Michael P. Kube-McDowell
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Michael Paul Kube-McDowell (born August 29, 1954, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania) is a science fiction novelist. He has also dabbled in music, written for television, been a stringer for a daily newspaper, and published short fiction, reviews, assorted nonfiction and erotica. He was honored for teaching excellence by the 1985 White House Commission on Presidential Scholars. Kube-McDowell's short fiction has been featured in Analog, Isaac Asimov's SF Magazine and The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, as well as anthologies After the Flames and Perpetual Light. Three of his stories have been adapted as episodes of the TV series Tales From the Darkside.
Outside of science fiction Kube-McDowell is the author of more than 500 nonfiction articles on subjects ranging from space careers to "scientific creationism" to an award-winning four-part series on the state of American education.
Contents |
[edit] Bibliography
[edit] Series
Trigon Disunity
- Odyssey (1987)
- Suspicion (1987) (with Mike McQuay)
Star Wars : The Black Fleet Crisis
[edit] Novels
- Thieves of Light (1987) (writing as Michael Hudson)
- Alternities (1988)
- The Quiet Pools (1990)
- Exile (1992)
- The Trigger (1999) (with Arthur C. Clarke)
- Vectors (2002)
[edit] Short stories
- "Murphy's Planet" (1983)
- "Babytrap" (1985)
- "Lifetomb" (1985)
- "Because Thou Lovest the Burning-Ground" (1993)
[edit] Anthologies containing stories by Michael P Kube-McDowell
- Alternate Warriors (1993)
[edit] Awards
- Hugo Best Novel nominee (1991) : The Quiet Pools
- Philip K. Dick Memorial nominee (1985) : Emprise