Michael G. Coney
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Michael Greatrex Coney (September 28, 1932 - November 4, 2005) was a British science fiction writer who spent his last years in Canada. Born in Birmingham, England on September 28, 1932, he moved to Vancouver, British Columbia in 1972. He died at age 73 of mesothelioma, a cancer of the lungs, on November 4, 2005 at the Saanich Peninsula Hospital palliative care unit.
[edit] Assessment
Settings and themes vary between the different novels. A common element is that you follow rather ordinary people who are buffeted by forces beyond their strength, and mostly not much concerned with them. Most SF gives the superior powers to the leading characters, or has them acquire it during the course of the tale. Coney avoided this, cleverly satirised it in The Hero of Downways.
The stories do also tie in with the cultural concerns of the time:
- His first novel, Mirror Image (1972), neatly intensified the American genre's Cold War focus on impostors and secret invaders; in this case the "amorphs", who are indistiguishable from us, are themselves convinced that they are human.
- After a first rush of dystopian tales, however, Coney began to shift his ground... his most successful later work - The Celestial Steam Locomotive and Gods of the Greataway - could almost be set on a transfigured Vancouver Island. (Obituary by John Clute).
Another of Coney's themes is small isolated communities - The Hero of Downways, Winter's Children and Fang, the Gnome. A different perspective is seen in ‘‘Hello Summer, Goodbye’’ - an adventure / mystery among people who are not quite human, on a planet rather like Earth, but with significant differences. An unpublished sequel to Hello Summer Goodbye is due to be appear in 2007.[1] It has previously been available as an internet download.
Brontomek! received the BritishScience Fiction award for best novel of 1976. He was nominated for a Nebula Award in 1995 for his novelette, Tea and Hamsters.
[edit] Novels
- Mirror Image, 1972
- Syzygy, 1973
- Friends Come in Boxes, 1973
- The Hero of Downways, 1973
- Winter's Children, 1974
- Monitor Found in Orbit, 1974
- The Jaws that Bite, the Claws that Catch, 1974. (UK title, The Girl with a Symphony in her Fingers)
- Hello Summer, Goodbye, 1975
- Charisma, 1975
- Brontomek, 1976
- The Ultimate Jungle, 1979
- Neptune's Cauldron, 1981
- Cat Karina, 1982
- The Celestial Steam Locomotive, 1983
- Gods of the Greataway, 1984
- Fang, the Gnome, 1988
- King of the Scepter'd Isle, 1989
- A Tomcat Called Sabrina, 1992
- No Place for a Sealion, 1992
The Celestial Steam Locomotive and Gods of the Greataway are two parts of a single tale. Cat Karina, Fang, the Gnome and King of the Scepter'd Isle are independent stories in the same framework. Brontomek is set on the same world as Syzygy and is also loosely linked to Mirror Image.
[edit] External links
- A bibliography, in PDF
- Another bibliography, with cover illustrations.
- A page devoted to Michael Coney Includes some unpublished work.
- Michael G. Coney at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Obituary in the Victoria Times Colonist.
- Obituary in The Guardian
- Obituary by John Clute
- An interview given near the end of his life
- A tribute] at Lonely Cry
- The True Worth of Ruth Villiers, a novel by Michael G. Coney, reproduced with permission on Cordula's Web