Locus Magazine has published obituaries on line for :
- Steve Stiles
- Mike Resnick
- Neil Peart
Steve Stiles (1943-2020)
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Artist Steve Stiles, 76, died January 12, 2020 shortly after announcing a diagnosis of terminal cancer. He lived in Maryland. Stiles was one of fandom’s best-known artists, first nominated for a Best Fan Artist Hugo in 1967, and winning in 2016; he received 17 nominations in all. He won 15 FAAn Awards for his fanzine work (the first in 2001, the last in 2016), and in 1998 won the first ever Rotsler Award for lifetime achievement in fan art. He also did professional artwork, including in comics. READ MORE
Mike Resnick (1942-2020)
Author Mike Resnick, 77, died January 9, 2020 of lymphoma. Resnick was a prolific and acclaimed SF, nominated 27 times for Hugo Awards and winning five. His Hugo Award winners include his first nomination “Kirinyaga” (1988), “The Manamouki” (1990), “Seven Views of Olduval Gorge” (1994), “The 43 Antarean Dynasties” (1997), and “Travels with My Cats” (2004), and his most recent fiction nomination was for “The Homecoming” (2011). His winners and nominees appear in Win Some, Lose Some: The Hugo Award Winning (and Nominated) Short Science Fiction and Fantasy (2012). He was a finalist for 11 Nebula Awards, and won for “Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge”. In all, he produced over 70 novels, more than 25 collections, hundreds of stories and articles, and edited over 40 anthologies. In 1995 he received a Skylark Award. READ MORE
Neil Peart (1952-2020)
Author and legendary Rush drummer and lyricist, Neil Peart, 67, died on January 7, 2020, after a long struggle with brain cancer.
With his grand, imaginative lyrics Peart helped usher in an entirely new genre of Progressive Rock music inspired by science fiction and fantasy. He wrote immense and lengthy musical epics such as dystopian science fiction “2112”, sweeping fantasy such as “Xanadu” and “The Necromancer”, and hard science fiction such as “Cygnus X-1” and “Hemispheres.” The last Rush album Clockwork Angels (2012) is a steampunk fantasy adventure with airships, alchemy, pirates, and lost cities. Peart worked with Kevin J. Anderson on the novel version of Clockwork Angels, which was a New York Times bestseller and Scribe Award winner, and follow-up novel Clockwork Lives (winner of the Colorado Book Award). Anderson and Peart adapted both works into graphic novels. READ MORE