Philip José Farmer bibliography
Encyclopedia
In a writing
Writing
Writing is the representation of language in a textual medium through the use of a set of signs or symbols . It is distinguished from illustration, such as cave drawing and painting, and non-symbolic preservation of language via non-textual media, such as magnetic tape audio.Writing most likely...

 career spanning more than 60 years (1946-2008), science fiction and fantasy author Philip José Farmer
Philip José Farmer
Philip José Farmer was an American author, principally known for his award-winning science fiction and fantasy novels and short stories....

(1918-2009) published almost 60 novel
Novel
A novel is a book of long narrative in literary prose. The genre has historical roots both in the fields of the medieval and early modern romance and in the tradition of the novella. The latter supplied the present generic term in the late 18th century....

s, over 100 short stories and novellas (many expanded or combined into novels), two “fictional biographies”, and numerous essays, articles and ephemera in fan publications.

World of Tiers
World of Tiers
The World of Tiers is a series of science fiction novels by American writer Philip José Farmer. They are set within a series of artificially-constructed universes, created and ruled by decadent beings who are genetically identical to humans, but who regard themselves as superior, the inheritors of...

Original publications:
  1. The Maker of Universes
    The Maker of Universes
    The Maker of Universes is a fantasy novel by American science fiction author Philip José Farmer. It is the first in his World of Tiers series....

    (1965) ISBN 0-441-51627-0
  2. The Gates of Creation (1966) ISBN 0-312-85761-6
  3. A Private Cosmos (1968) ISBN 0-411-67953-8
  4. Behind the Walls of Terra (1970) ISBN 0-312-86377-2
  5. The Lavalite World (1977) ISBN 0-899-68401-7
    Red Orc's Rage
    Red Orc's Rage
    Red Orc's Rage is a recursive science fiction novel and part of the "World of Tiers" series of novels by Philip José Farmer. The plot of the book was inspired by the work of American psychiatrist A.James Giannini, M.D, who used earlier books in Farmer's series as role-playing tools and aids to...

    (1991; series-related, but not in the main sequence) ISBN 0-812-50890-4
  6. More Than Fire (1993) ISBN 0-812-51959-0


Later compilations:
  • The World of Tiers Volume One (SFBC, 1991) (inc Vols 1-2)
  • The World of Tiers Volume Two (SFBC, 1991) (inc Vols 3-5)
  • World of Tiers 1 (Sphere, 1986) (inc Vols 1-3)
  • World of Tiers 2 (Sphere, 1986) (inc Vols 4-5)
  • The World of Tiers (Tor, 1996) (inc Vols 1-3)
  • The World of Tiers, Volume Two (Tor, 1997) (inc Vols 4-6)


Riverworld
Riverworld
Riverworld is a fictional planet and the setting for a series of science fiction books written by Philip José Farmer . Riverworld is an artificial environment where all humans are reconstructed. The books explore interactions of individuals from many different cultures and time periods...

  • To Your Scattered Bodies Go
    To Your Scattered Bodies Go
    To Your Scattered Bodies Go is a science fiction novel and the first book in the Riverworld series of books by Philip José Farmer. It won a Hugo Award for Best Novel in 1972 at the 30th Worldcon...

    (1971) ISBN 0-345-41967-7
  • The Fabulous Riverboat
    The Fabulous Riverboat
    The Fabulous Riverboat is a science fiction novel, the second book in the Riverworld series by Philip José Farmer.A shorter version of the novel was serialized in If magazine as "The Felled Star" and "The Fabulous Riverboat" .-Overview:Departing from the plot of To Your Scattered Bodies Go, the...

    (1971) ISBN 0-345-41968-5
  • The Dark Design
    The Dark Design
    The Dark Design is a science fiction novel, the third in the series of Riverworld books by Philip José Farmer. The title is derived from lines in Sir Richard Francis Burton's poem The Kasîdah of Hâjî Abdû El-Yezdî:-Overview:...

    (1977) ISBN 0-345-41969-3
  • The Magic Labyrinth
    The Magic Labyrinth
    The Magic Labyrinth is a science fiction novel, the fourth in the series of Riverworld books by Philip José Farmer. The title is derived from lines in Sir Richard Francis Burton's poem The Kasîdah of Hâjî Abdû El-Yezdî:...

