Posts Tagged ‘Obituary’

Mike Resnick, RIP

Thursday, January 9th, 2020

Science fiction writer and editor Mike Resnick died this morning a little after midnight according to a post by his daughter Laura Resnick, due to an aggressive lymphoma that followed on the heels of major surgery.

Mike was a friend from way back in the pre-WWW days of the Delphi Wednesday Night Group in the late 1980s, where a bunch of science fiction people (Resnick, Pat Cadigan, Gardner Dozois, myself, Dwight and many others) hung out on a regular basis. I sold Mike one of my earliest stories, “Huddled Masses” for his Alternate Presidents anthology, as well as “Saul’s Diary” for Galaxy’s Edge, and Mike used “Crucifixion Variations” for World’s Science Fiction Story Collection II, my only story ever published in China.

He got involved with science fandom early in life and never left. Mike was one of the last of a dying breed of science fiction’s writing machines, someone who early-on mastered the ability to crank out a prodigious amount of wordage every day. The Kirinyaga stories in the 1980s, set an orbital African primativist tribal “utopia,” was where he really started to make his mark, and he became a regular Hugo and Nebula winner back when that meant something. He edited dozens of anthologies, frequently buying work by new writers, and eventually founding Galaxy’s Edge. He raised prize-winning collies and collected books on Africa. When the Social Justice Warrior mob came for him and Barry Malzberg for the usual stupid reasons he told them to go pound sand.

He was a jovial presence at conventions, and he will be missed.

Barry Hughart, RIP

Friday, August 2nd, 2019

Mike Berro is reporting on Facebook than fantasy writer Barry Hughart has died. No linkable source yet for the news yet.

It’s a darn shame that the slings and arrows of outrageous publishing fortune discouraged him from writing any more Master Li and Number Ten Ox books…

Update: There’s now a small note on Berro’s Barry Hughart bibliography site that “It has been confirmed as of 1-Aug-2019 that Mr. Hughart has passed on.”

Gene Wolfe, RIP

Tuesday, April 16th, 2019

Science fiction writer Gene Wolfe died on Sunday. If you know who Gene Wolfe was no explanation is necessary, and if you don’t no explanation is possible.

He was the best of us all: the cleverest, trickiest science fiction writer alive, capable of carrying off narrative gambits the rest of us could barely conceive of. And this was not just my opinion: it’s all but universally held in the field, from Neil Gaiman to Howard Waldrop.

In The Book of the Short Sun, protagonist Horn sets off to retrieve Patera Silk, the protagonist of The Book of the Long Sun. He comes back thinking he’s failed. The great tragedy of the work is that he hasn’t. In Return to the Whorl, there comes a line of just two words: “Silk nodded.”

And it’s absolutely heartbreaking.

Gene Wolfe was a Korean War veteran, a fact that greatly shaped The Book of the New Sun, whose last volume features protagonist Severian gradually being drawn into a distant war. He was also a working engineer, and helped develop the cooking portion of the machine that makes Pringles potato chips. He was also an editor on Plant Engineering magazine, where he handled (among other things) robotics and cartoons.

Gene was a friend, albeit one I saw only every half a decade or so. I interviewed him for Nova Express at the 1998 Worldcon, bringing a box of his books with me to sign. (Since then, of course, I’ve picked up many more.) We had lunch together at the 2012 Chicago Worldcon, by which time his beloved wife Rosemary was dying of Alzheimer’s.

Here’s a scanned picture of Gene and Rosemary on their wedding day from A Wolfe Family Album:

Wolfe Wedding

And here’s a picture of Gene and Rosemary (with Elizabeth Hand in-between) at the 2009 Readercon:

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And here are some pictures of Gene’s books from my library:

Wolfe Family Album

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He will be deeply missed.

Obituary: GAK

Wednesday, February 20th, 2019

Only in reading the February Ansible did I learn that artist GAK died mid-January. His real name was evidently Gregg Kanefsky (edited to add: probably not; that seems to be a different GAK), though I also knew him as Glenn Denny Gak (the name he used on Facebook), and an obituary linked from his Facebook page referenced Glenn A. Klinger. He was obviously a man of many mysteries.

Back when I edited Nova Express, GAK became my go-to guy for cover art. His spikey style seemed a good fit for what I wanted to publish. Among his best covers was the one for the Tim Powers issue:

As well as the one for the Neil Gaiman issue, the original artwork for which I have matted and hanging in my house above a copy of the issue:

After Nova Express, he went on to illustrate a number of horor works, including the Dead Cat Bounce series.

I only met GAK once, at the 2002 World Fantasy Convention in Minneapolis, where I had dinner with him and Nova contributor Hank Wagner. I had no idea he was sick until I read that he had died.

Here’s his ISFDB listing.

One more for the road:

Harlan Ellison, RIP

Thursday, June 28th, 2018

The man many thought was too stubborn and angry to die has passed away in his sleep: Harlan Ellison, dead at 84.

Ellison was a tremendously important science fiction writer in his heyday in the 1960s, the infant terrible of the American New Wave. His prose was both razor sharp and packed an emotional urgency pretty much unseen in the field heretofore, the SF counterpart to the “angry young man” briefly fashionable in the literary world. Among his prodigious short fiction output was “I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream,” a story most would place among the genre’s very best, if not the best, and he won Hugos and Nebulas left and right back when they actually meant something.

