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1%% Administrivia/ZeroContextExample entries are not allowed on wiki pages. All such entries have been commented out. Add context to the entries before uncommenting them.
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3[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/charles-stross-eastercon-09_edited_5426.jpg]]
4
5->''"Manfred's on the road again, making strangers rich."''
6-->-- ''[[http://www.antipope.org/charlie/blog-static/fiction/accelerando/accelerando-intro.html Accelerando]]''
7
8Charles David George Stross (born 18 October 1964) is a British SpeculativeFiction author with a bent for PostCyberpunk work dealing with [[{{Transhuman}} posthumanism]] and TheSingularity, but who also has a vast array of other fiction out there. Early in his career, he invented several iconic ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'' monsters, including the Death Knight, githyanki and githzerai, and slaadi. He's also [[http://www.lspace.org/fandom/afp/timelines/afp-timeline.html on record]] as being responsible for bringing FootnoteFever to the Creator/TerryPratchett fan group alt.fan.pratchett on UsefulNotes/{{Usenet}}.
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10!!Works by Charles Stross with a page on this wiki:
11[[index]]
12* ''Literature/{{Accelerando}}'' and ''Literature/{{Glasshouse}}'': Two books (and [[WordOfGod a third planned]]) that explore the concept of TheSingularity and its aftermath. Despite similarities in setting, not meant to be set in the same universe.
13* ''Literature/TheEschatonSeries'': A far-future series featuring UN weapons inspector Rachel Mansour and Martin Springfield, set in a universe where a [[DeusEstMachina godlike AI]] called the "Eschaton" has spread humanity across the stars.
14* The ''Literature/HaltingState'' series: TwentyMinutesIntoTheFuture, EverythingIsOnline, including the criminals and police. A beat cop, an accountant, and a computer game programmer are called in to investigate a bank robbery in a ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft''-[[{{Expy}} esque]] online game, which quickly proves to [[GonnaNeedMoreTrope be more than it seems]]. Narrated in [[SecondPersonNarration the Second Person]], in the style of choose-your-own-adventure games.
15** ''Literature/HaltingState''
16** ''Literature/{{Rule 34}}''
17** A third entry, ''The Lambda Functionary'', has been put on indefinite hold (as of early 2020, cancelled) as a result of the rather unpredictable state of near-future Scottish politics in the 2010s and 2020s, including an independence referendum, EU referendum, and viral pandemic.
18* ''Literature/TheLaundryFiles'': Also known as The Bob Howard Series, about a special agent for the "Laundry", which is basically [=MI6=] crossed with Creator/HPLovecraft.
19** ''Literature/TheAtrocityArchive''
20** ''Literature/TheJenniferMorgue''
21* ''Literature/TheNewManagement'' series: Set in the same world as ''The Laundry Files'', but a year or so after the last of those stories. Two siblings with a complicated past and a motley crew of transhumans band together to survive in a [[TheUnmasquedWorld radically changed]] England.
22* ''Literature/TheMerchantPrincesSeries'': A journalist discovers she has the ability to travel to an AlternateUniverse at will, where her long-lost family are powerful traders.
23* ''Literature/SaturnsChildren'' and its sequel ''Literature/NeptunesBrood'': Set in a far-future where Humanity has gone extinct and the dominant intelligent beings are the robots we created in our image. WordOfGod suggests a possible third part of the series, but as the working title was implied to be ''Probing Uranus'' he may not have been entirely serious.
24[[/index]]
25
26!! Other works include:
27* ''Literature/AColderWar'' ([[http://www.infinityplus.co.uk/stories/colderwar.htm link]]): A {{novella}} combining the RedScare with the Franchise/CthulhuMythos with terrifying results.
28* ''Literature/MissileGap'' ([[https://subterraneanpress.com/magazine/spring_2007/fiction_missile_gap_by_charles_stross link]]): A {{novella}} combining the Cold War and the late Space Age with science and a bit of the fantastic. To say too much about the plot would be to give it away.
29----
30!! Tropes in his other works:
31* AirborneAircraftCarrier: The ekranoplan aircraft carrier from "Missile Gap" technically counts. (Ekranoplans are ground-effect-vehicles, and thus fly only at ''very'' low altitudes.)
