This is a bibliography of the works of William S. Burroughs.
Novels and other long fiction
Non-fiction and letters
Film collaborations
The Final Academy Documents, with experimental film collaborations of Brion Gysin, Antony Balch, John Giorno, and others, based on a tour organized by David Dawson, Roger Ely, and Genesis P-Orridge. A DVD of edited highlights from the tour, including Burroughs's 1982 appearance reading from his work at Manchester's The Haçienda, a performance by Giorno and includes the experimental film collaborations with Balch, Gysin, and others, Towers Open Fire and Ghosts at No. 9.
Burroughs appeared as himself in a number of films in the 1980s and 1990s, including the 1986 Laurie Anderson concert film Home of the Brave (in which Burroughs dances a slow-motion tango with Anderson during one number and provides vocal samples in other parts of the film), and the documentaries Heavy Petting and What Happened to Kerouac?
Burroughs also played a cameo part in the film Drugstore Cowboy, and his recording of The Junky's Christmas formed the basis for a 1993 animated short film of the same title in which Burroughs himself appears. He collaborated on the documentary Words of Advice: William S. Burroughs on the Road eventually released in 2007. An animated short film based upon his story "Ah Pook is Here" has also been produced.
Gus Van Sant, director of Drugstore Cowboy, made a short film in 1981 based on Burroughs's "The Discipline of DE".
Recordings (partial list)
Call Me Burroughs (1965) - The English Bookshop, Paris (reissued in 1995)
Long song for Zelda (1971) - by Dashiell Hedayat and Gong, LP shandar record production SR83512, Paris, ( reedited as a CD in 1992 and 2008 on "Mantra production"), Obsolete, Burroughs says a sentence of 10 seconds at the end of track at the 7'32 mark.
The Nova Convention (1979) by Burroughs and others - LP GPS
Nothing Here Now But The Recordings (1981) with Brion Gysin - LP Industrial Records IR0016
You're the Guy I Want to Share My Money With (1981) with John Giorno and Laurie Anderson - LP GPS
Mister Heartbreak (1984) by Laurie Anderson - Burroughs reads "Sharkey's Night"
The Elvis of Letters (1985) with Gus van Sant
Home of the Brave (1986) by Laurie Anderson - Burroughs sample is used in the song "Late Show"
UnCommon Quotes (1986) - Recorded at CARAVAN of DREAMS, September 11, 1986 (ISBN 0 929856 00 7); cassette only; includes foldout essay "William S. Burroughs: A Shift in Vision" by Robert Palmer
Break Through In Grey Room (1986) - A collection of readings and cutups - Sub Rosa Records
Smack My Crack (1987) with Tom Waits and various artists - LP GPS
Like A Girl I Want To Keep Coming (1989) by John Giorno - LP GPS
Seven Souls (1989) by Material - remixed in 1998 as The Road to the Western Lands
Dead City Radio (1990) - Island Records
Millions of Images (1990) with Gus Van Sant
The "Priest" they called him (1992) - Burroughs narrates and Kurt Cobain plays guitar
"Just One Fix" (1992) from the Ministry album Psalm 69: The Way to Succeed and the Way to Suck Eggs - Burroughs reads "Quick Fix" and created the cover art
The Black Rider (1992) - Musical co-authored with Tom Waits and Robert Wilson, sings on "T'ain't No Sin"
Spare Ass Annie and Other Tales with The Disposable Heroes of Hiphoprisy (1993) - Island Records
"Words Of Advice" on the Material album Hallucination Engine (1994)
The Dark Eye (1995), Voices the character "Uncle Edwin", also narration of Annabel Lee and Masque of the Red Death. Burroughs' only video game role.
10%: File under Burroughs (1996) - 2-CD set, produced by Frank Rynne and Joe Ambrose, Sub Rosa
Songs in the Key of X (1996) and In Time: The Best of R.E.M. 1988-2003 bonus disc (2003) - Burroughs vocal over an instrumental version of R.E.M.'s "Star Me Kitten"
Stoned Immaculate: The Music of the Doors (2000) - Burroughs reads poetry by Jim Morrison over music by The Doors on "Is Everybody In?"
References
External links
Containing 1,077 numbered entries, Anything but Routine: A Selectively Annotated Bibliography of William S. Burroughs v. 2.0 by Brian E.C. Schottlaender of UC San Diego Libraries lists many more works by Burroughs