Mike Resnick | |
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Born | Michael Diamond Resnick March 5, 1942 Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Died | January 9, 2020 Cincinnati, Ohio | (aged 77)
Occupation |
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Genre | Science fiction |
Years active | 1957—2020 |
Spouse | Carol L. Cain (m. 1961) |
Children | Laura |
Michael Diamond Resnick (/ˈrɛznɪk/; March 5, 1942 – January 9, 2020) was an American science fiction writer and editor. He won five Hugo awards, a Nebula award, was the guest of honor at Chicon 7, and was executive editor of Jim Baen's Universe.[1][2][3]
Resnick was born in Chicago and was a 1959 graduate of Highland Park High School [4][5] in Highland Park, Illinois.[6] He sold his first piece in 1957, while still in high school.[7]: 27 He attended the University of Chicago from 1959 to 1961 and met his future wife, Carol L. Cain, there.[8] The couple began dating in mid-December of 1960 and were engaged by the end of the month.[7]: 27 They were married in 1961.[1]
In the 1960s and early 1970s, Resnick wrote over 200 erotic adult novels under various pseudonyms[9] and edited three men's magazines and seven tabloid newspapers.[1] For over a decade he wrote a weekly column about horse racing and a monthly column about purebred collies, which he and his wife bred and showed.[1] His wife was an uncredited collaborator on much of his science fiction and a co-author on two movie scripts they sold, based on his novels Santiago and The Widowmaker.[10][7]: 9 His daughter Laura Resnick is an award-winning science fiction and fantasy author.[11]
Resnick lived in Cincinnati from 1976 until his death on January 9, 2020.[7][12][13]
Two notable trends run through the majority of Resnick's science fiction work. The first is his love of fable and legend.[7]: 10 The other main subject of Resnick's work is Africa,[7]: 9 especially Kenya's Kikuyu history, and the culture of Kikuyu tribes, colonialism and its aftermath, and traditionalism.[7]: 20–22 He visited Kenya often, and drew on this experience.[7]: 20 [14] Some of his science fiction stories are allegories of Kenyan history and politics.[7]: 21 Other stories are actually set in Africa or have African characters.[7]: 21–22
Resnick's style is known for the inclusion of humor.[7]: 9 Resnick enjoyed collaborating, especially on short stories.[7]: 23 Through 2014 he had collaborated with 52 different writers on short fiction, three on screenplays, and three on novels. Late in life, he began writing and selling a series of mystery novels as well, featuring detective Eli Paxton.[15] He had also sold screenplays based on his novels to Miramax, Capella, and Jupiter 9, and often had multiple properties under option to Hollywood studios.[7]: 9, 27–54
His work has been translated into French, Italian, German, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Bulgarian, Hungarian, Hebrew, Russian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Polish, Czech, Dutch, Latin, Swedish, Romanian, Finnish, Portuguese, Slovakian, Chinese, Catalan, Danish, and Croatian.[16] Resnick's papers are in the Special Collections Library of the University of South Florida in Tampa.[1][17]
Resnick worked as an editor for National Insider from 1966 to 1969.[7] He worked as editor-in-chief of National Features Syndicate from 1967 to 1968.[7] He worked as a publisher and editor for Oligarch Press from 1969.[7] From 1988 Resnick edited over 40 fiction anthologies.[2] He was an editorial consultant for BenBella Books from 2004 to 2006 and executive editor for Jim Baen's Universe from 2007 through 2010.[7]: 25 From 2011 he was the series editor for The Stellar Guild series published by Phoenix Pick.[7]: 25–26 The series pairs lesser known science fiction and fantasy authors with best-selling veterans of the genre.[7]: 26 Beginning in 2013, he was the editor of the bi-monthly magazine Galaxy's Edge, published by Arc Manor, which runs reprints by major names in the field along with new stories by new and lesser-known writers.[7]: 25–26
Resnick and his wife were participants in science fiction fandom from 1962.[7]: 8 As of 2012 Resnick had been the guest of honor at some 42 science fiction conventions and Toastmaster at a dozen others.[7] Resnick's wife created costumes in which she and Resnick appeared in five Worldcon masquerades in the 1970s, winning four out of five contests.[10][18]
