Re: [scifinoir2] Philip José Farmer dies

2009-03-07 Thread Martin Baxter
(a moment of silence, please...)





-[ Received Mail Content ]--

 Subject : Re: [scifinoir2] Philip José_ Farmer dies

 Date : Thu, 26 Feb 2009 13:44:50 -0500

 From : brent wodehouse brent_wodeho...@thefence.us

 To : scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com


:-


Brent


Amy Harlib  writes:

[ mailto:aharlib%40earthlink.net ]ahar...@earthlink.net
Philip JosŽ Farmer dies

A real shame.

Author Philip JosŽ Farmer Dies
([ http://sfscope.com/2009/02/author-philip-jos-farmer-dies.html
]http://sfscope.com/2009/02/author-philip-jos-farmer-dies.html)

By Ian Randal Strock
February 25, 2009

Philip JosŽ Farmer's web site reports the death of the author
peacefully in his sleep in the morning of 25 February 2009. Born 26
January 1918 in Terre Haute, Indiana, Farmer won three Hugo Awards
(Most Promising New Talent, 1953; Best Novella [Riders of the Purple
Wage], 1968; and Best Novel [To Your Scattered Bodies Go], 1972), the
Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America's Grand Master Award
(2001), and the World Fantasy Award's Lifetime Achievement Award
(2001).

Farmer's first short story, O'Brien and Obrenov, appeared in
Adventure in March 1946. In 1950, after a twelve-year hiatus (and a
break to wash out of the Army Air Corps flight training program), he
received his BA in English from Bradley University. In August 1952,
Startling Stories published his first science fiction story, The
Lovers.

Farmer's first published novel was The Green Odyssey, which Ballantine
released in 1957. In 1953, however, Farmer's I Owe for the Flesh won
the Shasta prize novel contest. And though the prize was never paid,
the book was the first in what would become his iconic Riverworld
series. That series posits that everyone who has ever lived on Earth,
from cavemen to 1984, is resurrected along the banks of a million mile
long river. A character dying along the river simply wakes up
somewhere else the next day. In these stories, Farmer has characters
from any point in history meeting, interacting, and frequently
fighting.

Farmer also wrote the Dayworld series, in which overpopulation
requires that people be placed in suspended animation for six days out
of seven, each living but one day, and sharing their homes, jobs, and
lives with six other people. Then, of course, there are daybreakers,
who live different lives each day of the week. And his World of Tiers
series introduced the idea of Pocket Universes, which have different
physical laws.

In the 1970s, when Farmer was suffering from writer's block, he turned
his efforts to writing other people's novels; specifically, he wrote
Venus on the Half-Shell by Kurt Vonnegut's fictional Kilgore Trout. He
also wrote as Ralph vvon Wau Wau, who came to life on his own when
Spider Robinson had him appear in Callahan's Bar.

Farmer is survived by his wife, Bette (whom he married in 1941), as
well as children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.











http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JQdwk8Yntds

Re: [scifinoir2] Philip José Farmer dies

2009-03-06 Thread brent wodehouse
:-


Brent


Amy Harlib ahar...@earthlink.net writes:

[ mailto:aharlib%40earthlink.net ]ahar...@earthlink.net
Philip JosŽ Farmer dies

A real shame.

Author Philip JosŽ Farmer Dies
([ http://sfscope.com/2009/02/author-philip-jos-farmer-dies.html
]http://sfscope.com/2009/02/author-philip-jos-farmer-dies.html)

By Ian Randal Strock
February 25, 2009

Philip JosŽ Farmer's web site reports the death of the author
peacefully in his sleep in the morning of 25 February 2009. Born 26
January 1918 in Terre Haute, Indiana, Farmer won three Hugo Awards
(Most Promising New Talent, 1953; Best Novella [Riders of the Purple
Wage], 1968; and Best Novel [To Your Scattered Bodies Go], 1972), the
Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America's Grand Master Award
(2001), and the World Fantasy Award's Lifetime Achievement Award
(2001).

Farmer's first short story, O'Brien and Obrenov, appeared in
Adventure in March 1946. In 1950, after a twelve-year hiatus (and a
break to wash out of the Army Air Corps flight training program), he
received his BA in English from Bradley University. In August 1952,
Startling Stories published his first science fiction story, The
Lovers.

Farmer's first published novel was The Green Odyssey, which Ballantine
released in 1957. In 1953, however, Farmer's I Owe for the Flesh won
the Shasta prize novel contest. And though the prize was never paid,
the book was the first in what would become his iconic Riverworld
series. That series posits that everyone who has ever lived on Earth,
from cavemen to 1984, is resurrected along the banks of a million mile
long river. A character dying along the river simply wakes up
somewhere else the next day. In these stories, Farmer has characters
from any point in history meeting, interacting, and frequently
fighting.

Farmer also wrote the Dayworld series, in which overpopulation
requires that people be placed in suspended animation for six days out
of seven, each living but one day, and sharing their homes, jobs, and
lives with six other people. Then, of course, there are daybreakers,
who live different lives each day of the week. And his World of Tiers
series introduced the idea of Pocket Universes, which have different
physical laws.