    (1980) ISBN 0-893-70258-7
  • Gods of Riverworld
    Gods of Riverworld
    Gods of Riverworld is a science fiction novel, the fifth and last in the series of Riverworld books by Philip José Farmer. It was reprinted in 1998 by Del Rey under the title The Gods of Riverworld....

    (1983) ISBN 0-345-41971-5
  • River of Eternity
    River of Eternity
    River of Eternity is an early version of what became the Riverworld series by Philip José Farmer.The original "Riverworld" story was a 150,000-word novel titled Owe for the Flesh, which ended with the protagonist finding the tower at the end of the river...

    (Riverworld Variant) (1983) ISBN 0-932-09628-X

Herald Childe

  • Image of the Beast
    Image of the Beast (novel)
    Image of the Beast is a science fiction novel by Philip José Farmer. The story follows Herald Childe, a private detective, who is sent a snuff film of his partner being murdered by what appears to be a vampire. His investigation into the identity of the killers leads him into a world of apparent...

    (1968) ISBN 1-902-19724-0
  • Blown: or Sketches Among the Ruins of My Mind (1969) ISBN 0-586-06211-4
  • Traitor to the Living
    Traitor to the Living
    Traitor to the Living is a science fiction novel by Philip José Farmer. The story follows Herald Childe, a private detective. Childe is also the lead character in two prior Farmer novels published as pornography by Essex House...

    (1973) ISBN 0-345-23613-0 (in this non-erotic novel, the lead character is clearly Herald Childe, but it follows the events of a never-written third book which left Childe amnesiac)
  • Image of the Beast (Playboy, 1979) (omnibus edition of Image of the Beast and Blown)

Dayworld

  • Dayworld
    Dayworld (1985)
    -Plot summary:Dayworld is the first in the Dayworld trilogy of science fiction novels by Philip José Farmer. The story is set in a dystopian future in which an overpopulated world solves the problem by allocating people only one day per week. For the rest of the six days they are 'stoned,' a kind...

    (1985) ISBN 0-399-12967-7
  • Dayworld Rebel
    Dayworld Rebel
    Dayworld Rebel is the second book in the Dayworld Trilogy....

    (1987) ISBN 0-441-14002-5
  • Dayworld Breakup (1990) ISBN 0-812-50889-0

"Straight" Tarzan books

  • The Adventures of the Peerless Peer (1974) ISBN 0-915-23006-2, writing as John H. Watson about Tarzan meeting Sherlock Holmes.
    • Reissued by Titan Books
      Titan Books
      Titan Publishing Group is an independently owned publishing company, established in 1981. It is based at offices in London, England's Bankside area. The Books Division has two main areas of publishing: film & TV tie-ins/cinema reference books; and graphic novels and comics reference/art titles. The...

       in 2011 (ISBN 0-857-68120-6) as part of The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes series.
    • Rewritten as "The Adventure of the Three Madmen"—with Mowgli
      Mowgli
      Mowgli is a fictional character from India who originally appeared in Rudyard Kipling's short story "In the Rukh" and then went on to become the most prominent and memorable character in his fantasies, The Jungle Book and The Second Jungle Book , which also featured stories about other...

       replacing Tarzan—in The Grand Adventure collection (1984)
  • The Dark Heart of Time
    The Dark Heart of Time
    The Dark Heart of Time: a Tarzan novel is a 1999 work by Philip José Farmer authorized by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. The book was first announced under the title Tarzan's Greatest Secret in 1997....

    (1999) ISBN 0-345-42463-8, authorized by the Edgar Rice Burroughs
    Edgar Rice Burroughs
    Edgar Rice Burroughs was an American author, best known for his creation of the jungle hero Tarzan and the heroic Mars adventurer John Carter, although he produced works in many genres.-Biography:...

     (ERB) estate; antagonist is an American millionaire seeking the secret of Tarzan's immortality

Khokarsa

The Khokarsa
Khokarsa
Khokarsa is a fictional empire in ancient Africa that serves as the primary setting for Philip José Farmer’s prehistoric fantasy novels Hadon of Ancient Opar, Flight to Opar, and The Song of Kwasin .-Literary Origins:...

series, featuring a character named John Gribardsun (in Time's Last Gift) and Sahhindar (in Hadon of Ancient Opar and Flight to Opar), who is hinted, but never stated, to be an immortal Tarzan time-traveling from the future to before 10,000 BC.
  • Time's Last Gift (1972) ISBN 0-812-51440-8
  • Hadon of Ancient Opar
    Hadon of Ancient Opar
    Hadon of Ancient Opar is a fantasy novel by Philip José Farmer, first published in paperback by DAW Books in April 1974, and reprinted three times through 1993. The first British edition was published by Magnum in 1977...

