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Ken MacLeod

Kenneth Macrae MacLeod (born 2 August 1954 in Steòrnabhagh) is a Scottish science fiction writer. His novels The Sky Road and The Night Sessions won the BSFA Award. MacLeod's novels have been nominated for the Arthur C. Clarke, Hugo, Nebula, Locus, and Campbell Memorial awards for best novel on multiple occasions. A techno-utopianist, MacLeod's work makes frequent use of libertarian socialist themes; he is a three-time winner of the libertarian Prometheus Award. Prior to becoming a novelist, MacLeod studied biology and worked as a computer programmer. He sits on the advisory board of the Edinburgh Science Festival.

Ken MacLeod
Addressing the 63rd World Science Fiction Convention, Glasgow, August 2005
BornKenneth Macrae MacLeod
(1954-08-02) 2 August 1954 (age 68)
Stornoway, Scotland
OccupationWriter
Genrescience fiction
Notable awardsBSFA Award, Prometheus Award
Website
kenmacleod.blogspot.com
Ken and Carol MacLeod at Boskone 43, 2006.

Biography

MacLeod was born in Stornoway, Scotland on 2 August 1954.[1] He graduated from Glasgow University with a degree in zoology and has worked as a computer programmer and written a masters thesis on biomechanics.[2] He was a Trotskyist activist in the 1970s and early 1980s[3] and is married and has two children.[1] He lived in South Queensferry near Edinburgh before moving to Gourock, on the Firth of Clyde, in June 2017.[4]

MacLeod is opposed to Scottish independence.[5]

Writing

He is part of a group of British science fiction writers who specialise in hard science fiction and space opera. His contemporaries include Neal Asher, Stephen Baxter, Iain M. Banks, Paul J. McAuley, Alastair Reynolds, Adam Roberts, Charles Stross, Richard Morgan, and Liz Williams.

His science fiction novels often explore socialist, communist, and anarchist political ideas, especially Trotskyism and anarcho-capitalism (or extreme economic libertarianism).[6] Technical themes encompass singularities, divergent human cultural evolution, and post-human cyborg-resurrection. MacLeod's general outlook can be best described as techno-utopian socialist,[7][8] though unlike a majority of techno-utopians, he has expressed great scepticism over the possibility and especially over the desirability of strong AI.[7]

He is known for his constant in-joking and punning on the intersection between socialist ideologies and computer programming, as well as other fields. For example, his chapter titles such as "Trusted Third Parties" or "Revolutionary Platform" usually have double (or multiple) meanings. A future programmers union is called "Information Workers of the World Wide Web", or the Webblies, a reference to the Industrial Workers of the World, who are nicknamed the Wobblies. The Webblies idea formed a central part of the novel For the Win by Cory Doctorow and MacLeod is acknowledged as coining the term.[9] Doctorow and Charles Stross also used one of MacLeod's references to the singularity as "the rapture for nerds" as the title for their collaborative novel Rapture of the Nerds (although MacLeod denies coining the phrase[10]). There are also many references to, or puns on, zoology and palaeontology. For example, in The Stone Canal the title of the book, and many places described in it, are named after anatomical features of marine invertebrates such as starfish.

Books about MacLeod

The Science Fiction Foundation have published an analysis of MacLeod's work titled The True Knowledge Of Ken MacLeod 8 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine (2003; ISBN 0-903007-02-9), edited by Andrew M. Butler and Farah Mendlesohn. As well as critical essays it contains material by MacLeod himself, including his introduction to the German edition of Banks' Consider Phlebas.

