Jerry Oltion

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Cover to Jerry Oltion's 2004 novel, Paradise Passed.
Cover to Jerry Oltion's 2004 novel, Paradise Passed.
Trackball Telescope
Trackball Telescope
Cover to the 2000 novel, Star Trek: New Earth: The Flaming Arrow, which Oltion wrote with Kathy Oltion.
Cover to the 2000 novel, Star Trek: New Earth: The Flaming Arrow, which Oltion wrote with Kathy Oltion.

Jerry Oltion (born 1957) is an award-winning science fiction author, known for numerous novels and short stories, including books in the Star Trek series.

He is also the inventor of the trackball telescope, a new system for making a telescope that is easy to aim and also tracks the stars. Additional information about the trackball can be found in the August, 2006 issue of Sky and Telescope magazine, and on Oltion's website: http://www.sff.net/people/j.oltion

His novels include Frame of Reference (1987), Abandon In Place (2000), The Getaway Special (2001), Paradise Passed (2004), and Anywhere But Here (2005)

His work has been compiled in the collections, Love Songs of a Mad Scientist: The Collected Stories of Jerry Oltion Volume One (1993), Singing in the Rain, The Collected Stories of Jerry Oltion Volume Two (1998), and Twenty Questions (2003).

Oltion also contributed to Isaac Asimov's Robot City series with the books Alliance and Humanity (both in 1990).

Oltion has also written several Star Trek novels, including Twilight's End (1995), Mudd in your Eye (1996), and the New Earth novel, The Flaming Arrow (2000), the latter written in collaboration with his wife, Kathy. He also wrote a novel in Star Trek's Captain's Table series, Where Sea Meets Sky (1998).

His work can also be found in numerous anthologies, such as Quest to Riverworld (1993) and Tales from the Mos Eisley Cantina (1995).

Oltion also writes under the pen name "Ryan Hughes."

He is a member of the Wordos writers' group.

[edit] Awards

Oltion won the 1998 Nebula Award for Best Novella for "Abandon in Place". He was also nominated for the Nebula Award two other times, for his 1993 novella "Contact", and his 2000 novella, "The Astronaut from Wyoming".

He won the 2006 Endeavor Award for best novel by a Northwest Author ("Anywhere But Here").

He was also nominated twice for the Hugo Awards for Best Novella, first for "Abandon in Place" in 1997, and then for "The Astronaut from Wyoming" in 2000, but did not win either time. [1]

In 2007, Oltion and Adam-Troy Castro won the Seiun Award for Best Foreign Language Short Story of the Year for "The Astronaut from Wyoming."

[edit] External links