Charles L. Harness
Charles L. Harness | |
---|---|
Born | Charles Leonard Harness December 29, 1915 Colorado City, Texas, U.S. |
Died | September 20, 2005 North Newton, Kansas, U.S. | (aged 89)
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | George Washington University |
Genre | Science fiction |
Charles Leonard Harness (December 29, 1915 – September 20, 2005)[1] was an American science fiction writer.
Biography
He was born in
Harness died in 2005, at the age of 89, in North Newton, Kansas.[1]
Writing career
Harness' first story, "Time Trap" (1948), shows many of his recurring themes, among them art, time travel, and a hero undergoing a quasi-transcendental experience.
His first novel was his most famous, Flight into Yesterday.
In his introduction in the 1967 Four Square
In 1953, Harness also published his most famous single story, "The Rose", which first appeared in the British magazine Authentic Science Fiction, then as the main novella in a UK mass-market paperback collection assembled and introduced by Michael Moorcock. The story did not appear in the United States until 1969.[1]
Other Harness' stories include "An Ornament to his Profession", "The Alchemist" and "Stalemate in Space". His story "The New Reality" has been called "SF's best Adam & Eve story" by Brian Stableford. His novel Redworld is one of the very few science fiction novels in which all characters are aliens.
Harness's ideas influenced numerous writers and he continued to publish until 2001, being nominated for multiple
Awards
- "The Rose", novella nominated for the Retro-Hugo Awardin 2004
- "The Alchemist", novella nominated for the Hugo and Nebula awards for 1966
- "An Ornament to His Profession", novelette nominated for the Hugo and Nebula awards for 1966
- "Probable Cause", novella nominated for the Nebula award for 1969
- "Summer Solstice", novella nominated for the Hugo award in 1985
Bibliography
Short stories
- "Time Trap", Astounding Stories (August 1948)
- "Flight into Yesterday", Startling Stories (May 1949)
- "Summer Solstice", Terry Carr's Best Science Fiction of the Year (June 1984)
Novels
- Flight into Yesterday (1953);[3] based on a 1949 novella; reprinted as The Paradox Men, 1955 by Ace Books and thereafter[2]
- The Ring of Ritornel (1968)[1]
- Wolfhead (1978)[1]
- The Catalyst (1980)[3]
- Firebird (1981)[3]
- The Venetian Court (1982)[3]
- Redworld (1986)[3]
- Krono (1988)[3]
- Lurid Dreams (1990)[3]
- Lunar Justice (1991)[3]
- Drunkard's Endgame (1999) (in Rings, an omnibus edition of four novels by Harness from ISBN 1-886778-16-7)
- Cybele, With Bluebonnets (2002)[1]
Collections
- The Rose (1966)[9]
- An Ornament to His Profession (1998)ISBN 1-886778-09-4)[2]
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Clute, John. "Unorthodox science-fiction writer" (Charles L. Harness obituary). The Independent, October 11, 2005.
- ^ a b c d
"Bibliography: Flight into Yesterday". ISFDB.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j "I Did it For the Money" (Charles L. Harness inverview). Locus, December 1998.
- ^ Flight into Yesterday (1953) by Charles Harness Archived 2016-03-03 at the Wayback Machine. FantasticFiction.co.uk.
- ^ "Recommended Reading", F&SF, September 1953, p. 101.
- Astounding Science Fiction, April 1954, p.147
- Trillion Year Spree, Victor Gollancz, 1986, p.324
- Ace DoubleReviews, 18. Retrieved September 23, 2008.
- ^ "SFE: Harness, Charles L".
External links
- Works by Charles L. Harness at Project Gutenberg
- Works by Charles L. Harness at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- Charles L. Harness at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Charles Harness at FantasticFiction.co.uk
- Charles L. Harness at Library of Congress, with 12 library catalog records