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Robert Don Hughes

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Occupation
  
Author

Nationality
  
United States


Name
  
Robert Hughes

Role
  
Writer

Robert Don Hughes wwwadherentscomlitimagesauthughesjpg

Genre
  
Fantasy, science fiction, non-fiction

Education
  
Southern Baptist Theological Seminary

Books
  
Satan's whispers, The fallen, The eternity gene, Gabriel's trumpet, History: Think for Yourself

Dr. Robert Don Hughes (born 1949), is an American educator and writer, author of both mainstream fantasy and science fiction and evangelical non-fiction.

Contents

Education

Hughes received his B.A. from California Baptist College, his M.Div. from Golden Gate Baptist Theological Seminary, and his Ph.D. from the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, also studying at the University of Redlands.

Educational career

Hughes was formerly employed at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky, as associate vice president for external programs and associate professor of communication and mass media. Later he was professor of missions and evangelism at Clear Creek Baptist Bible College. He has also worked as a missionary in Africa.

Literary works

Hughes' fiction tends to deal seriously with religious themes, particularly in The Fallen and its sequel The Eternity Gene. Of his non-fiction, Satan's Whispers has the distinction of having been adopted for use by the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association.

Hughes' most extended body of work consists of his two fantasy sequences about a magical country split into three states by a two-headed dragon's occupation of the mountain pass linking each region with the others. As a result, the magical potential of each region has developed differently. The "Pelmen the Powershaper" trilogy tells of the end of the dragon's reign and its consequences; The unfinished "Wizard and Dragon" sequence, also projected as a trilogy, is set earlier in the country's history and deals with how the dragon was originally created.

Hughes' powerfully imagined dragon Vicia-Heinox with its two bickering heads has set a pattern for the portrayal of similar creatures in other media, including the animated film Quest for Camelot (1998) and the public television children's program Dragon Tales (1999-2005).

References

Robert Don Hughes Wikipedia