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American science fiction scholar, critic and editor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gary K. Wolfe (born Gary Kent Wolfe in 1946) is an American science fiction editor, critic and biographer.[1] He is an emeritus Professor of Humanities in Roosevelt University's Evelyn T. Stone College of Professional Studies.[2]
Gary K. Wolfe | |
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Born | Gary Kent Wolfe March 24, 1946 Sedalia, Missouri, United States |
Occupation | Writer, professor, editor, critic |
Language | English |
Genre | Science fiction, biography |
Wolfe was born on March 24, 1946, in Sedalia, Missouri. He moved to Carrollton, Missouri, at age 12, and to Springfield, at 14, where he finished high school. He began attending Southwest Missouri State College (now University), transferred to University of Kansas, where he earned a B.A. in English in 1968, and worked for his honors thesis under Professor James Gunn.
From there, he transferred to University of Chicago, where Wolfe earned a Ph.D. in English, in 1971.
He was married to Ellen "Dede" Weil, a teacher and community service activist, in 1996. They held another wedding celebration at the International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts (ICFA) in a pool-side party, attended by many of their friends and colleagues, in March, 1997. Wolfe and Weil were happily married until her death in 2000. Before her death they collaborated on a book about Harlan Ellison, and often attended the International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts, in Florida.[3]
Wolfe has written extensively about science fiction and fantasy literature; he is recognized as one of the experts in the field.[citation needed]
He has had a monthly review column in Locus since December, 1991[4] and has written for Salon and other sites. He collaborates with editor Jonathan Strahan on The Coode Street Podcast,[5] a "discussion and digression on science fiction and fantasy" that was launched in May 2010, and is syndicated at Tor.com.
In 2016, he taught the course How Great Science Fiction Works for The Great Courses.[6]
He was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Related Work in 2006 for the book Soundings, Reviews 1992–1996,[8] and again in 2011, for the book Bearings: Reviews 1997–2001.[9] In addition, along with Jonathan Strahan, The Coode Street Podcast has been nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Fancast six times.
Date | Review article | Work(s) reviewed |
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2010 | Wolfe, Gary K. (Jan 2010). "Locus Looks at Books". Locus (588): 15, 17, 45–46. |
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2013 | Wolfe, Gary K. (Dec 2013). "Locus Looks at Books". Locus (635): 16–17, 49–50. |
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