This Wikipedia biography of science fiction author Dan Simmons documents his complete literary career, educational background, published works, and cultural achievements. The article primarily engages with Article 26 (education and cultural participation) and Article 27 (artistic and cultural life) through comprehensive documentation of his educational credentials and 40+ years of recognized literary output. The biographical format and Wikipedia's free-access structure implicitly presuppose and affirm Article 19 (freedom of expression), Article 23 (work rights and fair recognition), and educational access, though no explicit human rights discussion occurs.
Although it's quite a flawed novel compared to brilliant space opera like Hyperion, I have a bit of a soft spot for Carrion Comfort. I think it'd make a great movie!
The Hyperion Cantos is a masterpiece which every scifi fan ought to have read, but I would like to recommend a lesser known title of Simmons for readers who have read at least some works of Charles Dickens (self-explanatory) and Wilkie Collins (such as The Woman in White or The Moonstone).
Simmons wrote Drood (2009), which takes these two classical authors and places them in a mystery novel. What struck me as particularly masterful is that Simmons managed to write his prose in such a way that as a reader you soon forget that this book was not written in the 1800s — his tone and style match that of Dickens and Collins so convincingly.
The TechnoCore using human minds as unwitting processing nodes — to solve a problem humans couldn't even be told about — reads differently every few years. 2026 is a particularly strange time to reread it.
Enjoyed the first Hyperion, but Fall of Hyperion was a bit of a slog for me. If Fall of Hyperion were compressed into the conclusion of Hyperion and other stories left as novellas (in the way James S.A. Corey has done), I think I would have enjoyed the story more.
I read the Hyperion books during a particularly intense period of my life and found them quite powerful. I didn’t know anything about Simmons at the time, but I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised that like Tolkein these stories started with an oral format for children.
Wow. I picked up a copy of Hyperion this morning while taking a random stroll through town - something I rarely do during a work day anymore. I popped into a book shop on a complete whim, and picked it up as it had been on my list for a while. The coincidence feels deeply uncanny.
Simmons opened new frontiers of thought for me with his Hyperion Cantos. A house with each room on a different planet. A heartbreaking tale of a daughter aging in reverse. A romance playing out over space and time. A grand piano on the pop-out balcony of a starship. The cruciform parasite. The Shrike.
Branches of humanity torn between decadent stagnation and radical evolution. The artificial intelligence civilization with its own agenda. The All Thing (Internet) as the third branch of government.
Back in the 90s and the early aughts Simmons was on my “automatically buy everything he writes” list. But it seemed like he had stopped writing. But then I happened to browse Barnes and Noble beyond the SF&F and horror aisles and discovered he had been writing crime novels. And they were good.
I think if he had ever decided to write romance novels I would have probably enjoyed those as well.
His early stuff contains some real masterworks. Hyperion is still to this day, going to show up at the top of my scifi recommended reading list, most of his horror novels were also great in their own ways.
PS: I thought Fall of Hyperion should have been the end, it was just too final. There was plenty of space for some prequels but while the sequels contained some interesting ideas, they just never got to the level I felt justified reversing the finality of Fall. And Olympus/etc was pretty forgettable, but I don't regret the time I spent reading pretty much everything he wrote, sometimes more than once. So again, RIP.
I have never read an ending that was as sad, happy, clever and beautiful as the ending to Rise of Endymion. To this day it's one of the very few books that made me shed a tear.
Now, over decade later, I am in the middle of re-reading every book in the Cantos series back to back (this time in their original language), and still loving them.
Rest in peace Mr Simmons. You had the words of a poet and the mind of a dreamer.
Simmons wrote one of my favourite short stories of all time Vanni Fucci is Alive and Well and living in Hell.
While I'm definitely not willing to put myself through any of his books after 9/11, I haven't stopped recommending Vanni Fucci as an introduction to Dan Simmons.
I've had this internet handle since the last century. Most people in here are talking about Hyperion but Simmons was a fantastic cross-genre author. My favorites were his historical fiction that contained a fantastical bent:
Drood: Has Wilkie Collins as an unreliable narrator, depicting the last five or so years of Charles Dickens' life.
Crook Factory: An FBI agent is sent to Cuba to keep an eye on Ernest Hemingway, hijinks ensue.
