D. Harlan Wilson
D. Harlan Wilson | |
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D. Harlan Wilson during a reading at Backlist Books in Massillon, Ohio | |
Born |
Michigan, United States | September 3, 1971
Occupation | Novelist & Professor |
Nationality | American |
Period | 1999-Present |
Genre | Irrealism, Literary Fiction, Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror, Interstitial Fiction, Literary Criticism, Literary nonsense, Biography, Theatre of the Absurd |
Notable works | Dr. Identity, Peckinpah, The Kyoto Man |
Years active | 1999–Present |
Spouse | Christine Junker (m. 2005; div. 2015) |
Children | 2 |
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Signature | |
Website | |
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D. Harlan Wilson (born September 3, 1971) is an American novelist, short-story writer, critic, editor, playwright and English professor whose body of work bridges the aesthetics of literary theory with various genres of speculative fiction.[1] He is the author of over twenty books, and hundreds of his stories, essays and flash fiction have appeared in magazines, journals and anthologies in multiple languages.
Early Life & Education
Wilson was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where he grew up and went to high school. He attended Wittenberg University on a partial basketball scholarship that summarily lapsed; he joined the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity his sophomore year and never played basketball again. He majored in English and graduated in 1993 with a B.A. in Liberal Studies. After college, Wilson worked as an international businessman, model and actor before returning to graduate school in 1995 at the University of Massachusetts-Boston to further his studies in English. He graduated with a M.A. in English in 1997. He moved to England and completed a M.A. in Science Fiction Studies at the University of Liverpool in 1998, then returned to Grand Rapids and taught high school during the 1998-99 school year, which saw the first appearances of his short fiction in publication. In 1999, he moved to East Lansing, Michigan to pursue a Ph.D. in English at Michigan State University. He obtained his Ph.D. in 2005 and is currently a Professor of English at Wright State University-Lake Campus.[1]
Writing
Wilson is perhaps best known for his award-winning novel Dr. Identity and the subsequent Peckinpah: An Ultraviolent Romance, both of which he has fancifully categorized as examples of "splattershtick," a literary, comic, ultraviolent form of metafiction. Much of his writing satirizes the idiocy of pop culture and western society, illustrating how "the reel increasingly usurps the real."[1][2] On the whole, he writes all over the map and has been said to defy categorization; some critics have called him "a genre in himself."[3]
In addition to writing fiction, Wilson is a prolific reviewer and essayist. He has published a book of science fiction criticism called Technologized Desire: Selfhood & the Body in Postcapitalist Science Fiction, a monograph on John Carpenter's They Live for Columbia University Press's Cultographies series, and a biocritical study of J.G. Ballard for University of Illinois Press's Modern Masters of Science Fiction series.
Wilson is editor-in-chief of Anti-Oedipus Press, reviews editor of Extrapolation (journal), managing editor of Guide Dog Books, and emeritus editor-in-chief of The Dream People.[4]
Bibliography
Biographies
- Douglass: The Lost Autobiography (2014)
- Freud: The Penultimate Biography (2014)
- Hitler: The Terminal Biography (2014)
Plays
- Three Plays: The Triangulated Diner, The Dark Hypotenuse and Primacy (2016)
Stand-Alone Novels
- Primordial: An Abstraction (2014)
- Peckinpah: An Ultraviolent Romance (1st ed. 2009; 2nd ed. 2013)
- Blankety Blank: A Memoir of Vulgaria (2008)
The Scikungfi Trilogy
- The Kyoto Man: Book 3 (2013)
- Codename Prague: Book 2 (2011)
- Dr. Identity, or, Farewell to Plaquedemia: Book 1 (2007) — Winner of the Wonderland Book Award
Fiction Collections
- Battle without Honor or Humanity: Vol. 2 (2016)
- Battle without Honor or Humanity: Vol. 1 (2015)
- Diegeses (2013)
- They Had Goat Heads (2010)
- Pseudo-City (2005)
- Stranger on the Loose (2003)
- The Kafka Effekt (2001)
Literary Criticism
- Modern Masters of Science Fiction: J.G. Ballard (2017)
- Cultographies: They Live (2015)
- Technologized Desire: Selfhood & the Body in Postcapitalist Science Fiction (2009)
Films
- The Cocktail Party[5] (2006): Co-written with director Brandon Duncan, this short, animated, rotoscoped film is a highly abstracted and philosophical (post)postmodern meditation on the narcissistic themes of consumerism, redundant self-analysis and rampant hypocrisy. The film won Best Animation (ACE Film Festival 2007).
Trivia
- Wilson is a direct descendent of James Fenimore Cooper[1] and brother-in-law of D I Smith of the band Pilots of Japan.
References
- 1 2 3 4 "Interviews". Dharlanwilson.com. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
- ↑ Gurnow, Michael (2007). "Review of Dr. Identity". The Horror Review. Archived from the original on October 8, 2014. Retrieved February 17, 2015.
- ↑ "Going LIVE Interview".
- ↑ "TheDreamPeople.org". dreampeople.org. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
- ↑ "e x p i r i n g s u n". e x p i r i n g s u n. Archived from the original on 2014-04-16. Retrieved 2014-06-09.
External links
- Official Website
- Literary Journal
- Select Interviews
- Book Reviews
- D. Harlan Wilson at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database