fbpx
Wikipedia

Brad Linaweaver

Bradford Swain Linaweaver (September 1, 1952 – August 29, 2019) was an American science fiction writer, film producer, actor, and magazine publisher. Over a 40-year career, he completed a body of work including novels, short stories, and screenplays.

Brad Linaweaver
BornBradford Swain Linaweaver
(1952-09-01)September 1, 1952
Washington, North Carolina, U.S.
DiedAugust 29, 2019(2019-08-29) (aged 66)
Apopka, Florida, U.S.
OccupationWriter
EducationFlorida State University
Rollins College (MFA)
GenreScience fiction, fantasy
Notable worksMoon of Ice
Website
community.fortunecity.ws./lavendar/ducksoup/393/brad.htm

Early years and education edit

Brad Linaweaver was born September 1, 1952, in Washington, North Carolina, the only child of Melville and June Linaweaver (née Swain). The family moved to the outskirts of Orlando, Florida in 1958, when Brad was six years old, where his father engaged in real estate development and investments.[1] Linaweaver attended Orange County public schools, before attending Florida State University. He obtained his MFA degree in a program for poets and writers from Rollins College.[2] Although he spent the better part of his career in Hollywood, he eventually settled at the family lake front home in Apopka, which his father designed and built shortly after moving to Florida in 1958.

Career edit

Political essayist edit

In late 1970, during his freshman year at Florida State University, Linaweaver joined the local college chapter of the national conservative organization Young Americans for Freedom (YAF).[3] Both conservative and libertarian ideologies were represented within the local YAF chapter, prompting Linaweaver to begin writing and debating about the various political philosophies competing for followers on college campuses at that time. This eventually led to his first sale to a national publication, a short article The Wish, which made the case for capitalism over socialism. The article appeared in The New Guard, the magazine published by YAF.[4] Subsequent articles in that publication drew the attention of public intellectual, conservative author, and YAF founder William F. Buckley. Linaweaver and Buckley subsequently struck up a friendship and correspondence, which lasted decades until Buckley's death in 2008.[5] Through that relationship, Linaweaver eventually published essays in Buckley's magazine National Review.[4][6] Unknown to him at the time, Linaweaver's writing also caught the attention of Ronald Reagan.[4] In 1976, Reagan devoted one of his radio show broadcasts to a discussion of The Wish, praising Linaweaver in the process. Reagan summed up his commentary on Linaweaver with the line, "How right he is!"[7] The radio broadcast is included in the Reagan CD set In His Own Voice and in the book Stories in His Own Hand: The Everyday Wisdom of Ronald Reagan.[8] Linaweaver didn't learn about the endorsement from Reagan until decades later. He mused that if he had known about it earlier, it might have changed the trajectory of his career path. "I never would have had my career in Hollywood. I might have been a boring political hack in Washington, trying to capitalize on the Reagan endorsement to be a political speechwriter. I'd be a worse libertarian than I am today."[4] Instead, Linaweaver soon took up writing science fiction, and stories for movies, inserting his libertarian ideology into the works whenever feasible.[4][6] In a 2007 interview, he noted that "I've been getting libertarian messages into everything for a quarter of a century". But, he observed, not every genre lent itself to his form of political promotionalism. "My involvement with movies has been mostly low-budget, exploitation stuff where ideology is not that relevant. When you're writing science fiction for a New York publisher, you actually achieve something when you slip in a libertarian idea. But with independent, exploitation, low-budget Hollywood, there's already an anti-authoritarian attitude. That culture is by nature fairly libertarian. There's less need to be a propagandist."[4]

Film edit

Linaweaver began his film career in 1978 with an original story credit for The Brain Leeches, the film that also jump started the career of prodigious Hollywood director producer (and sometimes professional wrestler[9]) Fred Olen Ray.[2] The Brain Leeches was completed, on budget, for $298.00. His association with Ray continued throughout Linaweaver's life, and included work on Jack-O which Linaweaver wrote and Ray produced, as well as later projects like Super Shark, a 2011 Ray film where Linaweaver was executive producer.[2][10] Linaweaver's long association with independent film also included writing credits on low budget direct-to-video titles like The Boneyard Collection, Space Babes Meet the Monsters and The Low Budget Time Machine. Linaweaver's association with Ray, and others, led to a number of small acting roles, both uncredited and 16 credited in numerous independent films.

