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Thomas N Scortia


(Thomas Nicholas Scortia)
USA flag (1926 - 1986)

Thomas Nicholas Scortia was a science fiction author. He worked in the American aerospace industry until the late 60s/early 70s. He collaborated on several works with fellow author Frank M. Robinson. He sometimes used the pseudonyms "Scott Nichols", "Gerald MacDow", and "Arthur R. Kurtz."

Scortia was born in Alton, Illinois. He attended Washington University in St. Louis, where he earned a degree in chemistry in 1949. He worked for a number of aerospace companies during the 1950s and 1960s, and held a patent for the fuel used by one of the Jupiter fly-by missions.

Scortia had been writing in his spare time while still working in the aerospace field. When the industry began to see increased unemployment in the early 1970s, Scortia decided to try his hand at full-time writing. His first novel, The Glass Inferno (in collaboration with Frank M. Robinson) was the inspiration for the 1974 film The Towering Inferno. Scortia also collaborated with Dalton Trumbo on the novel The Endangered Species.

Scortia died of leukemia in La Verne, California on April 29, 1986.
 
 
Novels
   What Mad Oracle? (1961)
   Artery of Fire (1972)
   The Glass Inferno (1974) (with Frank M Robinson)
   Earthwreck! (1974)
   The Prometheus Crisis (1975) (with Frank M Robinson)
   The Nightmare Factor (1978) (with Frank M Robinson)
   The Gold Crew (1980) (with Frank M Robinson)
   Blowout! (1987) (with Frank M Robinson)
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Anthologies edited
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Thomas N Scortia recommends
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Recovery (1980)
(Max Moss, book 1)
Steven L Thompson
"The most frantic chase story I've read in years."

Anthologies containing stories by Thomas N Scortia
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The Last Dangerous Visions (2024)
(Dangerous Visions, book 3)
edited by
Harlan Ellison
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Caught in the Organ Draft (1983)
Biology in Science Fiction
edited by
Isaac Asimov and Martin H Greenberg
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Mythical Beasties (1983)
(Isaac Asimov's Magical Worlds of Fantasy, book 6)
edited by
Isaac Asimov and Martin H Greenberg

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