Bibliography

Series

  • Fall Revolution series
    1. The Star Fraction (1995; US paperback ISBN 0-7653-0156-3) – Prometheus Award winner, 1996; Clarke Award nominee, 1996[11]
    2. The Stone Canal (1996; US paperback ISBN 0-8125-6864-8) – Prometheus Award winner, 1998; BSFA nominee, 1996[11]
    3. The Cassini Division (1998; US paperback ISBN 0-312-87044-2) – BSFA nominee, 1998;[12] Clarke, and Nebula Awards nominee, 1999[13]
    4. The Sky Road (1999; US paperback ISBN 0-8125-7759-0) BSFA Award winner, 1999;[13] Hugo Award nominee, 2001[14] – represents an 'alternate future' to the second two books, as its events diverge sharply due to a choice made differently by one of the protagonists in the middle of The Stone Canal[15]
    • This series is also available in two volumes:
      1. Fractions: The First Half of the Fall Revolution (2009; US paperback ISBN 0-7653-2068-1)
      2. Divisions: The Second Half of the Fall Revolution (2009; US paperback ISBN 0-7653-2119-X)
  • Engines of Light Trilogy
    1. Cosmonaut Keep (2000; US paperback ISBN 0-7653-4073-9) – Clarke Award nominee, 2001;[14] Hugo Award nominee, 2002[16] Begins the series with a first contact story in a speculative mid-21st century where a resurgently socialist USSR (incorporating the European Union) is once again in opposition with the capitalist United States, then diverges into a story told on the other side of the galaxy of Earth-descended colonists trying to establish trade and relations within an interstellar empire of several species who travel from world to world at the speed of light.
    2. Dark Light (2001; US paperback ISBN 0-7653-4496-3) – Campbell Award nominee, 2002[16]
    3. Engine City (2002; US paperback ISBN 0-7653-4421-1)
  • The Corporation Wars[17]
    1. Dissidence (2016)
    2. Insurgence (2016)
    3. Emergence (2017)
  • Lightspeed[18]
    1. Beyond the Hallowed Sky (2021)

Other work

  • Newton's Wake: A Space Opera (2004; US paperback edition ISBN 0-7653-4422-X) – BSFA nominee, 2004;[19] Campbell Award nominee, 2005[20]
  • Learning the World: A Novel of First Contact (2005; UK hardback edition ISBN 1-84149-343-0) Prometheus Award winner 2006; Hugo, Locus SF, Campbell and Clarke Awards nominee, 2006;[21] BSFA nominee, 2005[20]
  • "The Highway Men" (2006; UK edition ISBN 1-905207-06-9)
  • The Execution Channel (2007; UK hardback edition ISBN 978-1841493480) – BSFA Award nominee, 2007;[22] Campbell, and Clarke Awards nominee, 2008[23]
  • The Night Sessions (2008; UK hardback edition ISBN 978-1841496511) – Winner Best Novel 2008 BSFA[23]
  • The Restoration Game (2010). According to the author, "In The Restoration Game I revisited the fall of the Soviet Union, with a narrator who is at first a piece in a game played by others, and works her way up to becoming to some extent a player, but – as we see when we pull back at the end – is still part of a larger game."[24]
  • Intrusion (2012): "an Orwellian surveillance society installs sensors on pregnant women to prevent smoking or drinking; and these women also have to take a eugenic 'fix' to eliminate genetic anomalies.[24]
  • Descent (2014):[25] "My genre model for Descent was bloke-lit – that's basically first-person, self-serving, rueful confessional by a youngish man looking back on youthful stupidities... ... Descent is about flying saucers, hidden races, and Antonio Gramsci's concept of passive revolution, all set in a tale of Scottish middle class family life in and after the Great Depression of the 21st Century. Almost mainstream fiction, really."[24]

Short fiction

Collections

  • Poems & Polemics (2001; Rune Press: Minneapolis, MN) Chapbook of non-fiction and poetry.
  • Giant Lizards From Another Star (2006; US trade hardcover ISBN 1-886778-62-0) Collected fiction and nonfiction.