He had a singular gift for memorable titles, superb taste in enemies, and a penchant for suing people at the drop of a hat (sometimes deserved, sometimes not). He wrote several memorable screenplays, including “Demon With a Glass Hand” for The Outer Limits and “City on the Edge of Forever” for Star Trek, as well as a large number of comic book issues. He was exceptionally smart, extremely charismatic, unusually hotheaded, irascible, opinionated and irreplaceable, and the source of hundreds of stories of his outrageous antics.

The field shall not see his like again.

Below: A few Ellison-related titles from my library. And I’ll actually be listing another recent purchase tomorrow…

Gardner Dozois, RIP

Sunday, May 27th, 2018

Michael Swanwick just announced the death of Gardner Dozois on Facebook:

It is my sad duty to note the passing of Gardner Dozois today, Sunday May 27, at 4:00 p.m. The cause was an overwhelming systemic infection. Gardner had been hospitalized for a minor illness and was expected to be released shortly. The decline was swift. He died surrounded by his family.

Gardner was a swell guy, one of the funniest people in the field, a fine writer and a great editor, and bought not only my first story, but more of my stories than anyone else over the years.

I’m about to rush off somewhere, but more extensive thoughts later.

Jigsaw, 2003—2018

Monday, March 12th, 2018

Friday, March 9, I had to have Jigsaw, my faithful canine companion of over 13 years, put to sleep.

I picked him up at Town Lake Animal Shelter through Gold Ribbon Rescue way back in December 2004, having finally bought my house earlier in the year and having already gone through GRR’s grueling vetting process.

Jigsaw started out as an unrestrained riot of affection. He wanted to chew through everything (including a nylon leash and a shoe, just his first night!) and jump excitedly on everyone who came through the door. Over the years he calmed down a bit, but he was well into his golden years before losing his puppish enthusiasm for jumping to greet people.

He loved swimming, chasing balls (though not so much dropping them), seeing people, and playing with other dogs; all the usual Golden Retriever joys. Going out to the regular GRR swim events, and having people come over to the house, were among his favorite things. (I’ll always remember that whenever we went to a GRR event, he loved swimming, but he always wanted to keep me in sight at all times, evidently scared I might leave him. He was always overjoyed to see me when I got back from trips to pick him up at my parents house.)

Age mellowed him into a dog all my friends loved.

I’ll always remember my father, in home hospice care for his own terminal cancer, scratching Jigsaw’s ears at his bedside.

Fourteen is a ripe old age for a Golden Retriever. I asked my vet how he was doing for his age. She said “I don’t know. They don’t usually live this long.”

I’d had false alarms with his health before. A couple of years ago he had increasing trouble getting up and down the stairs, and after long car trips he wouldn’t be able to stand for a while. Starting him on pain medication, and a round of antibiotics, seemed to fix that.

Then last year, when I adopted Avery, a black lab mix, to keep him company, she ran him ragged the first couple of days, to the point the same problems started to assert themselves. But slowly, with another upped medicine dosage, he got back to his old self, and was back to getting up and down the stairs without trouble.

I had suspected he had cancer for some time, but the first ultrasound last year was inconclusive, and I kept his pain under control with medication. But he started slowly but steadily losing weight the last few months. He’d still eat, but not as much, and stopped eating his dry food at all.

Finally, it got to the point he wasn’t pooping or peeing properly, probably due to (I found out a couple of weeks ago) inflamed lymph nodes near his spine. And when they finally got a good ultrasound of his bladder last week, the walls looked thickened, making cancer the likely culprit.

Finally, on Thursday night he had stopped eating entirely. And after two short walks that night, Friday morning his rear legs couldn’t support him at all. He walked about ten feet into the front yard and then feel down and lay in the grass.

It was time.

Here are some pictures of him over the years.

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Jigsaw Screen Cap Dup

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From his last day:

He was a good dog, and I’m going to miss him very, very much.

Bill Crider RIP

Tuesday, February 13th, 2018

Word has come down that writer Bill Crider died on February 12.

Bill was a prince among men and a welcome face at Armadillocon and elsewhere. He will be missed.

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Dolores O’Riordan, RIP

Monday, January 15th, 2018

Just heard the news that Dolores O’Riordan, the lead singer for The Cranberries, has just died at the untimely age of 46.

There were most famous for “Zombie” and a few other hits, but my favorite song of theirs has always been the melancholy “Daffodil Lament.” Here’s a live version.

(Hat tip: Derek Johnson.)

Jerry Pournelle, RIP

Friday, September 8th, 2017

I just got word that Jerry Pournelle died today.

Pournelle was most famous for his collaborations with Larry Niven, and justly so: Lucifer’s Hammer is a great novel, and Inferno and The Mote in God’s Eye are, at the least, very good. But he was a strong writer on his own as well.

Pournelle lied about his age to get into the army in the Korean War, where he served in the artillery, which gave him life-long tinnitus. He had a widely varied carrier before becoming a science fiction writer, working in the defense industry, then on the successful Los Angeles mayoral campaign of Sam Yorty. He was also a notable advocate of SDI and a prominent columnist for Byte magazine for many years.

He had a long and successful career as a science fiction writer, winning the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer, but never really received his due, for a variety of reasons, some aesthetic (he did a lot of work in Military SF, a subgenre held in low critical esteem), some political (he was an unapologetic conservative and disciple of Russell Kirk), some personal (Jerry rubbed many people the wrong way, and reportedly had a drinking problem in the 1980s). He edited a number of anthologies over the years; when he finally received a Hugo nomination for that, Social Justice Warrior bloc voting made sure he finished below No Award.

He was 84.

Edited to Add: A personal remembrance by Borepatch.