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May 17, 2007

Lloyd Alexander, 1924-2007

SF Scope reports that young adult novelist Lloyd Alexander has died today under hospice care in his home, two weeks after the death of his wife of sixty-two years. Alexander is best known for the "Prydain" series (five novels and a related story collection, which won him the Newberry Award for The High King and was made into a Disney animated movie as The Black Cauldron.

A bibliography of his work is available at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database, and he has a page on Wikipedia.

He will be greatly missed.

April 17, 2007

Kurt Vonnegut, 1922-2007

Kurt Vonnegut, perhaps the most influential and popular science fiction writer of the late twentieth century -- and the one who fought the hardest to deny that he ever wrote science fiction -- died Wednesday night in New York City. The New York Times has a full obituary

Vonnegut's career began with stories in the science fiction magazines in the early 1950s (though his very first sale was to the mainstream slick Collier's), and his first novel, the dystopia Player Piano, was nominated for the 1953 International Fantasy Award for Fiction. His later SF novels included The Sirens of Titan, Cat's Cradle, and Slaughterhouse-Five; his best-known and most characteristic works were deeply science fictional. His last novel was 1997's Timequake, in which an unspecified apocalypse has caused the entire world to re-live a decade for the second time.

He will be greatly missed, both by readers and by other SF writers dreaming of escaping the "ghetto."

[via Locus Online]

Update: Episode #16 of The Time Traveler Show podcast is a tribute to Vonnegut, including a reading of his story "2BRO2B" (orignally from the January 1962 issue of Worlds of If).

Update 2: Bloggasm has a number of tributes to Vonnegut.

Virginia Tech Shooting Victim News

It's been reported that Jamie Bishop, son of novelist and teacher Michael Bishop, was one of the victims of yesterday's shooting at Virginia Tech. Paul Di Filippo and Jason Erik Lundberg provide more details, and some background. Crimeblog has a list of the victims, which states that Jamie Bishop was a Foreign Languages Instructor at VT.

[via Locus Online]

March 28, 2007

David Honigsberg, 1958-2007

Author, musician, and rabbi David M. Honigsberg died of a heart attack late on Tuesday; he was well-known in East Coast fan/pro circles for his stories and music, and had officiated at the weddings of a number of SFnal people. SFWA has an obituary.

I'm personally stunned; I saw David very briefly across a room at Lunacon a few weeks ago, and he seemed to have completely recovered from his heart attack last fall. I thought I'd be seeing him for many years to come. He was far, far too young to go like this.

March 14, 2007

Arnold Drake, 1924-2007

Comics writer Arnold Drake, best-known for his work for DC Comics in the 1960s (including Jerry Lewis, Doom Patrol, Stanley and His Monster, and other quirky, odd-ball titles), has died at the age of 83 at Cabrini Hospital in New York.

He'll be missed; as Comics Should Be Good said, he was the Grant Morrison of his day.

Obituaries: SFWA, The Beat 1 and 2, Mark Evanier.

March 09, 2007

David I. Masson, 1915-2007

Locus Online reports the death of librarian and one-time SF writer David I. Masson, and links to a John Clute obituary published in The Independent. Masson wrote seven stories for New Worlds in the mid-60s and published a collection of those stories, The Caltraps of Time, but then stopped writing SF.

March 06, 2007

Leigh Eddings, 1939-2007

Locus Online reports that Leigh Eddings, co-author with her husband David Eddings of many fantasy novels including the well-loved "Belgariad" and "Malloreon" series, has died on Wednesday, February 28th, after a series of strokes.

February 27, 2007

Patrice Duvic, 1946-2007

Locus Online reports that Patrice Duvic, a French editor of SF and other works who was also known as an interviewer, author, and filmmaker, has died. In the English-speaking world, he's probably best -known for his films or for his interviews with American SF writers in the early 1970s.

Locus links to his IMDB entry and his Wikipedia entry (which is in French).

February 09, 2007

Lee Hoffman, 1932-2007

SF writer and editor Lee Hoffman, also known as a writer of Westerns, has died of a massive heart attack. Her death was reported first by Making Light. There is also a Wikipedia page about her life and work.

February 06, 2007

Charles L. Fontenay, 1917-2007

Journalist and SF author Charles Louis Fontenay died in a Memphis hospital on Saturday morning. SFWA has a fuller notice, and a link to the obituary Fontenay wrote for himself soon after his 1987 retirement from The Tennessean.

January 10, 2007

James Baen Remembered

The American Spectator has a remembrance of editor Jim Baen by Hal G.P. Colebatch, focusing mostly on how he single-handedly saved SF from the New Wave and creeping liberalism.

Well, what else would you expect from American Spectator? It does give a nice overview of his career, and the slant is not unwarranted, given Baen's personal preferences and the kinds of books he published.

January 03, 2007

Adrienne Martini on Octavia Butler

Adrienne Martini has written a remembrance of Octavia Butler for City Paper.

Jack Williamson Obit in The Times

The Times (of London) had a belated, but very respectful, obituary of the recently deceased Grand Master Jack Williamson in their January 2nd issue.

December 27, 2006

Margery Krueger (aka Jayge Carr), 1940-2006

SFWA has posted an obituary for Margery Ruth Morgenstern Krueger, who was a SFWA member and wrote at least four novels under the name Jayge Carr.

December 14, 2006

Patricia Matthews, 1927-2006

SFWA reports that prolific author and SFWA member Patricia Matthews -- best known for her historical romances -- died at home on December 7th.

