Jump to content

Stepan Chapman: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
It's the Philip K. Dick Award; reference: http://www.philipkdickaward.org/ The official award homepage
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Stepan Chapman''' (born [[1951]] in [[Chicago]]) is a writer of speculative fiction and [[fabulation]]. He might be best known for the [[Philip K. Dick Memorial Award]] winning novel '''The Troika.'''
'''Stepan Chapman''' (born [[1951]] in [[Chicago]]) is a writer of speculative fiction and [[fabulation]]. He might be best known for the [[Philip K. Dick Award]] winning novel '''The Troika.'''


He was raised in Chicago and then studied theatre at the [[University of Michigan]]. His first published work was a story to [[Analog]] in [[1969]]. As a rule his work is more fable-like in tone and surreal than is common for that magazine. He also had several stories in [[Damon Knight]]'s [[Orbit (the anthology series)]]. He has primarily been published in small literary magazines since the late [[1970s]]. A collection of his stories was titled '''Dossier.'''<ref>[http://www.sfsite.com/05b/ds104.htm SFSite]</ref>
He was raised in Chicago and then studied theatre at the [[University of Michigan]]. His first published work was a story to [[Analog]] in [[1969]]. As a rule his work is more fable-like in tone and surreal than is common for that magazine. He also had several stories in [[Damon Knight]]'s [[Orbit (the anthology series)]]. He has primarily been published in small literary magazines since the late [[1970s]]. A collection of his stories was titled '''Dossier.'''<ref>[http://www.sfsite.com/05b/ds104.htm SFSite]</ref>

Revision as of 17:35, 21 January 2007

Stepan Chapman (born 1951 in Chicago) is a writer of speculative fiction and fabulation. He might be best known for the Philip K. Dick Award winning novel The Troika.

He was raised in Chicago and then studied theatre at the University of Michigan. His first published work was a story to Analog in 1969. As a rule his work is more fable-like in tone and surreal than is common for that magazine. He also had several stories in Damon Knight's Orbit (the anthology series). He has primarily been published in small literary magazines since the late 1970s. A collection of his stories was titled Dossier.[1]

Web sources