    (1974) ISBN 0-879-97637-3.
  • Flight to Opar
    Flight to Opar
    Flight to Opar is a fantasy novel by Philip José Farmer, first published in paperback by DAW Books in June 1976, and reprinted twice through 1983. The first British edition was published by Magnum in 1977....

    (1976) ISBN 0-879-97718-3.
  • The Song of Kwasin (coauthored with Christopher Paul Carey), forthcoming in the omnibus Gods of Opar: Tales of Lost Khokarsa (Subterranean Press, 2012)
    • "Kwasin and the Bear God" (20,000-word novella coauthored with Christopher Paul Carey)

Lord Grandrith & Doc Caliban

Alternate and renamed versions of Tarzan
Tarzan
Tarzan is a fictional character, an archetypal feral child raised in the African jungles by the Mangani "great apes"; he later experiences civilization only to largely reject it and return to the wild as a heroic adventurer...

 and Doc Savage
Doc Savage
Doc Savage is a fictional character originally published in American pulp magazines during the 1930s and 1940s. He was created by publisher Henry W. Ralston and editor John L...

 as half-brothers involved in a world-ruling conspiracy.
  • A Feast Unknown
    A Feast Unknown
    A Feast Unknown is a novel written by American author Philip José Farmer. The novel is a pastiche of pulp fiction, erotica, and horror fiction...

    (1969) ISBN 0-872-16586-8
  • Lord of the Trees
    Lord of the Trees
    Lord of the Trees is an American novel by Philip José Farmer. Originally released in 1970, it was one of two intertwining sequels to Farmer's previous A Feast Unknown, along with The Mad Goblin...

    / The Mad Goblin
    The Mad Goblin
    The Mad Goblin is an American novel by Philip José Farmer. Originally released in 1970, it was one of two intertwining sequels to Farmer's previous A Feast Unknown, along with Lord of the Trees...

    (dos-a-dos Ace Double, 1970) ISBN 0-441-49252-5
  • The Empire of the Nine (Sphere, 1988) Omnibus reprint of the Ace Double with The Mad Goblin retitled as Keepers of the Secrets.

Fictional biographies

  • Tarzan Alive: A Definitive Biography of Lord Greystoke
    Tarzan Alive: A Definitive Biography of Lord Greystoke
    Tarzan Alive: A Definitive Biography of Lord Greystoke is a fictional biography by Philip José Farmer. It presents the life story of Edgar Rice Burroughs' literary hero Tarzan as if he were a real person....

    (1972) ISBN 0-872-16876-X
    • "The Arms of Tarzan" (1971)
    • "Tarzan's Coat of Arms" (1971)
    • "Tarzan Lives" (1972) - republished as "An Exclusive Interview with Lord Greystoke" (1973)
    • "The Great Korak-Time Discrepancy" (1972)
    • "Extracts from the Memoirs of "Lord Greystoke"" (1974)

  • Doc Savage: His Apocalyptic Life
    Doc Savage: His Apocalyptic Life
    Doc Savage: His Apocalyptic Life is a fictional biography by Philip José Farmer about pulp fiction hero Doc Savage.The book is written with the assumption that Doc Savage was a real person. Kenneth Robeson, the author of the Doc Savage novels, is portrayed as writing fictionalized memoirs of the...

    (1973) ISBN 0-385-08488-9

Other novels

  • The Green Odyssey
    The Green Odyssey
    The Green Odyssey is an American science fiction novel written by Philip José Farmer. It was Farmer's first book-length publication, originally released by Ballantine in 1957...

    (1957) ISBN 1-434-48494-7
  • Flesh
    Flesh (novel)
    Flesh is an American science fiction novel written by Philip José Farmer. Originally released in 1960, it was Farmer's second novel-length publication, after The Green Odyssey. Flesh features many sexual themes, as is typical of Farmer's earliest work.-Overview:In Flesh, Peter Stagg and a group of...

