Bradley Denton

Bradley Clayton Denton (born 1958 in Towanda, Kansas) is an American science fiction author.

Life

Denton attended the University of Kansas and graduated there with a bachelor's degree in astronomy as well as a masters in English. His first short story he published in March 1984 in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction as The Music of the Spheres. In 1988 he moved with his wife Barbara to Austin, Texas.

The early works of Denton can be assigned to the genre of science fiction as well as the majority of his short stories. The novels Blackburn (1993 ), about a sympathetic serial killer, and Lunatics (1996 ), however, are thrillers.

Works

  • Laughin 'Boy (novel, 2005)
  • Lunatics (novel, 1996)
  • Blackburn (novel, 1993, nominated for the Bram Stoker Award 1993)
  • The Calvin Coolidge Home for Dead Comedians ( anthology, 1993, winner of the World Fantasy Award in 1995 for Best Collection)
  • A Conflagration Artist ( anthology, 1993)
  • Buddy Holly is Alive and Well on Ganymede (novel, 1991, winner of the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Science Fiction Novel, 1992)
  • Wreck & Roll (novel, 1986, nominated for the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Science Fiction Novel)
  • " Sergeant Chip" (September 2004, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, winner of the Sturgeon Award 2005 )
  • " Timmy and Tommy 's Thanksgiving Secret" (2003, in the anthology Witpunk )
  • " Bloody Bunnies " ( April 2000, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction )
  • "We Love Lydia Love" ( November 1994, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction )
  • "The Territory" ( July 1992 The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, 1993 nominated for the Hugo and Nebula as the best short story )
  • " The Sin Eater of the Kaw " ( June 1989, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction )
  • "The Calvin Coolidge Home for Dead Comedians " (June 1988, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction )
  • "In the Fullness of Time" (May, 1986, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction )
  • " The Summer We Saw Diana" ( August 1985, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction )
  • "Top of the Charts " ( March 1985, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction )
  • "The Music of the Spheres " ( March 1984, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction )
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