Science fiction edit

Linaweaver's first published science fiction sale was in the July 1980 issue of Fantastic with the short story The Competitor, which was later adapted as a radio play and stage production by the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company.[11][12][13]

Moon of Ice edit

What soon followed is considered Linaweaver's magnum opus, Moon of Ice. It is an alternate history tale that has Nazi Germany being the first to develop an atomic bomb, and using it to defeat the Soviet Union and Great Britain...only to reach a stalemate with the United States, which uses its own atomic bomb to defeat Japan.[14] The work allowed Linaweaver to expound upon the different outcomes of economic models (National Socialism in Germany, Libertarianism in the United States), as well as the little known cultist underpinnings and beliefs of the Nazi regime. The work began in the form of a novella, which soon drew the attention of the science fiction community, resulting in a 1983 nomination for the Nebula Award, and finishing as a finalist in that category. Linaweaver then expanded the story to novel length, firmly establishing himself within the realm of Libertarian science fiction writers, and winning a Prometheus Award. The novel garnered the endorsements of Robert A. Heinlein, Isaac Asimov, Ray Bradbury, and William F. Buckley, Jr.[11][15] While many reviews praised the handling of economic themes, and Linaweaver's research into the little known cultist beliefs of some Nazi elites (including a hollow earth, and a moon made of ice), some found fault with the story telling, opining that the torrent of information "numbs rather than stimulates".[16]

Other novels edit

His novel Sliders, based on the television series of the same name, includes a thorough critique of communism, expanding on ideas Linaweaver first explored in The Wish at the beginning of his career.[17] His other novels include The Land Beyond Summer,[5] four Doom novels[18] with Dafydd ab Hugh, three Battlestar Galactica novels with actor Richard Hatch, and Anarquia with J. Kent Hastings, an alternate history treatment of the Spanish Civil War.[19][20] The first collection of his short stories was published under the title Clownface.[21]

Over his career, Linaweaver wrote more than 50 stories that found their way into print.[2]

Collaborations and awards edit

Linaweaver's 1995 story collaboration with Victor Koman, The Light That Blinds featured an occult battle between Aleister Crowley and Adolf Hitler.[22]

In 1993, Linaweaver's short story Unmerited Favor was published in Mike Resnick's anthology Alternate Warriors.

In 1998, Linaweaver's short story And to the Republic For Which It Stands was published in Harry Turtledove's anthology Alternate Generals. In 2005, his short story A Good Bag was collected in another of Turtledove's anthologies Alternate Generals III.

In 2004, he co-authored Worlds of Tomorrow with former movie magazine editor and film memorabilia collector Forrest J Ackerman. The hardcover coffee table book featured cover art from science fiction's Golden Age, from Ackerman's considerable collection, and included full color reproductions and commentary from the authors.[23]

Linaweaver shared a second Prometheus Award with Ed Kramer for co-editing Free Space, a libertarian science fiction anthology from TOR books.[24]

Several of his short stories received Honorable Mention in The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror by Ellen Datlow. Those stories included The Lon Chaney Factory, Clutter, A Real Babe, and Chump Hoist. The Science Fiction story, Wells of Wisdom made the preliminary Nebula ballot and was part of the Galaxy Audio Project, read by Catherine Oxenberg.

Web series edit

Linaweaver also wrote and produced online content, including the award-winning web series Silicon Assassin, starring Richard Hatch, currently available on YouTube.[25]

Magazine publishing edit

Linaweaver's many years in Hollywood, and the stories and personalities he had come to know while living there, culminated in the creation of movie magazine Mondo Cult, with Linaweaver as publisher.[26] The magazine featured literary contributions from, and articles about, Linaweaver's eclectic list of celebrity friends and contacts, including Battlestar Galactica actor Richard Hatch; science fiction author and collector Forrest J. Ackerman; the conservative commentator, publisher, and television personality William F. Buckley, Jr.; adult cinema legend Traci Lords and poetry from speculative fiction icon Ray Bradbury and Linaweaver's college friend and YAF colleague, Georgia State Representative Chesley V. Morton. Mondo Cult is edited by former Famous Monsters of Filmland editor, Jessie Lilley.[3][27]

