Stephen Tall
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- This page is about the American science fiction writer. See Stephen Tall (politician) for the British politician.
Stephen Tall was the most common pseudonym of American science fiction writer Compton Newby Crook (June 14, 1908 – January 1981, Baltimore, Maryland). Crook was also a professor at Towson University and a long-time resident of Baltimore, Maryland. Crook's early writing, published under his own name, began appearing in 1930, but he didn't begin to publish science fiction until 1955 with the appearance of "The Lights on Precipice Peak" in Galaxy. His short story "The Bear with the Knot on His Tail" (1971) was nominated for the 1972 Hugo Award for short fiction. His activity in the field grew in the mid-1970s before his death.
In 1983, the Compton Crook/Stephen Tall Memorial Award was established by the Baltimore Science Fiction Society in his name for best first science fiction novel in a given year.
Contents |
[edit] Bibliography
[edit] Stardust series
- The Stardust Voyages (collection, 1975)
- The Ramsgate Paradox (1976)
[edit] Novels
- The People Beyond the Wall (1980)
[edit] Short stories
- "The Lights on Precipice Peak" (1955)
- "A Star Called Cyrene" (aka "Seventy Light-Years from Sol") (1966)
- "The Angry Mountain" (1970)
- "Talk with the Animals" (1970)
- "Allison, Carmichael and Tattersall" (1970)
- "The Mad Scientist and The FBI" (1970)
- "Birds Fly South in Winter" (1971)
- "This is My Country" (1971)
- "The Bear with the Knot on His Tail" (1971)
- "The Gods on Olympus" (1972)
- "The Invaders" (1973)
- "Space Bounce" (1973)
- "Mushroom World" (1974)
- "Chlorophyll" (1976)
- "The Rock and the Pool"" (1976)
- "The Man Who Saved the Sun (1977)
- "The King is Dead. Long Live the Queen!" (1978)
- "Home is the Hunter" (1979)
- "The Hot and Cold Running Waterfall" (1980)
- "The Merry Men of Methane" (1980)