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William Tenn

William Tenn is the pseudonym for the science fiction work of Philip Klass (born May 9, 1920). Born in London, he and his parents moved to New York in the 1920s. He started writing fiction while working at Bell Labs, and later lecturing in English at Penn State University from the mid '60s to the late '80s. He has written over 60 stories, mostly satires on social and business themes. His best-known stories are "On Venus, Have We Got a Rabbi," "Alexander the Bait," "Child's Play" and "Venus and the Seven Sexes."

He also wrote a number of essays, including "Mr. Eavesdropper," which was later collected in Best Magazine Articles, 1968. His essay and interview collection, Dancing Naked, has been nominated for a Hugo Award for Best Related Book, 2004.

Tenn was a Guest of Honor at the 2004 World Science Fiction Convention, and was named Author Emeritus by the Science Fiction Writers of America in 1999. He lives in suburban Pittsburgh with his wife Fruma Klass.

William Tenn is not the UFO debunker Philip J Klass .

Bibliography

  • Children of Wonder (1953)
  • Of All Possible Worlds (1955)
  • The Human Angle (1956)
  • Time in Advance (1958)
  • A Lamp for Medusa (double novel with The Players of Hell by Dave Van Arnam) (1968)
  • Of Men and Monsters (1968)
  • Once Against the Law (1968) with Donald E. Westlake
  • The Seven Sexes (1968)
  • The Square Root of Man (1968)
  • The Wooden Star (1968)
  • Immodest Proposals (2000)
  • Here Comes Civilization (2001)
  • Dancing Naked, the Unexpurgated William Tenn (2004)

External links



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01-04-2007 01:21:04