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Jack McDevitt

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Nationality
  
American

Role
  
Author

Name
  
Jack McDevitt

Genre
  
Science fiction

Period
  
1981 - present


Jack McDevitt httpsopionatorfileswordpresscom201201jack

Born
  
April 14, 1935 (age 89) (
1935-04-14
)

Occupation
  
Novelist, Short story writer

Education
  
Wesleyan University, La Salle University

Awards
  
Nebula Award for Best Novel

Nominations
  
Arthur C. Clarke Award

Books
  
The Engines of God, The Hercules Text, A Talent for War, Seeker, Deepsix

Similar People
  
Arthur C Clarke, Robert A Heinlein, Jack Levin, Alastair Reynolds, Mike Resnick

Jack McDevitt interview - Echo (and other books)


Jack McDevitt (born April 14, 1935) is an American science fiction author whose novels frequently deal with attempts to make contact with alien races, and with archaeology or xenoarchaeology. His two main series are the Alex Benedict series and the Priscilla Hutchins series.

Contents

McDevitt's first published story was "The Emerson Effect" in The Twilight Zone Magazine in 1981. Five years later, he published his first novel, The Hercules Text, about the discovery of an intelligently conceived signal whose repercussions threaten human civilization. This novel set the tone for many of McDevitt's following novels, which focused on making first contact. Frequently this theme is mixed with both trepidation before the unknown and a sense of wonder at the universe.

With The Engines of God (1994), McDevitt introduced the idea of a universe that was once teeming with intelligent life, but contains only their abandoned artifacts by the time humans arrive on the scene. Although it was initially written as a standalone novel, the main character of The Engines of God, pilot Priscilla Hutchins, has since appeared in six more books, Deepsix (2001), Chindi (2002), Omega (2003), Odyssey (2006), Cauldron (2007) and StarHawk (2013). The mystery surrounding the destructive "Omega Clouds" (which are introduced in The Engines of God) is left unexplored until Omega.

McDevitt's novels frequently raise questions which he does not attempt to answer. He prefers to leave ambiguities to puzzle and intrigue his readers: "Some things are best left to the reader's very able imagination." The SF Site's Steven H Silver has written about this:

McDevitt has a (probably unintentional) tendency to give the impression that his novels will go in one direction and then take them in a different direction. Or possibly his background is so well thought out, that throw away lines, or subplots, or minor characters, have enough information behind them to make the reader want to see their story as much as the main plot of the book. While slightly annoying, this is, I've decided, a strength of McDevitt's writing since it shows the depth of his created worlds.

The novel Seeker won the 2006 Nebula Award for Best Novel, given by the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America. He has been nominated for the Nebula Award sixteen times; Seeker is his only win.

Biography

McDevitt went to La Salle University, where a short story of his won the annual Freshman Short Story Contest and was published in the school's literary magazine, Four Quarters. As McDevitt explained in an interview, "I was on my way. Then I read David Copperfield and realized I could never write at that level, and therefore I should find something else to do. I joined the Navy, drove a cab, became an English teacher, took a customs inspector's job on the northern border, and didn't write another word for a quarter-century." McDevitt received a master's degree in literature from Wesleyan University in 1971. He returned to writing when his wife, Maureen, encouraged him to try his hand at it in 1980. As of 2007, McDevitt lives near Brunswick, Georgia. In 2005, he donated his archive to the department of Rare Books and Special Collections at Northern Illinois University.

Awards and nominations

  • Nebula Best Short Story nominee (1983) : Cryptic
  • Philip K. Dick Award (special citation) (1986) : The Hercules Text
  • Nebula Best Short Story nominee (1988) : "The Fort Moxie Branch"
  • Hugo Best Short Story nominee (1989) : "The Fort Moxie Branch"
  • International UPC Science Fiction Award winner (1993) : "Ships in the Night" (first English language winner)
  • Nebula Best Novella nominee (1996) : "Time Travelers Never Die"
  • Arthur C. Clarke Best Novel nominee (1997) : Engines of God
  • Hugo Best Novella nominee (1997) : "Time Travelers Never Die"
  • Nebula Best Novel nominee (1997) : Ancient Shores
  • Nebula Best Novel nominee (1998) : Moonfall
  • Nebula Best Novelette nominee (1999) : "Good Intentions" (co-writer Stanley Schmidt)
  • Nebula Best Novel nominee (2000) : Infinity Beach
  • John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Novel nominee (2001) : Infinity Beach
  • John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Novel nominee (2002) : Deepsix
  • Nebula Best Short Story nominee (2002) : "Nothing Ever Happens in Rock City"
  • Nebula Best Novel nominee (2003) : Chindi
  • Campbell Award winner (2004) : Omega
  • Nebula Best Novel nominee (2004) : Omega
  • Nebula Best Novel nominee (2005) : Polaris
  • Nebula Best Novel winner (2006) : Seeker
  • John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Novel nominee (2006) : Seeker
  • John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Novel nominee (2007) : Odyssey
  • Nebula Best Novel nominee (2007) : Odyssey
  • Nebula Best Novel nominee (2008) : Cauldron
  • Nebula Best Novel nominee (2010) : Echo
  • Nebula Best Novel nominee (2011) : Firebird
  • Robert A. Heinlein Award winner (2015)
  • References

    Jack McDevitt Wikipedia


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