Selected Stories
Theodore Sturgeon was a genuine American master. Praised, revered, and even envied by the likes of Bradbury, Vonnegut, and King, his short stories contain some of his best work.
In "Thunder and Roses," soon after a nuclear Holocaust, a starlet gives one final performance during which she makes an odd request of the few remaining survivors. In perhaps his most praised story, "The Man Who Lost the Sea," a man riffs on memory and experience on the way to the story's powerful conclusion. And in the Hugo and Nebula Award-winning masterpiece, "Slow Sculpture," a young woman with a lump in her breast chances upon a strange healer. With unrivaled emotional impact, Theodore Sturgeon's stories are funny, lyrical, surprising, and provoking.
Contents:
- Thunder and Roses
- The Golden Helix
- Mr. Costello, Hero
- Bianca's Hands
- The Skills of Xanadu
- Killdozer! (revised)
- Bright Segment
- The Sex Opposite
- The [Widget], the [Wadget], and Boff
- It
- A Way of Thinking
- The Man Who Lost the Sea
- Slow Sculpture
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Theodore Sturgeon
Theodore Sturgeon (Edward Hamilton Waldo, 1918–1985) was a celebrated American science fiction author.
