io9.com reports the passing of hard s/f author James P. Hogan, author of over 30 novels, along with several short story collections.
I first read Hogan's Code of the Lifemaker, a novel about a robotic culture that 'evolved' and was then discovered by humans; it was a fun read, with a lot of odd, quirky humor. The Proteus Operation was one of my favorite alternate reality novels, about America after Germany won WWII, and their discovery that it was with the assistance of time travelers from, presumably, our own future; it had a kind of noir pulpish feel. Thrice Upon A Time also involved time travel, of a sort, where they were able to communicate backwards in time for a limited temporal distance; this one took me 3 tries to get going, but once I got past the illustration of the divergent timelines, it really picked up - the secret, I found, was to simply skip over what I'd read and gotten bogged down in previously
.
Apparently, there were also some controversies about Hogan's personal views; I'd never heard of them, having only read his actual works, and those are how I'll remember him.
R.I.P. J.P.H.
I first read Hogan's Code of the Lifemaker, a novel about a robotic culture that 'evolved' and was then discovered by humans; it was a fun read, with a lot of odd, quirky humor. The Proteus Operation was one of my favorite alternate reality novels, about America after Germany won WWII, and their discovery that it was with the assistance of time travelers from, presumably, our own future; it had a kind of noir pulpish feel. Thrice Upon A Time also involved time travel, of a sort, where they were able to communicate backwards in time for a limited temporal distance; this one took me 3 tries to get going, but once I got past the illustration of the divergent timelines, it really picked up - the secret, I found, was to simply skip over what I'd read and gotten bogged down in previously

Apparently, there were also some controversies about Hogan's personal views; I'd never heard of them, having only read his actual works, and those are how I'll remember him.
R.I.P. J.P.H.
Last edited: