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Tracy Hickman

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Tracy Raye Hickman
Tracy Hickman at Dragon Con 2006.
Tracy Hickman at Dragon Con 2006.
OccupationNovelist
NationalityUnited States of America
Period1984-Present
GenreFantasy Fiction
Website
http://www.trhickman.com/

Tracy Raye Hickman (born November 26, 1955, Salt Lake City, Utah, United States)[1] is a best-selling fantasy author, best known for his work on Dragonlance as a game designer and co-author with Margaret Weis, while he worked for TSR. He married Laura Curtis in 1977, and together they have four children.

Early life

Tracy Hickman was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, on November 26 1955, where he grew up.[1] He graduated from Provo High School in 1974, where his major interests were in drama, music, and Air Force JROTC. In 1975, Tracy began two years of service as a missionary for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. His initial posting was for six months in Hawaii before his visa was approved, and he moved on to his final calling in Indonesia. There, he served as a missionary in Surabaya, Djakarta, and the mountain city of Bandung before being released honorably in 1977. As a result, Tracy can still speak conversational Indonesian, and occasionally bases his magical phrases on that language.

Tracy married his high school sweetheart, Laura Curtis,[1] within four months of his return to the United States.[citation needed] They are the parents of four children: Angel, Curtis, Tasha, and Jarod.[citation needed] Laura Hickman was the inspiration for Laurana Kanan.[1]

He eventually attended Brigham Young University.[1] Tracy has worked as a supermarket stockboy, a movie projectionist, a theater manager, a glass worker, a television assistant director, and a drill press operator in a genealogy center.

Tracy and Laura wrote the original versions of the modules Rahasia and Pharaoh together, and privately published them.[1] In 1981,[citation needed] Tracy went into business, but his associate left the Hickmans with $30,000 in bad checks to cover. Driven into bankruptcy, Tracy sent Rahasia and Pharaoh to TSR, “literally so that I could buy shoes for my children”.[1] TSR wanted the mouldes, but hired Tracy as well, “They said it would be easier to publish my adventures if I was part of the company. So, we made the move from Utah to Wisconsin. It was a terrifying experience. We had no money. My parents begged us not to venture into such foreign territory to pursue such a bizarre career. My father wrote that there was a secure job as a fry cook in Flagstaff (where my parents were living), and he pleaded with me to come take it.”[1]

Career

Tracy came to TSR in 1982, and soon thereafter management announced the intention to develop a series of role-playing adventures based on dragons. Tracy's proposal, code-named Project Overlord, was the Dragonlance Chronicles, which led to his association with Margaret Weis. This was the first project TSR had undertaken that would include adult novels as well as games, calendars, and other spin-off products. The original Drangonlance team was formed under Tracy's leadership. By 1987, the successful Dragonlance project had sold two million books and a half million adventure modules.[1]

Hickman and Weis also wrote the Darksword trilogy, the Death Gate Cycle, and the Sovereign Stone trilogy.

Tracy Hickman (Left) and Margaret Weis at Gen Con Indy 2008.

The Hickmans have been publishing game designs together for over twenty-five years including the popular and innovative Advanced Dungeons & Dragons Ravenloft module. They published their first joint novel, Mystic Warrior, in 2004. Tracy and Laura have been producing their DragonHearth podcast since December 2005.

Tracy recently announced starting two new fantasy series: one being the six-book 'Dragonships' series with his long-time writing partner Margaret Weis and the other the three-book 'Drakis' series with his wife, Laura.

In 1999 Pyramid magazine named Tracy Hickman as one of The Millennium's Most Influential Persons "at least in the realm of adventure gaming."[2] The magazine stated that Tracy Hickman and Margaret Weis are "basically responsible for the entire gaming fiction genre."[2] Hickman was inducted into the Origins Hall of Fame in 2002, recognized in part for "one game line turned literary sensation: Dragonlance."[3]

Hickman wrote the screenplay for, produced and edited the first science-fiction film shot in space, 'Apogee of Fear'.[4]

In 2009, Hickman announced his intent to release XDM: X-Treme Dungeon Mastery, a guide to DMing based on his years of experience in the trade. [1]

On his personal website, Hickman states that he continues to be an active member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and resides in St. George, Utah.[5]

Bibliography

Dragonlance

Darksword

  1. Forging the Darksword 1 (1987)
  2. Doom of the Darksword 1 (1988)
  3. Triumph of the Darksword 1 (1988)
  4. Legacy of the Darksword 1 (1997)

Rose of the Prophet

  1. The Will of the Wanderer 1 (1988)
  2. Paladin of the Night 1 (1989)
  3. The Prophet of Akhran 1 (1989)

Death Gate Cycle

  1. Dragon Wing 1 (1990)
  2. Elven Star 1 (1991)
  3. Fire Sea 1 (1992)
  4. Serpent Mage 1 (1993)
  5. The Hand of Chaos 1 (1993)
  6. Into the Labyrinth 1 (1994)
  7. The Seventh Gate 1 (1995)

Songs of the Stellar Wind

  1. Requiem of the Stars (1996)

Starshield

  1. Starshield: Sentinels 1 (1996)
  2. Nightsword 1 (1998)

StarCraft

  1. StarCraft: Speed Of Darkness 7 (2002)

Sovereign Stone

  1. Well of Darkness 1 (2000)
  2. Guardians of the Lost 1 (2001)
  3. Journey into the Void 1 (2003)

Bronze Canticles

  1. Mystic Warrior 2 (2004)
  2. Mystic Quest 2 (2005)
  3. Mystic Empire 2 (2006)

Dragonships

  1. Bones of the Dragon 1 (2008)
  2. Dragonships 2 (working title) 1 (TBA)
  3. Dragonships 3 (working title) 1 (TBA)
  4. Dragonships 4 (working title) 1 (TBA)
  5. Dragonships 5 (working title) 1 (TBA)
  6. Dragonships 6 (working title) 1 (TBA)

Drakis

  1. Song of the Dragon 2 (2008)[citation needed]
  2. Citadel of the Lost 2 (TBA)
  3. Blood of the Empire 2 (TBA)

Other novels

  1. The Immortals (1996)
  2. Starcraft: Speed of Darkness (2002)

1 (co-author Margaret Weis)
2 (co-author Laura Hickman)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Weis, Margaret (April 1987). "TSR Profiles". Dragon (#120). Lake Geneva, Wisconsin: TSR, Inc.: 91. {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ a b Haring, Scott D. (1999-12-24). "Second Sight: The Millennium's Best "Other" Game and The Millennium's Most Influential Person". Pyramid (online). Retrieved 2008-02-15. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ "Origins Award Winners (2001) and Hall of Fame Inductees". Academy of Adventure Gaming Arts & Design. Retrieved 2008-03-13.
  4. ^ "LTUE, Day 2". Tachyon City (Nathan Shumate). Retrieved 2009-02-20.
  5. ^ http://www.trhickman.com/Bio.html
  6. ^ "Origins Award Winners (2000)". Academy of Adventure Gaming Arts & Design. Retrieved 2008-03-13.
  • Varney, Allen (1998-08). "Profiles: Tracy Hickman". Dragon #250. XIII (3): 120. {{cite journal}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameters: |Starcraft Book Wikia Page= and |coauthors= (help)