Heinlein's brass cannon edit

Linaweaver owned a signaling gun, or small brass cannon, which had originally belonged to science fiction writer Robert A. Heinlein. Heinlein and his wife Virginia, had acquired the cannon in 1964, immediately following the Goldwater campaign. It later provided inspiration for The Brass Cannon which was Heinlein's working title for the 1966 novel which eventually became The Moon is a Harsh Mistress.[28] In that novel, Heinlein refers to the cannon, in a parable implying that self-government is an illusion caused by failure to understand reality. For nearly 30 years, the firing of the brass cannon was a July 4 tradition at the Heinlein residence. Virginia Heinlein retained the cannon after her husband's death in 1988, and it was bequeathed to Linaweaver in her will, after Virginia died in 2003. Linaweaver restored the cannon to working order and subsequently posted a 2007 video of it being fired several times (with very small charges) on YouTube.[29]

Death edit

Brad Linaweaver, age 66, died August 29, 2019, of cancer at his home in Apopka, Florida.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ "Obituary - June Swain Linaweaver". Orlando Sentinel. August 4, 2005. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Brad Linaweaver (1952-2019)". Locus Publications. September 3, 2019. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  3. ^ a b "Merely A Century - Forry is 100". MondoCult.com. Retrieved January 3, 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e f "Libertarian Screenwriter Brad Linaweaver Slams Neocons". Hollywood Investigator. August 12, 2007. Retrieved December 20, 2019.
  5. ^ a b Brad Linaweaver. "Chasing Paper - An Announcement from the Publisher". MondoCult.com. Retrieved January 4, 2020.
  6. ^ a b John DeChancie. "Brad Linaweaver - Guest of Honor". MondoCult.com. Retrieved January 4, 2020.
  7. ^ "Ronald Reagan's Radio Show About Mondo Cult's Brad Linaweaver". Mondo Cult TV. September 2019. Retrieved December 20, 2019.
  8. ^ Kiron K. Skinner (November 1, 2001). "In His Own Voice". Simon and Schuster - Google Play. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  9. ^ Johnny D. Boggs (January 10, 2014). Jesse James and the Movies. McFarland. p. 225. ISBN 978-0-7864-8496-6.
  10. ^ Brad Linaweaver (2016). "Trick and Treat - (Some candy from our publisher)". MondoCult.com. Retrieved January 4, 2020.
  11. ^ a b "In Memoriam-Brad Linaweaver". AmazingStories.com. September 12, 2019. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  12. ^ "The Competitor part 1-2". Atlanta Radio Theatre Company. October 15, 2010. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  13. ^ Brad Linaweaver (2018). "A Man For All Reasons - a personal tribute to Richard Hatch". Mondo Cult. Retrieved December 23, 2019.
  14. ^ "Moon of Ice". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved December 31, 2019.
  15. ^ Richard Hatch (September 10, 2006). So Say We All: An Unauthorized Collection of Thoughts and Opinions on Battlestar Galactica. BenBella Books. p. 185. ISBN 978-1-932100-94-5.
  16. ^ "Moon of Ice". Kirkus Review. February 15, 1987. Retrieved December 22, 2019.
  17. ^ Brad Linaweaver (1996). Sliders: The Novel. Boulevard Books. ISBN 978-1-57297-098-4.
  18. ^ "Books by Brad Linaweaver". Simon and Schuster. Retrieved December 31, 2019.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on April 26, 2015. Retrieved April 12, 2015.
  20. ^ Brad Linaweaver; J. Kent Hastings (September 2004). Anarquia: An Alternate History of the Spanish Civil War. James A. Rock Publishers. ISBN 978-0-918736-64-2.
  21. ^ Brad Linaweaver (June 1999). Clownface. Pulpless.com, Incorporated. ISBN 978-1-58445-096-2.
  22. ^ Kramer, Edward E. Dark Destiny: Proprietors of Fate. Clarkston, GA: White Wolf Publishing, 1995, pp. 232–51
  23. ^ Ackerman, Forrest J.; Linaweaver, Brad (August 1, 2004). Worlds of Tomorrow: The Amazing Universe of Science Fiction Art. Collectors Press. ISBN 978-1888054934.
  24. ^ "Review:"Free Space"". Susan Stepney. August 4, 2002. Retrieved December 31, 2019.
  25. ^ [1]|YouTube - Silicon Assassin series
  26. ^ "Fond Memories of "Mr. Sci-Fi"". Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers of Amererica. January 18, 2017. Retrieved January 3, 2020.
  27. ^ "Mondo Cult - Welcome to the world". Mondo Cult Magazine. Retrieved December 18, 2019.
  28. ^ "In Memoriam-Brad Linaweaver". Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA). September 3, 2019. Retrieved December 20, 2019.
  29. ^ "Brad Linaweaver presents Robert A Heinlein's Brass Cannon" on YouTube

