Tom Reamy - Published Works

Published Works

  • Novels:
    • Blind Voices (1978)
  • Collections:
    • San Diego Lightfoot Sue and Other Stories (1979)
  • Anthologies containing stories by Tom Reamy:
    • Nova 4 (1974)
    • Orbit 17 (1974)
    • New Dimensions 6 (1975)
    • Nebula Award Stories 10 (1975)
    • Lone Star Universe (1976)
    • The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction #22 (1976)
    • Nebula Award Stories 11 (1976)
    • Six Science Fiction Plays (1976)
    • The Thirteen Crimes of Science Fiction (1980)
    • New Voices 4 (1981)
    • Sci-Fi Private Eye (1984)
    • Light Years and Dark (1984)
    • A Treasury of American Horror Stories (1985)
    • Demons! (1987)
    • Passing for Human (2009)
  • Published short stories:
    • "Beyond the Cleft" (1974)
    • "Twilla" (1974)
    • "San Diego Lightfoot Sue" (1975)
    • "Under the Hollywood Sign" (1975)
    • "Dinosaurs" (1976)
    • "Mistress of Windraven" (1976)
    • "The Sweetwater Factor" (1976)
    • "The Detweiler Boy" (1977)
    • "Insects in Amber" (1978)
    • "Waiting for Billy Star" (1978)
    • "2076: Blue Eyes" (1979)
    • "M is for the Million Things" (1981)
  • One unpublished 17,000 word story sold to The Last Dangerous Visions:
    • "Potiphee, Petey and Me" (1975)
  • Screenplays:
    • "The Goddaughter" (produced 1972, only credited as Assistant Director)
    • "The Mislayed Genie" (produced, 1973)
    • "Sting" (1975) (unproduced)
    • "The Screaming Night: A Screenplay" with Howard Waldrop (?) (unproduced)
  • Hollywood Film Crew:
    • Served in the Art Department as Property Master on the cult-movie "Flesh Gordon" (1974)

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Famous quotes related to published works:

    Literature that is not the breath of contemporary society, that dares not transmit the pains and fears of that society, that does not warn in time against threatening moral and social dangers—such literature does not deserve the name of literature; it is only a façade. Such literature loses the confidence of its own people, and its published works are used as wastepaper instead of being read.
    Alexander Solzhenitsyn (b. 1918)