberpunk, feminism och balett.
http://213.80.60.99/sfbok/bulle/bull30f.htm

36. Fragment.nl :: Cadigan, Pat 1998
Individual Entry. cadigan, pat (1998) Tea from an Empty Cup. New York Tor. Notes.Copyright © 1997 by . Powered by MovableType. W3C valid HTML4.01 CSS.
http://fragment.nl/resources/entries/000762.html
@import url("http://fragment.nl/css/resources.css"); This website looks much better in a web standards compliant browser. The reason you are reading this message is probably because you visit this site with an old, non-standards compliant browser. It's probably a good idea to update your browser. Visit the Web Standards Project for more information on web standards and which browsers support them. Although you're missing out on the fabulous ;-) design of this website, all the content should still be accessible, whatever browser you use. Cyberculture Resources Texts About Home Resources Resources Index
Fragments blog

Bibliography Complete

Online Articles
...
Game Research

New windows?
Individual Entry Cadigan , Pat (1998) Tea from an Empty Cup. New York: Tor. Notes by . Powered by MovableType . W3C valid CSS

37. Fools Review By Nicola Griffith
Nicola Griffith's March 1993 review of a book by pat cadigan.
http://users.wmin.ac.uk/~fowlerc/fools_review_nyrsf.html
Review of Fools, by Nicola Griffith
from the New York Review of Science Fiction , Number 55, March 1993
Fools by Pat Cadigan
reviewed by Nicola Griffith To read is to journey, but it is the writer, not the reader, who chooses the mode of transport: kangaroo jumps in stop-start jalopies, meandering barge trips through interesting countryside, hot air balloon voyages where the author lays out her territory clearly and coolly. Fools is a bullet-train of a book. And the Fools, we begin to think, may be us. Cadigan is a sly, witty writer, with energy to burn. Layer after layer of reality slough off like snake skins and fly into the night as we hurtle through these three novellas which may, or may not, for a seamless novel. The landscape is relentlessly urban - no trees, no sunlight, not even weeds struggling up between cracks in the concrete - and the territory is that of Cadigan's first novel, Mindplayers , where memories and identities are as easily doffed as playactors' costumes. We flash in and out of characters' minds and personalities, buffeted by the changing pressure and light levels, but there are no stops on this train, no time to assemble the pieces at leisure and work out for sure what is going on. From the first page, we are asked to travel on faith and at speed towards an unknown destination. We and the narrator, Marva, find ourselves in the middle of an exclusive party where holograms and real people mingle, and where personality copy-and-franchising is big business. The narrator is not at all confused, even though we, the reader, begin to suspect - by the reactions of those she meets at this party - that she should be.

