Donnerjack is a science fiction novel begun by American author Roger Zelazny and completed after his death by his companion Jane Lindskold. It was published in 1997. The original title of the book was "Donnerjack, of Virtú". Initially, Zelazny intended for it to be the first of an ambitious trilogy, with the two sequels tentatively named "The Gods of Virtú" and "Virtú, Virtú". Zelazny completed a few hundred pages of the first novel and left detailed notes for its remainder, which Lindskold completed, attempting to write in his style. Its description of the virtual world of Virtu has been considered as prefiguring the modern internet.
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdf:type
| |
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
| |
sameAs
| |
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
| |
foaf:name
| |
rdfs:comment
| - Donnerjack is a science fiction novel begun by American author Roger Zelazny and completed after his death by his companion Jane Lindskold. It was published in 1997. The original title of the book was "Donnerjack, of Virtú". Initially, Zelazny intended for it to be the first of an ambitious trilogy, with the two sequels tentatively named "The Gods of Virtú" and "Virtú, Virtú". Zelazny completed a few hundred pages of the first novel and left detailed notes for its remainder, which Lindskold completed, attempting to write in his style. Its description of the virtual world of Virtu has been considered as prefiguring the modern internet.
|
rdfs:label
| |
has abstract
| - Donnerjack is a science fiction novel begun by American author Roger Zelazny and completed after his death by his companion Jane Lindskold. It was published in 1997. The original title of the book was "Donnerjack, of Virtú". Initially, Zelazny intended for it to be the first of an ambitious trilogy, with the two sequels tentatively named "The Gods of Virtú" and "Virtú, Virtú". Zelazny completed a few hundred pages of the first novel and left detailed notes for its remainder, which Lindskold completed, attempting to write in his style. Its description of the virtual world of Virtu has been considered as prefiguring the modern internet.
|
author
| |
Dewey Decimal Classification
| |
ISBN
| |
LCC
| |
literary genre
| |
media type
| |
number of pages
| |
OCLC
| |
publisher
| |
Link to the Wikipage edit URL
| |
extraction datetime
| |
Link to the Wikipage history URL
| |
Wikipage page ID
| |
page length (characters) of wiki page
| |
Wikipage modification datetime
| |
Wiki page out degree
| |
Wikipage revision ID
| |
Link to the Wikipage revision URL
| |
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
| |
dct:subject
| |
dc:publisher
| |
is foaf:primaryTopic
of | |