    (1960) ISBN 0-853-91126-6 (expanded 1967, Doubleday)
  • A Woman a Day (also as The Day of Timestop; 1960) ISBN 0-425-04526-9 (expanded from 1953 novella, Moth and Rust) (connected to The Lovers)
  • The Lovers (1961) ISBN 0-345-28691-X (expanded from the 1952 novella) (revised 1977)http://www.amazon.com/review/RJQPCXXO0IGKJ
  • Cache from Outer Space (1962)
  • Fire and the Night
    Fire and the Night
    Fire and the Night is an American novel by Philip José Farmer. It was published in 1962 by Regency Books, as a paperback costing 50 cents. Unusual for Farmer, the novel contains no science fictional or otherwise fantastic themes. It was his first "mainstream" book, but did not attract much...

    (1962)
  • Inside Outside
    Inside Outside (novel)
    Inside Outside is an American fantasy novel written by Philip José Farmer. Originally released in 1964, the novel explores the question of what happens before souls inhabit human bodies, and how they are created.-Plot summary:...

    (1964) ISBN 0-425-04041-0
  • Tongues of the Moon
    Tongues of the Moon
    Tongues of the Moon is an American science fiction novel by Philip José Farmer. Originally released in 1964, the book is an action story, focusing on fighting and combat scenes rather than a complex plot. It was initially printed as a novella in Amazing Stories.In Tongues of the Moon, colonists on...

    (1964) ISBN 0-515-04595-0 (expanded from the 1961 novella)
  • Dare (1965) ISBN 1-600-10438-X
  • The Gate of Time
    The Gate of Time
    The Gate of Time is an alternate history novel by Philip José Farmer. It was first published in paperback editions by Belmont Books in the United States in October 1966 and by Quartet in the United Kingdom in September 1974. Later it was revised and expanded as Two Hawks from Earth, in which form...

    (1966), revised and expanded as Two Hawks from Earth (1979) ISBN 0-704-31171-2
  • Night of Light
    Night of Light
    Night of Light is a science fiction novel by American writer Philip Jose Farmer. It was published in June 1957 by Lawrence E. Spivak's publishing house, The Mercury Press, Inc. It was published a second time in 1966 by Berkeley Medallion Books with copyright reserved to the author...

    (1966) ISBN 0-425-02249-8
  • Lord Tyger
    Lord Tyger
    Lord Tyger is an American novel by Philip José Farmer. Originally released in 1970, the book is a metafictional pastiche of one of Farmer's favorite subjects, Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan.-Plot summary:...

    (1970) ISBN 0-451-05096-7
  • Love Song (1970)
  • The Stone God Awakens (1970) ISBN 0-441-78654-5
  • The Wind Whales of Ishmael (1971) ISBN 0-441-89240-X
  • The Other Log of Phileas Fogg
    The Other Log of Phileas Fogg
    The Other Log of Phileas Fogg is a science fiction/Steampunk parallel history novel written by American author Philip José Farmer in 1973. It was originally published by DAW Books and later reprinted in 1979 by Hamlyn and again in 1982 by Tor Books...

    (1973) ISBN 0-812-52468-3
  • Venus on the Half-Shell
    Venus on the Half-Shell
    Venus on the Half-Shell is a science fiction novel attributed to the fictional author Kilgore Trout but actually written by Philip José Farmer. Kilgore Trout is a recurring character of many of the novels of Kurt Vonnegut and this book was first mentioned as a fictional work in his novel God Bless...

    (1975) (writing as Kilgore Trout
    Kilgore Trout
    Kilgore Trout is a fictional character created by author Kurt Vonnegut. He was originally created as a fictionalized version of author Theodore Sturgeon , although Trout's consistent presence in Vonnegut's works has also led critics to view him as the author's own alter ego...

    ) ISBN 0-440-36149-4
  • Ironcastle (1976) (translation/expansion of work by J.-H. Rosny
    J.-H. Rosny
    J.-H. Rosny was the pseudonym of the brothers Joseph Henri Honoré Boex and Séraphin Justin François Boex , both born in Brussels. Together they wrote a series of novels and short stories about natural, prehistoric and fantasy subjects, published between 1886 and 1909, as well as several popular...

