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Terence M. Green
by Robert J. Sawyer
Copyright © 1993 by
Robert J. Sawyer
All Rights Reserved
Green, Terence M(ichael), born in Canada on 2 February 1947
Green, a high-school English teacher in his native Toronto, had
his first SF story, "Japanese Tea," published in the Australian
anthology Alien Worlds in 1978. His first sale to the U.S. was
"Till Death Do Us Part" in the December 1981 Magazine of Fantasy
& Science Fiction; he's had three other stories in that magazine
since, plus three in Asimov's (including a collaboration with
Andrew Weiner in the June 1988 issue). Green is a soft SF
writer; his work is thoughtful, introspective, and
character-driven, and most often explores family relationships.
Green's first novel, Barking Dogs (1988), expanding his brilliant
short story of the same name from the May 1984 F&SF, was a tale
of vigilantism and psychological breakdown in a future Toronto,
in which perfect, portable lie detectors barking dogs
change both interpersonal relationships and criminal justice.
The 1992 Canadian anthology Ark of Ice contains a sequel
novelette entitled "Blue Limbo."
Green's second novel, Children of the Rainbow (to date published
only in Canada by McClelland & Stewart, 1992), displaced a
variety of characters through time. Green combined the Mutiny on
the Bounty story, the anti-nuclear protests of Greenpeace, and an
Incan religious revival into a highly literate narrative full of
wry commentaries on the present day.
Ten of his stories were collected in The Woman Who Is the
Midnight Wind (1987) from Canada's Pottersfield Press. Notable
stories include "Ashland, Kentucky" (first published in Asimov's,
November 1985, and arguably Green's finest work), which tells of
a son's search for his dying mother's brother who had disappeared
decades ago; "Legacy" (reprinted from F&SF, March 1985), in which
a murdered man's mind is kept alive long enough to identify his
killer; and the original short version of "Barking Dogs."
More Good Reading
Encyclopedia Galactica entries on:
Interview with Terence M. Green (1992)
Interview with Terence M. Green (1988)
More about Canadian SF
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