Sneha Girap (Editor)

Marc Gascoigne

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Nationality
  
British

Name
  
Marc Gascoigne

Role
  
Author


Marc Gascoigne shewolfreadscomwpcontentuploads201204marcp

Born
  
5 July 1962 (age 61) Temple Ewell with River, near Dover, Kent (
1962-07-05
)

Genre
  
Children's, games, science fiction, fantasy

Books
  
Black Madonna, Let the Galaxy Burn, Nosferatu, Dark Imperium, Shadowmaster

Similar People
  
Carl Sargent, Nick Kyme, Nigel Findley, Cassern S Goto, Ian Livingstone

Fighting Fantasy Fest 2: Battleblade Demonstealer


Marc Gascoigne (born 5 July 1962 at Temple Ewell with River, near Dover, Kent) is a British author and editor.

Contents

He is the editor, author or co-author of more than fifty books and gaming related titles, notably various Fighting Fantasy gamebooks, Shadowrun novels and adventures, Earthdawn novels and adventures, the original Games Workshop Judge Dredd roleplaying game, and material for Paranoia, Call of Cthulhu and many others listed below.

Biography

Marc Gascoigne co-wrote Games Workshop's original Judge Dredd Roleplaying Game and Puffin's mass-market Advanced Fighting Fantasy trilogy. Gascoigne also published Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay. He has also written and edited for Chaosium, West End Games, and FASA.

Gascoigne was the developer or editor of several of GW's classic boardgames in the mid-1980s, including the first two editions of Blood Bowl, and created the background for Dark Future, ported onto the car-based boardgame after the cancellation of an original cyberpunk-themed roleplaying game.

Although he worked on the popular children's series Fighting Fantasy as an editor, he only ever published one gamebook as author which was called Battleblade Warrior. It was number 31 of 59 in the original series and was released in early 1988.

After ten years as a freelance editor, including time on Puffin's Fighting Fantasy gamebook series, he returned to the Nottingham-based company in 1997 to help establish the Black Library fiction imprint. Starting as editor he became publisher and overall manager of the BL Publishing family of imprints, that during a time also included Black Industries and Solaris Books.

Under Gascoigne, with Warhammer experts Rick Priestley and Andy Jones, the idea for the Black Library slowly evolved and produced the magazine Inferno! as a result beginning in July 1997. Gascoigne was the general manager of Games Workshop's BL Publishing division, making books, board games, and RPGs.

He left this post at the end of March 2008 when Games Workshop downsized its staff. It was announced on 11th Sept 2008 that he had joined HarperCollins to create a new science fiction & fantasy imprint to be called Angry Robot.

Angry Robot was acquired by Osprey Publishing in September 2010. In October 2011, Gascoigne won the World Fantasy Special Award (Professional) for Angry Robot, presented at the World Fantasy Convention in San Diego, California.

References

Marc Gascoigne Wikipedia