- David Feintuch
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David Feintuch (July 21, 1944-March 16, 2006) was a science fiction and fantasy author and attorney. He was the 1996 winner of the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in Science Fiction. He wrote one major science fiction series, the Seafort Saga, and a fantasy series, Rodrigo of Caledon.
David Feintuch Born July 21, 1944
New York, New YorkDied March 16, 2006 (aged 61)
Mason, Michigan, United StatesOccupation Attorney, Author Notable award(s) John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in Science Fiction
1996Contents
Published works
Seafort Saga
A military space opera series revolving around the character Nicholas Seafort, an officer in the UNNS. The books are set in a future human society that is largely dominated by unified Christianity. The main protagonist is a naval officer who strives always to do his duty, both to the navy and to his God, at great personal cost. The series and main character are inspired by C. S. Forester's novels about Horatio Hornblower. Shortly before his death, the author announced on his website that an eighth book, Galahad's Hope, had been completed and was in the publication stage; its current status is unknown. Books in the Seafort Saga have been translated into Russian, German, Japanese, Spanish and Czech (published by Talpress).
- Midshipman's Hope (1994)
- Challenger's Hope (1995)
- Prisoner's Hope (1995)
- Fisherman's Hope (1996)
- Voices of Hope (1996)
- Patriarch's Hope (1999)
- Children of Hope (2001)
Rodrigo of Caledon
- The Still (1997) ISBN 0-446-67285-8 (Time Warner trade paperback) ISBN 0-446-60551-4 (1998 Aspect paperback) ISBN 1-85723-597-5 (Orbit paperback)
- The King (2002) ISBN 0-441-00902-6 (Ace hardcover) ISBN 0-441-01037-7 (2003 Ace paperback)
External links
- Official Site of the Seafort Saga
- David Feintuch's 1990s Web page (via archive.org)
- Obituary at SFWA
- Obituary at The Independent
- David Feintuch at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
Categories:- American science fiction writers
- John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer winners
- 1944 births
- 2006 deaths
- Deaths from cardiovascular disease
- American science fiction writer stubs
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