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* The Old Man's Best (May 2011)
* The Old Man's Best (May 2011)
* Astronomical Distance, Geologic Time (March 2011)
* Astronomical Distance, Geologic Time (March 2011)
* [http://www.analogsf.com/201005/story-yellowwood.shtml Encounter in a Yellow Wood] (March 2010)
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120325230548/http://www.analogsf.com/201005/story-yellowwood.shtml Encounter in a Yellow Wood] (March 2010)
* The Late Sam Boone (June 2008)
* The Late Sam Boone (June 2008)
* The Suit (November 2007)
* The Suit (November 2007)
* Chandra's Pup (July/August 2005)
* Chandra's Pup (July/August 2005)
* [http://www.analogsf.com/0602/Clay.shtml Clay's Pride] (July/August 2004) – [[Nebula Award]] finalist
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20120423124003/http://www.analogsf.com/0602/Clay.shtml Clay's Pride] (July/August 2004) – [[Nebula Award]] finalist
* Sam Boone's Super Fantastic, Intragalactic, Ass-Kicking, Body-Slammin', Foot Stomping, Rasslin' Extravaganza (May 2002)
* Sam Boone's Super Fantastic, Intragalactic, Ass-Kicking, Body-Slammin', Foot Stomping, Rasslin' Extravaganza (May 2002)
* Magic's Price (March 2001) – Nebula Award finalist
* Magic's Price (March 2001) – Nebula Award finalist

Revision as of 04:31, 27 July 2017

Bud Sparhawk
BornJohn C. Sparhawk
(1937-08-11) August 11, 1937 (age 87)
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction

John C. "Bud" Sparhawk (born August 11, 1937)[1] is an American science fiction writer. He is known for the strong scientific basis of his work[citation needed] and for his humorous science fiction, in particular the Sam Boone series of short fiction.

Biography

Sparhawk was born in Baltimore, Maryland, and lives in Annapolis. He has a BS degree in Mathematics from the University of Maryland and an MBA in Finance from Oklahoma City University. After fifteen years in the Air Force he worked for a variety of commercial companies before retiring from the role of Vice President at Macfadden, a Federal Government contractor. Sparhawk is also a member of SIGMA, a think tank of speculative writers that advises the government on issues of national interest.[2]

Sparhawk started writing seriously in 1974 and made his first sale to Analog, followed quickly by his second, just when he entered his second year of graduate school, and just before taking a thirteen-year hiatus from SF. His work is most associated with his short fiction in Analog but it has also appeared in various other magazines and anthologies. He is a three-time nominee for the Nebula Award for Best Novella in 1997, 2002, and 2005, and his stories have appeared in several Year's Best SF anthologies. His latest novel titled Distant Seas, was released in April 2015 by Fantastic Books. His first professionally published novel, titled Vixen, was released in 2008 from Cosmos Books.[3] He currently serves on the Board of Directors in the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America as Chief Financial Officer.[4]

Sparhawk occasionally attends science fiction and fantasy conventions, including Balticon, Confluence, and CapClave in the Mid-Atlantic region of the US. He has also appeared as a guest author in numerous interviews When not writing, he spends his spare time sailing on Chesapeake Bay.[5]

Bibliography

Novels

  • Sparhawk, Bud (2008). Vixen. New York: Cosmos Books. ISBN 978-0-8439-5945-1. OCLC 232981501.
  • Sparhawk, Bud (2015). Distant Seas. Brooklyn, N.Y.: Fantastic Books. ISBN 9781627556330. OCLC 907799376.

