Difference between revisions of "George R. R. Martin"

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* 1986 -- [[AggieCon XVII]], [[Bubonicon 18]], [[OryCon '86]], [[Nebula Award]]
 
* 1986 -- [[AggieCon XVII]], [[Bubonicon 18]], [[OryCon '86]], [[Nebula Award]]
 
* 1987 -- [[Tropicon VI]], [[Fantasycon XII]], [[Triangulum 1987]]
 
* 1987 -- [[Tropicon VI]], [[Fantasycon XII]], [[Triangulum 1987]]
* 1988 -- [[WisCon 12]], [[Bram Stoker Award]], [[Inkpot Award]]
+
* 1988 -- [[Philcon 88]], [[WisCon 12]], [[Bram Stoker Award]], [[Inkpot Award]]
 
* 1989 -- [[AggieCon XX]], [[New Orleans SF & Fantasy Festival '89]], [[Windycon XVI]], [[World Fantasy Award]]
 
* 1989 -- [[AggieCon XX]], [[New Orleans SF & Fantasy Festival '89]], [[Windycon XVI]], [[World Fantasy Award]]
 
* 1990 -- [[Danse Macabre]], [[Archon 14]], [[Marcon XXV]]
 
* 1990 -- [[Danse Macabre]], [[Archon 14]], [[Marcon XXV]]

Revision as of 16:11, 20 September 2022

(September 20, 1948 –)

George Raymond Richard Martin, sometimes called “Railroad” for his middle initials, made his first pro sale to Galaxy in 1971 and quickly became a leading short-sf writer, getting Hugo and Nebula nominations. He was GoH at Torcon 3, the 2003 Worldcon. Martin is arguably the genre’s best-known and most successful writer, especially to have come out of fandom.

A fan as well as a pro, Martin regularly attends cons. In 1976, at MidAmeriCon, Martin and Gardner Dozois conceived of and organized the first Hugo Losers Party for the evening following the convention's Hugo Awards ceremony. Such parties became semi-official Worldcon events, and Martin personally funded and hosted them for many years, until he was insulted by his reception as toastmaster at CoNZealand, culminating in Discon III’s Hugo nominations.

He attended college at Northwestern University and lived in Chicago during the 1960s and ’70s, where he was active in local fandom and regularly attended cons including Midwestcon. Next, he moved to Iowa, where he was one of the founders of ICON. He taught at Clarion West in 1998.

Besides literary sf, he worked in Hollywood on a revival of Twilight Zone, and on Beauty and the Beast, while also developing the 30+-volume, multi-author Wild Cards series.

He became stunningly successful with his A Song of Ice and Fire series, which has sold quintillions of copies and was turned into the very successful HBO series Game of Thrones, leading Martin to be declared “the American Tolkien.” A second, prequel series, House of the Dragon, premiered in 2022. GoT has inspired its own media fandom. The books and show popularized a number of Thronespeak catchphrases.

Martin collects medieval-themed miniatures and has a house devoted to his collection. In the early 1970s, he was in a relationship with fellow pro Lisa Tuttle. He later married Gale Burnick; they divorced in 1979. He is married to fellow fan Parris McBride; they live in Santa Fe, NM. Martin was born in New Jersey.

Awards, Honors and GoHships:



Person 1948
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