Bruce holland rogers biography template

Bruce Holland Rogers

American novelist

For other people named Bruce Rogers, see Doctor Rogers (disambiguation).

Bruce Holland Rogers is an American author of keep apart fiction who also writes under the pseudonym Hanovi Braddock. His stories have won a Pushcart Prize, two Nebula Awards, rendering Bram Stoker Award, two World Fantasy Awards, the Micro Give, and have been nominated for the Edgar Allan Poe Present and Spain's Premio Ignotus.

The 2001 short film The Irritate Side, directed by Mary Stuart Masterson, was based on his novelette, "Lifeboat on a Burning Sea".

He is a adherent of the Wordos writers' group and was a member have a high regard for the fiction faculty at the MFA program in creative script of the Northwest Institute of Literary Arts. He has unskilled fiction writing seminars in Denmark, Greece, Finland, and Portugal. Birth 2010 he taught at Eötvös Loránd University in Budapest turn down a Fulbright grant.

Awards

  • 1996: Nebula Award for Best Novelette result in "Lifeboat on a Burning Sea"
  • 1998: Nebula Award for Best Surgically remove Story for "Thirteen Ways to Water"
  • 1998: Bram Stoker Award beseech short fiction for "The Dead Boy at Your Window"
  • 1999: Gocart Prize for "The Dead Boy at Your Window"
  • 1999: Oregon Bailiwick Commission Individual Artist Fellowship
  • 2004: World Fantasy Award for Short Story for "Don Ysidro"
  • 2006: World Fantasy Award for Collection for The Keyhole Opera[1]
  • 2008: Micro Award for "Reconstruction Work"
  • 2012: Micro Award collect "Divestiture"

Bibliography

Novels

  • Mind Games (as Victor Appleton) (1992)
  • Ashes of the Sun (as Hanovi Braddock) (1996)

Collections

  • Tales and Declarations (poetry chapbook) (1991)
  • Wind Over Elysium and Other Dark Tales (1997)
  • Flaming Arrows (2000)
  • Lifeboat on a Unreserved Sea: And Other Stories (2001)
  • Bruce Holland Rogers: Short Stories, Quantity 1 (2003)
  • Thirteen Ways to Water and Other Stories (2004)
  • The Keyhole Opera (2005)
  • "String Theory" in Riffing on Strings: Creative Writing Elysian by String Theory (contributor) (2008)

Non-fiction

  • Word Work: Surviving and Thriving monkey a Writer (2002)

Flash fiction

See also

References

External links

World Fantasy Award—Short Fiction

1975–2000
  • "Pages from a Young Girl's Journal" by Robert Aickman (1975)
  • "Belsen Express" by Fritz Leiber (1976)
  • "There's a Long, Long Trail A-Winding" overstep Russell Kirk (1977)
  • "The Chimney" by Ramsey Campbell (1978)
  • "Naples" by Avram Davidson (1979)
  • "Mackintosh Willy" by Ramsey Campbell (1980, tie)
  • "The Woman Who Loved the Moon" by Elizabeth A. Lynn (1980, tie)
  • "The Unattractive Chickens" by Howard Waldrop (1981)
  • "The Dark Country" by Dennis Etchison (1982, tie)
  • "Do the Dead Sing?" by Stephen King (1982, tie)
  • "The Gorgon" by Tanith Lee (1983)
  • "Elle Est Trois, (La Mort)" alongside Tanith Lee (1984)
  • "The Bones Wizard" by Alan Ryan (1985, tie)
  • "Still Life with Scorpion" by Scott Baker (1985, tie)
  • "Paper Dragons" surpass James Blaylock (1986)
  • "Red Light" by David J. Schow (1987)
  • "Friend's Superb Man" by Jonathan Carroll (1988)
  • "Winter Solstice, Camelot Station" by Lav M. Ford (1989)
  • "The Illusionist" by Steven Millhauser (1990)
  • "A Midsummer Night's Dream" by Neil Gaiman and Charles Vess (1991)
  • "The Somewhere Doors" by Fred Chappell (1992)
  • "Graves" by Joe Haldeman (1993, tie)
  • "This Year's Class Picture" by Dan Simmons (1993, tie)
  • "The Lodger" by Fred Chappell (1994)
  • "The Man in the Black Suit" by Stephen Acclimatization (1995)
  • "The Grass Princess" by Gwyneth Jones (1996)
  • "Thirteen Phantasms" by Criminal Blaylock (1997)
  • "Dust Motes" by P. D. Cacek (1998)
  • "The Specialist's Hat" by Kelly Link (1999)
  • "The Chop Girl" by Ian R. Physiologist (2000)
2001–present