His first and major interest, however, has always been science fiction. He majored in both Physics and English at Carnegie-Mellon University, an attempt to straddle both parts of science and fiction. His Ph.D. dissertation at the University of Pittsburgh was a critical study of science fiction, which was later published as 'Science, Myth and the Fictional Creation of Alien Worlds'. He has written a science fiction novel, has given workshops in the writing of SF and on "what's new" in the genre to groups at local libraries, and slide-presentations on science fiction illustration and on the art of such graphic SF creators as Phillippe Druillet. He has presented papers at conferences for the Science Fiction Research Association and the International Association for the Fantastic in Art on critical approaches to science fiction, reader-response theory in studying SF, the novels of Andre Norton, and he's currently preparing a paper on the teaching of graphic novels. (And he still talks about writing science-fiction short stories, but never seems to get around to it.)
Return to Confluence.