Stalking the Vampire (29 page)

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Authors: Mike Resnick

“What the hell are you hitting
me
for?” he demanded.

“When I have time for aimed shots, you'll be the first to know,” I grated through torn lips.

The blackjack caught me on the side of the head again, and as I fell to the ground Vinnie and his partner began covering my unprotected body with kicks that would have done a soccer player proud. Time after time one foot
or another would crunch into my face. I felt the cartilage in my nose give way, and I heard the sharp
crack!
as my jaw broke.

Finally Vinnie pulled out a pistol and aimed it at me.

“You can't say you wasn't warned, Shamus,” he said, pulling the trigger. Five shots buried themselves deep in my liver and spleen.

That did it. Before I'd merely been annoyed. Now I was
mad.

—end of excerpt—

Locus,
the trade journal of science fiction, keeps a list of the winners of major science fiction awards on its Web page. Mike Resnick is currently fourth in the all-time standings, ahead of Isaac Asimov, Sir Arthur C. Clarke, Ray Bradbury, and Robert A. Heinlein. He is the leading award-winner among all authors, living and dead, for short science fiction.

Mike was born on March 5, 1942. He sold his first article in 1957, his first short story in 1959, and his first book in 1962.

He attended the University of Chicago from 1959 through 1961, won three letters on the fencing team, and met and married Carol. Their daughter, Laura, was born in 1962, and has since become a writer herself, winning three awards for her romance novels and the 1993 Campbell Award for Best New Science Fiction Writer.

Mike and Carol discovered science fiction fandom in 1962, attended their first Worldcon in 1963, and more than fifty science fiction books into his career, Mike still considers himself a fan and frequently contributes articles to fanzines. He and Carol appeared in five Worldcon masquerades in the 1970s in costumes that she created, and they won four of them.

Mike labored anonymously but profitably from 1964 through 1976, selling more than two hundred novels, three hundred short stories, and two thousand articles, almost all of them under pseudonyms, most of them in the “adult” field. He edited seven different tabloid newspapers, and a trio of men's magazines as well.

In 1968 Mike and Carol became serious breeders and exhibitors of
collies, a pursuit they continued through 1981. During that time they bred and/or exhibited twenty-seven champion collies, and they were the country's leading breeders and exhibitors during various years along the way.

This led them to purchase the Briarwood Pet Motel in Cincinnati in 1976. It was the country's second-largest luxury boarding and grooming establishment, and they worked full-time at it for the next few years. By 1980 the kennel was being run by a staff of twenty-one, and Mike was free to return to his first love, science fiction, albeit at a far slower pace than his previous writing. They sold the kennel in 1993.

Mike's first novel in this “second career” was
The Soul Eater
, which was followed shortly by
Birthright: The Book of Man, Walpurgis III
, the four-book Tales of the Galactic Midway series,
The Branch
, the four-book Tales of the Velvet Comet series, and
Adventures
, all from Signet. His breakthrough novel was the international best seller
Santiago
, published by Tor in 1986. Tor has since published
Stalking the Unicorn, The Dark Lady, Ivory, Second Contact
,
Paradise, Purgatory, Inferno
, the Double
Bwana/Bully!
, and the collection
Will the Last Person to Leave the Planet Please Shut Off the Sun?
His most recent Tor releases were
A Miracle of Rare Design, A Hunger in the Soul, The Outpost
, and
The Return of Santiago.

Even at his reduced rate, Mike is too prolific for one publisher, and in the 1990s Ace published
Soothsayer, Oracle
, and
Prophet
; Questar published
Lucifer Jones
; Bantam brought out the
Locus
best-selling trilogy of
The Widowmaker, The Widowmaker Reborn
, and
The Widow-maker Unleashed
; and Del Rey published
Kirinyaga: A Fable of Utopia
and
Lara Croft, Tomb Raider: The Amulet of Power.
His current releases include
A Gathering of Widowmakers
for Meisha Merlin,
Dragon America
for Phobos, and
Lady with an Alien, A Club in Montmarte, The World behind the Door
for Watson-Guptill, and
The Alternate Teddy Roosevelts
for Subterranean Press.

