Paul Cook (author)

This article is about the author. For other uses, see Paul Cook (disambiguation).

Paul Cook is a science fiction writer, classical music critic, and a Principal Lecturer in the English Department at Arizona State University.

Biography

Paul Cook was born in Tucson, Arizona in 1950 and has lived all of his life in Arizona with the exception of three years in Salt Lake City from 1978-1981 where he studied English at the University of Utah, from which he received a Ph.D. in 1981. He currently resides in Tempe, Arizona and has been teaching at Arizona State University since 1982. He has taught a wide range of courses from creative writing courses to literature courses, both British and American. He also teaches ASU's first science fiction class, Eng 369: Science Fiction Studies. He has taught authors as diverse as Thomas Pynchon, John D. MacDonald, Elmore Leonard, Carlos Castaneda, Ezra Pound, and John O'Hara. He currently writes book reviews for Galaxy's Edge, an online science fiction magazine edited by Mike Resnick.

Works

Novels

Other writing

Paul Cook has also published short stories in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction, Amazing Stories, New Letters, Digital Science Fiction, The Nameless Review and The Hawai'i Review.

He has also published poems in a wide variety of literary non mainstream magazines such as The Georgia Review and Quarterly West. He also writes (and continues to write) classical music criticism, having written for ClassicsToday.com and MusicWeb-International.com. He now writes classical music reviews exclusively for The American Record Guide. He has written extensively on the music of Shostakovich, Hindemith, Stravinsky, and Prokofiev.

He most recently wrote the introduction to Tanar of Pellucidar by Edgar Rice Burroughs from Bison Books (University of Nebraska Press, 2006) and is the Series Editor for the Phoenix Science Fiction Classic series from Phoenix Pick/Arc Manor books. He is also an immense Doc Savage fan and a fan, in general, of pulp fiction from the 1930s and 1940s.

External links

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