Bruce Cassiday
Bruce Cassiday (1920–2005) was an American writer and editor. He was the author and editor of pulp fiction, suspense and espionage stories, Gothics, medical melodramas, radio and TV dramas and novelizations, "how-to" books on landscaping, home carpentry, solar houses, ghostwritten biographies, and reader's guides on detective, mystery and science-fiction literature.[1][2]
He was married to Doris Galloway in 1950, and they had a son and a daughter. He died in Stamford, Connecticut, on January 12, 2005, of Parkinson's disease, from which he had suffered since 1999.[1] He was the son of California architect, Robert M. Cassiday and Persis Bingham Cassiday, an architectural author.
Works
by | genre | title | year | comment |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bruce Cassiday | MY | The Buried Motive | 1957 | |
Bruce Cassiday | MY | Brass Shroud | 1958 | |
Carson Bingham | na | Gorgo | 1960 | |
Bruce Cassiday | MY | The Corpse in the Picture Window | 1961 | |
Bruce Cassiday | na | Angels Ten | 1966 | |
Con Steffanson | SF | 4: The Time Trap of Ming XIII | 1974 | Flash Gordon |
Carson Bingham | SF | 5: The Witch Queen of Mongo | 1974 | Flash Gordon |
Carson Bingham | SF | 6: The War of the Cybernauts | 1975 | Flash Gordon |
Bruce Cassiday | NF | The Illustrated History of Science Fiction | 1989 | with Dieter Wuckel |
Bruce Cassiday | NF | My Life in the Pulps: Guest of Honor Speech, Pulpcon #23 | 1996 | essay |
References
- ^ a b [1], The Independent, February 11, 2005
- ^ Pace, Eric (May 7, 1984). "Mystery Writers Celebrate New York's Intrigue" – via NYTimes.com.
- ^ Bruce Cassiday - Summary Bibliography ISFDB. Retrieved 2015-03-01.
External links
- Bruce Cassiday at Library of Congress, with 26 library catalog records under his own name, plus numerous linked pseudonyms
- Bruce Cassiday at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database