References

  1. ^ a b Raven, Paul (February 2007). "The New British Catastrophe". The SF Site. Retrieved 20 March 2012.
  2. ^ . Orbitbooks.co.uk. Archived from the original on 17 December 2005. Retrieved 20 March 2012.
  3. ^ Walker, Jesse (November 2000). "Anarchies, States, and Utopias". Reason Magazine. Retrieved 20 March 2012.
  4. ^ MacLeod, Ken (4 March 2018). "Other Good News". The Early Days of a Better Nation.
  5. ^ MacLeod, Ken (19 December 2012). "Never knowingly understated". The Early Days of A Better Nation. Retrieved 27 February 2014. Of the 27, I counted 15 who would give a definite Yes to independence. Only two of the others – Jenni Calder and myself – give a definite No.
  6. ^ "Lifeboat Foundation Bios: Ken MacLeod, M.Phil". lifeboat.com. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  7. ^ a b . Zone-sf.com. Archived from the original on 24 October 2005. Retrieved 20 March 2012.
  8. ^ Butler, Andrew M.; Mendlesohn, Farah, eds. (2003). The True Knowledge Of Ken MacLeod. SF Foundation. ISBN 0-903007-02-9.
  9. ^ Cory Doctorow (2010). For the Win. HarperVoyager. ISBN 978-0765322166. MacLeod is thanked in the Acknowledgements section: "Many thanks to Ken MacLeod for letting me use IWWWW and 'Webbly.'"
  10. ^ "Communism failed. What about the ideal of global humanity? – Ken MacLeod | Aeon Essays". Aeon. Retrieved 18 August 2018.
  11. ^ a b "1996 Award Winners & Nominees | Science Fiction & Fantasy Books by Award". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  12. ^ "1998 Award Winners & Nominees | Science Fiction & Fantasy Books by Award". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  13. ^ a b "1999 Award Winners & Nominees | Science Fiction & Fantasy Books by Award". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  14. ^ a b "2001 Award Winners & Nominees | Science Fiction & Fantasy Books by Award". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  15. ^ "The Falling Rate of Profit, Red Hordes and Green Slime: What the Fall Revolution Books Are About" – Nova Express, Volume 6, Spring/Summer 2001, pp 19–21
  16. ^ a b "2002 Award Winners & Nominees | Science Fiction & Fantasy Books by Award". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  17. ^ MacLeod, Ken. "The Shape Of Things To Come". The Early Days of a Better Nation. Retrieved 28 April 2016.
  18. ^ MacLeod, Ken. "Beyond the Hallowed Sky". Fantastic Fiction. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  19. ^ "2004 Award Winners & Nominees | Science Fiction & Fantasy Books by Award | WWEnd". Worldswithoutend.com. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  20. ^ a b "2005 Award Winners & Nominees | Science Fiction & Fantasy Books by Award". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  21. ^ "2006 Award Winners & Nominees | Science Fiction & Fantasy Books by Award". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  22. ^ "2007 Award Winners & Nominees | Science Fiction & Fantasy Books by Award | WWEnd". Worldswithoutend.com. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  23. ^ a b "2008 Award Winners & Nominees | Science Fiction & Fantasy Books by Award". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 11 June 2010.
  24. ^ a b c Winter, Jerome (24 February 2014). "Turbulent Years Ahead: An Interview with Ken MacLeod". Los Angeles Review of Books.
  25. ^ . Upcoming4.me. Archived from the original on 2 February 2014. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  26. ^ Alexander, Niall (12 June 2014). "Step into the Stars: Reach for Infinity, ed. Jonathan Strahan". Tor.com. Retrieved 13 December 2015.

External links

  • Ken MacLeod's Weblog
  • Ken MacLeod's page at Macmillan.com
  • Ken MacLeod at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  • The Human Genre Project, a collection of works on genetic themes, collated and maintained by MacLeod
  • Free MacLeod stories online at Free Speculative Fiction Online

