David Langford
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David Langford (born April 10, 1953, in Newport, Monmouthshire) is a British science fiction author and critic. He publishes the science fiction newsletter Ansible, which he describes as "The SF Private Eye".
His first job was as a physicist at the Atomic Weapons Research Establishment at Aldermaston, Berkshire, an experience which he later humorously parodied in The Leaky Establishment. He is the brother of cult musician Jon Langford.
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[edit] Literary career
In fiction, he is most noted for his parodies. A collection of short stories, parodying various science fiction, fantasy fiction and detective story writers has been published as He Do The Time Police In Different Voices (2003, incorporating the earlier and much shorter 1988 parody collection The Dragonhiker's Guide to Battlefield Covenant at Dune's Edge: Odyssey Two). Two novels, parodying disaster novels and horror, respectively, are Earthdoom! and Guts!, both co-written with John Grant.
His novelette An Account Of A Meeting With Denizens Of Another World 1871, is an entertaining account of a UFO encounter, as experienced by a Victorian, but is notable chiefly for the framing story, in which Langford claimed to have found the manuscript in an old desk. This has led some UFOlogists to believe the story is genuine. Langford freely admits the story is fictional when asked - but, as he notes, "Journalists usually don't ask."
A collection of his nonfiction and humorous work, Let's Hear It for the Deaf Man, was published in 1992 by NESFA Press. This was incorporated into a follow-up collection, consisting of 47 nonfiction pieces and three short stories, and published as The Silence of the Langford in 1996. He also assisted in producing The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (1993) and contributed several articles to The Encyclopedia of Fantasy (1997).
His 2004 collection Different Kinds of Darkness is a compilation of 36 of his shorter, non-parodic science fiction pieces, the title story of which won the Hugo Award for Best Short Story in 2001. He also had one serious science fiction novel published in 1982, The Space Eater.
Langford has won numerous other Hugo Awards, mostly for his fan journalism: 20 for Best Fan Writer, 5 for Ansible as Best Fanzine, and another for Ansible as Best Semiprozine. As of 2006 he has, in total, 27 Hugo Awards.
David Langford has also written columns for several computer magazines, notably 8000 Plus (later renamed PCW Plus), which was devoted to the Amstrad PCW word processor. This column ran, though not continuously, from the first issue in October 1986 to the last, dated Christmas 1996. His 1985-1988 "The Disinformation Column" for Apricot File focused on Apricot Computers systems. Since 1985 he has run a "tiny and informally run software company" with science fiction writer Christopher Priest, called Ansible Information.
Langford wrote the science fiction and fantasy book review column for White Dwarf from 1983 to 1988, continuing in other British role-playing game magazines until 1991; the columns are collected as The Complete Critical Assembly (2001). He has also written a regular column for SFX magazine, featuring in every issue since its launch in 1995. A tenth-anniversary collection of these columns appeared in 2005 as The SEX Column and other misprints; this was shortlisted for a 2006 Hugo Award for Best Related Book. His most recent book is The End of Harry Potter? (2006), an unauthorized companion to the famous series by J.K. Rowling.
[edit] Basilisks
A number of his stories are set in a future containing images, colloquially called "basilisks", which crash the human mind by triggering thoughts that the mind is physically or logically incapable of thinking. The first of these stories was "BLIT" (Interzone, 1988); others include "What Happened at Cambridge IV" (Digital Dreams, 1990); "comp.basilisk FAQ" (Nature, 1999), and the Hugo-winning "Different Kinds of Darkness" (F&SF, 2000).
The idea, a form of the motif of harmful sensation, has appeared elsewhere; in one of his novels, Ken MacLeod has characters explicitly mention (and worry about encountering) the "Langford Visual Hack". Similar references, also mentioning Langford by name, feature in novels by Greg Egan and Charles Stross. The titular Snow Crash of Neal Stephenson's novel is a combination mental/computer virus capable of infecting the minds of hackers via their visual cortex.The idea also appears in Blindsight by Peter Watts where a particular combination of right angles is a harmful image to Vampires.
A related idea, the fracter, a fractal image with psycho-active effects, occurs as a key plot element in Ian McDonald's 1994 novel Scissors Cut Paper Wrap Stone.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- David Langford UK site
- Bibliography
- Ansible newsletter
- 8000 Plus/PCW Plus columns
- Apricot File columns
- SFX columns