Mark L. Van Name
Mark L. Van Name is an American science fiction writer and technology consultant. As of 2009, Van Name lives in North Carolina.
About
With John Kessel, Van Name co-founded the Sycamore Hill Writer's Workshop in 1985, and in 1996 he, Kessel, and Richard Butner edited an anthology of stories written there, called Intersections: The Sycamore Hill Anthology, including one of his own stories.Van Name's first professionally published science fiction short story was "My Sister, My Self", in 1984, in the anthology Isaac Asimov's Tomorrow's Voices. His first novel, One Jump Ahead, was published by Baen Books in 2007, and won the Compton Crook Award for Best First Novel in the Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror genres in 2008. It is the first book in the Jon and Lobo series, of which he published another four books until 2012.
In 2009, he premiered a stand-up comedy routine at Balticon, the Baltimore Science Fiction Convention.
Van Name has worked in the information technology field for over 30 years, at one time serving as Vice President of Product Testing for Ziff-Davis, and has written many technical articles for print and on-line publications including Computer Shopper and PC Week. He currently is CEO of a technology assessment company, Principled Technologies, in the Research Triangle area of North Carolina.
Novels
Jon and Lobo Series- One Jump Ahead
- Slanted Jack
- Overthrowing Heaven
- Children No More
- No Going Back Jump Gate Twist, a trade paperback omnibus re-issue of the novels One Jump Ahead and Slanted Jack accompanied by 4 essays and the short stories My Sister, My Self and ''Lobo, Actually''
Short stories
- My Sister, My Self in Isaac Asimov's Tomorrow's Voices ed. Editors of Isaac Asimov's
- "Basic Training" in Armageddon ed. David Drake, Billie Sue Mosiman & Martin H. Greenberg
Anthologies
Transhuman- The Wild Side
Non-fiction
- Windows Performance Secrets
- 2001: The Personal Computer Article in New Destinies, Vol. IX/Fall 1990 ed. Jim Baen (Baen 0-671-2016-3, Sep '90