In the 1970s, when Farmer was suffering from writer's block, he turned
his efforts to writing other people's novels; specifically, he wrote
Venus on the Half-Shell by Kurt Vonnegut's fictional Kilgore Trout. He
also wrote as Ralph vvon Wau Wau, who came to life on his own when
Spider Robinson had him appear in Callahan's Bar.

Farmer is survived by his wife, Bette (whom he married in 1941), as
well as children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.










Re: [scifinoir2] Philip José Farmer dies

2009-03-06 Thread brent wodehouse
:-


Brent


Amy Harlib ahar...@earthlink.net writes:

[ 
mailto:aharlib%40earthlink.net
 ]
ahar...@earthlink.net

Philip Jos? Farmer dies

A real shame.

Author Philip Jos? Farmer Dies
([ 
http://sfscope.com/2009/02/author-philip-jos-farmer-dies.html
 ]
http://sfscope.com/2009/02/author-philip-jos-farmer-dies.html)


By Ian Randal Strock
February 25, 2009

Philip Jos? Farmer's web site reports the death of the author
peacefully in his sleep in the morning of 25 February 2009. Born 26
January 1918 in Terre Haute, Indiana, Farmer won three Hugo Awards
(Most Promising New Talent, 1953; Best Novella [Riders of the Purple
Wage], 1968; and Best Novel [To Your Scattered Bodies Go], 1972), the
Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America's Grand Master Award
(2001), and the World Fantasy Award's Lifetime Achievement Award
(2001).

Farmer's first short story, O'Brien and Obrenov, appeared in
Adventure in March 1946. In 1950, after a twelve-year hiatus (and a
break to wash out of the Army Air Corps flight training program), he
received his BA in English from Bradley University. In August 1952,
Startling Stories published his first science fiction story, The
Lovers.

Farmer's first published novel was The Green Odyssey, which Ballantine
released in 1957. In 1953, however, Farmer's I Owe for the Flesh won
the Shasta prize novel contest. And though the prize was never paid,
the book was the first in what would become his iconic Riverworld
series. That series posits that everyone who has ever lived on Earth,
from cavemen to 1984, is resurrected along the banks of a million mile
long river. A character dying along the river simply wakes up
somewhere else the next day. In these stories, Farmer has characters
from any point in history meeting, interacting, and frequently
fighting.

Farmer also wrote the Dayworld series, in which overpopulation
requires that people be placed in suspended animation for six days out
of seven, each living but one day, and sharing their homes, jobs, and
lives with six other people. Then, of course, there are daybreakers,
who live different lives each day of the week. And his World of Tiers
series introduced the idea of Pocket Universes, which have different
physical laws.

In the 1970s, when Farmer was suffering from writer's block, he turned
his efforts to writing other people's novels; specifically, he wrote
Venus on the Half-Shell by Kurt Vonnegut's fictional Kilgore Trout. He
also wrote as Ralph vvon Wau Wau, who came to life on his own when
Spider Robinson had him appear in Callahan's Bar.

Farmer is survived by his wife, Bette (whom he married in 1941), as
well as children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.



[scifinoir2] Philip José Farmer dies

2009-02-26 Thread Amy Harlib

ahar...@earthlink.net
Philip José Farmer dies


A real shame.



Author Philip José Farmer Dies
(http://sfscope.com/2009/02/author-philip-jos-farmer-dies.html)

By Ian Randal Strock
February 25, 2009

Philip José Farmer's web site reports the death of the author
peacefully in his sleep in the morning of 25 February 2009. Born 26
January 1918 in Terre Haute, Indiana, Farmer won three Hugo Awards
(Most Promising New Talent, 1953; Best Novella [Riders of the Purple
Wage], 1968; and Best Novel [To Your Scattered Bodies Go], 1972), the
Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America's Grand Master Award
(2001), and the World Fantasy Award's Lifetime Achievement Award
(2001).

Farmer's first short story, O'Brien and Obrenov, appeared in
Adventure in March 1946. In 1950, after a twelve-year hiatus (and a
break to wash out of the Army Air Corps flight training program), he
received his BA in English from Bradley University. In August 1952,
Startling Stories published his first science fiction story, The
Lovers.

Farmer's first published novel was The Green Odyssey, which Ballantine
released in 1957. In 1953, however, Farmer's I Owe for the Flesh won
the Shasta prize novel contest. And though the prize was never paid,
the book was the first in what would become his iconic Riverworld
series. That series posits that everyone who has ever lived on Earth,
from cavemen to 1984, is resurrected along the banks of a million mile
long river. A character dying along the river simply wakes up
somewhere else the next day. In these stories, Farmer has characters
from any point in history meeting, interacting, and frequently
fighting.

Farmer also wrote the Dayworld series, in which overpopulation
requires that people be placed in suspended animation for six days out
of seven, each living but one day, and sharing their homes, jobs, and
lives with six other people. Then, of course, there are daybreakers,
who live different lives each day of the week. And his World of Tiers
series introduced the idea of Pocket Universes, which have different
physical laws.

In the 1970s, when Farmer was suffering from writer's block, he turned
his efforts to writing other people's novels; specifically, he wrote
Venus on the Half-Shell by Kurt Vonnegut's fictional Kilgore Trout. He
also wrote as Ralph vvon Wau Wau, who came to life on his own when
Spider Robinson had him appear in Callahan's Bar.

Farmer is survived by his wife, Bette (whom he married in 1941), as
well as children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.