Spaceship Girl: Difference between revisions

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* Dora, Lazarus Long's starship in Robert Heinlein's ''Time Enough For Love''. Dora appears again in later works, especially ''[[The Number of the Beast]]''.
* Another Heinlein example: Gay Deceiver in ''Number of the Beast'' and later works.
* [[Anne McCaffrey]]'s ''[[The Ship Who...]] Sang'', and later related books.
** ''The Ship Who Searched'' by [[Mercedes Lackey]] {{spoiler|featured a brainship who financed the creation of a remote-operated android accessory so she could be her human partner's... [[Robosexual|partner]]}}.
** Another book from that series has a brainship who had gone through a terrible traumatic event; in [[There Are No Therapists|therapy]] a counselor had her channel her emotions and frustrations into art, and eventually had her create a self portrait. He expected her to paint a projection of herself as a human, if she hadn't had the genetic defects that landed her in a brainship, but she painted her shipself with some anthropomorphic elements.
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* Only tangentially related, but too funny not to mention: Captain Star of ''Captain Star'' insists that his ship the ''Boiling Hell'' is a he.
* A.L.E.X., the ''Xcalibur's'' AI hologram from [[The Xtacles]], who is constantly fending off advances from her dim-witted crew.
* Aya from [[Green Lantern: theThe Animated Series]] was originally just the artificial intelligence of the Lantern's [[Cool Starship]] until she created a body for herself.
 
 
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{{reflist}}
[[Category:Spaceship Girl]]
[[Category:All the Tropes Superhero Team]]
[[Category:Always Female]]
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[[Category:Travel Cool]]
[[Category:Vehicle Tropes]]
[[Category:Spaceship Girl{{PAGENAME}}]]