    ) ISBN 0-879-97545-8
  • Jesus on Mars
    Jesus on Mars
    Jesus on Mars is a 1979 science fiction novel by Philip José Farmer set on Mars and involving an alien civilization. Despite the apparently lurid, sensationalist theme evoked by the title, this novel makes social commentary on a just society and on religious belief.-Plot summary:An unmanned...

    (1979) ISBN 0-523-40184-1
  • Dark Is the Sun
    Dark Is the Sun
    Dark Is The Sun is a science fiction novel by Philip José Farmer, first published in 1979. It tells the story of the people and creatures left on Earth when the Sun is dead and the universe is heading towards the Big Crunch.-Reception:Thomas M...

    (1979) ISBN 0-345-33956-8
  • The Unreasoning Mask (1981) ISBN 1-585-67715-9
  • Stations of the Nightmare (1982) ISBN 0-812-53773-4
  • Greatheart Silver
    Greatheart Silver
    Greatheart Silver is a 1982 science fiction novel ISBN 0-523-48535-2 written by Philip José Farmer. It is a collection of three of Farmer's stories from the series Weird Heroes published in the 1970s with the title character, a lineal descendant of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, working for...

    (1982) ISBN 0-523-48535-2
  • A Barnstormer in Oz
    A Barnstormer in Oz
    A Barnstormer in Oz: A Rationalization and Extrapolation of the Split-Level Continuum is a 1982 novel by Philip José Farmer and is based on the setting and characters of L...

    (1982)
  • Escape From Loki (1991)
  • Nothing Burns in Hell (1998)
  • Up From the Bottomless Pit, published in ten parts in Farmerphile: The Magazine of Philip José Farmer
    Farmerphile: The Magazine of Philip José Farmer
    Farmerphile: The Magazine of Philip José Farmer was a quarterly digest-sized magazine which published fiction and non-fiction by and about science fiction and fantasy author Philip José Farmer. Over its first ten issues, the magazine serialized the first-time publication of Farmer's novel Up from...

    (2005–2007)


Co-authored novels:
  • The Caterpillar's Question (1992) (with Piers Anthony
    Piers Anthony
    Piers Anthony Dillingham Jacob is an English American writer in the science fiction and fantasy genres, publishing under the name Piers Anthony. He is most famous for his long-running novel series set in the fictional realm of Xanth.Many of his books have appeared on the New York Times Best...

    )
  • Naked Came The Farmer (1998) (with Nancy Atherton, Terry Bibo, Steven Burgauer, Dorothy Cannell
    Dorothy Cannell
    Dorothy Cannell is an English-American writer. She writes mysteries featuring Ellie Haskell, interior decorator and Ben Haskell, writer and chef, and Hyacinth and Primrose Tramwell, a pair of dotty sisters and owners of the Flowers Detection Agency...

    , David Everson, Joseph Flynn, Julie Kistler, Jerry Klein, Bill Knight, Tracy Knight, Garry Moore and Joel Steinfeldt)
  • The City Beyond Play, coauthored with Danny Adams (2007)
  • The Evil in Pemberley House, coauthored with Win Scott Eckert
    Win Scott Eckert
    Win Scott Eckert is an author and editor, best known for his work on the literary-crossover Wold Newton Universe, created by author Philip José Farmer, but much expanded-upon subsequently by Eckert and others. He holds a B.A...

     (2009), featuring the daughter of "Doc Savage"

Collections

  • Strange Relations (1960) (collects "Mother", "Daughter", "Father", "Son", "My Sister's Brother")
  • The Alley God (1962)
  • The Celestial Blueprint: And Other Stories (1962)
  • Down in the Black Gang (1971)
  • The Book of Philip José Farmer, or the Wares of Simple Simon’s Custard Pie and Space Man (1973)
  • Riverworld and Other Stories (1979)
  • Riverworld War: The Suppressed Fiction of Philip José Farmer (1980) (includes a condensed version of Jesus on Mars and several chapters cut from The Magic Labyrinth before publication)
  • The Cache (1981) ISBN 0-812-53755-6 (collection of Cache from Outer Space [1962] plus shorts)
  • Father to the Stars (1981)
  • The Purple Book (1982)
  • The Classic Philip José Farmer, 1952-1964 (1984)
  • The Classic Philip José Farmer, 1964-1973 (1984)
  • The Grand Adventure (1984) (includes The Adventure of the Three Madmen)
  • Riders of the Purple Wage (1992)
  • Myths for the Modern Age: Philip José Farmer's Wold Newton Universe (2005)
  • The Best of Philip José Farmer (2006)
  • Strange Relations (2006) (omnibus of The Lovers, Flesh, and the collection Strange Relations [1960])
  • Pearls from Peoria (2006)
  • Up from the Bottomless Pit and Other Stories
    Up from the Bottomless Pit and Other Stories
    Up from the Bottomless Pit and Other Stories is an original collection featuring a novel and other short literary works by science fiction author Philip José Farmer, edited by Christopher Paul Carey, published in 2007...