Interviews

    Preceded by ESFS award for Best Author
    2000
    Succeeded by

    macleod, other, people, named, disambiguation, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, june, 2020, kenneth, macrae, macleod, born, august. For other people named Ken MacLeod see Ken MacLeod disambiguation This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article June 2020 Kenneth Macrae MacLeod born 2 August 1954 in Steornabhagh is a Scottish science fiction writer His novels The Sky Road and The Night Sessions won the BSFA Award MacLeod s novels have been nominated for the Arthur C Clarke Hugo Nebula Locus and Campbell Memorial awards for best novel on multiple occasions A techno utopianist MacLeod s work makes frequent use of libertarian socialist themes he is a three time winner of the libertarian Prometheus Award Prior to becoming a novelist MacLeod studied biology and worked as a computer programmer He sits on the advisory board of the Edinburgh Science Festival Ken MacLeodAddressing the 63rd World Science Fiction Convention Glasgow August 2005BornKenneth Macrae MacLeod 1954 08 02 2 August 1954 age 68 Stornoway ScotlandOccupationWriterGenrescience fictionNotable awardsBSFA Award Prometheus AwardWebsitekenmacleod wbr blogspot wbr comKen and Carol MacLeod at Boskone 43 2006 Contents 1 Biography 2 Writing 3 Books about MacLeod 4 Bibliography 4 1 Series 4 2 Other work 4 3 Short fiction 4 4 Collections 5 References 6 External links 6 1 InterviewsBiography EditMacLeod was born in Stornoway Scotland on 2 August 1954 1 He graduated from Glasgow University with a degree in zoology and has worked as a computer programmer and written a masters thesis on biomechanics 2 He was a Trotskyist activist in the 1970s and early 1980s 3 and is married and has two children 1 He lived in South Queensferry near Edinburgh before moving to Gourock on the Firth of Clyde in June 2017 4 MacLeod is opposed to Scottish independence 5 Writing EditHe is part of a group of British science fiction writers who specialise in hard science fiction and space opera His contemporaries include Neal Asher Stephen Baxter Iain M Banks Paul J McAuley Alastair Reynolds Adam Roberts Charles Stross Richard Morgan and Liz Williams His science fiction novels often explore socialist communist and anarchist political ideas especially Trotskyism and anarcho capitalism or extreme economic libertarianism 6 Technical themes encompass singularities divergent human cultural evolution and post human cyborg resurrection MacLeod s general outlook can be best described as techno utopian socialist 7 8 though unlike a majority of techno utopians he has expressed great scepticism over the possibility and especially over the desirability of strong AI 7 He is known for his constant in joking and punning on the intersection between socialist ideologies and computer programming as well as other fields For example his chapter titles such as Trusted Third Parties or Revolutionary Platform usually have double or multiple meanings A future programmers union is called Information Workers of the World Wide Web or the Webblies a reference to the Industrial Workers of the World who are nicknamed the Wobblies The Webblies idea formed a central part of the novel For the Win by Cory Doctorow and MacLeod is acknowledged as coining the term 9 Doctorow and Charles Stross also used one of MacLeod s references to the singularity as the rapture for nerds as the title for their collaborative novel Rapture of the Nerds although MacLeod denies coining the phrase 10 There are also many references to or puns on zoology and palaeontology For example in The Stone Canal the title of the book and many places described in it are named after anatomical features of marine invertebrates such as starfish Books about MacLeod EditThe Science Fiction Foundation have published an analysis of MacLeod s work titled The True Knowledge Of Ken MacLeod Archived 8 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine 2003 ISBN 0 903007 02 9 edited by Andrew M Butler and Farah Mendlesohn As well as critical essays it