Short fiction

Title Year First published Reprinted/collected Notes
Scout 2012 Sparhawk, Bud (Jun 2012). "Scout". Asimov's Science Fiction. 36 (6). {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |authormask= (help)
Deceleration 2013 Sparhawk, Bud (Nov 2013). "Deceleration". Analog Science Fiction and Fact. 133 (11): 39–43. {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |1= and |authormask= (help)
Asimov's
  • Bright Red Star (March 2005)
Analog
  • Footprints in the Snow (November 2015)
  • Slider (May 2015)
  • Conquest (November 2014)
  • Forgiveness (June 2014)
  • CREP d'Etoile (July/August 2013)
  • The Snack (March 2013)
  • The Old Man's Best (May 2011)
  • Astronomical Distance, Geologic Time (March 2011)
  • Encounter in a Yellow Wood (March 2010)
  • The Late Sam Boone (June 2008)
  • The Suit (November 2007)
  • Chandra's Pup (July/August 2005)
  • Clay's Pride (July/August 2004) – Nebula Award finalist
  • Sam Boone's Super Fantastic, Intragalactic, Ass-Kicking, Body-Slammin', Foot Stomping, Rasslin' Extravaganza (May 2002)
  • Magic's Price (March 2001) – Nebula Award finalist
  • The Debt (May 2000)
  • The Emperor's Dark Matters (July/August 2000)
  • Evolution (October 2000)
  • Olympus Mons (February 1998)
  • The Ice Dragon's Song (July/August 1998)
  • Sam Boone's Teacup Conundrum (August 1998)
  • High Flight (December 1998)
  • Sam Boone's Dry Run (July 1997)
  • Primrose Rescue (May 1997)
  • Sam Boone's Rational Choice (March 1997)
  • Sam Boone's Appeal to Common Scents (July 1996)
  • Primrose and Thorn (May 1996) – Anlab Award winner (Analog reader's poll), Nebula finalist; in Years' Best Science Fiction, number 14
  • The Bill (February 1996)
  • Resurrection (January 1996)
  • Sam Boone and the Thermal Couples (October 1995)
  • Persistence (May 1994)
  • Iridium Dreams (April 1994)
  • Jake's Gift (September 1993)
  • R-TRNRD (Mid-December 1993)
  • Dad (June 1993)
  • Childish Things (December 1994)
  • Hurricane! (September 1994)
  • Mary's Present (July 1994)
  • Alba Krystal (January 1977)
  • The Tompkins Battery Case (August 1976)
Other magazines
  • Haunted (w/Cat Rambo)("Apex & Abyss", July 2016)
  • Causes and Effects (Daily Science Fiction, July 2016)
  • High Jack ("Trajectories", Hydra Publications, April 2016)
  • Culmination (Daily Science Fiction, September 2015)
  • Tommy and the Beast (Daily Science Fiction, December 20, 2013)
  • Ten Winks to Forever (Orson Scott Card's Intergalactic Medicine Show, June 2010)
  • Tortuous Path (Abyss and Apex, April 2010)
  • No Cord Nor Cable (Abyss and Apex, April 2009)
  • Winds of Mars (Jim Baen's Universe, April 2009)
  • Pumpkin Jim Baen's Universe, January 2009)
  • The Super (Jim Baen's Universe, August 2008)
  • Connection (Darker Matter, June 2007)
  • Frost (Darker Matter, March 2007)
  • An Affliction of Wyrms (iFiction, February 2006)
  • Bright Red Star (Asimov's August 2004) – in Year's Best Science Fiction, number 11
  • Handful of Stars (Frequency *5, Fall 2003)
  • Rate of Change (Frequency, *2, January 2001)
  • Mercenary (Absolute Magnitude, Summer, 1998)
  • Beryl's Run (Absolute Magnitude, Winter 1999)
  • Etiquette (Radius, April 1995)
  • Rate of Change (Radius, November 1995)
  • Eve of Feast (Radius, December 1994)
  • Culmination (Daily SF, July 2015)

Short fiction in anthologies

  • Pilgrim (Fantastic Future 13, February 2013)
  • True Friends (Dogs of War, April 2013)
  • Hard Choices (Best Laid Plans, December 2012)
  • Cybermarine (Defending the Future, December 2013)
  • The Glass Box (So It Begins, March 2009)
  • Broadside (Breach the Hull, November 2007)
  • Alliances (Breach the Hull, November 2007)
  • Dancing with Dragons (Wildside Press), collection
  • Sam Boone - Front to Back (FoxAcre Press), collection of the Sam Boone stories
  • Bright Red Star (Year's Best SF, Number 11, 2004)
  • Seduction (Through a Glass Darkly, Lite Circle Books, 2003)
  • Pumpkin (Dancing with Dragons, Wildside Press)
  • Fierce Embrace (Return of the Dinosaurs, DAW Books,1997)

Electronic books

  • Distant Seas (eNovel)
  • Stone in the Glade (eNovel) (As J Carroll)
  • Two Novellas (eCollection)
  • Three from the Dark Side (eCollection)
  • Mars & Beyond (eCollection)
  • Magician (eNovel)
  • Evolution (eCollection)
  • Boy’s Book of Science (eNovel)
  • Short Subjects (eCollection)

Nonfiction

  • Premature Submission Syndrome (The SFWA Bulletin Summer 2015)
  • The Eleven Stages of Publication (The SFWA Bulletin Summer 2014)
  • Writing Tools (Clarkesworld Magazine #92)
  • From the Treasurer(The SFWA Bulletin, Winter 2014)
  • Taxes and the Short Fiction Writer (The SFWA Bulletin, Winter 2013)
  • Laugh Lines (How to Write Science Fiction, Dragon Moon Press, 2007)
  • Your Literary Legacy (The SFWA Bulletin, Winter 2006)
  • Cold Trophies (Artemis, Fall 2003)
  • Ms Management (Speculations 21, June 1999)
  • Love's Labor. Lost! (Speculations 20, April 1998)
  • The Last Great Man (Speculations, March 1995)
  • The Hat and the Dragon (Chesapeake Bay Magazine, October 1992)
  • Hugo and Me (Chesapeake Bay Magazine, April 1992)

References

  1. ^ Bud Sparhawk at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database. Retrieved 2015-07-17. Select a title to see its linked publication history and general information. Select a particular edition (title) for more data at that level, such as a front cover image or linked contents.
  2. ^ "Members M – S". SIGMA forum. Retrieved 2015-11-13.
  3. ^ "Bud Sparhawk". Fantasticfiction.co.uk. Retrieved 2015-07-17.
  4. ^ "Board". SFWA. 2015-07-01. Retrieved 2015-07-17.
  5. ^ "Bud Sparhawk". Bud Sparhawk. Retrieved 2015-07-17.