Howard V. Hendrix

For the Christian professor and author, see Howard Hendricks.
Howard Vincent Hendrix
Born 1959 (age 5657)
Cincinnati, Ohio
Occupation author, professor
Nationality United States
Education
  • *BS, Biology
    • MA, English Literature
    • PhD, English Literature
Alma mater
Period 1981 - present
Genre Hard science fiction
Website
www.howardvhendrix.com

Howard Vincent Hendrix (born 1959) is an American scholar and science fiction writer. He is author of the novels Lightpaths and Standing Wave, Better Angels, Empty Cities of the Full Moon, The Labyrinth Key, and Spears of God. His early short stories are found in the ebook Mobius Highway.

Biography

Howard Vincent Hendrix was born in 1959[1] in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States. He graduated in 1980 with a Bachelor of Science degree in biology from Xavier University. He then went on to earn a Master's (1982) and a Ph.D (1987) in English literature from the University of California at Riverside.[2]

Hendrix published his first short story, "Bad/Night/Vision", in 1983 in UC Riverside's art and literary journal, Mosaic. Since then, he has published over thirty short stories and poems as well as six science fiction novels, beginning with Lightpaths in September 1997 through Ace Books. His most recent novel is the 2006 Spears of God, published through Del Rey.

He is a cousin of blues musician Mike Tetrault.

Selected bibliography

Fiction

Novels

Short fiction and poetry

Nonfiction

Articles

Awards

International Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Day

Hendrix created a stir among science fiction and fantasy fans and authors with a LiveJournal posting on April 12, 2007.[5] The purpose of the posting was to explain, in part, why he would not be seeking the presidency of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America after having served as its vice president. He criticized authors who offer their works for free on the internet, either as written works, or recorded as podcasts. His comments have drawn criticism from a number of other authors, such as Jo Walton, Michael A. Stackpole,[6] John Scalzi,[7] and David Wellington,[8] and resulted in International Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Day.

References

External links

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