John Grant (author) explained

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Paul le Page Barnett (22 November 1949 – 3 February 2020), known by the pen name of John Grant, was a Scottish writer and editor of science fiction, fantasy, and non-fiction.[1] [2]

Biography

Born Paul le Page Barnett in Aberdeen, Scotland, Grant sometime wrote under his own name, as Eve Devereux, and under various other pseudonyms; he has also ghostwritten a number of books. The author of some 70 books in all (excluding ghostwritten books), he has published several original novels as well as one novel in the Judge Dredd series and, with Joe Dever, 11 novels and a novella collection in the Legends of Lone Wolf series; edited several anthologies, beginning with Aries 1 (1979) and most recently New Writings in the Fantastic (2007); and has written dozens of nonfiction works, including several relating to fantasy and science fiction. His collaborators have included David Langford and, as illustrator, Bob Eggleton. With John Clute, he co-edited The Encyclopedia of Fantasy (1997) for which he also wrote all the cinema entries.[3] He has written numerous short stories, articles and columns. Barnett lived in New Jersey with his wife, Pamela Scoville, a noted animation art expert and co-founder with her late husband Michael of the Animation Art Guild.[4] Grant died in February 2020 at the age of 70.[5]

Bibliography

Critical studies and reviews of Grant's work

Enchanted world

Awards and nominations

YearNominated workAwardCategoryResult
1994The Encyclopedia of Science FictionBSFA AwardSpecial Award
1996The Glad Who Sang a Mermaid in from the Probability SeaBritish Fantasy AwardBest Short Fiction
1997The Encyclopedia of FantasyBram Stoker AwardSuperior Achievement in Non-Fiction
1998Hugo AwardHugo Award for Best Related Work
Locus AwardBest Non-Fiction
Mythopoeic AwardsMythopoeic Scholarship Award (for Myth and Fantasy Studies)
World Fantasy Award
1999Eaton AwardJ. Lloyd Eaton Scholarship Award
2001Paper Tiger BooksChesley AwardsChesley Award for Best Art Director
2002Locus AwardBest Editor
2003DragonhengeHugo AwardHugo Award for Best Related Work
Locus AwardBest Art Book
Paper Tiger Fantasy Art GalleryLocus AwardBest Art Book
PerceptualisticsLocus AwardBest Art Book
Paper Tiger BooksWorld Fantasy AwardWorld Fantasy Special Award: Professional
2004The Chesley Awards for Science Fiction and Fantasy Art: A RetrospectiveHugo Award Hugo Award for Best Related Work
Locus AwardBest Non-Fiction/Art
2008New Writings in the FantasticBritish Fantasy AwardBest Anthology

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: John Grant . . 6 July 2014 . 28 October 2014.
  2. Web site: John Grant and Paul Barnett Agree: Science Has Been Corrupted . . July 2008 . 25 October 2014.
  3. Web site: John Grant . Infinity Plus. 16 November 2002 . 25 October 2014.
  4. Web site: Writers talk about writing: John Grant . Iain Rowan's blog . 13 June 2011 . 25 October 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20141031092539/http://blog.iainrowan.com/2011/06/writers-talk-about-writing-john-grant.html . 31 October 2014 . dead . dmy-all .
  5. http://www.sf-encyclopedia.com/news/paul-barnett-(1949-2020)/ Paul Barnett (1949–2020)