Bill Baldwin Explained

Bill Baldwin
Birth Date:6 June 1935
Occupation:Novelist
Nationality:American
Education:Mercersburg Academy
University of Pittsburgh (BA, MLitt)
Genre:Science fiction

Bill (Merl. W, Jr.) Baldwin (June 6, 1935 – October 14, 2015) was an American science fiction writer.[1] He wrote militaristic space opera. His main series is about a male protagonist named Wilf Ansor Brim.

He graduated from The Mercersburg Academy and the University of Pittsburgh, where he earned a B.A. in Journalism and a Master of Letters degree. He served as a lieutenant at the U.S. Air Force Missile Test Center. He worked at NASA at Cape Canaveral, Florida supporting Project Mercury as Chief of the Reports Division. Later, Baldwin served as a contractor for the NASA Manned Spacecraft Center.

He was the president of the Wooden Boat Association of north Texas. He was also the managing editor of the magazine The Brass Bell of the Chris-Craft Antique Boat Club. He and others helped create the Lawson Boating Heritage Center on Chautauqua Lake, Bemus Point, New York.[2]

Published works

The Helmsman Saga

Several books of the original Helmsman saga, The Siege, The Defenders and The Defiance in particular, were influenced by the World War II autobiography titled The Big Show (written by Pierre Clostermann).[3]

Baldwin's work contains allusions to other science fiction works. For example, Galactic Convoy mentions a planet named Throon (the capital world in the Star Kings books). The Turning Tide features a freighter captain named Verger Antillies.

This series began in 1985 but was later reprinted in "Director's Cut Special Editions" by Timberwolf Press. Also, as of October 2012, rewritten versions of the first four books have been made available in both paper and electronic form.

Other works

At the time of his death, Bill was working on a novel entitled "Heisenberg's U-Boat" and was starting on a final Wilf Brim book.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bill Baldwin at Internet Speculative Fiction Database. Internet Speculative Fiction Database.
  2. Web site: Lawson. David Jr. A Brief History of "LAWSONS" Lakeside Drive, Bemus Point. The Lawson Center. 28 January 2018. 15 October 2010.
  3. Book: Clostermann. Pierre. The Big Show. 1951. Random House. 978-0809479627. 42.