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"The Snow Women" is a sword and sorcery novella by American writer Fritz Leiber, recounting the early history of Fafhrd, a future member of the adventurous duo Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser. It was nominated for the Hugo and Nebula Awards in 1971 (although Leiber withdrew it in favor of "Ill Met in Lankhmar"), and finished second in the annual Locus poll for short fiction. First published in 1970 in Fantastic magazine, it's in the nature of a prequel, as Leiber had by that time been chronicling the pair's adventures for thirty years. The story forms part two of the collection Swords and Deviltry.

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  • Las mujeres de la nieve (es)
  • The Snow Women (en)
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  • Las mujeres de la nieve (título original en inglés: The Snow Women) es una novela corta del subgénero espada y brujería escrita por Fritz Leiber, y publicada por primera vez en 1970 en la revista Fantastic, como parte de la serie . La novela se publicó en español en 1985, con traducción de Jordi Fibla Feito por la editorial Martínez Roca. (es)
  • "The Snow Women" is a sword and sorcery novella by American writer Fritz Leiber, recounting the early history of Fafhrd, a future member of the adventurous duo Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser. It was nominated for the Hugo and Nebula Awards in 1971 (although Leiber withdrew it in favor of "Ill Met in Lankhmar"), and finished second in the annual Locus poll for short fiction. First published in 1970 in Fantastic magazine, it's in the nature of a prequel, as Leiber had by that time been chronicling the pair's adventures for thirty years. The story forms part two of the collection Swords and Deviltry. (en)
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  • Las mujeres de la nieve (título original en inglés: The Snow Women) es una novela corta del subgénero espada y brujería escrita por Fritz Leiber, y publicada por primera vez en 1970 en la revista Fantastic, como parte de la serie . La novela se publicó en español en 1985, con traducción de Jordi Fibla Feito por la editorial Martínez Roca. (es)
  • "The Snow Women" is a sword and sorcery novella by American writer Fritz Leiber, recounting the early history of Fafhrd, a future member of the adventurous duo Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser. It was nominated for the Hugo and Nebula Awards in 1971 (although Leiber withdrew it in favor of "Ill Met in Lankhmar"), and finished second in the annual Locus poll for short fiction. First published in 1970 in Fantastic magazine, it's in the nature of a prequel, as Leiber had by that time been chronicling the pair's adventures for thirty years. The story forms part two of the collection Swords and Deviltry. (en)
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