Greg Egan Audio Book Collection – Greg Egan Free Audiobook
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Format: MP3
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Unabridged
Greg Egan Audio Book Collection
13 novels and 38 short stories
I thought this might be a good way to welcome the new year.
I had a request for “The Best of..” but decided to re-do the collection instead.
I’m surprised how little has come out since my last iteration 7 years ago.
Enjoy
Hellblazer1138
—Novels—
1992 – Quarantine
—(Read by Adam Epstein) 64k [09:27:58] {265mb}
1994 – Permutation City
—(Read by Adam Epstein) 64k [12:58:25] {362mb}
1995 – Distress
—(Read by Adam Epstein) 64k [14:16:43] {397mb}
1997 – Diaspora
—(Read by Adam Epstein) 64k [11:06:00] {308mb}
—(Read by John Polk) 64k [12:10:35] {341mb}
1999 – Teranesia
—(Read by Vince Canlas) 64k [09:12:17] {258mb}
2002 – Schild’s Ladder
—(Read by Paul Boehmer) 64k [11:01:46] {306mb}
2008 – Incandescence
—(Read by Paul Boehmer) 64k [11:07:49] {315mb}
—(Read by John Polk) 64k [11:52:44] {332mb}
2010 – Zendegi
—(Read by Parisa Johnston) 64k [12:51:54] {362mb}
—(Read by Stan Pretty) 96k [13:21:03] {551mb}
2011 – The Clockwork Rocket
—(Read by Adam Epstein) 64k [14:36:52] {406mb}
2012 – The Eternal Flame
—(Read by Adam Epstein) 64k [14:29:41] {411mb}
2013 – The Arrows of Time
—(Read by Adam Epstein) 64k [13:58:58] {394mb}
2017 – Dichronauts
—(Read by Paul Boehmer) 64k [10:49:31] {301mb}
2019 – Perihelion Summer
—(Read by Andy Pyle) 64k [05:08:29] {144mb}
—Short Stories—
2019 – The Best of Greg Egan
—(Read by Eva Wilhelm) 64k [26:25:49] {731mb}
01) Learning to Be Me
02) Axiomatic
03) Appropriate Love
04) Into Darkness
05) Unstable Orbits in the Space of Lies
06) Closer
07) Chaff
08) Luminous
09) Silver Fire
10) Reasons to Be Cheerful
11) Oceanic
12) Oracle
13) Singleton
14) Dark Integers
15) Crystal Nights
16) Zero for Conduct
17) Bit Players
18) Uncanny Valley
19) 3-adica
20) Instantiation
21) Afterword
—–
1991 – Blood Sisters
—(Read by Amy Bruce) 64k [01:11:48] {33.4mb}
1995 – Wang’s Carpets
—(Read by John Cartwright) 56k [01:44:44] {42.1mb}
——[from: The Mammoth Book of Extreme Science Fiction]
1997 – Reasons to Be Cheerful
—(Read by Richard Hauenstein) 64k [01:28:16] {40.5mb}
——[from: The Year’s Best Science Fiction: 15th Annual Collection]
1997 – Yeyuka
—(Read by Richard Hauenstein) 64k [00:42:47] {19.7mb}
——[from: The Year’s Best Science Fiction: 15th Annual Collection]
1998 – Oceanic
—(Read by Richard Hauenstein) 64k [02:06:15] {58mb}
——[from: The Year’s Best Science Fiction: 16th Annual Collection]
—(Read by Jon Huffman) 64k [02:34:22] {70.8mb}
——[from: The Best of the Best Volume 2: 20 Years of the Best Short Science Fiction Novels]
1999 – Border Guards
—(Read by Richard Hauenstein) 64k [01:03:42] {29.5mb}
——[from: The Year’s Best Science Fiction: 17th Annual Collection]
2000 – Oracle
—(Read by Roy Avers) 64k [01:56:47] {53.6mb}
——[from: The Year’s Best Science Fiction: 18th Annual Collection]
2002 – Singleton
—(Read by Richard Hauenstein) 64k [02:16:54] {62.9mb}
——[from: The Year’s Best Science Fiction: 20th Annual Collection]
2005 – Riding the Crocodile
—(Read by John Polk) 64k [02:13:08] {61.1mb}
——[from: The Year’s Best Science Fiction: 24th Annual Collection]
—(Read by Mark Ashby) 64k [01:47:11] {98.3mb}
——[from: Galactic Empires]
2007 – Glory
—(Read by Cat Gould) 128k [01:16:29] {70.3mb}
——[from: The New Space Opera]
—(Read by Vivienne Leheny) 64k [01:11:32] {33mb}
——[from: The Very Best of the Best: 35 Years of The Year’s Best SF]
—(Read by John Polk) 64k [01:14:12] {34.2mb}
——[from: The New Space Opera]
—(Read by John Polk) 64k [01:14:39] {34.3mb}
——[from: The Year’s Best Science Fiction: 25th Annual Collection]
—(Read by ??) 64k [01:08:24] {31.5mb}
——[from: The Final Frontier: Stories of Exploring Space, Colonizing the Universe, and First Contact]
2007 – Steve Fever
—(Read by John Polk) 64k [00:44:27] {20.5mb}
——[from: The Year’s Best Science Fiction: 25th Annual Collection]
2008 – Crystal Nights
—(Read by Mary Kane) 64k [01:03:04] {29mb}
——[from: The Best Science Fiction & Fantasy of the Year: Volume 3]
—(Read by John Polk) 64k [01:15:02] {34.6mb}
