Ted Chiang was born in Port Jefferson, New York, and currently lives outside Seattle, Washington. In 1990 he won the Nebula Award for his first published story, 'Tower of Babylon'. Following this triumph, his stories have won him numerous other awards, making him one of the most honoured writers in contemporary SF.
United by a humane intelligence that speaks very directly to the
reader, and makes us experience each story with immediacy and
Chiang's calm passion.
*The Guardian*
Ted Chiang's stories are lean, relentless and incandescent.
*Colson Whitehead, author of The Underground Railroad*
Ted is a national treasure... each of those stories is a goddamned
jewel.
*Cory Doctorow, journalist and author of Little Brother*
Meticulously pieced together, utterly thought through, Chiang's
stories emerge slowly . . . but with the perfection of slow-growing
crystal.
*Lev Grossman, author of The Magicians Trilogy*
Chiang writes seldom, but his almost unfathomably wonderful stories
tick away with the precision of a Swiss watch – and explode in your
awareness with shocking, devastating force.
*Kirkus Reviews (Starred Review)*
He puts the science back in science fiction – brilliantly.
*Booklist (Starred Review)*
[Chiang] confirms that blending science and fine art at this length
can produce touching works, tales as intimate as our own blood
cells, with the structural strength of just-discovered industrial
alloys.
*Seattle Times*
Essential. You won't know SF if you don't read Ted Chiang.
*Greg Bear, author of The Way and Forge of God
series*
Chiang is the real deal. His debut collection, Stories of Your Life
and Others is one of the finest collections of short fiction I have
read in the last decade. These tales possess the imaginative
frisson that is a trademark of the best conceptual fiction, but,
also bespeak a confident prose style and a willingness to take
chances in tone and narrative structure.
*Ted Gioia*
His stories mirror the process of scientific discovery: complex
ideas emerge from the measured, methodical accumulation of
information until epiphany strikes. . . . The best science fiction
inspires awe for the natural properties of the universe . . . Mr
Chiang's writing manages all of this.
*The Economist blog*
Chiang derides lazy thinking, weasels it out of its hiding place,
and leaves it cowering.
*Washington Post*
The stories range widely in time, subject and style but are united
by a patient but ruthless fascination with the limits of
knowledge.
*Los Angeles Times*
Throughout all his work, though no more so than in Stories, you can
feel his months of removing sentences from his stories. Perhaps
that he writes so little does something good for him, or maybe it's
just that he doesn't write enough.
*Choire Sicha, editor-at-large of New York Magazine*
It will not take readers new to these stories very long to
appreciate their quality and beauty.
*https://www.sfsite.com*
I think Chiang is one of the great science fiction short story
writers of all time . . . it's not often these days that I have
that "What? What? Wow!" experience. Chiang does it for me
practically every time. There's no wonder he keeps winning awards –
he really is just that good. I generally try not to simply burble
incoherently that things are brilliant and you have to read them,
but faced with stories this awesome, that's pretty much all I can
do.
*Tor.com*
A science fiction genius . . . Ted Chiang is a superstar.
*The Guardian*
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