In England as A Rose for Ecclesiastes. |
Collection of ten stories, including several award winners, plus an introduction and two essays. |
Poetry collection. There is an introduction by Zelazny and a foreword by Jane M. Lindskold. |
Edited by Byron Preiss, stories shortened. |
Details taken from online listing. |
Limited edition of 275 copies, issued for the 1980 Vancouver Science Fiction Convention, at which Zelazny was Guest of Honor. |
Expanded from the 1980 (Pocket) edition by the addition of four stories. |
Collection of 11 stories; this has only four stories in common with the earlier (Pocket 1980) collection by the same title. Introduction by Robert Silverberg. |
Collection, the fourth volume in the Collected Stories of Roger Zelazny, of 23 stories, 21 poems (three original), and nine non-fiction pieces (two original) from the late 1970s and early 1980s; this includes the contents of collection My Name is Legion (1976). Introductions by Joe Haldeman and Steven Brust; this also includes the fourth section of a biography by Christopher S. Kovacs. This includes comments on the works by Zelazny, where available, and annotations by editors David G. Grubbs, Christopher S. Kovacs, & Ann Crimmins. |
Subtitled “(October 1961-October 1967) Ten Tales”. Each story is accompanied by notes from Zelazny reprinted from the first three volumes of The Collected Stories of Roger Zelazny (2009). Details taken from online listing. |
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Collection, the fifth volume in the Collected Stories of Roger Zelazny. This covers the 1980s with 19 stories (one previously unpublished), 17 poems, five articles, four outlines, and five articles, plus part five of Christopher S. Kovacs’s literary biography “…And Call Me Roger”. Introductions by Melinda Snodgrass and George R.R. Martin. |
Limited to 1000 copies, distributed at no cost to the first 1000 members of Discon II, the 32nd World Science Fiction Convention. Details taken from online listing. |
Collection, the second volume in the Collected Stories of Roger Zelazny, of 28 stories (four original, several previously uncollected), the serialized version of …And Call Me Conrad complete with synopsis, an article, two speeches, and 21 poems (13 original), with annotations by the editors. Introductions by Kristine Kathryn Rusch and Walter Jon Williams; this also includes the second section of a biography by Christopher S. Kovacs. |
Collection of two short stories and a poem. Limited to 297 numbered, 45 lettered and approximately 20 “promotional” copies, signed by Zelazny. Also available in a slipcased edition limited to 57 numbered and 7 lettered copies, signed by Zelazny & Eagleson. |
Collection, the sixth volume in the Collected Stories of Roger Zelazny, of 17 stories, a play, four outlines, and various non-fiction pieces, covering the last five years of his career, including five linked Amber stories. This has introductions/appreciations by Jane Lindskold, Gerald Houseman, Gardner Dozois, MIchael Whelan, Trent Zelazny, and George R.R. Martin; plus the sixth part of Christopher S. Kovacs’s biography “…And Call Me Roger”. |
Reprint (Ace 1967 as Four for Tomorrow) SF collection. |
Details taken from online listing. |
Collection, the third volume in the Collected Stories of Roger Zelazny, of 30 stories (three original), 41 poems (11 original), seven non-fiction pieces (one original), plus four “curiousities” including a brief sex scene cut from The Guns of Avalon. Introductions by Neil Gaiman and David G. Hartwell. Edited and annotated by David G. Grubbs, Christopher S. Kovacs, & Ann Crimmins; this volume includes part three of Kovacs’s biography of Zelazny. |
Collection, the first volume in the Collected Stories of Roger Zelazny, of 28 stories (four originally published as by Harrison Denmark), a prayer, 32 poems (nine original), one article, and four fragments (at least two original); 15 stories are collected here for the first time. Some items first school literary magazines. Many items are accompanied by comments by Zelazny, and annotations by the editors. This includes introductions by Robert Silverberg and Carl B. Yoke, and a biographical article by Christopher S. Kovacs. |