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Launched in March 2007, Stephen Baxter's own website includes the latest information about new releases & more.
The Baxterium has been on-line since 1999, and was Stephen's official site until 2007. Recommended, however it doesn't appear to have been updated recently.
Wikipedia's constantly changing page on Stephen Baxter.
Contains a biography of Baxter as well as a list of the books they have published for him. Nice site.
The Yahoo! hosted Stephen Baxter Forum, created in 2001.
The Stephen Baxter Archive is comprised of typescripts, outlines, proofs and related essays of most of his published short stories and novels.
The Infinity Plus website has a Stephen Baxter section which contains several short stories.
Contains interviews, reviews, readings and a copy of the short story 'Moon Six'.
The ISFDB is an extensive effort to catalog works of Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror. It has a full print bibliography, which contains everything ever written and published by Baxter, from magazine articles to novels. Not much to look at, but it's got it where it counts, kid.

The biggest range of books on-line in the UK.
Good place for getting rare editions, signed books or out-of-print novels. (That's where I got my copy of Anti-Ice!)
Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror bookshop in Birmingham, UK.
A combination of traditional bookselling expertise and modern technical know how make The Book Pl@ce unique and the first stop online for bargain hunters and book lovers alike.
A book comparison site that searches a number of online book retailers and more to find the best possible book price for specific titles.
UK Bookshop, Est. 1879.
The science fiction section of the Orion Books website.
Good site which has lots of informations about Science Fiction book & comic news with a definite UK-flavour.
News, Reviews, Resources, and Perspectives of Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror.
In 1958 a group of leading authors, publishers, booksellers and fans decided that Britain needed an organisation to encourage science fiction in every form. So the BSFA was born!
The Earth's greatest SF and fantasy magazine? You decide...
Massive site with reviews, tribute sites, interviews and convention information.
The most popular SF site in Europe (and the 3rd most popular in the world).
Langford's website which links through to his monthly sci-fi newsletter, Ansible.
The Worldcon, or World Science Fiction Convention, is the annual convention of the World Science Fiction Society (WSFS). The Hugo Awards are nominated and voted upon by the members of the Worldcon.
Ideomancer is a quarterly on-line fiction magazine. They hope to interview Stephen Baxter soon for an upcoming issue.
Matrix is the news magazine of the British Science Fiction Association.
Short story and novellette magazine which regularly published Stephen's stories.
Book and Movie reviews
An organisation that promotes the acadmemic and educational applications of science fiction and generally helps to spread the word.
Interactive, online, hard science fiction and space opera, world-building and writing project.
SciFan updates their database almost daily, with the ambition to make it a comprehensive and accurate resource for bibliographies and biographies in Sci-Fi.
The Best SF website promotes and reviews the best in short Science Fiction.
Hard Science Fiction Culture - a hub for fans of 'hard' SF.
Experience interactive science fiction where you are the hero (or heroine!) in a fantasy adventure.

The European Space Agency's site detailing the Cassini-Huygens mission. (Featured in Titan)
International discussion about complexity and complex systems. (Featured in Coalescent)
Wikipedia's page about the peculiar asteroid that's in a horseshoe orbit around the Sun. (Featured in Time)
Why our search for extraterrestial intelligence has failed. (Related to the Manifold trilogy)
Detailed Essay about the anatomy and nature of cephalopods. (featured in Time)
Eric Symes Abbott Memorial Lecture 2001. Discusses the 'Carter catastrophe'. (Featured in Time)
space.com's report on solar "tadpoles" - dark shadows that seem to wiggle down toward the surface of the sun during flares. Related to Ring.
Are You Living In a Computer Simulation? On this website you can follow the debate that followed the paper presenting the Simulation argument. The original paper is here, as are popular synopses. (Related to Phase Space,and the Fermi Paradox)
   

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