Owing to the screen size of your device, you may obtain a better viewing experience by rotating your device a quarter-turn (to get the so-called “panorama” screen view).
Search term(s):
Welcome to the Great Science-Fiction & Fantasy Works web site!
You have apparently come to this page from a link on a search engine or another site. If this is your first visit here, I much recommend that you take a few minutes to look over the introductory material accessible via the red “Introductory” zone of the Site Menu available from the “hamburger” icon in the upper right of this (and every) page. An understanding of the purposes and principles of organization of this site will, I hope and believe, much augment your experience here, for this page and in general. You can simply click this link to get at the site front page, which, unsurprisingly, is the best place to start. Thank you for visiting.Quick page jumps:
Standard Disclaimer:
This is a brief discussion of Lucius Shepard and, of course, of some speculative-fiction books by Shepard.
This discussion and list does not necessarily include every book by Shepard: it includes only those books that I both know and like. Just as with the author list itself, omission of a particular item may mean I didn’t think highly enough of the omitted item, or it may simply mean that I have not yet sufficient familiarity with it. (In a very few cases, I have listed some books merely on the strength of my opinion of the author: all such books are clearly marked below, as throughout these lists, with a hash mark (#) before the title so you know what’s what.)
I don’t pretend that this discussion is a deep analysis. My intent is no more than to give you a rough idea of what kinds of tales Shepard tells, how those tales are usually told, and what makes them and Shepard worthy; in sum, to help you rank Lucius Shepard (and the works by Shepard listed here) on your personal literary “to do” list.
Regrettably, I have not yet had an opportunity to write an essay on this author, but the “Other Resources” section below will lead you to some information about the “Notable Books” listed farther down this page.
The prime one is Shepard’s own site, The Worlds of Lucius Shepard. There is also a mid-length but somewhat adulatory biography, “Travels With Lucius” [archived copy], at Publisher’s Weekly. Beyond those, there is still a lot of material, but aside from a few interviews with Shepard, it’s all in the form of one-off reviews of Shepard books.
A few of those reviews, ones dealing with the collection The Best of Lucius Shepard, are worth breaking out separately since they perforce involve some critical overview of Shepard’s entire oeuvre. Those include Paul Kincaid’s review at The SF Site; Joe Sherry’s at Adventures in Reading; and Dorman T. Shindler’s at The Denver Post.
I could find none.
This web page is strictly compliant with the WHATWG (Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group) HyperText Markup Language (HTML5) Protocol versionless “Living Standard” and the W3C (World Wide Web Consortium) Cascading Style Sheets (CSS3) Protocol v3 — because we care about interoperability. Click on the logos below to test us!