    (2007)
  • Venus on the Half-Shell and Others
    Venus on the Half-Shell and Others
    Venus on the Half-Shell and Others is a collection mostly of science fiction author Philip José Farmer's pseudonymous fictional-author literary works, edited by Christopher Paul Carey and published in 2008...

    (2008) includes novels Venus on the Half-Shell and The Adventure of the Peerless Peer plus other stories written as by fictional characters
  • The Other in the Mirror (2009) (omnibus of Fire & The Night, Jesus on Mars, Night of Light)
  • The Worlds of Philip José Farmer 1: Protean Dimensions (2010)
  • Up the Bright River (2010)
  • The Worlds of Philip José Farmer 2: Of Dust and Soul (2011)
  • Gods of Opar: Tales of Lost Khokarsa (omnibus of Hadon of Ancient Opar
    Hadon of Ancient Opar
    Hadon of Ancient Opar is a fantasy novel by Philip José Farmer, first published in paperback by DAW Books in April 1974, and reprinted three times through 1993. The first British edition was published by Magnum in 1977...

    , Flight to Opar
    Flight to Opar
    Flight to Opar is a fantasy novel by Philip José Farmer, first published in paperback by DAW Books in June 1976, and reprinted twice through 1983. The first British edition was published by Magnum in 1977....

    , and The Song of Kwasin, forthcoming 2012)

Short stories and novellas

  • "O'Brien and Obrenov" (1946)
  • "Duo Miaule" (Ca. 1950s; Rediscovered/published 2008)
  • "The Lovers" (1952) (expanded to novel of same name, 1961)
  • "Sail On! Sail On!
    Sail On! Sail On!
    "Sail On! Sail On!" is a alternate history short story from Philip José Farmer, originally published in 1952. In this alternative 1492, the Earth is flat, despite scepticism from scientists and philosophers over this geological provenance...

    " (1952)
  • "The Biological Revolt" (1953)
  • "Mother" (1953)
  • "Moth and Rust" (1953) (basis of novel, A Woman a Day (1960))
  • "Attitudes" (1953)
  • "Strange Compulsion" (1953)
  • "They Twinkled Like Jewels" (1954)
  • "Daughter" (1954)
  • "Queen of the Deep" (1954)
  • "The God Business" (1954)
  • "Rastignac the Devil" (1954)
  • "The Celestial Blueprint" (1954)
  • "The Wounded" (1954)
  • "Totem and Taboo" (1954)
  • "Father" (1955)
  • "The Night of Light" (1957)
  • "The Alley Man
    The Alley Man
    The Alley Man by Philip José Farmer was the cover story for the June, 1959, issue of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. The central figure, a thinly disguised Alley Oop, is the last Neanderthal who has survived into the 20th Century....

    " (1959)
  • "Heel" (1960)
  • "My Sister's Brother" or "Open to Me, My Sister" (1960)
  • "A Few Miles" (1960)
  • "Prometheus" (1961)
  • "Tongues of the Moon" (1961) (expanded as novel of same name, 1964)
  • "Uproar in Acheron" (1962)
  • "How Deep the Grooves" (1963)
  • "Some Fabulous Yonder" (1963)
  • "The Blasphemers" (1964)
  • "The King of the Beasts" (1964)
  • "Day of the Great Shout" (1965)
  • "Riverworld" (1966)
  • "The Suicide Express" (1966)
  • "The Blind Rowers" (1967)
  • "A Bowl Bigger than Earth" (1967)
  • "The Felled Star (part 1)" (1967)
  • "The Felled Star (part 2)" (1967)
  • "The Shadow of Space" (1967)
  • "Riders of the Purple Wage
    Riders of the Purple Wage
    Riders of the Purple Wage is a science fiction novella by Philip José Farmer. It appeared in Dangerous Visions, the famous New Wave science fiction anthology compiled by Harlan Ellison, in 1967, and won the Hugo Award for best novella in 1968, jointly with Weyr Search by Anne McCaffrey.-Title:The...