External links edit

brad, linaweaver, bradford, swain, linaweaver, september, 1952, august, 2019, american, science, fiction, writer, film, producer, actor, magazine, publisher, over, year, career, completed, body, work, including, novels, short, stories, screenplays, bornbradfor. Bradford Swain Linaweaver September 1 1952 August 29 2019 was an American science fiction writer film producer actor and magazine publisher Over a 40 year career he completed a body of work including novels short stories and screenplays Brad LinaweaverBornBradford Swain Linaweaver 1952 09 01 September 1 1952Washington North Carolina U S DiedAugust 29 2019 2019 08 29 aged 66 Apopka Florida U S OccupationWriterEducationFlorida State UniversityRollins College MFA GenreScience fiction fantasyNotable worksMoon of IceWebsitecommunity wbr fortunecity wbr ws wbr wbr lavendar wbr ducksoup wbr 393 wbr brad wbr htm Contents 1 Early years and education 2 Career 2 1 Political essayist 2 2 Film 2 3 Science fiction 2 3 1 Moon of Ice 2 3 2 Other novels 2 3 3 Collaborations and awards 2 4 Web series 2 5 Magazine publishing 3 Heinlein s brass cannon 4 Death 5 References 6 External linksEarly years and education editBrad Linaweaver was born September 1 1952 in Washington North Carolina the only child of Melville and June Linaweaver nee Swain The family moved to the outskirts of Orlando Florida in 1958 when Brad was six years old where his father engaged in real estate development and investments 1 Linaweaver attended Orange County public schools before attending Florida State University He obtained his MFA degree in a program for poets and writers from Rollins College 2 Although he spent the better part of his career in Hollywood he eventually settled at the family lake front home in Apopka which his father designed and built shortly after moving to Florida in 1958 Career editPolitical essayist edit In late 1970 during his freshman year at Florida State University Linaweaver joined the local college chapter of the national conservative organization Young Americans for Freedom YAF 3 Both conservative and libertarian ideologies were represented within the local YAF chapter prompting Linaweaver to begin writing and debating about the various political philosophies competing for followers on college campuses at that time This eventually led to his first sale to a national publication a short article The Wish which made the case for capitalism over socialism The article appeared in The New Guard the magazine published by YAF 4 Subsequent articles in that publication drew the attention of public intellectual conservative author and YAF founder William F Buckley Linaweaver and Buckley subsequently struck up a friendship and correspondence which lasted decades until Buckley s death in 2008 5 Through that relationship Linaweaver eventually published essays in Buckley s magazine National Review 4 6 Unknown to him at the time Linaweaver s writing also caught the attention of Ronald Reagan 4 In 1976 Reagan devoted one of his radio show broadcasts to a discussion of The Wish praising Linaweaver in the process Reagan summed up his commentary on Linaweaver with the line How right he is 7 The radio broadcast is included in the Reagan CD set In His Own Voice and in the book Stories in His Own Hand The Everyday Wisdom of Ronald Reagan 8 Linaweaver didn t learn about the endorsement from Reagan until decades later He mused that if he had known about it earlier it might have changed the trajectory of his career path I never would have had my career in Hollywood I might have been a boring political hack in Washington trying to capitalize on the Reagan endorsement to be a political speechwriter I d be a worse libertarian than I am today 4 Instead Linaweaver soon took up writing science fiction and stories for movies inserting his libertarian ideology into the works whenever feasible 4 6 In a 2007 interview he noted that I ve been getting libertarian messages into everything for a quarter of a century But he observed not every genre lent itself to his form of political promotionalism My involvement with movies has been mostly low budget exploitation stuff where ideology is not that relevant When you re writing science fiction for a New York publisher you actually achieve something when you slip in a libertarian idea But with independent exploitation low budget Hollywood there s already an anti authoritarian attitude That culture is by nature fairly libertarian There s less need to be a propagandist 4 Film edit Linaweaver began his film career in 1978 with an original story credit for The Brain Leeches the film that also jump started the career of prodigious Hollywood director producer and sometimes professional wrestler 9 Fred Olen Ray 