——[from: The Year’s Best Science Fiction: 26th Annual Collection]
2008 – Lost Continent
—(Read by Kristin Allison) 64k [01:07:00] {30.9mb}
——[from: The Time Traveler’s Almanac]
—(Read by Andrew Wincott) 48k [01:12:50] {25.4mb}
——[from: The Time Traveler’s Almanac v3: Mazes & Traps]
—(Read by Jim Zeiger) 64k [01:18:02] {35.9mb}
——[from: The Starry Rift: Tales of New Tomorrows]
2013 – Zero for Conduct
—(Read by Nancy Linari) 64k [01:15:16] {34.6mb}
——[from: The Year’s Top Ten Tales of Science Fiction: Volume 6]
—(Read by John Polk) 64k [01:14:09] {34.1mb}
——[from: The Year’s Best Science Fiction: 31st Annual Collection]
2014 – Break My Fall
—(Read by ??) 64k [00:45:10] {20.9mb}
——[from: Reach for Infinity]
2014 – Seventh Sight
—(Read by Jack Fox) 64k [00:42:37] {19.7mb}
——[from: Upgraded]
2014 – Shadow Flock
—(Read by Gregory Maupin) 64k [00:59:23] {27.4mb}
——[from: The Year’s Best Science Fiction: 32nd Annual Collection]
2015 – The Four Thousand, The Eight Hundred
—(Read by Doug Tisdale Jr.) 64k [01:59:50] {55.1mb}
——[from: Asimov’s Science Fiction, December 2015]
2017 – The Discrete Charm of the Turing Machine
—(Read by ??) 64k [01:06:11] {30.5mb}
——[from: The Best Science Fiction & Fantasy of the Year: Volume 12]
—(Read by Doug Tisdale Jr.) 64k [01:10:14] {32.4mb}
——[from: Asimov’s Science Fiction, November-December 2017]
2017 – Uncanny Valley
—(Read by Emily Ellet) 64k [01:24:01] {38.7mb}
——[from: The Year’s Best Science Fiction: 35th Annual Collection]
2018 – 3-adica
—(Read by Lindsey Pierce) 64k [02:12:42] {60.9mb}
——[from: Asimov’s Science Fiction, September-October 2018]
2019 – Instantiation
—(Read by Lindsey Pierce) 64k [02:11:06] {60.2mb}
——[from: Asimov’s Science Fiction, March-April 2019]
2019 – The Slipway
—(Read by Doug Tisdale Jr.) 64k [01:12:36] {33.4mb}
——[from: Analog Science Fiction and Fact, July-August 2019]
2019 – This is Not the Way Home
—(Read by Jonathan Taylor) 64k [00:47:36] {22mb}
——[from: Mission Critical]
2020 – You and Whose Army?
—(Read by Kate Baker) 192k [01:23:02] {114mb}
——[from: Clarkesworld Magazine #169]
2021 – Light Up the Clouds
—(Read by Doug Tisdale Jr.) 64k [02:03:34] {56.7mb}
——[from: Asimov’s Science Fiction, March-April 2021]
2021 – Sleep and the Soul
—(Read by Shawn Hertel) 64k [01:59:31] {54.9mb}
——[from: Asimov’s Science Fiction, September-October 2021]
———-
From Wikipedia:
Greg Egan (born 20 August 1961) is an Australian science fiction writer and amateur mathematician, best known for his works of hard science fiction. Egan has won multiple awards including the John W. Campbell Memorial Award, the Hugo Award, and the Locus Award.
–Life and work–
Egan holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Mathematics from the University of Western Australia.
He published his first work in 1983. He specializes in hard science fiction stories with mathematical and quantum ontology themes, including the nature of consciousness. Other themes include genetics, simulated reality, posthumanism, mind uploading, sexuality, artificial intelligence, and the superiority of rational naturalism to religion. He often deals with complex technical material, like new physics and epistemology. He is a Hugo Award winner (with eight other works shortlisted for the Hugos) and has also won the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Science Fiction Novel. His early stories feature strong elements of supernatural horror.
Egan’s short stories have been published in a variety of genre magazines, including regular appearances in Interzone and Asimov’s Science Fiction.
–Mathematics–
In 2018, Egan described a construction of superpermutations, thus giving an upper bound to their length. On 27 February 2019, using ideas developed by Robin Houston and others, Egan produced a superpermutation of n = 7 symbols of length 5906, breaking previous records.
–Personal life–
As of 2015, Egan lives in Perth. Egan is a vegetarian and an atheist.
Egan does not attend science fiction conventions, does not sign books, and has stated that he appears in no photographs on the web, though both SF fan sites and Google Search have at times mistakenly represented photos of other people with the same name as those of the writer.