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1 posted on 12/04/2025 5:04:13 PM PST by kawhill
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To: kawhill
I liked him as a teenager. Particularly remember Crate.
2 posted on 12/04/2025 5:15:02 PM PST by Steely Tom ([Voter Fraud] == [Civil War])
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To: kawhill

I read all his work that I could get my hands on. I find his books and stories now at project Gutenberg.


3 posted on 12/04/2025 5:21:32 PM PST by Agatsu77
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To: kawhill

“Killdozer!”

That was the first time I heard of him, that Marvel comic. I should turn in my “Sci-Fi Geek” card just admitting that one. Then I read “If All Men Were Brothers, Would You Let One Marry Your Sister?” in “Dangerous Visions” and I became a fan. Listened to his “X Minus One” stuff just the other day. That man was out there. lol


6 posted on 12/04/2025 5:28:02 PM PST by Retrofitted
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To: kawhill

I met him at a convention in 1979.

Notable statement he made in his speech-—
“Men and women should stop this battle over feminism. We need each other and could do so much good in the world if we cooperated instead of fighting.”


7 posted on 12/04/2025 5:31:57 PM PST by frank ballenger (There's a battle outside and it's raging. It'll soon shake your windows and rattle your walls. )
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To: kawhill

“Kurt Vonnegut admired fellow sci-fi writer Theodore Sturgeon and was amused by his fish-related name, leading to the character of Kilgore Trout, a prolific, often ignored sci-fi author whose ideas often drive the plot or comment on the absurdity of life.
The character serves as both a tribute and a projection of Vonnegut’s own experiences as a writer.
In a further nod, author Philip José Farmer wrote a novel, Venus on the Half-Shell, under the Kilgore Trout pseudonym.”


8 posted on 12/04/2025 5:36:06 PM PST by frank ballenger (There's a battle outside and it's raging. It'll soon shake your windows and rattle your walls. )
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To: kawhill
Sturgeon invented Spock's "Live long and prosper" according to a Star Trek fandom site. He wrote two episodes of the original series - Amok Time, and Shore Leave.

https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Theodore_Sturgeon

9 posted on 12/04/2025 5:39:59 PM PST by fruser1
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To: kawhill

Theodore Sturgeon’s short story “Memorial” was first published in the April 1946 issue of Astounding Science Fiction magazine, appearing shortly after the Hiroshima bombing and exploring themes of nuclear devastation.
When: April 1946.
Where: Astounding Science Fiction magazine.
Short Story Review: Theodore Sturgeon’s “Memorial” (1946) | Science Fiction and Other Suspect Ruminations
Nov 13, 2021 — “Memorial” is a 1946 short story by Theodore Sturgeon. It first appeared in the April 1946 issue of *Astounding Science Fiction*. You can read it on...

Science Fiction and Other Suspect Ruminations

Memorial by Theodore Sturgeon - Pointless Philosophical Asides
Aug 11, 2013 — First published in Astounding Science Fiction, April 1946. Six months or so after the dropping of the bomb on Hiroshima, Astounding SF published thi...

Blogger.com


10 posted on 12/04/2025 5:43:23 PM PST by desertsolitaire (hite sea. My grandfather shouted warning to anyone who would listen that the Titanic was going to st)
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To: kawhill

That’s a fishy name.


12 posted on 12/04/2025 6:14:41 PM PST by PAR35 (I)
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To: kawhill

I’ve been a Sturgeon fan since I was a kid. I can’t remember the first story of his that I read, but it got me hooked. I own the 13-volume collection of his short stories, and all the novels as well. I don’t know if I have one favorite story, though. A Way of Thinking was really good, but there were so many others.

I never met him, though I lived not many miles from his home for a while in the 70s.

Time to dig out the short stories again.


15 posted on 12/04/2025 6:53:01 PM PST by HartleyMBaldwin
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To: kawhill

I read a lot of his stories - seems that I either loved them or disliked them, with very little in between. “Microcosmic God” was my favorite.


16 posted on 12/04/2025 7:14:59 PM PST by Some Fat Guy in L.A. (Still bitterly clinging to rational thought despite its unfashionability)
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To: kawhill

Sturgeon’s law - “Ninety percent of everything is crud”


18 posted on 12/04/2025 8:36:51 PM PST by yuleeyahoo (“Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain!” - the deep-state)
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To: kawhill
With the caveat that an e-reader is no substitute for a well stocked library, its' relationship is more to a emergency canteen (especially when one is stuck at the relatives' house, which happens quite a bit this time of year), I humbly offer this

17,033 page book that I found wandering on the 'net. It works, I checked it out, which caused the substantial delay in posting.

20 posted on 12/05/2025 5:05:43 AM PST by Southern Magnolia
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