contains material by MacLeod himself including his introduction to the German edition of Banks Consider Phlebas Bibliography EditSeries Edit Fall Revolution series The Star Fraction 1995 US paperback ISBN 0 7653 0156 3 Prometheus Award winner 1996 Clarke Award nominee 1996 11 The Stone Canal 1996 US paperback ISBN 0 8125 6864 8 Prometheus Award winner 1998 BSFA nominee 1996 11 The Cassini Division 1998 US paperback ISBN 0 312 87044 2 BSFA nominee 1998 12 Clarke and Nebula Awards nominee 1999 13 The Sky Road 1999 US paperback ISBN 0 8125 7759 0 BSFA Award winner 1999 13 Hugo Award nominee 2001 14 represents an alternate future to the second two books as its events diverge sharply due to a choice made differently by one of the protagonists in the middle of The Stone Canal 15 This series is also available in two volumes Fractions The First Half of the Fall Revolution 2009 US paperback ISBN 0 7653 2068 1 Divisions The Second Half of the Fall Revolution 2009 US paperback ISBN 0 7653 2119 X Engines of Light Trilogy Cosmonaut Keep 2000 US paperback ISBN 0 7653 4073 9 Clarke Award nominee 2001 14 Hugo Award nominee 2002 16 Begins the series with a first contact story in a speculative mid 21st century where a resurgently socialist USSR incorporating the European Union is once again in opposition with the capitalist United States then diverges into a story told on the other side of the galaxy of Earth descended colonists trying to establish trade and relations within an interstellar empire of several species who travel from world to world at the speed of light Dark Light 2001 US paperback ISBN 0 7653 4496 3 Campbell Award nominee 2002 16 Engine City 2002 US paperback ISBN 0 7653 4421 1 The Corporation Wars 17 Dissidence 2016 Insurgence 2016 Emergence 2017 Lightspeed 18 Beyond the Hallowed Sky 2021 Other work Edit Newton s Wake A Space Opera 2004 US paperback edition ISBN 0 7653 4422 X BSFA nominee 2004 19 Campbell Award nominee 2005 20 Learning the World A Novel of First Contact 2005 UK hardback edition ISBN 1 84149 343 0 Prometheus Award winner 2006 Hugo Locus SF Campbell and Clarke Awards nominee 2006 21 BSFA nominee 2005 20 The Highway Men 2006 UK edition ISBN 1 905207 06 9 The Execution Channel 2007 UK hardback edition ISBN 978 1841493480 BSFA Award nominee 2007 22 Campbell and Clarke Awards nominee 2008 23 The Night Sessions 2008 UK hardback edition ISBN 978 1841496511 Winner Best Novel 2008 BSFA 23 The Restoration Game 2010 According to the author In The Restoration Game I revisited the fall of the Soviet Union with a narrator who is at first a piece in a game played by others and works her way up to becoming to some extent a player but as we see when we pull back at the end is still part of a larger game 24 Intrusion 2012 an Orwellian surveillance society installs sensors on pregnant women to prevent smoking or drinking and these women also have to take a eugenic fix to eliminate genetic anomalies 24 Descent 2014 25 My genre model for Descent was bloke lit that s basically first person self serving rueful confessional by a youngish man looking back on youthful stupidities Descent is about flying saucers hidden races and Antonio Gramsci s concept of passive revolution all set in a tale of Scottish middle class family life in and after the Great Depression of the 21st Century Almost mainstream fiction really 24 Short fiction Edit The Web Cydonia 1998 UK paperback edition ISBN 1 85881 640 8 part of the young adult fiction series The Web Collected in Giant Lizards from Another Star The Light Company 1998 The Human Front 2002 winner of Short form Sidewise Award for Alternate History 2002 collected in Giant Lizards from Another Star The Highway Men 2006 Who s Afraid of Wolf 359 The New Space Opera 2007 nominated for Hugo Award for Best Short Story Ms Found on a Hard Drive Glorifying Terrorism 2007 Earth Hour 2011 The Entire Immense Superstructure An Installation Reach for Infinity 2014 26 Collections Edit Poems amp Polemics 2001 Rune Press Minneapolis MN Chapbook of non fiction and poetry Giant Lizards From Another Star 2006 US trade