Gordon R. Dickson
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Gordon Rupert Dickson | |
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Gordon Dickson lecturing |
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Born | November 1, 1923 |
Died | January 31, 2001 (aged 77) |
Occupation | Novelist, short story author |
Genres | Science fiction, Fantasy |
Notable work(s) | Childe Cycle |
Gordon Rupert Dickson (November 1, 1923 – January 31, 2001) was an American science fiction author. He was born in Canada, then moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota as a teenager. He is probably most famous for his Childe Cycle and the Dragon Knight series. He won three Hugo awards and one Nebula award.
For a great part of his life, Dickson suffered from the effects of asthma.
Contents |
[edit] Biographical timeline
- 1 November 1923: born in Edmonton, Alberta
- 1936 or 1939 (age 13): emigrated to United States
- 1943–1946: served in the United States Army
- 1948: received Bachelor of Arts from University of Minnesota
- 1948–1950: attended University of Minnesota for graduate work
- 31 January 2001: died
[edit] Selected bibliography
[edit] Childe Cycle
- The Genetic General (1960) (restored variant title: Dorsai!, 1976)
- Necromancer (1962) (variant title: No Room for Man)
- Warrior (1965)(short story) included in Lost Dorsai
- Soldier, Ask Not (1967)
- Tactics of Mistake (1971)
- The Spirit of Dorsai (1979)
- Lost Dorsai (1980)
- The Final Encyclopedia (1984)
- The Dorsai Companion (1986)
- The Chantry Guild (1988)
- Young Bleys (1991)
- Other (1994)
- Antagonist (with David W. Wixon) (2007)
[edit] Dragon Knight series
- The Dragon and the George (1976)
- The Dragon Knight (1990)
- The Dragon on the Border (1992)
- The Dragon at War (1992)
- The Dragon, the Earl, and the Troll (1994)
- The Dragon and the Djinn (1996)
- The Dragon and the Gnarly King (1997)
- The Dragon in Lyonesse (1998)
- The Dragon and the Fair Maid of Kent (2000)
[edit] Hoka series
- Earthman's Burden (1957) (with Poul Anderson) (contents diff in vt: Hoka! Hoka! Hoka!) (1998)
- Hoka! (1983) (with Poul Anderson)
- Star Prince Charlie (1983) (with Poul Anderson)
- Hokas Pokas! (2000) (with Poul Anderson) (includes Star Prince Charlie)
[edit] Novels
- Alien from Arcturus (1956) (expanded as Arcturus Landing)
- Mankind on the Run (1956) (variant title: On the Run, 1979)
- Time to Teleport (1960)
- Naked to the Stars (1961)
- Spacial Delivery (1961)
- Delusion World (1961)
- The Alien Way (1965)
- The Space Winners (1965)
- Mission to Universe (1965) (rev. 1977)
- The Space Swimmers (1967)
- Planet Run (1967) (with Keith Laumer)
- Spacepaw (1969)
- Wolfling (1969)
- None But Man (1969)
- Hour of the Horde (1970)
- Sleepwalkers’ World (1971)
- The Outposter (1972)
- The Pritcher Mass (1972)
- Alien Art (1973)
- The R-Master (1973) (rev. as The Last Master, 1984)
- Gremlins, Go Home (1974) (with Ben Bova)
- The Lifeship (variant title: Lifeboat) (1977) (with Harry Harrison)
- Time Storm (1977)
- The Far Call (1978)
- Home from the Shore (1978)
- Pro (1978)
- Masters of Everon (1980)
- The Last Master (1984)
- Jamie the Red (1984) (with Roland Green)
- Steel Brother (1985)
- The Forever Man (1986)
- Way of the Pilgrim (1987)
- The Earth Lords (1989)
- Wolf and Iron (1990)
- The Magnificent Wilf (1995)
- The Right to Arm Bears (2000) omnibus of Spacial Delivery, Spacepaw, etc.
[edit] Short story collections
- Danger—Human (1970) (as The Book of Gordon Dickson, 1973)
- Mutants (1970)
- The Star Road (1973)
- Ancient, My Enemy (1974)
- Gordon R. Dickson's SF Best (1978) (revised as In the Bone, 1987)
- In Iron Years (1980)
- Love Not Human (1981)
- The Man from Earth (1983)
- Dickson! (1984) (revised as Steel Brother)
- Survival! (1984)
- Forward! (1985)
- Beyond the Dar Al-Harb (1985)
- Invaders! (1985)
- The Man the Worlds Rejected (1986)
- Mindspan (1986)
- The Last Dream (1986)
- The Stranger (1987)
- Guided Tour (1988)
- Beginnings (1988)
- Ends (1988)
- The Human Edge (2003)
[edit] Children's books
- Secret under the Sea (1960)
- Secret under Antarctica (1963)
- Secret under the Caribbean (1964)
- Secrets of the Deep (1985) omnibus of the three above
[edit] Awards
- "Soldier, Ask Not" for best short story, 1965
- Lost Dorsai for best novella, 1981
- "The Cloak and the Staff" for best novelette, 1981
- "Call Him Lord" for best novelette, 1966
[edit] External links
- Obituary at SFWA
- Obituary at StarTribune.com
- Gordon R. Dickson at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Bibliography at SciFan
- Gordon R. Dickson's online fiction at Free Speculative Fiction Online