- CALDER, Richard
- (1956-)UK-born writer, in Thailand from 1990, who began publishing sf with "Toxine" in Interzone: The 4th Anthology (anth 1989) ed John CLUTE, Simon Ounsley and David PRINGLE; his early short fiction, almost always densely post- CYBERPUNK in idiom and setting, was assembled as "The Allure" and published, trans Hisashi Asakura, in Japanese (coll 1991 Japan). His first 2 novels-Dead Girls (dated 1992 but 1993 UK) and Dead Boys (1994 UK)-mix horror and sf in depicting a world, loosely connected to that of "Toxine" and others of his stories, which has been transformed by NANOTECHNOLOGY into an over-heated, inordinately complex dazzlement of an environment. Dead Girls centres on a "nanotech doll" or gynoid who generates an AIDs-like disease in the humans she bloodsucks for their genes, and is herself invasively disrupted by a bio-weapon "dust" which scrambles the fractal programmes that enable her to operate. The novel continues with excursions into the "cyberspace" within her deranged brain, and much else; it is funny, ornately erotic, and frequently inspired. Dead Boys, perhaps less sustainedly, continues the examination of a not-unlikely 21st century.JC
Science Fiction and Fantasy Encyclopedia. Academic. 2011.