hardcover ISBN 1 886778 62 0 Collected fiction and nonfiction References Edit a b Raven Paul February 2007 The New British Catastrophe The SF Site Retrieved 20 March 2012 Ken MacLeod s official page at Orbit Books Orbitbooks co uk Archived from the original on 17 December 2005 Retrieved 20 March 2012 Walker Jesse November 2000 Anarchies States and Utopias Reason Magazine Retrieved 20 March 2012 MacLeod Ken 4 March 2018 Other Good News The Early Days of a Better Nation MacLeod Ken 19 December 2012 Never knowingly understated The Early Days of A Better Nation Retrieved 27 February 2014 Of the 27 I counted 15 who would give a definite Yes to independence Only two of the others Jenni Calder and myself give a definite No Lifeboat Foundation Bios Ken MacLeod M Phil lifeboat com Retrieved 30 July 2020 a b SF Zone interview with MacLeod Zone sf com Archived from the original on 24 October 2005 Retrieved 20 March 2012 Butler Andrew M Mendlesohn Farah eds 2003 The True Knowledge Of Ken MacLeod SF Foundation ISBN 0 903007 02 9 Cory Doctorow 2010 For the Win HarperVoyager ISBN 978 0765322166 MacLeod is thanked in the Acknowledgements section Many thanks to Ken MacLeod for letting me use IWWWW and Webbly Communism failed What about the ideal of global humanity Ken MacLeod Aeon Essays Aeon Retrieved 18 August 2018 a b 1996 Award Winners amp Nominees Science Fiction amp Fantasy Books by Award Worlds Without End Retrieved 11 June 2010 1998 Award Winners amp Nominees Science Fiction amp Fantasy Books by Award Worlds Without End Retrieved 11 June 2010 a b 1999 Award Winners amp Nominees Science Fiction amp Fantasy Books by Award Worlds Without End Retrieved 11 June 2010 a b 2001 Award Winners amp Nominees Science Fiction amp Fantasy Books by Award Worlds Without End Retrieved 11 June 2010 The Falling Rate of Profit Red Hordes and Green Slime What the Fall Revolution Books Are About Nova Express Volume 6 Spring Summer 2001 pp 19 21 a b 2002 Award Winners amp Nominees Science Fiction amp Fantasy Books by Award Worlds Without End Retrieved 11 June 2010 MacLeod Ken The Shape Of Things To Come The Early Days of a Better Nation Retrieved 28 April 2016 MacLeod Ken Beyond the Hallowed Sky Fantastic Fiction Retrieved 8 June 2020 2004 Award Winners amp Nominees Science Fiction amp Fantasy Books by Award WWEnd Worldswithoutend com Retrieved 11 June 2010 a b 2005 Award Winners amp Nominees Science Fiction amp Fantasy Books by Award Worlds Without End Retrieved 11 June 2010 2006 Award Winners amp Nominees Science Fiction amp Fantasy Books by Award Worlds Without End Retrieved 11 June 2010 2007 Award Winners amp Nominees Science Fiction amp Fantasy Books by Award WWEnd Worldswithoutend com Retrieved 11 June 2010 a b 2008 Award Winners amp Nominees Science Fiction amp Fantasy Books by Award Worlds Without End Retrieved 11 June 2010 a b c Winter Jerome 24 February 2014 Turbulent Years Ahead An Interview with Ken MacLeod Los Angeles Review of Books Ken MacLeod Descent Upcoming4 me Archived from the original on 2 February 2014 Retrieved 18 August 2013 Alexander Niall 12 June 2014 Step into the Stars Reach for Infinity ed Jonathan Strahan Tor com Retrieved 13 December 2015 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Ken MacLeod Ken MacLeod s Weblog Ken MacLeod s page at Macmillan com Ken MacLeod at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database The Human Genre Project a collection of works on genetic themes collated and maintained by MacLeod Free MacLeod stories online at Free Speculative Fiction OnlineInterviews Edit Interview with Ken Macleod at SFFWorld com SF Zone interview with MacLeod Interview on the SciFiDimensions Podcast Science Saturday Galactic Princesses Edition Bloggingheads dialog with Annalee Newitz The story behind Descent Online Essay by Ken MacLeodPreceded byJames White ESFS award for Best Author2000 Succeeded byValerio Evangelisti Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ken MacLeod amp oldid 1136833062, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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