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About Joe
- Born 1943 in Oklahoma City; grew up mostly in Anchorage,
Alaska and Bethesda, Maryland.
- BS physics & astronomy, MFA
writing.
- Vietnam draftee 1968-69, Purple Heart
- Writer since 1970,
part-time professor at MIT since 1983.
- Married to Mary Gay (Potter)
Haldeman since 1965 (A long time for the sixties generation!).
More About Joe
Short biography
(All you really want to know, but if you're a glutton for information...)
Longer autobiographical sketch
(done for Contemporary Authorsand used here with permission;
please give source if you quote)
Daily diary on sff.net
Recent Books
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MIT graduate student Matt Fuller puts together a black box
that's supposed to calibrate photons for his professor, but instead,
it turns out to be an idiot time machine that only goes forward,
and waits for you.
He's lost his car, his girl, and his job, but he still has the machine.
It's totally useless -- or is it?
Buy
The Accidental Time Machine from amazon.com. |
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Publisher's Weekly says Joe Haldeman's latest story
collection. "Old pro Haldeman (Camouflage) has a gift
for seeing issues in a sympathetic but dispassionate perspective,
as shown by the 15 tales in this collection. How can we live as
human beings in an uncaring universe? he asks. The title story returns
to the conclusion of the Hugo- and Nebula-winning novel The
Forever War as seen by another character, discovering uncomfortable
but ultimately encouraging things about our capacity to adapt and
endure. Other selections, such as "Finding My Shadow"
and "Civil Disobedience," are much bleaker, as they angrily
extrapolate trends in American politics and our abuse of the environment.
Set on a far future Earth, "For White Hill" is one of
the most memorable tragic love stories ever written as SF. . . .
Haldeman's work is never less than clever and sometimes much more.
Buy
A Separate War and Other Stories from amazon.com. |
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Old Twentieth, published in August 2005, is about immortals
escaping from their tiresome utopia in two ways -- aboard a space
ship bound on a risky thousand-year voyage and within a "time
machine," a virtual reality device that takes them back to
the old twentieth century -- the last century when every human life
traveled the natural rainbow arc from birth to death.
Publisher's Weekly says "tremendously compelling with
his usual brilliant knack for detail and characterization . . .
. Haldeman's numerous fans will eagerly snap this one up."
Buy
Old Twentieth from amazon.com. |
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War Stories, published in January 2006, is a 405-page collection
of all of Joe Haldeman's writings about Vietnam. It includes two
complete novels, War Year and 1968, as well as seven short stories,
two narrative poems, and three essays.
Publisher's Weekly says "Haldeman is much more than
just a military SF writer, but it's clear that Vietnam remains central
to his existence and the nightmare inspiration for some of his best
work. . . . . Far from escapist, Haldeman's art provides a devastating
retrospective of a particularly black time in American history."
Buy
War Stories from amazon.com. |
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Camouflage, published in August 2004, is .... Lorem ipsum mei et
duis velit habemus. An dicant ponderum cum. Ad suas nonumy postulant
mei. Nam ignota primis probatus ex, augue dolorum minimum cu pri.
Est everti ornatus id, in veritus intellegam mea.
Buy
Camouflage from amazon.com. |
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Guardian, published in December 2002, is a hard-sf novel set in
1894, 1952, 2004, and points beyond. It answers the age-old question
"What should you do if a raven keeps appearing on your doorstep
and giving you advice?" If this is always happening to you,
maybe it would be a good idea to buy a copy.
Buy
Guardian from amazon.com. |
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The Coming is a first-contact story, in a way; it's also the
story of a small town fifty years from now in a Florida that hasn't
improved with age. An astronomer fighting politics of the garden-
and academic varieties while trying to protect her husband's dark
secret. A little Hispanic and Mafia culture thrown in for spice,
and virtual-reality sex in different flavors.
If you'd like to try it out, here's the first
couple of sections.
Buy
The Coming from amazon.com or an autographed
first edition. |
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The novel FOREVER FREE is an actual sequel to THE FOREVER WAR
-- William and Marygay Mandella are tired of living under the benevolent
dictatorship of Man. They get together with other veterans of the
Forever War and try to take control of their destiny. They encounter
resistance from an unexpected source.
Buy
Forever Free from amazon.com. |
Buy
Forever Peace from amazon.com or an autographed
first edition.
First few pages. |
Forever Peace is not a direct sequel to THE FOREVER WAR, though
it does look at many of the same questions from a perspective that
would not have been possible twenty-some years ago.
It's the year 2043, and the Ngumi War is raging -- a cluster of
dozens of smoldering conflicts between the First World and the Third.
Limited nuclear strikes have been used by both sides. The Ngumi
forces are limited to merely human soldiers with a few robots, but
our side uses "soldierboys" -- almost indestructible war
machines run by remote control by soldiers safe underground, hundreds
of miles away.
Julian Class is one of these soldiers, and the psychological strain
of being jacked into the soldierboy (where he's in a group mind
with nine other soldiers, not all nice people) is about to make
him crack. It might be worth dying, just to stop the pain of living.
For twenty days out of every month, Julian's out of uniform, working
as a physicist. His lover and partner, Amelia Harding, discovers
that a huge experiment being conducted in Jupiter's orbit may literally
put us back to Square One, recreating the Big Bang.
Julian's not sure that would be a bad idea.
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Buy
1968 from amazon.com or an autographed
first edition. |
1968 comes directly from my experience as a combat soldier
in Vietnam and as a "child of the Sixties" before and after the
period of my conscription.
It's sort of a "braided" novel, with three plaits: One is the
story of John Spiedel, Spider, who is drafted and sent to Vietnam,
and after wounds and psychological trauma has to deal with his problems
stateside. Another is the story of his ex- girlfriend, Beverly,
who drifts into the counterculture and sees the other side of the
unsubtle not-quite-revolution that rocked American life in 1968.
The third strand is a running commentary, perhaps objective, about
the world they survive in their separate ways.
I hope the book is shocking and startling as well as being gentle
in places; gently humorous and sexy.
An aspect of the novel that is interesting to me, and perhaps
a few scholars, is that it is a reaction to 1919 , the middle
novel in the fine USA Trilogy, by John Dos Passos. Dos Passos saw
history as a social science, and his novels reflect that sensibility,
and that hope. I tend rather to see history as a branch of fiction.
I started the book in 1974, but was too close to the material,
and put it away for almost a generation. I hope that it gains in
insight whatever it might have lost in immediacy.
The first couple of chapters, and a picture of the author back
in 1968, trying to look cool leaning against a bunker in Vietnam,
are available through 1968.
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None So Blind is a collection of science fiction stories
and a couple of narrative poems. Several of the works -- the title
story, "The Hemingway Hoax," and "Graves" -- have variously won
the Hugo, Nebula, and World Fantasy Awards.
I enjoy writing short stories, but only do one or two a year.
Like most practical writers, I spend most of my time and energy
producing novels, since that's where the money is.
Buy
None So Blind from amazon.com or an autographed
first edition.
Here's a free sample -- the title story "None
So Blind"
(And if you're the one in a thousand who reads poetry, try this
-- "18 Years Old, October 11th") |
Other
books by Joe Haldeman
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