Stephen Hunt (author)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stephen Hunt (born in Canada) is a British author best known for his fantasy novel For the Crown and the Dragon which won the 1994 WH Smith New Talent Prize.

This book was also voted best fantasy novel of 1994 by the readers of the British genre gaming magazine Roleplayer Independent.

The novel is widely recognized as having created the 'flintlock fantasy' sub-genre of the mainstream sword and sorcery literary genre,[citation needed] a movement which is still popular amongst tabletop gaming enthusiasts. [see Flintloque].

Hunt's short fiction has appeared in various mainly US and UK-based genre magazines, and some of his earliest works were written in the cyberpunk sub-genre of science fiction.

The best known of these was the "Hollow Duellists", a short story which William Gibson was reported as admiring as one of the leading works of the second-wave of cyberpunk fiction. This later went on to win the 1995 ProtoStellar magazine prize for best short fiction story, a tie with British SF author Stephen Baxter.

Also by Stephen Hunt is the recently (2/04/07) published The Court of the Air this is a similar style of novel to For the Crown and the Dragon and is set in a basically Victorian alternate world with the addition of magic in various forms. The nation in which the plot is largely set is recognizably based on Victorian Britain and the main neighbouring country is presumably inspired by the Paris Commune (and communist revolutions in general).

Influences on Hunt's work include Jack Williamson, Stephen Goldin, Bruce Sterling, Larry Niven and Michael Moorcock (the latter is an author whose work Hunt's own has sometimes been compared to by reviewers).[citation needed]

[edit] External links