2 The Brain Leeches was completed on budget for 298 00 His association with Ray continued throughout Linaweaver s life and included work on Jack O which Linaweaver wrote and Ray produced as well as later projects like Super Shark a 2011 Ray film where Linaweaver was executive producer 2 10 Linaweaver s long association with independent film also included writing credits on low budget direct to video titles like The Boneyard Collection Space Babes Meet the Monsters and The Low Budget Time Machine Linaweaver s association with Ray and others led to a number of small acting roles both uncredited and 16 credited in numerous independent films Science fiction edit Linaweaver s first published science fiction sale was in the July 1980 issue of Fantastic with the short story The Competitor which was later adapted as a radio play and stage production by the Atlanta Radio Theatre Company 11 12 13 Moon of Ice edit What soon followed is considered Linaweaver s magnum opus Moon of Ice It is an alternate history tale that has Nazi Germany being the first to develop an atomic bomb and using it to defeat the Soviet Union and Great Britain only to reach a stalemate with the United States which uses its own atomic bomb to defeat Japan 14 The work allowed Linaweaver to expound upon the different outcomes of economic models National Socialism in Germany Libertarianism in the United States as well as the little known cultist underpinnings and beliefs of the Nazi regime The work began in the form of a novella which soon drew the attention of the science fiction community resulting in a 1983 nomination for the Nebula Award and finishing as a finalist in that category Linaweaver then expanded the story to novel length firmly establishing himself within the realm of Libertarian science fiction writers and winning a Prometheus Award The novel garnered the endorsements of Robert A Heinlein Isaac Asimov Ray Bradbury and William F Buckley Jr 11 15 While many reviews praised the handling of economic themes and Linaweaver s research into the little known cultist beliefs of some Nazi elites including a hollow earth and a moon made of ice some found fault with the story telling opining that the torrent of information numbs rather than stimulates 16 Other novels edit His novel Sliders based on the television series of the same name includes a thorough critique of communism expanding on ideas Linaweaver first explored in The Wish at the beginning of his career 17 His other novels include The Land Beyond Summer 5 four Doom novels 18 with Dafydd ab Hugh three Battlestar Galactica novels with actor Richard Hatch and Anarquia with J Kent Hastings an alternate history treatment of the Spanish Civil War 19 20 The first collection of his short stories was published under the title Clownface 21 Over his career Linaweaver wrote more than 50 stories that found their way into print 2 Collaborations and awards edit Linaweaver s 1995 story collaboration with Victor Koman The Light That Blinds featured an occult battle between Aleister Crowley and Adolf Hitler 22 In 1993 Linaweaver s short story Unmerited Favor was published in Mike Resnick s anthology Alternate Warriors In 1998 Linaweaver s short story And to the Republic For Which It Stands was published in Harry Turtledove s anthology Alternate Generals In 2005 his short story A Good Bag was collected in another of Turtledove s anthologies Alternate Generals III In 2004 he co authored Worlds of Tomorrow with former movie magazine editor and film memorabilia collector Forrest J Ackerman The hardcover coffee table book featured cover art from science fiction s Golden Age from Ackerman s considerable collection and included full color reproductions and commentary from the authors 23 Linaweaver shared a second Prometheus Award with Ed Kramer for co editing Free Space a libertarian science fiction anthology from TOR books 24 Several of his short stories received Honorable Mention in The Year s Best Fantasy and Horror by Ellen Datlow Those stories included The Lon Chaney Factory Clutter A Real Babe and Chump Hoist The Science Fiction story Wells of Wisdom made the preliminary Nebula ballot and was part of the Galaxy Audio Project read by Catherine Oxenberg Web series edit Linaweaver also wrote and produced online content including the award winning web series Silicon Assassin starring Richard Hatch currently available on YouTube 25 Magazine publishing edit Linaweaver s many years in Hollywood and the stories and personalities he had come to know while living there culminated in the creation of movie magazine Mondo Cult with Linaweaver as publisher 26 The magazine featured literary contributions from and articles about Linaweaver s eclectic list of celebrity friends and