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memoirs
Remembering the Moon Landing: Michael Collins’ Carrying the Fire
Not So Good A Gay Man
Darkly Dreaming: 5 Essential Reads from Caitlín R. Kiernan
Ken Liu and Tara Clancy on Translating Fiction and Adapting Bar Stories
Astronaut Scott Kelly’s Memoir About His Year in Space to Become Movie
William Shatner’s New Memoir Leonard is Surprising and Moving
Memoir as Fantasy: Michael Moorcock’s The Whispering Swarm
Genre in the Mainstream
Science Fiction as a Childhood Coping Mechanism? On Gary Shteyngart’s Little Failure
Nested Scrolls: The Autobiography of Rudolf von Bitter Rucker (Excerpt)
Non-Fiction || The autobiography of Rudy Rucker begins in Louisville, Kentucky, with a young boy growing up with a desire to be a beatnik writer, a businessman father who becomes a clergyman, and a mother descended from the philosopher, Hegel. It continues through his college years, his romance with his wife, graduate school, rock music, and his college teaching jobs as a math professor. All the while Rudy is reading science fiction, beat poetry, and beginning to write some pretty strange fiction, a blend of Philip K. Dick and hard SF that qualifies him as part of the original circle of writers in the early 1980s, including Bruce Sterling, William Gibson, John Shirley, and Lew Shiner, who founded cyberpunk. He becomes known for his wild-man behavior, in the beatnik tradition.
Later, Rucker renames his fiction Transrealism (and now there is at least one academic book on the subject). In the mid-1980s he switches from math to computers, just in time for the computer revolution. By then he is living in Silicon Valley and teaching in Santa Cruz. As the '90s go by and his life evens out, he keeps writing and producing a unique and wildly imaginitive body of work in SF, usually math-based hard SF. And he's still doing that today.