Mark Brandis
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is orphaned as very few or no other articles link to it. A member of Wikiproject Orphanage tried to de-orphan this page in June 2008, but was unable to do so. Please help introduce links in articles on related topics. (June 2008) |
Nikolai von Michalewsky (aka Mark Brandis) (* January 17, 1931, Dahlewitz, † December 27, 2000, Grasberg) was a German writer and journalist best known for a series of science fiction novels published between 1970 and 1987.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
After having earned his living as a dock worker, a coffee harvester in the Congo, and a diver in the Mediterranean, von Michalewsky worked as a journalist in the Algerian war, eventually to start writing fictional works in the late 1950s, mostly juvenile novels. He expanded his field to documentary filming and writing of radio drama in the 1960s, an expertise he he became very successful at. At the end of his life he would have more than 500 broadcast radio dramas to his name.[1] In 1969 he was approached by German book publisher Herder to write a science fiction book for juveniles. Despite having no previous experience in the field of science fiction, von Michalewsky's first book, Bordbuch Delta VII, was an instant success.
Using the name of his protagonist as pen name and writing in first person perspective, von Michalewsky would pen approximately two books a year over the following decades to eventually complete a series of 31 novels. The series became the second best-selling German-language science fiction series of all time, eclipsed only by team effort Perry Rhodan. The books were translated into English, Danish, French, Italian, Spanish and Chinese.[2] A late attempt to revive the series in 1999 was limited to one novel, Ambivalent Zone. This expanded universe series was cut short when von Michalewsky died shortly after Christmas 2000, leaving the second novel unfinished. [3]
[edit] Mark Brandis series
The Mark Brandis series can be categorized as hard SF space opera with many allusions to seafaring novels. Mankind has been exploring the solar system, setting up colonies on the Moon and Venus. Earth is controlled by two superpowers, the Union of Europe, the Americas and Africa ("EAAU") opposing the United Oriental Republics ("VOR", that is Asia). The respective capitals are Beijing and an artificial Atlantic city named Metropolis. Mark Brandis, a German born astronaut, works as a test pilot for a nominally independent EAAU institution, the Venus-Earth Astronautical Society (VEGA). His work with the newest and therefore fastest and strongest spaceships often puts him and the international crews of his ships into danger, be it revolutions, ecological catastrophes, overpopulation issues, space exploration, equipment malfunctions and civil war.
After volume 20, Brandis quits his job to run an independent society dedicated to rescue ship crews suffering emergencies in space. Operating a number of modern high-speed space rescue ships from an extraterritorial moon base, the society rescues numerous space crews and play an important role in various adventures not too dissimilar in style to the VEGA adventures. Like in the early novels, political diplomacy and difficult ethical choices play an important role, as well as the constant fight to keep the space rescue service operating on a tight budget and in between warring factions and interests.[4]
The ships of the rescue service are named after people famous for their humanitarian efforts, such as Elsa Brändström, Florence Nightingale, Henri Dunant, Albert Schweitzer, Mahatma Gandhi and Rabindranath Tagore.
[edit] The novels
- Bordbuch Delta VII (1970)
- Verrat auf der Venus (1971)
- Unternehmen Delphin (1972)
- Aufstand der Roboter (1972)
- Vorstoß zum Uranus (1972)
- Die Vollstrecker (1973)
- Testakte Kolibri (1973)
- Raumsonde Epsilon (1974)
- Salomon 76 (1974)
- Aktenzeichen: Illegal (1975)
- Operation Sonnenfracht (1975)
- Alarm für die Erde (1976)
- Countdown für die Erde (1976)
- Kurier zum Mars (1977)
- Die lautlose Bombe (1977)
- Pilgrim 2000 (1978)
- Der Spiegelplanet (1978)
- Sirius-Patrouille (1979)
- Astropolis (1980)
- Triton-Passage (1981)
- Blindflug zur Schlange (1981)
- Raumposition Oberon (1982)
- Vargo-Faktor (1982)
- Astronautensonne (1983)
- Planetaktion Z (1983)
- Ikarus, Ikarus... (1984)
- Der Pandora-Zwischenfall (1984)
- Metropolis-Konvoi (1985)
- Zeitspule (1985)
- Die Eismensch-Verschwörung (1986)
- Geheimsache Wetterhahn (1987)
[edit] The radio dramas
The Mark Brandis adventure series is currently being adapted into radio drama format and published on CD.
- Bordbuch Delta VII (2007) (ISBN 978-3-88698-918-8)
- Verrat auf der Venus (2008) (ISBN 978-3-88698-773-3)
[edit] External links
- Official site (German language)
- Mark Brandis series official site (German language)
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ translated from bio page of writer's official German language website
- ^ Periodical "phantastisch!" (ISSN 1616-8437) issue #28, p.42 ff: "Die Memoiren des Mark Brandis" (The Memoirs of Mark Brandis)
- ^ taken from bio page of writer's official German language website
- ^ Jeschke/Mamczak (editors): "Das Science Fiction Jahr 2006" (ISBN 978-3-453-52183-4), p. 657 ff.: Essay "Erinnerungen an Mark Brandis" (Memories of Mark Brandis)