contacts including Battlestar Galactica actor Richard Hatch science fiction author and collector Forrest J Ackerman the conservative commentator publisher and television personality William F Buckley Jr adult cinema legend Traci Lords and poetry from speculative fiction icon Ray Bradbury and Linaweaver s college friend and YAF colleague Georgia State Representative Chesley V Morton Mondo Cult is edited by former Famous Monsters of Filmland editor Jessie Lilley 3 27 Heinlein s brass cannon editLinaweaver owned a signaling gun or small brass cannon which had originally belonged to science fiction writer Robert A Heinlein Heinlein and his wife Virginia had acquired the cannon in 1964 immediately following the Goldwater campaign It later provided inspiration for The Brass Cannon which was Heinlein s working title for the 1966 novel which eventually became The Moon is a Harsh Mistress 28 In that novel Heinlein refers to the cannon in a parable implying that self government is an illusion caused by failure to understand reality For nearly 30 years the firing of the brass cannon was a July 4 tradition at the Heinlein residence Virginia Heinlein retained the cannon after her husband s death in 1988 and it was bequeathed to Linaweaver in her will after Virginia died in 2003 Linaweaver restored the cannon to working order and subsequently posted a 2007 video of it being fired several times with very small charges on YouTube 29 Death editBrad Linaweaver age 66 died August 29 2019 of cancer at his home in Apopka Florida 2 References edit Obituary June Swain Linaweaver Orlando Sentinel August 4 2005 Retrieved December 18 2019 a b c d e Brad Linaweaver 1952 2019 Locus Publications September 3 2019 Retrieved December 18 2019 a b Merely A Century Forry is 100 MondoCult com Retrieved January 3 2020 a b c d e f Libertarian Screenwriter Brad Linaweaver Slams Neocons Hollywood Investigator August 12 2007 Retrieved December 20 2019 a b Brad Linaweaver Chasing Paper An Announcement from the Publisher MondoCult com Retrieved January 4 2020 a b John DeChancie Brad Linaweaver Guest of Honor MondoCult com Retrieved January 4 2020 Ronald Reagan s Radio Show About Mondo Cult s Brad Linaweaver Mondo Cult TV September 2019 Retrieved December 20 2019 Kiron K Skinner November 1 2001 In His Own Voice Simon and Schuster Google Play Retrieved December 18 2019 Johnny D Boggs January 10 2014 Jesse James and the Movies McFarland p 225 ISBN 978 0 7864 8496 6 Brad Linaweaver 2016 Trick and Treat Some candy from our publisher MondoCult com Retrieved January 4 2020 a b In Memoriam Brad Linaweaver AmazingStories com September 12 2019 Retrieved December 18 2019 The Competitor part 1 2 Atlanta Radio Theatre Company October 15 2010 Retrieved December 18 2019 Brad Linaweaver 2018 A Man For All Reasons a personal tribute to Richard Hatch Mondo Cult Retrieved December 23 2019 Moon of Ice Publishers Weekly Retrieved December 31 2019 Richard Hatch September 10 2006 So Say We All An Unauthorized Collection of Thoughts and Opinions on Battlestar Galactica BenBella Books p 185 ISBN 978 1 932100 94 5 Moon of Ice Kirkus Review February 15 1987 Retrieved December 22 2019 Brad Linaweaver 1996 Sliders The Novel Boulevard Books ISBN 978 1 57297 098 4 Books by Brad Linaweaver Simon and Schuster Retrieved December 31 2019 An alternative history novel that takes anarchism seriously out of step Archived from the original on April 26 2015 Retrieved April 12 2015 Brad Linaweaver J Kent Hastings September 2004 Anarquia An Alternate History of the Spanish Civil War James A Rock Publishers ISBN 978 0 918736 64 2 Brad Linaweaver June 1999 Clownface Pulpless com Incorporated ISBN 978 1 58445 096 2 Kramer Edward E Dark Destiny Proprietors of Fate Clarkston GA White Wolf Publishing 1995 pp 232 51 Ackerman Forrest J Linaweaver Brad August 1 2004 Worlds of Tomorrow The Amazing Universe of Science Fiction Art Collectors Press ISBN 978 1888054934 Review Free Space Susan Stepney August 4 2002 Retrieved December 31 2019 1 YouTube Silicon Assassin series Fond Memories of Mr Sci Fi Science Fiction amp Fantasy Writers of Amererica January 18 2017 Retrieved January 3 2020 Mondo Cult Welcome to the world Mondo Cult Magazine Retrieved December 18 2019 In Memoriam Brad Linaweaver Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America SFWA September 3 2019 Retrieved December 20 2019 Brad Linaweaver presents Robert A Heinlein s Brass Cannon on YouTubeExternal links editBig Lizards blog Brad Linaweaver at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database nbsp Brad Linaweaver at IMDb The Fortune City Page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Brad Linaweaver amp oldid 1212501312, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.