In 2012 he was the guest of honor at Chicon 7, the 70th World Science Fiction Convention in Chicago.[12][13] As of 2020 Resnick was number one on Locus magazine's list of all-time award winners for short fiction and number four for all lengths.[19][20]
Resnick was nominated for 37 Hugo Awards[21] and won five times.[7]
In addition to his wins he was nominated for "For I Have Touched the Sky" (1990), "Winter Solstice" and "One Perfect Morning, With Jackals" (1992), "The Lotus and the Spear" (1993), "Mwalimu in the Squared Circle" (1994), "Barnaby in Exile" and "A Little Knowledge" (1995), "When the Old Gods Die" and "Bibi" (with Susan Shwartz, 1996), "The Land of Nod" (1997), "Hothouse Flowers" and "Hunting the Snark" (2000), "The Elephants on Neptune", "Redchapel" & Putting It Together (2001), "Old MacDonald Had a Farm" and "I Have This Nifty Idea..." (2002), "Robots Don't Cry" (2004), "A Princess of Earth" (2005), "Down Memory Lane" (2006), "All the Things You Are" (2007), "Distant Replay" (2008), "Alastair Baffle's Emporium of Wonders" and "Article of Faith" (2009), "The Bride of Frankenstein" (2010), and "The Homecoming" (2012).[7]: 477–492 In 1995 he was the first person nominated for four Hugos in a single year.[7]: 7 His 37 Hugo nominations through 2015 were at the time an all-time record for a writer.[7]: 459–477
He was also nominated for Best Editor in 1994, 1995, and 2015; for his Chicon 7 Guest of Honor speech in 2007; and for the nonfiction The Business of Science Fiction (with Barry N. Malzberg) in 2011.[7]
Resnick won one Nebula Award[13] from eleven nominations,[21] and numerous other awards from places as diverse as France, Japan, Spain, Croatia, and Poland.[7]: 7
His Hugo Award-winning novella "Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge" also won the S.F. Chronicle Poll Award for the same, the corresponding 1994 Nebula Award for Best Novella and the 1995 HOMer Award for Best Novella.[22] Between 1991 and 2001, he won a further nine HOMer Awards (bringing his total to 10, from 24 nominations), placing him at the head of HOMer Award winners, ahead of Robert J. Sawyer with nine wins from 12 nominations.[22]
His 1998 and 2005 Hugo Award-winning stories – "The 43 Antarean Dynasties" and "Travels with My Cats" – also garnered him Asimov's Reader Poll Awards, of which he won a total of five (from 20 nominations), placing him tied for second with poet Bruce Boston, behind artist Bob Eggleton.[23] He won a total of six S.F. Chronicle Poll Awards,[24] one Locus Award (from 30 nominations, winning in 1996 with "When the Old Gods Die"),[25] a Golden Pagoda Award, two American Dog Writers Awards and an Alexander Award.
In 1995, he was awarded the Skylark (or "Edward E. Smith Memorial Award for Imaginative Fiction") for Lifetime Achievement in Science Fiction.[26] In 2017 he was awarded Writers and Illustrators of the Future's Lifetime Achievement Award.[27]
"Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge" also won awards in Spain (Ignotus Award),[7]: 463 France (Prix Ozone Award)[7]: 465 and Croatia (Futura Poll), contributing to a total of three Ignotus Awards and two Prix Ozone Awards. He was awarded the Spanish El Melocoton Mecanico Award for "Old MacDonald Had a Farm" and the Xatafi-Cyberdark Award for "For I Have Touched the Sky", in addition to a Tour Eiffel Award in France for The Dark Lady.[7]: 459–477
In Japan, he won the Seiun-sho Award for Kirinyaga: A Fable of Utopia, and the Hayakawa Award for "For I Have Touched the Sky".[7]: 459–477 In Poland, "Kirinyaga" won the Nowa Fantastyka Poll Award, while "For I Have Touched the Sky" and "When the Old Gods Die" won SFinks awards.[7]: 459–477 He won Catalonia's Ictineus Award in 2012 for Best Translated Story for "Soulmates",[19] a collaboration with Lezli Robyn.
Resnick wrote more than 70 novels and published over 25 collections.[2] He edited more than 40 anthologies.[2] Fiona Kelleghan compiled Mike Resnick: An Annotated Bibliography and Guide to His Work (Farthest Star, 2000).[2] Adrienne Gormley completed a 679-page second edition, which was published in 2012.[7] This is a list of his series.[28]
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