The Fifth Heart: Henry James and Sherlock Holmes team up to solve a mystery.
The Terror: Tells the story of what happened to the HMS Terror that attempted to make the northwest passage. The Arctic is a character in itself in this amazing story. I thought the TV mini-series was fine.
Abominable and Black Hills: I haven't read these yet but look forward to doing so.
Honestly, I think Dan Simmons is my favorite author. I know his politics became unpalatable but I could never find it in myself to care. My heart sank when I saw this post.
I texted a RIP message to a friend-chat with the comment, "easily one of the top five space opera novels of all time"
One of the friends asked Claude-AI "what are the top five space opera novels of all time," and it ranked Hyperion as #2, only behind Dune.
I personally think LLM "knowledge" is… kind of stupid… but I have to admit it speaks to Simmons legacy that even the word swamp recognizes Hyperion as an all-time classic.
(it ranked Stars Are Legion by K. Hurley as #5, which I unconditionally agree with, but am also kind of shocked, I've never heard of this book so much as referenced in any kind of article or conversation. But yeah, read it. Star Wars meets Alien — the Death Star is the alien)
The tale of the priest in Hyperion Cantos is the scariest thing I have ever read. Just this one story is a masterpiece. But the books contain dozens and dozens of stories, worlds, characters like that. The scope of the universe Simmons had built is immense. Truly a great writer.
I would also rate this above hyperion, like hyperion book 1 it crossed into the horror genre quite well, the rest of the hyperion books were a little bit too preachy but a good series never the less. RIP Dan.
It obviously owes a lot to Stephen King’s IT. But it stands on its own merits…and I give it extra credit because it was set in my home town. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Summer_of_Night)
Very much agreed. I haven't read all of Dan's work to comment how it ranks among his output, but Carrion Comfort is a book that I still think back on years after I read it.
I started reading it for the first time this week. It’s just a statistical anomaly… but humans are wired to notice and feel coincidence; it connects us to space and time in a way that must have helped make religion more believable.
In contrast, getting through Hyperion was hard for me (some of the character stories I LOVED and some felt like a slog), but I really loved Fall of Hyperion.
Great writer. For people who want to get a taste of Simmons without committing to an entire book, I would recommend this (very) short story: The River Styx Runs Upstream[1].
My "intense time of life" story re: Hyperion. I was finishing "The Rise of Endymion" and was stricken with a kidney stone. It was absolutely eerie, and has cemented my memory of that book in a strange way.
I did find the transition from Hyperion to Fall a little jarring. It has a completely different narrative structure for a start, but more importantly the scope goes from a single group of people doing a pilgrimage to a huge interstellar conspiracy. I think it works best if you read each book slightly separately rather than as one huge work.
THANK YOU!!! The Terror—the book—absolutely blew me away. I still am in awe of that book. Just everything about it.
And yeah the adaptation was so, so weak. But it faced the same problem many horror movies do, which is that if you're forced to show the Thing™ it loses all its power.
I tried reading it but I couldn't get into it. Maybe it the heavy religious themes or just the science fiction being so far into the future? I really should give it a shot again
Same here. It's a fading memory, but the decade following 9/11 really did feature a lot of big brains turning THE COMING CALIPHATE into an existential threat to humanity. Which seems quaint, now.
Well there was no way the show would be quite as good as the book. But I was still pleasantly surprised, it was definitely better than the average TV adaptation. The actors were very good.
Currently finishing up The Terror. I've never read a horror story until I got this. There are times I struggle to put it down, incredible book. Simmons painted quite a colorful picture of what it's like to die from scurvy so now I bring an emergency orange wherever I go.
I think it's a poisonous and reductive mindset to have. You can separate art from the character of the artist. If you cared about everything everyone has ever said or done in various stages of their lives, you wouldn't have much left to enjoy or appreciate.
Despite being a huge fan of Simmons I had originally passed on this one because I didn't care for the Dickens novels I had read in school. At a family gathering I was surprised to learn that my Grandma was a big Simmons fan. She convinced me to give Drood a shot and sure enough I really enjoyed it! So I'd say it's worth checking out even if you're not a big Dickens reader.
