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The Girl Who Heard Dragons book cover
The Girl Who Heard Dragons
1985
First Published
3.92
Average Rating
352
Number of Pages

Part of Series

Anne McCaffrey's tales of the Dragonriders of Pern have been international bestsellers, as well as Hugo and Nebula Award-winners. Here McCaffrey fans will delight in a massive compilation of her fiction never before collected in one volume, including an all-new short novel of Pern. Illustrated. 1 The Girl Who Heard Dragons 2 Velvet Fields 3 Euterpe on a Fling 4 Duty Calls 5 A Sleeping Humpty Dumpty Beauty 6 The Mandalay Cure 7 A Flock of Geese 8 The Greatest Love 9 A Quiet One 10 If Madam Likes You... 11 Zulei, Grace, Nimshi, and the Damnyankees 12 Cinderella Switch 13 Habit Is an Old Horse 14 Lady-in-Waiting 15 The Bones Do Lie

Avg Rating
3.92
Number of Ratings
11,437
5 STARS
33%
4 STARS
33%
3 STARS
29%
2 STARS
5%
1 STARS
1%
goodreads

Author

Anne McCaffrey
Anne McCaffrey
Author · 119 books

Anne McCaffrey was born on April 1st, 1926, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Her parents were George Herbert McCaffrey, BA, MA PhD (Harvard), Colonel USA Army (retired), and Anne Dorothy McElroy McCaffrey, estate agent. She had two brothers: Hugh McCaffrey (deceased 1988), Major US Army, and Kevin Richard McCaffrey, still living. Anne was educated at Stuart Hall in Staunton Virginia, Montclair High School in Montclair, New Jersey, and graduated cum laude from Radcliffe College, majoring in Slavonic Languages and Literatures. Her working career included Liberty Music Shops and Helena Rubinstein (1947-1952). She married in 1950 and had three children: Alec Anthony, b. 1952, Todd, b.1956, and Georgeanne, b.1959. Anne McCaffrey’s first story was published by Sam Moskowitz in Science Fiction + Magazine and her first novel was published by Ballantine Books in 1967. By the time the three children of her marriage were comfortably in school most of the day, she had already achieved enough success with short stories to devote full time to writing. Her first novel, Restoree, was written as a protest against the absurd and unrealistic portrayals of women in s-f novels in the 50s and early 60s. It is, however, in the handling of broader themes and the worlds of her imagination, particularly the two series The Ship Who Sang and the fourteen novels about the Dragonriders of Pern that Ms. McCaffrey’s talents as a story-teller are best displayed. She died at the age of 85, after suffering a massive stroke on 21 November 2011. Obituaries: Locus, GalleyCat.

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