John Clute
Bibliography: Index Page
As I discovered doing encyclopedias, you should never ask an author
anything even remotely resembling a factual question about his or her own
career. Facts like dates of publication of books, venues where stories were
placed, almost anything that might go into a bibliography or checklist, are
routinely misremembered by their Creators. (From one author, while I was doing
the _Encyclopedia of Science Fiction_ , I received a whole series of specific
year-of-publication dates, all of them different from what I'd thought were the
proper dates. This caused me to revise my entry extensively--until I discovered
that he had treated the date on which he'd signed contract with his publisher as
the date of publication. . . . ) Facts? (authors say to themselves) Our servants
to that for us.
When I did the bibliography below--as
it gives little genuine bibliographical information about the physical books
etc, it might be more properly described as a checklist, but the term
"bibliography" does exclusively describe some form of list of
publications, and so let it be--I found I was no exception to the rule. I
thought it would be a simple process to assemble a list of my stuff--mostly for
my own benefit, so I could locate precisely comments I'd made years or decades
earlier on specific books and subjects--but I found the chaos inside my head
about my own stuff was as daunting and ditzy as the chaos inside the heads of
any of the airhead writers I've gotten used to being sarcastic about. The
checklist or bibliography which you can look at below is, therefore, highly
tentative, and almost certainly incomplete. I did my best to be accurate, as
there's not much point in impressionism in a list; but hey. "But hey,"
I found myself subvocalizing, "All this stuff is just your old
crap." And so it is. But so be it. It's an honest stab.
The organization of the checklist fits the shape of the work I've done. 1) Books with my name on them, self-evident. 2) Books to which I contributed multiple essays or entries. 3) Poems and stories. 4) essays and pieces not written as specific book reviews. 5) essays and pieces couched in the form of book reviews (some of these pieces being long enough and generalist enough to rank as essays; but it seemed useful all the same to separate reviews, however ambitious, from other work). 6) Published letters (lots missing here). 7) Stuff about me: one early review, and some interviews, and an essay or two. No reviews after 1988 are cited. (John Clute, Jan 2003)
Index
![]() |
Home | Next Page![]() |
|
Home | Actors
| Authors | Media
| Filmmakers |