Stephen R. Lawhead
Stephen R. Lawhead, born [1] known for his works of fantasy, science fiction, and historical fiction, particularly Celtic historical fiction. He has written over 28 novels and numerous children's and non-fiction books.
2 July 1950 , is a UK–based American writerBiography
He was born to Robert Eugene Lawhead and Lois Rowena Bissell Lawhead at Good Samaritan Hospital, Kearney, Nebraska. In 1968, Lawhead graduated from Kearney High and entered Kearney State College as an Art major. In 1969, while at Kearney State College, he wrote a weekly humour column for the college newspaper and was a frequent contributor of poetry and short stories to The Shore Anthology and The Antler. He paid his way through college largely through playing lead guitar in a college rock band named Mother Rush. Lawhead met Alice Slaikeu in 1971 and married her in 1972. He graduated from Kearney State College in 1973 with BA in Art and then went on to enroll in Northern Baptist Theological Seminary. During this time Lawhead also enrolled in a number of writing courses at nearby Wheaton College. In 1980, Lawhead became the manager of the successful Christian rock act DeGarmo and Key and formed his own record company, Ariel Records.[2] The demise of Ariel Records in 1981 prompted the beginning of Lawhead's fiction-writing career.
In 1981, Lawhead began to author novels, initially fantasy and science fiction, completing his first trilogy, the "Dragon King trilogy". In 1986, he moved to Oxford, England to do research for The Pendragon Cycle, a reinterpretation of the legend of King Arthur in a Celtic setting combined with elements of Atlantis. Heavily rooted in the original Celtic source material which gave rise to the later and more familiar versions of the Arthurian legend, the series has received critical acclaim for its creative retelling of the Arthur legend and historical credibility.[3]
The first book in the series, Taliesin, won the Evangelical Christian Publishers Association's Gold Medallion Award for Fiction in 1988.[4] Lawhead's research for The Pendragon Cycle sparked an interest in Celtic history and culture, especially Celtic Christianity, topics which have featured prominently in his work ever since.
"The Song of Albion" trilogy prompted a return to England (Lawhead having left in 1987). This was a series of books set between the Celtic Otherworld and present-day Britain. In the 1990s, he published Byzantium,[5] a work of pure historical fiction, followed by "The Celtic Crusades" trilogy, set at the time of the Crusades, and then Avalon: The Return of King Arthur, a stand-alone related to the Pendragon Cycle.
In 2003, Lawhead published the novel Patrick: Son of Ireland, a fictionalized account of the early years of Saint Patrick. In 2006, he published Hood, the first book in the King Raven Trilogy – a retelling of the Robin Hood legend, transferred to Wales.[6] In 2008, the second book in the trilogy, Scarlet, won a Christy Award in the category of Visionary Fiction.[7]
In 2003, Lawhead received an honorary doctorate from the University of Nebraska at Kearney.[8]
Lawhead and his wife reside in Oxford, UK. He has two sons, Ross and Drake Lawhead.