Beginning with
Shaggy B.E.M. Stories
in 1988, Mike has also become an anthology editor (and was nominated for a Best Editor Hugo in 1994 and 1995). His list of anthologies in print and in press totals forty-eight, and includes
Alternate Presidents, Alternate Kennedys, Sherlock Holmes in Orbit, By Any Other Fame, Dinosaur Fantastic
, and
Christmas Ghosts
, plus the recent
Stars
, coedited with superstar singer Janis Ian, and
The Dragon Done It
, coedited with best seller Eric Flint.

Mike has always supported the “specialty press,” and he has numerous books and collections out in limited editions from such diverse publishers as Phantasia Press, Axolotl Press, Misfit Press, Pulphouse Publishing, Wildside Press, Dark Regions Press, NESFA Press, WSFA Press, Obscura Press, Farthest Star, and others. He recently served a stint as the science fiction editor for BenBella Books, and in 2006 he became the executive editor of
Jim Baen's Universe.

Mike was never interested in writing short stories early in his career, producing only seven between 1976 and 1986. Then something clicked, and he has written and sold more than 200 stories since 1986, and now spends more time on short fiction than on novels. The writing that has brought him the most acclaim thus far in his career is the Kirinyaga series, which, with sixty-seven major and minor awards and nominations to date, is the most honored series of stories in the history of science fiction.

He also began writing short nonfiction as well. He sold a four-part series, “Forgotten Treasures,” to the
Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction
, was a regular columnist for
Speculations
(“Ask Bwana”) for twelve years, currently appears in every issue of the
SFWA Bulletin
(“The Resnick/Malzberg Dialogues”), and wrote a biweekly column for the late, lamented
GalaxyOnline.com
.

Carol has always been Mike's uncredited collaborator on his science fiction, but in the past few years they have sold two movie scripts—
Santiago
and
The Widowmaker
, both based on Mike's books—and Carol
is
listed as his collaborator on those.

Readers of Mike's works are aware of his fascination with Africa, and the many uses to which he has put it in his science fiction. Mike and Carol have taken numerous safaris, visiting Kenya (four times), Tanzania, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Egypt, Botswana, and Uganda. Mike edited the Library of African Adventure series for St. Martin's Press and is currently editing
The Resnick Library of African Adventure
and, with Carol as coeditor,
The Resnick Library of Worldwide Adventure
for Alexander Books.

Since 1989, Mike has won five Hugo Awards (for “Kirinyaga,” “The Manamouki,” “Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge,” “The 43 Antarean Dynasties,” and “Travels with My Cats”) and a Nebula Award (for “Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge”), and has been nominated for thirty-one Hugos, eleven Nebulas, a Clarke (British), and six Seiun-sho (Japanese). He has also won a Seiun-sho, a Prix Tour Eiffel (French), two Prix Ozones (French), ten HOMer Awards, an Alexander Award, a Golden Pagoda Award, a Hayakawa SF Award (Japanese), a Locus Award, three Ignotus Awards (Spanish), a Xatafi-Cyberdark Award (Spanish), a Futura Award (Croatian), an El Melocoton Mechanico (Spanish), two Sfinks Awards (Polish), and a Fantastyka Award (Polish), and has topped the Science Fiction Chronicle Poll six times, the Scifi Weekly Hugo Straw Poll three times, and the Asimov's Readers Poll five times. In 1993 he was awarded the Skylark Award for Lifetime Achievement in Science Fiction, and both in 2001 and in 2004 he was named
Fictionwise.com
's Author of the Year.

His work has been translated into French, Italian, German, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Bulgarian, Hungarian, Hebrew, Russian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Polish, Czech, Dutch, Swedish, Romanian, Finnish, Danish, Chinese, and Croatian.

He was recently the subject of Fiona Kelleghan's massive
Mike Resnick: An Annotated Bibliography and Guide to His Work.
Adrienne Gormley is currently preparing a second edition.

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