Joel Rosenberg | |
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Joel Rosenberg at Windycon (1987)
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Born |
Winnipeg, Manitoba |
May 1, 1954
Died | June 2, 2011 Minneapolis, Minnesota |
(aged 57)
Occupation | Novelist, handgun instructor |
Language | English |
Citizenship | United States, Canada |
Alma mater | University of Connecticut |
Period | 1982 | –2011
Genre | Science Fiction, Fantasy, Mysteries |
Subject | Second Amendment advocacy, textbooks for handgun training and regional gun control law (Minnesota, Missouri) |
Notable works | Guardians of the Flame series |
Notable awards | Prometheus Award Best Novel nominee (1992) : D'Shai |
Spouse | Felicia Herman |
Children | 2 daughters |
Relatives | Carol Rosenberg (sister) |
Website | |
ellegon |
Joel Rosenberg (May 1, 1954 – June 2, 2011) was a Canadian American science fiction and fantasy author best known for his long-running "Guardians of the Flame" series. Rosenberg was also a gun rights activist. He is the oldest brother of Miami Herald reporter Carol Rosenberg.
Rosenberg began publishing in 1978 with an op-ed piece in The New York Times favoring nuclear power. His stories appeared in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, Amazing Science Fiction, and TSR's The Dragon. His novels have been published by Roc, Avon, Berkley, Tor and Baen Books.
His first published fiction, "Like the Gentle Rains", appeared in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine in 1982. The following year, he published his first novel, The Sleeping Dragon, which was the first in his long-running Guardians of the Flame series. This series placed a group of college students into a fantasy setting similar to a role-playing world. Throughout the series' ten novels, Rosenberg traced these characters, their descendants, and the changes they made to society. He showed no compunction about killing off popular characters.
The "Keepers of the Hidden Ways" trilogy similarly placed people from the real world into a fantasy setting, making heavy use of Norse mythology. A third fantasy series, consisting of the novels D'Shai (1991) and Hour of the Octopus (1994) (both lightly humorous mysteries), was set in an Asian-influenced fantasy world with very strict cultural standards and etiquette.