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Steele was born in Nashville, Tennessee on January 19, 1958. He was introduced to science fiction fandom attending meetings of Nashville's science fiction club.He graduated high school from the Webb School in Bell Buckle, Tennessee, received a bachelor's degree from New England College and a master's from the University of Missouri.
Coyote (2002) is a science fiction novel by American writer Allen Steele, [1] [2] the first in a series of eight books. It is a fixup of several of Steele's previously-published short stories, beginning with Stealing Alabama in the January 2001 issue of Asimov's Science Fiction. The series has been noted for the constructed Lemarean Calendar ...
Spindrift is a 2007 science fiction novel by American writer Allen Steele. [1] Spindrift is set within the same universe as the Coyote trilogy but was written as a stand-alone novel. Steele has stated that he wrote Spindrift because he was "tired of the militaristic sort of space opera that says that any contact between humans and aliens will ...
V-S Day: A Novel of Alternate History is a 2014 science fiction novel by American writer Allen Steele. It was first published in the United States in February 2014 by Ace Books . The story is set during an alternate history of World War II and is about a space race between Germany and the United States.
The Tranquillity Alternative is a science fiction and space drama novel written by Allen Steele published by Ace Books in 1996. [1] The author's sixth novel, it tells an alternate history in which the United States placed nuclear missiles on the Moon in 1960.
Old Earth was founded in 1993, with the publication of a short story collection, Rude Astronauts, by Allen Steele. [1] Its greatest commercial success came with the re-printing of the Lensman series, by E. E. Smith, starting in 1997. [2]
The books were written by a number of different authors, each writing from one to seven of the books; the authors included Benjamin Appel, Jim Kjelgaard, Earl Schenck Miers, William O. Steele, and others. Each book's byline also lists a separate "historical consultant", who was a specialist in the historic topic covered by that particular book.
An early Kornbluth novelette, "The Core", was the cover story for the April 1942 issue of Future.It carried the "S. D. Gottesman" byline, a pseudonym Kornbluth used mainly for collaborations with Frederik Pohl or Robert A. W. Lowndes The opening installment of Mars Child, by Kornbluth and Judith Merril, took the cover of the May 1951 issue of Galaxy Science Fiction A year later, the first ...