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Frederik Pohl [1919-0] American
Rank: 102
Writer, Fiction writer


Frederik George Pohl, Jr. was an American science fiction writer, editor and fan, with a career spanning more than seventy-five years—from his first published work, the 1937 poem "Elegy to a Dead Satellite: Luna", to the 2011 novel All the Lives He Led and articles and essays published in 2012.

Science



QuoteTagsRank
My first thought was always a cigarette. It still is, but I haven't cheated.
101
People ask me how I do research for my science fiction. The answer is, I never do any research. Science
102
The science fiction method is dissection and reconstruction. Science
103
That's the method: restructure the world we live in in some way, then see what happens.
104
My old English buddy, John Rackham, wrote and told me what made science fiction different from all other kinds of literature - science fiction is written according to the science fiction method.
105
Stephen Hawking said he spent most of his first couple of years at Cambridge reading science fiction (and I believe that, because his grades weren't all that great).
106
You look at the world around you, and you take it apart into all its components. Then you take some of those components, throw them away, and plug in different ones, start it up and see what happens.
107
If you don't care about science enough to be interested in it on its own, you shouldn't try to write hard science fiction. You can write like Ray Bradbury and Harlan Ellison as much as you want.
108
I'm doing a book, 'Chasing Science,' about the pleasures of science as a spectator sport.
109
It's clear that science and science fiction have overlapping populations.
110
The head of Fermilab was reading Astonishing Stories when he was ten.
111
In terms of stories I would buy for a science fiction magazine, if they take place in the future, that might do it.
112
The big new development in my life is, when I turned 80, I decided I no longer have to do four pages a day. For me, it's like retiring.
113
I did that for 40 years or more. I never had any writer's block. I got up in the morning, sat down at the typewriter - now, computer - lit up a cigarette.
114
Stories where the author has known very little, but run a computer program that tells him how to construct a planet, and looked up specific things about rocketry and so on, really suck.
115
I don't think the scientific method and the science fictional method are really analogous. The thing about them is that neither is really practiced very much, at least not consciously. But the fact that they are methodical does relate them.
116
A lot of the cosmologists and astrophysicists clearly had been reading science fiction.
117
A large fraction of the most interesting scientists have read a lot of SF at one time or another, either early enough that it may have played a part in their becoming scientists or at some later date just because they liked the ideas.
118
I'm pretty catholic about what constitutes science fiction.
119
I was thinking of writing a little foreword saying that history is, after all, based on people's recollections, which change with time.
120

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