    " (1967)
  • "Don't Wash the Carats" (1968)
  • "The Jungle Rot Kid on the Nod" (1968)
  • "Down in the Black Gang" (1969)
  • "The Oogenesis of Bird City" (1970)
  • "The Voice of the Sonar in my Vermiform Appendix" (1971)
  • "Brass and Gold" (1971)
  • "The Fabulous Riverboat (part 1)" (1971)
  • "The Fabulous Riverboat (part 2)" (1971)
  • "Only Who Can Make a Tree?" (1971)
  • "The Sliced-Crosswise Only-On-Tuesday World
    The Sliced-Crosswise Only-On-Tuesday World
    "The Sliced-Crosswise Only-On-Tuesday World" is a science-fiction short story by Philip José Farmer, first published in 1971 in New Dimensions 1: Fourteen Original Science Fiction Stories. The story later formed the basis for Farmer's Dayworld trilogy of novels.-Plot:Due to extreme overpopulation...

    " (1971) (basis of the Dayworld series of novels)
  • "Seventy Years of Decpop" (1972)
  • "Skinburn" (1972)
  • "The Sumerian Oath" (1972)
  • "Father's in the Basement" (1972)
  • "Toward the Beloved City" (1972)
  • "Mother Earth Wants You" (1972)

  • "Sketches Among the Ruins of My Mind" (1973)
  • "Monolog" (1973)
  • "After King Kong Fell" (1973)
  • "Opening the Door" (1973)
  • "The Two-Edged Gift" (1974)
  • "The Startouched" (1974)
  • "The Evolution of Paul Eyre" (1974)
  • "Passing On" (1975)
  • "A Scarletin Study, as Jonathan Swift Somers III" (1975)
  • "The Problem of the Sore Bridge - Among Others, as Harry Manders" (1975)
  • "Greatheart Silver" (1975)
  • "The Return of Greatheart Silver" (1975)
  • "Osiris on Crutches, as Leo Queequeg Tincrowder" (1976)
  • "The Volcano, as Paul Chapin" (1976)
  • "The Doge Whose Barque Was Worse Than His Bight, as Jonathan Swift Somers III" (1976)
  • "Fundamental Issue" (1976)
  • "The Henry Miller Dawn Patrol" (1977)
  • "Greatheart Silver in the First Command" (1977)
  • "Savage Shadow as Maxwell Grant" (1977)
  • "The Impotency of Bad Karma as Cordwainer Bird" (1977)
  • "It's the Queen of Darkness, Pal, as Rod Keen" (1978)
  • "Freshman" (1979)
  • "The Leaser of Two Evils" (1979)
  • "J.C. on the Dude Ranch" (1979)
  • "Spiders of the Purple Mage" (1980)
  • "The Making of Revelation, Part I" (1980)
  • "The Long Wet Dream of Rip Van Winkle" (1981)
  • "The Adventure of the Three Madmen" (1984) (rewrite of The Adventure of the Peerless Peer (1974))
  • "UFO vs IRS" (1985)
  • "St. Francis Kisses His Ass Goodbye" (1989)
  • "One Down, One to Go" (1990)
  • "Evil, Be My Good" (1990)
  • "Nobody's Perfect" (1991)
  • "Wolf, Iron and Moth" (1991)
  • "Crossing the Dark River" (1992)
  • "A Hole in Hell as Dane Helstrom" (1992)
  • "Up the Bright River" (1993)
  • "Coda" (1993)
  • "The Good of the Land" (2002)
  • "The Face that Launched a Thousand Eggs" (2005)
  • "The Unnaturals" (2005)
  • "Who Stole Stonehenge?" (2005)
  • "That Great Spanish Author, Ernesto" (2006)
  • "The Essence of the Poison" (2006)
  • "The Doll Game" (2006)
  • "Keep Your Mouth Shut" (2006)
  • "The Frames" (2007)
  • "A Spy in the U.S. of Gonococcia" (2007)
  • "A Peoria Night" (2007)
  • "The First Robot" (2008)
  • "Getting Ready to Write" (2008) (co-authored with Paul Spiteri)
  • "My Summer Husband" (2010)
  • "What I Thought I Heard" (2011)
  • "Kwasin and the Bear God" (2011) (co-authored with Christopher Paul Carey)


