William Thomas Quick

"Margaret Allan" redirects here. For the 1930s racing driver, see Margaret Allan (racing driver).
William Thomas Quick
Born May 1946
Muncie, Indiana
Occupation Novelist
Nationality American
Genre science fiction
Website
www.iw3p.com/quick.shtml

William Thomas "Bill" Quick (born 1946), who sometimes writes under the pseudonym Margaret Allan,[1] is a science fiction author and self-described libertarian conservative blogger.[2] Quick is the author of 28 novels, the most famous of which is the cyberpunk Dreams of Flesh and Sand, and co-authored a six-novel series with William Shatner.

Quick runs the conservative blog Daily Pundit.

Personal life

Quick is originally from Indiana and now lives in Hunters Point, San Francisco, California.[3]

Books

Quick is the author of 28 novels, the most famous of which is Dreams of Flesh and Sand. He co-authored the six novel Quest for Tomorrow series with William Shatner. He has also written a series of prehistoric adventure novels under the pen name Margaret Allan, the best selling of which was The Last Mammoth.[4]

Quick's 2014 novel Lightning Fall, a disaster thriller, was featured in a USA Today column [5] by Instapundit's Glenn Reynolds. Quick's novel and Reynold's column were commented on by other libertarian sources,[6][7] and Quick wrote that the book reached Amazon's Top 200 sales list, and was #3 in Hard SF sales.[8]

Blog "Daily Pundit"

Quick runs the conservative blog Daily Pundit. Quick claims to have "named the blogosphere" in 2002.[9] The term was actually coined by Brad L. Graham in 1999.[10]

American Conservative Party

In February 2008, Quick was among those involved (he describes himself as "the guy who dreamed up the damned name of the party, registered it, built your first web site, and gave you your first publicity") in the creation of a third party called the American Conservative Party as an alternative to the Democratic and Republican parties. He has since repudiated this organization repeatedly on his blog.[11]

W. T. Quick Blog

In July 2011, Quick started the blog W.T. Quick to blog about his writing and publishing efforts past, present and future.

See also

References

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