Tuf Series

Tuf Voyaging
Baen HC 1986, and PB, 1987
US
Tuf Voyaging
Gollancz HC 1987
UK
Tuf Voyaging
Gollancz PB, 1988
UK
Tuf Voyaging
Meisha Merlin HC and PB, 2003
US


 Short Fiction
Guardians
"Guardians"
Analog, October 1981
Manna from Heaven
"Manna from Heaven"
Analog, Mid-December 1985
The Plague Star
"The Plague Star"
Analog, January 1985


 Foreign Language Editions
Bulgarian      Czech      French      Israeli
Tuf Voyaging, et al.
Bard PB 1996
Tuf Voyaging
Albatross 2000
Tuf Voyaging
Mnemos PB 2006
Tuf Voyaging
Opus Press 2005
Japanese      Polish      Romanian      Russian
Tuf Voyaging Tuf Voyaging
Hayakawa PB 2005 (Japan)
Tuf Voyaging
Zysk PB 1997
Tuf Voyaging
Teora PB 1997
Tuf Voyaging, et al.
Omnibus 1975
Spanish
Tuf Voyaging, et al.
Nova PB 1988
Tuf Voyaging, et al.
Byblos PB 2006
Tuf Voyaging, et al.
Zeta PB 2009

So far as I'm concerned, Janet Aulisio will always be the definitive Haviland Tuf artist. Aulisio did the majority of the interior illustrations (though not all of them) for Tuf's appearances in Analog over the years, and captured the character perfectly. Primarily known for her black and white work, she did only one color Tuf, the Analog cover for "Manna From Heaven." That one is also very nice, and the original hangs on my wall, along with a number of Aulisio's delightful interiors.

I am also very fond of the cover that Davis Willson painted for the Baen hardcover of Tuf Voyaging, which was subsequently used for the PB and many other editions around the world. Willson featured more cats than Aulisio usually did, and one can never have too many cats on a cover.

To my eye, Aulisio's Tuf looks a bit like Alfred Hitchcock, while Willson's bears an uncanny resemblence to Robert A. Heinlein.


Copyright © George R. R. Martin. All rights reserved.