John E. Stith Explained

John E. Stith
Birth Date:July 30, 1947
Birth Place:Boulder, Colorado, United States
Occupation:Novelist
Genre:science fiction, mystery

John E. Stith (born 1947 in Boulder, Colorado) is an American science fiction and mystery author, known for the scientific rigor he brings to adventure and mystery stories.[1]

Redshift Rendezvous, a Nebula Award nominee,[2] is a murder mystery set aboard a space ship traveling through hyperspace, where the speed of light is ten meters per second, so relativistic effects occur at running speed. The solution respects the laws of physics. Manhattan Transfer, a novel about an alien abduction of the entire borough of Manhattan, was a Seiun Award nominee in Japan.[3]

Stith's Nick Naught is a detective with a sense of humor in a dystopian future. He first appeared in Analog Magazine and his exploits (Naught for Hire and Naught Again) have been reprinted in the collection, All For Naught. Stith's other short fiction has appeared in Amazing Stories, Nature, and Dragon.

His work has been translated into French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, and Russian. His novels have been bestsellers on Locus and Amazon. He has lived in Colorado Springs since the 1970s.

Stith lived in Alamogordo, New Mexico from second grade through high school, with the exception of one year at Sunspot, New Mexico (when his father worked at Sacramento Peak Solar Observatory) and one year in Tucson, Arizona (when his father worked at Kitt Peak National Observatory). His father also worked at Holloman Air Force Base and White Sands Missile Range on projects including the rocket sled. In the 1950s, the neighbors a few houses down were Jim and Coral Lorenzen, who headed the Aerial Phenomena Research Organization (APRO).

Bibliography

Novels

Novellas

Novelettes

Collections

Major Awards

Television appearances

Video Appearances

Selected Short Stories

References

  1. Web site: John Edward Stith at the Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. 2015.
  2. Web site: SFWA Nebula Awards. 1991.
  3. Web site: Science Fiction Awards Database, Seiun Awards 1995. 1995.
  4. Web site: Colorado Authors' League Award Winners. 1996.
  5. Web site: Science Fiction Awards Database, John E. Stith. 1995.
  6. Web site: Daphne du Maurier Award. 2019.

External links

Selected Interviews