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Sean A Moore

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Occupation
  
Author

Nationality
  
United States


Name
  
Sean Moore

Role
  
Fiction writer

Born
  
April 20, 1964 (
1964-04-20
)

Genre
  
Fantasy, science fiction

Died
  
February 23, 1998, Boulder, Colorado, United States

Books
  
Conan and the Grim Grey God, Conan the Hunter, Kull The Conqueror, Conan and the Shaman's

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

Sean A. Moore (April 20, 1964 – February 23, 1998) was an American fantasy and science fiction writer, and computer programmer. His primary significance as a writer is for his three pastiche novels featuring Robert E. Howard's sword and sorcery hero Conan and for his work on the screenplay of the movie Kull the Conqueror, and novelization of the same film.

Contents

Life

Moore was a resident of Boulder, Colorado, where he worked in the field of computer programming in a number of different capacities, including programmer, systems operations specialist, and writer of computer games. He was employed as a programmer by Aspen Systems, Inc. He was also a designer of board games. His hobbies included playing computer games and fencing.

Moore died in a car crash in Boulder. He was survived by his wife. Services were held five days after his death in Denver.

Writing career

Moore was active as both a fan and a professional writer in the community of Colorado fantasy and science fiction enthusiasts. Initially writing part-time, he had become a full-time writer at the time of his death, primarily for Tor Books. His last work was an unfinished science fiction horror novel, provisionally titled Diggers. He was a member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA).

Works

Among Moore's works are three Conan novels and the novelization of the film Kull the Conqueror, all published by Tor Books. He also contributed in an uncredited capacity to the screenplay of the film, and wrote the novelette "10585," published in the anthology It Came from the Drive-In (DAW Books, 1996).

Reception

Moore has been both praised for his "strengths ... in crafting a clever, dense plot with immense, epic scope, and populating it with an imaginative flood of action and monsters," and criticized for "overwrit[ing] to an incredible degree" and "choppy ... start-and-stop structure."

References

Sean A. Moore Wikipedia