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Context Creator / GregoryBenford

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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/gregory_benford.jpg]]
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3Gregory Benford (born January 30, 1941) is an American astrophysicist who also happens to be a bestselling award-winning science fiction author.
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6His story "Literature/AndTheSeaLikeMirrors" was included in Creator/HarlanEllison's anthology ''Literature/AgainDangerousVisions''.
7----
8!!Benford's novels include:
9[[index]]
10* ''{{Literature/Timescape}}''
11* ''Literature/AgainstInfinity''
12* ''Literature/BeyondInfinity'' (no relation)
13* ''Literature/TheStarsInShroud'' (also published as ''Deeper Than the Darkness'')
14* The ''Literature/GalacticCenter'' saga, consisting of:
15** ''Literature/InTheOceanOfNight''
16** ''Literature/AcrossTheSeaOfSuns''
17** ''Literature/GreatSkyRiver''
18** ''Literature/TidesOfLight''
19** ''Literature/FuriousGulf''
20** ''Literature/SailingBrightEternity'' [[/index]]%%Don't index Man-Kzin; only the books he wrote
21* Two novels in the ''Literature/ManKzinWars'' series with Creator/LarryNiven [[index]] %%Don't index Man-Kzin; only the books he wrote
22* ''Literature/IfTheStarsAreGods'', with Creator/GordonEklund
23* ''Literature/FoundationsFear'', an installment in the late Creator/IsaacAsimov's ''Literature/FoundationSeries''.
24* ''Literature/BeyondTheFallOfNight'', a sequel to the late Creator/ArthurCClarke's ''Literature/AgainstTheFallOfNight''.
25[[/index]]
26----
27!! Tropes in his works:
28* BigfootSasquatchAndYeti: Bigfoot played a prominent, though not central, role in ''In the Ocean of Night''.
29* CentrifugalGravity: The protagonists of ''Beyond Infinity'' spend a brief time trapped in a Tunnelworld after an encounter with some 4-dimensional aliens. It was a closed loop, so traveling in any direction for a long enough time would return you to your point of origin.
30* ExtremeOmnivore: In ''Eater'', the Eater of All Things is ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin; since it's a sapient black hole, this is natural enough.
31* GrandfatherParadox: ''Timescape'' describes a unique, quantum-mechanical approach to Grandfather Paradoxes. If a time-travelling signal were to prevent its own transmission, the signal and everything involved in triggering it would be in an ''indeterminate'' state where it neither does, nor doesn't, occur -- like Schrödinger's Cat before the box is opened.
32* HumanPopsicle:
33** The short story "Doing Lennon" features a man who has himself cryogenically frozen in order to impersonate John Lennon in the future.
34** The slower-than-light starship in ''Across the Sea of Suns'' features "slow slots" in which a person can hibernate for years at a time.
35* IAmOneOfThoseToo: In "Doing Lennon", a man from the twentieth century hatches a plan to live out his dreams of stardom by having himself frozen and upon being revived in the future, claiming to be Music/JohnLennon. The plan hits a snag when he meets another cryogenically-frozen person claiming to be Music/PaulMcCartney.
36* LivingGasbag: ''The Sunborn'' has strange alien gasbags discovered on Pluto, which show signs of intelligence.
37* MechanicalEvolution: The ''Galactic Center'' novels have "mechs" which evolved from self-replicating Von Neumann machines, after they were abandoned when their biological creators destroyed themselves.
38* MechanicalLifeforms: The ''Galactic Center'' novels include "mechs" which are implied to have evolved from self replicating von neumann machines. Left to their own devices after their biological creators destroyed themselves, errors and changes have occured in their templates over the millenia until their original functions were replaced by sentient self-direction.
39* OrWasItADream: Theshort story "Sleepstory" features a space pilot fighting a war on Ganymede who gets a little compressed downtime with a dream-guiding narrative system, telling a story about an engineer in Los Angeles trying to fix breaches in the dams that keep the GlobalWarming-afflicted seas from flooding the city ...or possibly the other way round.
40* {{Ramscoop}}:
41** Gets a brief mention in ''The Stars in Shroud'', although FTL jump-drive technology is the main means of interstellar travel in that universe.
42** In ''Across the Sea of Suns'', an enourmous one takes a 1200-person crew to [[UsefulNotes/LocalStars Lalande 21185]] (which the author identifies by its BD catalog number), and then to Ross 128.
43* RingWorldPlanet: The protagonists of ''Beyond Infinity'' spend a brief time trapped in a Tunnelworld after an encounter with some 4-dimensional aliens. It was a closed loop, so traveling in any direction for a long enough time would return you to your point of origin.
44* StarfishAliens:
45** In ''The Sunborn'' humanity discovers strange alien gas-bags on Pluto when some of them start feeding off of the heat given off by their probe. Said alien gas-bags have sapient intelligence. And then a bunch of robotic drones descends on Pluto apparently ''eating'' said aliens. These robotic drones turn out to be the equivalent of microscopic instruments used by what is apparently an intelligent race of electromagnetic waves.
46** ''Against Infinity'' has an alien entity called the Aleph, which is even weirder.
47* StarKilling: In the ''Galactic Center'' series, it is implied that the mechs are the cause behind a number of recent novas.

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