Philip José Farmer: Difference between revisions

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=== Works by Philip José Farmer with their own trope pages include: ===
{{examples|Works by Philip José Farmer with their own trope pages include:}}

* ''[[The Lovers]]''
* ''[[The Lovers]]''
* [[Dangerous Visions|"Riders of the Purple Wage"]]
* [[Dangerous Visions|"Riders of the Purple Wage"]]
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* ''[[World of Tiers]]''
* ''[[World of Tiers]]''


{{creatortropes}}
=== Tropes found in the works of Philip José Farmer ===
* [[After the End]]: See [[Apocalypse How]].
* [[After the End]]: See [[Apocalypse How]].
* [[Apocalypse How]]: ''Dark Is The Sun'' takes place on Earth billions of years in the future. At one point, humankind's civilization was so advanced that they found a way to move the Earth to avoid being burned away by the Sun when it eventually expanded into a red giant star. When the book starts, civilization has reverted to a primitive level, and eventually the group of protagonists discover that the universe itself is coming to an end via the Big Crunch. Their new goal is to find a way to enter another universe to avoid being crushed into a singularity along with everything else in their universe.
* [[Apocalypse How]]: ''Dark Is The Sun'' takes place on Earth billions of years in the future. At one point, humankind's civilization was so advanced that they found a way to move the Earth to avoid being burned away by the Sun when it eventually expanded into a red giant star. When the book starts, civilization has reverted to a primitive level, and eventually the group of protagonists discover that the universe itself is coming to an end via the Big Crunch. Their new goal is to find a way to enter another universe to avoid being crushed into a singularity along with everything else in their universe.