32* AlienSky: In "Missile Gap", as the disk is an artificial construct outside of any solar system, it lacks the traditional celestial objects of Earth -- and indeed, the altered sky was the first thing to tip people off to the fact that something was wrong. By day, instead of a sun, the sky is lit by an incandescent jet projected from the star in its center, which some people have taken to calling the axle of heaven. By night, no moon is present, but the nearby star Lucifer shines brightly enough to provide considerable illumination and, since the disc lies within the Greater Magellanic Cloud, the aged, reddened swirl of the Milky Way features prominently in the heavens.
33* AntiquatedLinguistics: The story "[[https://subterraneanpress.com/magazine/winter_2008/audio_trunk_and_disorderly_by_charles_stross/ Trunk and Disorderly]]" is set in Modern Times (centuries after the near-collapse of the human race) but is written in the barbaric yet spiffing idiom natural to the early 20th Century master Creator/PGWodehouse; enough to drive a cove near to distraction, as Uncle Philpott once remarked. (Additionally, there exists a Dalek.)
34* BigDumbObject: "Missile Gap" takes place on an artificial disc with a radius two and half times greater than the distance between the Earth and the Sun, large enough to contain scale copies of every habitable world in the Milky Way, which the Earth and its inhabitants were mysteriously transported to. The immensity of this new world, the time needed to explore even a tiny fraction of it, and the looming eventuality of encountering other stranded civilizations or, worse, the aliens who built it, are major themes in the story.
35* CosmicHorrorStory: "Missile Gap" begins with humanity findings itself on a colossal, extragalactic construct after being somehow moved there by an unknowable civilization, engendering a good deal of dread about why this happened and what these entities are trying to achieve with it. The ending answers some of these questions, [[spoiler:in ways that mostly just make humanity's place in creation even more unsettling]].
36%%* CreatorBacklash: Has written a small amount of early ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'' tie-in fiction, but won't write any more.
37%% How is it a backlash? What has he said? Simply stopping work-for-hire is not the same thing.
38* DeadlyGraduation: The UsefulNotes/{{Hugo|Award}}-winning novella "Palimpsest" has a unique variation: the final test for a time agent is to go back in time and murder [[spoiler:''yourself''.]]
39* HereThereBeDragons: In "Missile Gap", a passage describing a survey expedition still sketching out tentative and mostly empty maps mentions someone having scribbled in a dragon coiling in a particularly empty stretch of void.
40* HiveMind: The ending to "Missile Gap" reveals that [[spoiler:hive-minded civilizations are ultimately the more successful ones, outcompeting individualistic species, and that the future while eventually be dominated by a galaxy-spanning collective consciousness descended from such beings]].
41* InsectoidAliens: Some of the alien species present on the disc in "Missile Gap" are insectoid, varying in size and degree of anthropomorphism, and live in hive-based caste systems. The ending states that [[spoiler:these species make up the majority of life there, and that they -- not humanity -- will inherit the future]].
42* MindScrew: Are the characters from "Missile Gap" [[spoiler: from the same snapshot, or separated ones]]? Do they even happen in the same moment, or are separate by centuries? The descriptions make it intentionally vague, so any interpretation works within the context of the story. Add to that [[spoiler: the ants that are present in few various forms, too]], and you start to wonder if they are [[spoiler: alien species or something that evolved from snapshots of Earth where humans went extinct]]. By the final paragraph of the story there are more questions than there were at the beginning.
43* RuinsOfTheModernAge: In "Missile Gap", one of the first signs that something is terribly wrong is when [[spoiler:a Soviet exploration team, while surveying a continent one hundred and forty thousand miles from Earth, find the thousands-years-old ruins of perfect copies of American cities]].
44* SufficientlyAdvancedAlien: The civilization that built the disc in "Missile Gap" was capable of, as several characters put it, peel the Earth like a grape, take its surface and denizens outside the galaxy, and plate them on the surface of a construct that modern physics says cannot physically exist without anybody noticing. Whatever these entities may be, they operate entirely outside of human comprehension, and probably have as much in common with humanity as humanity does with termites.
45* WorldShapes: "Missile Gap" is set on an immense flat disc as wide as a solar system, with a hole in the middle like a music record where a star is held to provide illumination through periodic flares. Whole continents and worlds are scattered on its surface like so many archipelagos, divided by immense oceans dotted with cooling fins as tall as Mount Everest.

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