My Favorite Writers (Joe Haldeman)
Haldeman was born June 9,
1943, and is an American science fiction author.
He is best known for his
1974 novel The Forever War. That novel, and other of his works including The
Hemingway Hoax (1991) and Forever Peace (1997), have won major science fiction
awards including the Hugo Award and Nebula Award.
For his career writing
science fiction and/or fantasy he is a SFWA Grand Master and since 2012 a
member of the Science Fiction Hall of Fame.
Many of Haldeman's works,
including his debut novel War Year and his second novel The Forever War, were
inspired by his experience serving in the Vietnam War, where he was wounded in
combat, and by his adjustment to civilian life after returning home.
Haldeman
was born in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. His family traveled and he lived in Puerto
Rico, New Orleans, Washington DC, Bethesda (Maryland), and Anchorage (Alaska)
as a child.
In 1965, Haldeman married
Mary Gay Potter, known as "Gay". He received a BS degree in Physics
and Astronomy from the University of Maryland in 1967.
He
was immediately drafted into the United States Army, and served as a combat
engineer in Vietnam. He was wounded in combat and received a Purple Heart.
His wartime experience
was the inspiration for War Year, his first novel; also later books such as The
Hemingway Hoax and Old Twentieth which deal extensively with the experience of
combat soldiers in Vietnam and other wars.
In 1975, he received an
MFA degree in Creative Writing from the University of Iowa Writers'
Workshop.
Haldeman resides
alternately in Gainesville, Florida and Cambridge, Massachusetts. Since 1983,
he has been an Adjunct Professor teaching writing at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology, which is also the fictional setting for his 2007
novel, The Accidental Time Machine.
In addition to being an
award-winning writer, Haldeman is a painter.
In 2009 and 2010, he was
hospitalized for pancreatitis.
Haldeman is the brother
of Jack C. Haldeman II (1941–2002), also a science-fiction author whose work
included an original Star Trek novel (Perry's Planet, February 1980).
Comments
Post a Comment