n this all new collection of wildly entertaining stories by the trailblazing feminist writers who transformed American science fiction in the 1970s
In the 1970s, feminist authors created a new mode of science fiction in defiance of the "baboon patriarchy"--Ursula Le Guin's words--that had long dominated the genre, imagining futures that are still visionary. In this sequel to her groundbreaking 2018 anthology
The Future is Female!: 25 Classic Science Fiction Stories by Women from Pulp Pioneers to Ursula K. Le Guin, SF-expert Lisa Yaszek offers a time machine back to the decade when far-sighted rebels changed science fiction forever with stories that made female community, agency, and sexuality central to the American future.
Here are twenty-three wild, witty, and wonderful classics that dramatize the liberating energies of the 1970s:
- Sonya Dorman, "Bitching It" (1971)
- Kate Wilhelm, "The Funeral" (1972)
- Joanna Russ, "When It Changed" (1972) NEBULA AWARD
- Miriam Allen deFord, "A Way Out"(1973)
- Vonda N. McIntyre, "Of Mist, and Grass, and Sand" (1973) NEBULA
- James Tiptree, Jr., "The Girl Who Was Plugged In" (1973) HUGO AWARD
- Kathleen Sky, "Lament of the Keeku Bird" (1973)
- Ursula K. Le Guin, "The Day Before the Revolution" (1974) NEBULA & LOCUS AWARD
- Eleanor Arnason, "The Warlord of Saturn's Moons" (1974)
- Kathleen M. Sidney, "The Anthropologist" (1975)
- Marta Randall, "A Scarab in the City of Time" (1975)
- Elinor Busby, "A Time to Kill" (1977)
- Raccoona Sheldon, "The Screwfly Solution" (1977) NEBULA AWARD
- Pamela Sargent, "If Ever I Should Leave You" (1974)
- Joan D. Vinge, "View from a Height" (1978)
- M. Lucie Chin, "The Best Is Yet to Be" (1978)
- Lisa Tuttle, "Wives" (1979)
- Connie Willis, "Daisy, In the Sun" (1979)