Anthologies edited by Farmer

  • Mother Was A Lovely Beast: A Feral Man Anthology, Fiction And Fact About Humans Raised By Animals (1974)
  • Tales of Riverworld (1992)
  • Quest to Riverworld (1993) with uncredited co-editors Richard Gilliam, Martin H. Greenberg, and Edward E. Kramer

Ephemera

  • "Bradley Brave Sees New York With Observing Injun Eyes—And with Knocking Knees" (1940)
  • "Lovers and Otherwise" (1953)
  • "The Tin Woodman Slams the Door" (1954)
  • "White Whales Raintrees Flying Saucers" (1954)
  • "The Golden Age and the Brass" (1956)
  • "On a Mountain Upside Down" (1960)
  • "Blueprint for Free Beer" (1967)
  • "Reap" (1968)
  • "Oft Have I Travelled" (1969)
  • "Report" (1969) - republished as "The Josés from Rio" (2006)
  • "The Affair of the Logical Lunatics" (1971)
  • "The Two Lord Ruftons" (1971)
  • "The Obscure Life and Hard Times of Kilgore Trout" (1971)
  • "A Reply to "The Red Herring"" (1971)
  • "The Lord Mountford Mystery" (1972)
  • "Writing the Biography of Doc Savage" (1973) - republished as "Writing Doc's Biography" (1974)
  • "From Erb to Ygg" (1973)
  • "To the Wizard of Sci-Fi" (1974)
  • "The Feral Human in Mythology and Fiction" (1974)
  • "Charles L. Tanner" (1974)
  • "A Language for Opar" (1974)
  • "Some Comments" (1975) - republished as "The Source of the River" (2006)
  • "How Dinosaurs Did It" (1976)
  • "Phonemics" (1976)
  • "Philip Jose Farmer Sez..." (1976) - republished as "A Fimbulwinter Introduction" (2006)
  • "Religion and Myths" (1977)
  • "Jonathan Swift Somers III: Cosmic Traveller in a Wheelchair" (1977)
  • "The Remarkable Adventure" with Beverly Friend (1978)
  • "Creating Artificial Worlds" (1979)
  • "Riverworld War" (1980)
  • "Maps and Spasms" (1981)
  • "The Monster on Hold" (1983)

  • "L. Frank Baum" (1985)
  • "Edgar Rice Burroughs" (1985)
  • "Memoir" (1986) - republished as "IF R.I.P" (2006)
  • "Remembering VERN" (1987)
  • "The Journey" (1988)
  • "Hayy ibn Yaqzam: An Arabic Mowgli" (1994)
  • "Robert Bloch: An Appreciation" (1994)
  • "Dede Weil: An Appreciation" (2000)
  • "I Still Live!" (2006)
  • "Why Do I Write?" (2006)
  • "The Trout Letters" (2006)
  • "The Light-Hog Incident" (2007)
  • "The Rebels Unthawed" (2007)
  • "A Modest Proposal" (2007)
  • "Sherlock Holmes & Sufism—& Related Subjects" (2008)
  • "Jongor in the Wold Newton Family" (2008)
  • "Three Metafictional Proposals" (2008)
  • "Uncle Sam's Mad Tea Party" (2008)
  • "Down to Earth's Centre" (2008)
  • "The Weird Wild Climb" (2008)
  • "Buddha Contemplates His Novel" (2009)
  • "Resumé of Riverworld Dawn" (2009)
  • "Miadzian Journal" (2009)
  • "Time Has Its Mirages" (2009)
  • "Newly Born, Newly Dead" (2010)
  • "The Legend of Mishiwapo" (2010)
  • "A Writer's Prayer" (2010)
  • "Strangers & Brothers: Pitch to Publishers" (2011)
  • "Strangers & Brothers: Francis Uquart" (2011)
  • "A Slender Tribute to a Big Man" (2011)
  • "Faith in 2097" (2011)
  • "Mark Twain and Kurt Vonnegut versus Free Will" (2011)
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