38. Cadigan, Pat
Books by pat cadigan For sale, from the author, and her husband, Chris Fowler All prices in pounds sterling.
http://www.sff.net/bfob/files/Cadigan%2C_Pat.txt
Books by Pat Cadigan For sale, from the author, and her husband, Chris Fowler All prices in pounds sterling. Please send funds, payable to "C J Fowler", as sterling cheques drawn on a UK bank, or, if sending from overseas, as International Money Order or bankers draft in sterling. Send to: Chris Fowler, 106A Woodlands Park Road, London N15 3SD, United Kingdom Enquiries: send SAE (stamped, if from UK, or with International Reply Coupons if from overseas), or email to fowlerc@wmin.ac.uk More information: http://www.wmin.ac.uk/~fowlerc/patcadigan.html Fools HarperCollins, paperback, second printing, UK. 4.99. Pat's third novel, winner of the Arthur C Clarke Award, 1995. Warning: Personalities for Sale. All the world's a role. In a world of brainsuckers and bodysnatchers, you can't take anything for granted. Not even your own identity. When Marva, a struggling Method actress, wakes up in a hologram pool in an exclusive priv club with fancy new clothes and plenty of money, she knows something is strange. When a memory of murder starts tugging at her, she knows something is very strange, and that she'd better find out whose life she's living. Fast. Pursued by assassins from a mysterious Escort Service and renegade mind-pirates of every description, Marva must venture into the seamy Downs to find out who wrote the script of the most difficult role of her career. "Cadigan is a major talent" William Gibson "Cadigan has a talent for cutting right to the disturbing heart of her chosen subject, always from an unexpected angle" Time Out "Fools is one of those rare books that not only bear immediate rereading, but demand it. It is smart, urgent, funny, and perfectly controlled, cranking up its characters' paranoia notch by notch in a tight plot where no one can trust anyone else, not even themselves" Interzone Mindplayers Gollancz, hardback (first hardback edition), UK. 20.00. Pat's first novel. Mindplayers are tomorrow's psychoanlaysts, linked directly to their patients using sophisticated machinery attached to the optic nerve. In one-to-one Mindplay contact, you can be inside someone else's head, wandering the landscapes of their consciousness. Allie is a sensation-seeking young woman, obtaining illicit thrills from her shady friend Jerry Wirerammer. But Allie goes badly astray when Jerry suplies her with a "madcap" - a device that lets you temporarily and harmlessly experience psychosis. There's something wrong with Jerry's madcap, and the psychosis doesn't go away when it's disconnected. Allie ends up undergoing treatment at a "dry-cleaner", and she is faced with a stark choice - jail, for her illegal use of the madcap; or training to become a Mindplayer herself. During training Allie becomes familiar with the Pool - a cohesive, though shifting mental landscape jointly constructed by a number of minds; and more disturbingly encounters McFloy, who has been mind-wiped, so that his adult body is inhabited by a mind only two hours old. And as a fully-fledged Mindplayer Allie has to choose between the many specialist options open to her - Reality Affixing or Pathsofinding; Thrillseeking or Dreamfeeding... Mindplayers is a remarkably accomplished first novel, from an author who has already established a formidable reputation for her short stories. Written in a hard-edged modern style which will appeal to readers of William Gibson, Mindplayers "does a terrific job describing the interior landscapes of the minds we visit ... rich and imaginative"(Locus). "Excellent stuff, perceptive, imaginative, subtle and penetrating. A pleasure to read, and a writer to admire" Analog "Cadigan's novel is an energetic, intriguing, darkly humorous head-trip extravaganza" Fantasy Review Synners HarperCollins, hardback (first hardback edition), UK. 20.00. Pat's second novel, winner of the Arthur C Clarke Award, 1992. Synners are synthesisers - not machines, but people. They take images from the brains of performers and turn them into a form which can be packaged, and sold, and consumed. Pat Cadigan's third novel plunges us into a fast-moving, high-tech future, exotic, exciting and dangerous. It's a world where new technology spawns new crime even before it hits the streets. A world where computer viruses can seem all but human. A world of new drugs and even newer side-effects. A world where the human mind and the extern al landscape have fused into a new and strange reality. Our future, in other words. "Synners is a knock-out, witty, rude and rich with ideas" Ellen Datlow, Fiction Editor of Omni "Ambitious, brilliantly executed...Cadigan is a major talent" William Gibson "Beside Synners, most previous cyberpunk novels look like vignettes ... settle back for a great read" Locus "If you have't tried Cadigan yet, you're still drinking that sissy kid stuff" Michael Swanwick "All Cadigan's work is typified by a hard-bitten but evocative prose, an understanding of the bleaker side of the human psyche, and an undergirding compassion" Michael Bishop "I can't think of another writer who makes such exacting work look so easy" Lewis Shiner Dirty Work Ziesing, trade hardback (first edition). 20.00. Pat's third short story collection. This is the only edition so far. Home By the Sea WSFA, hardback, first edition, limited, numbered, signed, slipcased. A beautifully produced collection of stories, Pat's second collection. Originally priced at $49.95. Special price - 25.00. Patterns Ursus, hardback, first edition, limited, numbered, signed, slipcased. Pat's first short story collection. Originally priced at $50 in this edition. Special price - 25.00. All books are signed. Prices (reminder - in pounds sterling) include post and packing. The only one of these of which we have significant amounts is Fools. If you are purchasing for educational use, enquire about discounts for bulk purchases. Information correct at 7 October 1996.

39. Cadigan, Pat
Mit ihrem Debüt Synder, einem überkomplizierten CyberpunkNachzieher, konnte pat cadigan nicht recht überzeugen.
http://www.acd.lepso.de/extras/rezis/rezi-c17.htm
Pat Cadigan
Rezensent: Peter Herfurth
Synder

40. Literary Criticism On The Web: Cadigan, Pat -- Cummings, E.E.
cadigan, pat Notes on pat cadigan; Cyberpunks to Synners Toward aFeminist Posthumanism? Cage, John John Cage's Dublin, Lyn Hejinian's
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Crete/9078/c.html
Cadigan, Pat
Cage, John
Camposs, Haroldo de
Camus, Albert
Carey, Peter Carman, Bliss Carroll, Lewis Carver, Raymond Cary, Thomas Cather, Willa Catullus, Gaius Valerius

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