C.L. Moore
Born
in Indianapolis, Indiana, The United States
January 24, 1911
Died
April 04, 1987
Website
Genre
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Jirel of Joiry
24 editions
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published
1934
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Black God's Kiss
14 editions
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published
1982
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The Best of C.L. Moore
by
13 editions
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published
1975
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Black Gods and Scarlet Dreams
2 editions
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published
2002
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Northwest of Earth: The Complete Northwest Smith
by
13 editions
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published
2008
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Shambleau
25 editions
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published
1933
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Northwest Smith
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published
1982
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Earth's Last Citadel
by
8 editions
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published
1943
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Judgment Night
19 editions
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published
1943
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Doomsday Morning
33 editions
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published
1957
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“The explorers and the drifters and the spacehands are misfits mostly, and, therefore, men of imagination. The contrast between the rigid functionalism inside a spaceship and the immeasurable glories outside is too great not to have a name. So whenever you stand in a ship’s control room and look out into the bottomless dark where the blinding planets turn and the stars swim motionless in space, you are taking a walk down Paradise Street.”
― Judgment Night
― Judgment Night
“This was what the loss of civilization really meant. For the first time the full impact of the Galaxy’s great loss overwhelmed her. So long as she could see those lost worlds she might hope to win them back, but to be struck blind like this was to lose them forever. She knew a sudden agony of homesickness for all the planets she might never see again, a sudden terrible nostalgia for the lost, familiar worlds, for the fathomless seas of space between them. Ericon’s eternal greenness was hateful, strangling in its tiny limitations.”
― Judgment Night
― Judgment Night
“He shook his head at the bright world in the sky. He would have to get over the habit of regarding the heavens as a chart with a glittering pinhead for each planet, and so many thousand Thresholders, ex-Earth-born, bred for the ecology of alien worlds, pinned up there upon the black velvet backdrop for study and control. It wasn’t his problem any more.”
― Judgment Night
― Judgment Night
Polls
July 2016 Woman Genre BOM: Fantasy

Dragonflight by Anne McCaffrey
Published in 1968
HOW CAN ONE GIRL SAVE AN ENTIRE WORLD?
To the nobles who live in Benden Weyr, Lessa is nothing but a ragged kitchen girl. For most of her life she has survived by serving those who betrayed her father and took over his lands. Now the time has come for Lessa to shed her disguise—and take back her stolen birthright.
But everything changes when she meets a queen dragon. The bond they share will be deep and last forever. It will protect them when, for the first time in centuries, Lessa’s world is threatened by Thread, an evil substance that falls like rain and destroys everything it touches. Dragons and their Riders once protected the planet from Thread, but there are very few of them left these days. Now brave Lessa must risk her life, and the life of her beloved dragon, to save her beautiful world. . . .

Black God's Kiss by C.L. Moore
Published in 1934
First published in the pages of "Weird Tales" in 1934, C.L. Moore's Jirel of Joiry is the first significant female sword and sorcery protagonist and one of the most exciting and evocative characters the genre has ever known. Published alongside seminal works by H.P. Lovecraft and Robert E. Howard, the five classic fantasy tales included in this volume easily stand the test of time and often overshadow the storytelling power and emotional impact of stories by Moore's more famous contemporaries. A seminal work from one of fantasy's most important authors, "Black God's Kiss" is an essential addition to any fantasy library.

Star Man's Son, 2250 A.D by Andre Norton
Published in 1951
Fors was a mutant. He did not know what drove him to explore the empty lands to the north, where the great skeleton ruins of the old civilization rusted away in the wreckage of mankind's hopes.
But he could not resist the urging that led him through danger and adventure, to the place where he faced the menace of the Star Men.
Two centuries after an atomic war on earth, a silver-haired mutant sets out on a dangerous search for a lost city of the ruined civilization.
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