Oh, boy. The Shrike. That thing still haunts me in a way that no other monster or alien across all of Sci-fi or fantasy really does. It's something about the inscrutability of it, especially in the first novel (still my favorite) where its purpose and backstory haven't been revealed. Sure, it's scary, but I think the mystery of its motives - and its ability to unpredictably act apparently benevolently sometimes - is where the real terror lies.
I read Hyperion and I found it... alright, just not my thing. Maybe it is indeed a masterpiece but "that every fan of sci-fi ought to have read" oversells it. I honestly can't conscion the time to read the rest of the Cantos versus other things on my reading list. Quality does not alone compel consumption! :)
Article comprehensively documents Simmons' participation in literary and artistic life: genre discussions, character studies, thematic analysis of works, international awards, and media adaptations affirming his central role in cultural production.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Article dedicates extensive sections to literary genres (horror, science fiction, fantasy), individual works, and their literary and thematic influences (Decameron, Canterbury Tales, Inferno, etc.).
Works documented as adapted into television series and films, with multiple international literary awards from prestigious bodies (Hugo, World Fantasy, Bram Stoker, British Fantasy Society).
Article provides detailed bibliography (60+ works) showing sustained, recognized participation in cultural and artistic production.
Inferences
The comprehensive documentation of artistic work reflects Simmons' full and unrestricted participation in the cultural and artistic life of his community and globally.
International recognition through major awards and media adaptations demonstrates broad public participation in and engagement with Simmons' cultural contributions.
Article extensively documents Simmons' educational credentials (B.A. English, M.Ed.) and comprehensive cultural output (30+ novels, collections, adaptations), directly evidencing Article 26 rights to education and cultural participation.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Simmons earned B.A. in English from Wabash College (1970) and Master's in Education from Washington University (1971).
Article documents extensive literary output: 30+ novels, numerous short stories, poetry collections, and literary adaptations spanning 42 years of cultural production.
Wikipedia provides free, global access to this educational and cultural information without barriers, enabling worldwide participation in understanding Simmons' contributions.
Inferences
Educational credentials and prolific literary output demonstrate Simmons' full access to quality education and unrestricted opportunities for cultural participation.
Wikipedia's existence as a freely accessible encyclopedia explicitly exemplifies institutional support for Article 26 rights globally.
Article documents Simmons' career progression (education → elementary teaching → full-time writing) and lists numerous literary awards, suggesting access to employment and fair recognition, without explicit discussion of work rights.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
Simmons earned educational credentials (B.A. 1970, M.Ed. 1971) and worked in elementary education until 1989.
The article lists 40+ literary awards and nominations across international prestigious bodies (Hugo, Nebula, Bram Stoker, World Fantasy Award), indicating professional recognition and compensation.
Career trajectory documents access to employment as both educator and full-time author.
Inferences
The documented career progression presupposes access to fair employment conditions and opportunity for professional advancement.
Literary awards and international recognition imply fair compensation for creative labor and professional respect.
Article documents Simmons as a published author across multiple genres; implicitly presupposes freedom to write and publish diverse content without explicit discussion of expression rights.
FW Ratio: 60%
Observable Facts
The article lists multiple published works spanning 1985–2025 across science fiction, horror, and fantasy genres.
Works include adaptations into television series and films, indicating public circulation and reception of the author's expression.
Wikipedia provides this biography without editorial restrictions or paywall barriers, enabling free access to documentation of the author's literary contributions.
Inferences
The comprehensive documentation of Simmons' publishing history presupposes his freedom to write and publish diverse works.
Wikipedia's free, editable structure inherently supports Article 19 protections by enabling public documentation and discussion of writers and their contributions.
Wikipedia as an educational platform institutionally supports universal access to knowledge about education and cultural life; the article exemplifies this mission by documenting one author's full participation in cultural production.
Wikipedia's structure supports and celebrates cultural knowledge-sharing; the article enables global participation in and appreciation of artistic contributions.
Wikipedia's structure as a free, editable, publicly accessible encyclopedia presupposes and affirms freedom of expression through documentation of a prolific writer's career.
build 1ad9551+j7zs · deployed 2026-03-02 09:09 UTC · evaluated 2026-03-02 10:41:39 UTC
Support HN HRCB
Each evaluation uses real API credits. HN HRCB runs on donations — no ads, no paywalls.
If you find it useful, please consider helping keep it running.