The Forever War series

The Forever War series is a series of science fiction novels by Joe Haldeman. Not all of them take place in the same future universe.

The Forever War and Forever Peace both received the Hugo[1][2] and Nebula[2][3] Awards for Best Novel.

The Forever War series

  • The Forever War (1974) (Nebula Award winner, 1975;[3] Hugo and Locus SF Awards winner, 1976[1])
  • Forever Free (1999) (a direct sequel to the first novel)
  • "A Separate War" (1999, short story; appeared first in 1999 in the anthology Far Horizons; collected in 2006 in War Stories and A Separate War and Other Stories) (The story of Marygay Potter after she parts with William Mandella in The Forever War)

The Forever Peace series

  • Forever Peace (1997) (while thematically linked to the previous novel, Forever Peace is not actually a sequel and is not set in the same universe: it is an entirely separate work, although published in a combined volume titled Peace and War with The Forever War and Forever Free)
  • "Forever Bound" (2010, short story; appears in the anthology Warriors) (a prequel to Forever Peace, it tells the story of Julian Class being drafted and trained as a soldierboy while falling in love with Carolyn)

Publication

Sections of The Forever War were originally published in Analog Magazine as four shorter works; "Hero", "We Are Very Happy Here", "This Best of All Possible Worlds", and "End Game". "You Can Never Go Back" was published in Amazing Stories and eventually became part of the paperback version of the novel.[4]

Adaptation

In 1988, The Forever War was adapted with art by comic artist Marvano into a three-part graphic novel also titled The Forever War. It was originally published in French in Belgium and France in 1988, then released in an American edition in 1991. Translations have appeared in Spanish, Portuguese, German, Italian, Swedish, Polish and Romanian.

Short story

"A Separate War", a 1999 Haldeman short story which follows the adventures of Marygay Potter after she and Mandella are separated in the last years of the Forever War, appeared in Far Horizons (edited by Robert Silverberg) and in Haldeman's short-story collection A Separate War and Other Stories (2006).

References

  1. "1976 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2009-08-05.
  2. "1998 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2009-08-05.
  3. "1975 Award Winners & Nominees". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2009-08-05.
  4. Joe W. Haldeman (2009). The Forever War. St. Martin's Press. p. xvi. ISBN 9780312536633.

See also

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