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Leonard Carpenter

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Occupation
  
Author

Nationality
  
United States


Name
  
Leonard Carpenter

Role
  
Writer

Genre
  
Fantasy, science fiction

Books
  
Conan, Conan the Gladiator, Conan the Raider, Conan the Hero, Conan the Savage

Similar People
  
Robert E Howard, John Maddox Roberts, Lin Carter, Karl Edward Wagner, L Sprague de Camp

Leonard Carpenter, Author, Traveler, Storyteller


Leonard Paul Carpenter is an American writer of fantasy and science fiction. He writes as Leonard Carpenter and Leonard P. Carpenter.

Contents

Life

Carpenter was born in 1948 in Chicago, but aside from a year in West Texas in childhood has lived most of his life in California. He married Cheryl Lynn Chrisman on October 10, 1970 in Alameda, California. They attended UC Berkeley, from which they both graduated, and had two daughters and a son. The Carpenters lived in Santa Maria, California from 1975 to 2003, and continued to reside on the California Central Coast thereafter. Cheryl, a schoolteacher, retired in 2013 and died January 24, 2014 after a year-long fight with cancer. Since her death Carpenter has traveled and worked on book projects.

Works

Among Carpenter's works are eleven Conan novels published by Tor Books. He has also written the science fiction novel Fatal Strain, later re-titled Biohacker, the historical fiction novel Lusitania Lost, and a number of short stories, articles and poems.

Carpenter's writing has been published in the magazines Amazing Stories, Asimov's Science Fiction, Eldrich Tales, and 2AM, as well as the anthologies Dark Lessons (1985), L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume I (1985), The Year's Best Horror Stories XIV (1986), Horrorstory Volume 5 (1989), The Year's Best Horror Stories: XVII (1989), Short Sharp Shocks (1990), The Cthulhu Cycle (1996), Serve It Forth — Cooking With Anne McCaffrey (1996), L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume XV (1999), and L. Ron Hubbard Presents the Best of Writers of the Future (2000).

Awards

Carpenter has been the recipient of the Writers of the Future award and the Origins Award for Best Game Related Fiction.

References

Leonard Carpenter Wikipedia