December 06, 2006

Pierce Askegren, 1955-2006

Keith R.A. DeCandido reports that SF and tie-in writer Pierce Askegren has died.

Update: SFWA has posted an obituary.

November 10, 2006

Jack Williamson, 1908-2006

It's being reported that Jack Williamson, one of the living legends of the field, has just died. Williamson was the second writer to be named a Grand Master by SFWA, in 1976, and was a working SF/Fantasy/Horror writer from 1928 through the present day -- a 78-year career that will probably never be equalled. His most famous works include the chilling SF novella "With Folded Hands" and the formative dark fantasy novel Darker Than You Think.

Stanley Metzoff, 1917-2006

Locus Online reports that noted SF illustrator Stanley Metzoff has died yesterday at the age of 89. He was best known in the field for the work he did on paperback covers in the 1950s.

November 05, 2006

Nelson Bond, 1908-2006

Locus Online reports that Nelson Bond, one of the few remaining links back to the pulp era of science fiction, has died at the age of 97 following complications from heart valve problems. He's probably best known for the book with the wonderful title The Remarkable Exploits of Lancelot Biggs, Spaceman.

October 07, 2006

Wilson "Bob" Tucker, 1914-2006

Science fiction fan and author Wilson Tucker died on Friday, October 6th, in a St. Petersburg, Florida hospital. He was a few weeks shy of his 92nd birthday.

His novel The Year of the Quiet Sun won the Campbell Award for Best Novel in 1976, and he was also the winner of a Hugo Award for fan writing in 1970, as well as two Retro-Hugos.

October 06, 2006

John M. Ford Book Endowment

In honor of the life and works of John M. Ford, his friends and colleagues have set up the John M. Ford Book Endowment at the Minneapolis Public Library. (You can use that first link to make a donation through PayPal, if you wish.)

To raise money for the Endowment, John Scalzi is auctioning a rare advance opy of his novel The Last Colony and Jo Walton is offering various incentives for donations.

(And, yes, I should have mentioned this several days ago, when it actually started, but I forgot.)

September 25, 2006

John M. Ford, 1957-2006

It's being widely reported that John M. Ford, author of the classic alternate history The Dragon Waiting as well as many other books, has died in his home overnight. He had been in poor health for many years, but the cause of death is not yet known.

September 21, 2006

Charles L. Grant, 1942-2006

Writer and editor Charles L. Grant died of a heart attack on Friday, September 15th, several days after returning home after a long hospital stay. He was the recipient of several Nebula and World Fantasy Awards, as well as lifetime achievement awards of various titles from the International Horror Guild, the HWA, World Horror, and British Fantasy Awards.

There is a short biography and an extensive bibliography on the International Horror Guild website.

Update: a full obituary has been posted on Dark Echo.

September 07, 2006

Caitlin Kiernan Remembers the Lovecraft Tree

Caitlin R. Kiernan has posted a reminiscence about "the Lovecraft Tree," a gigantic old thing that, until very recently, shaded H.P. Lovecraft's grave in Providence, Rhode Island.

August 11, 2006

Martin Last, 1930-2006

Locus Online reports that author and bookseller Martin Last died on July 6th. Last ran the famed Science Fiction Bookshop in New York City with Baird Searles from 1973 to 1986, and also wrote short fiction. I recognize his name mostly as a co-author of the incredibly-useful-in-its day A Reader's Guide to Science Fiction.

Bob Leman, 1922-2006

Locus Online reports that short-story writer Bob Leman died Tuesday, August 8th. An obituary has been posted on SFWA's website.

Philip E. High, 1914-2006

Locus Online reports that the UK science fiction writer Philip E. High died on Wednesday, August 9th. High was active as a novelist through the 1960s and 70s, writing such novels as The Prodigal Sun and No Truce With Terra. Two collections of his short fiction were also published in recent years. A bibliography of his work is available at Fantastic Fiction.

July 28, 2006

David Gemmell, 1948-2006

BBC News is reporting that fantasy novelist David Gemmell has died, probably of complications due to his recent heart bypass surgery.

(My thanks to James Nicoll for passing on the news.)

June 29, 2006

Jim Baen, 1943-2006

Jim Baen -- publisher and editor-in-chief of Baen Books, former editor of Ace Books, and one of the most influential SF editors of our time -- has died at the age of 62.

David Drake has written an obituary and appreciation for the Baen website; he doesn't go into details, but Baen had a stroke two weeks ago and never regained consciousness.

He will be greatly missed; all of us at the SFBC will keep his family and friends in our thoughts.

June 20, 2006

Karl T. Pflock (1943-2006)

SFWA reports that former member and UFO skeptic Karl Pflock died of Lou Gehrig's disease on June 5th. Their web site has a full obiturary.

June 12, 2006

Tim Hildebrandt, 1939-2006

I've just learned, via Keith R.A. DeCandido's blog, that noted SF/Fantasy artist Tim Hildebrandt has died from complications of diabetes at the age of 67.

With his twin brother Greg, Tim Hildebrandt was one of the great iconic SFF artists of the '70s, painting one of the famous Star Wars posters as well as many, many Tolkien covers, calendar paintings and other pieces. (I can still picture my first paperback Hobbit in my mind's eye, and it had a Hildebrandt cover.) They also wrote and illustrated the fantasy novel Urshurak (with Jerry Nichols), and made piles of fantasy art, separately and together, in the decades since.

He will certainly be missed. Our condolences to his friends and family.