Works
Adult fiction
Many of his books are in series following a common theme:
Dragon King trilogy:
- In the Hall of the Dragon King (1982)
- The Warlords of Nin (1983)
- The Sword and the Flame (1984)
Empyrion Saga:
- Empyrion I: The Search for Fierra (1985)
- Empyrion II: The Siege of Dome (1986)
The Pendragon Cycle:
- Taliesin (1987)
- Merlin (1988)
- Arthur (1989)
- Pendragon (1994)
- Grail (1997)
The Song of Albion:
- The Paradise War (1991)
- The Silver Hand (1992)
- The Endless Knot (1993)
The Celtic Crusades:
- The Iron Lance (1998)
- The Black Rood (2000)
- The Mystic Rose (2001)
- Hood (2006)
- Scarlet (2007)
- Tuck (2009)
Hero (With Ross Lawhead):
- City of Dreams (2003)
- Rogue Nation (unpublished)
- World Without End (unpublished)
Bright Empires:
- The Skin Map (2010)
- The Bone House (2011)
- The Spirit Well (2012)
- The Shadow Lamp (2013)
- The Fatal Tree (2014)
Stand-alone novels:
- Dream Thief (1983)
- Byzantium (1996)
- Avalon: The Return of King Arthur (1999) — related to the Pendragon Cycle
- Patrick: Son of Ireland (2003)
Children's fiction
The Brown Ears Books:
- Brown Ears: The adventures of a lost-and-found rabbit (1988)
- Brown Ears at Sea: More adventures of a lost-and-found rabbit (1990)
The Howard Books
- Howard Had A Spaceship (1986)
- Howard Had A Submarine (1987)
- Howard Had A Hot Air Balloon (1988)
- Howard Had A Shrinking Machine (1988)
The Riverbank Series
- The Tale of Jeremy Vole (1990)
- The Tale of Timothy Mallard (1990)
- The Tale of Annabelle Hedgehog (1990)
Non-fiction
- The Ultimate College Student Handbook (1989) (later published as The Total Guide to College Life) – With Alice Lawhead
- Rock on Trial: Pop Music and its Role in Our Lives (1989)
- Rock of This Age: The Real & Imagined Dangers of Rock Music (1987)
- Pilgrim's Guide to the New Age (1986) – With Alice Lawhead
- Judge For Yourself (1985)
- The Phoenix Factor: Surviving and Growing Through Personal Crisis (1985) (later published as Up From the Ashes) – With Karl A. Slaikeu
- Turn Back the Night: A Christian Response to Popular Culture (1985)
- Welcome to the Family: How to Find a Home With Other Believers (1982)
- Rock Reconsidered: A Christian Looks at Contemporary Music (1981)
- After You Graduate: A Guide to Life After High School (1978)
- Decisions! Decisions! Decisions! What to do When You Can't Make Up Your Mind (1978)
Books contributed to
Lawhead has also contributed essays or chapters to several books. His essay "J.R.R. Tolkien: Master of Middle-earth," which describes the impact Tolkien's writings had on him, is featured in the following titles:
- More Than Words: Contemporary Writers on the Works That Shaped Them (2002) (previously published as Reality and the Vision (1990) and The Classics We've Read, The Difference They've Made (1993)) – Compiled by Philip Yancey, edited by James C. Schaap
- Tolkien: A Celebration (1999) – Edited by Joseph Pearce
Lawhead has contributed to one fictional compilation, writing a chapter in the serial mystery novel Carnage at Christhaven (1989 – ed. William Griffin).
References
- ^ "Harry Potter Books". Los Angeles Times. 31 October 1999. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
...bestselling author Stephen R Lawhead's Dragon King series...
- ^ "STEPHEN LAWHEAD, AWARD-WINNING AUTHOR AND UNK ALUMNUS, IS WINTER COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER". University of Nebraska at Kearney. 2 December 2003. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
- ^ Bradley J. Birzer. "The Conundrum of Stephen Lawhead". The Imaginative Conservative.
- ^ "Christian Book Expo: 1988 Gold Medallion Book Awards Winners". www.christianbookexpo.com. Retrieved 27 May 2015.
- ^ James, Marion (15 March 2009). "'Byzantium' by Steven R. Lawhead". Today's Zaman. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
- ^ Sullivan, Jane (28 May 2010). "The truth about Robin Hood". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
- ^ "2001-2010 Christy Awards Winners & Finalists" (PDF). The Christy Awards. The Christy Awards. 26 May 2015. Retrieved 26 May 2015.
- ^ Sokpa, Kosi. "University of Nebraska's Presidential Search". nebraska.edu. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
External links
- 1950 births
- Living people
- 20th-century American novelists
- 21st-century American novelists
- American Christians
- American expatriates in the United Kingdom
- American fantasy writers
- American historical novelists
- American male novelists
- American science fiction writers
- Christian writers
- Writers from Nebraska
- Writers of historical fiction set in the Middle Ages