Ryk E. Spoor

Ryk E. Spoor
Born (1962-07-21) July 21, 1962
Omaha, Nebraska, U.S.
Occupation Novelist, short story author
Period 2003–present
Genre Science fiction, Fantasy
Website
www.grandcentralarena.com

Ryk E. Spoor (born July 21, 1962) is an American science fiction and fantasy author, who also writes research grant proposals for a technology firm.[1] He published his first novel, Digital Knight[2] in 2003, and has gone on to publish over a dozen more novels,[3] often in collaboration with award-winning author Eric Flint on their Boundary series. He is nicknamed "seawasp" or "Sea Wasp", an online handle he has been using since 1977 in venues such as Livejournal, Dreamwidth and Usenet.

Reception of his published works

Digital Knight (2003) reached number 10 on Locus Magazine Bestsellers for paperbacks for the month of January 2004.[4] A reviewer for the Shiny Book Review called Spoor's first published work "fun, fast read about things that go bump in the night" and "a fine debut novel that does just about everything right".[5]

In reviewing the novel Grand Central Arena, the reviewer for the Shiny Book Review called the book "an intelligently written space opera with a great deal to recommend it" but was concerned about the relatively slow start of the novel when compared with Spoor's previous work.[6] Although the reviewer for the Fantasy Book Critic thought that "the novel sags a little in the middle", the reviewer gave a very positive review and calls the book a "space opera in the grand old tradition... but with modern sensibilities and awareness of current speculations in cutting edge physics."[7]

In reviewing the 2006 co-authored novel Boundary, the reviewer for the publication SFRevu wrote that "It's refreshing to have a book with soldiers, scientists, and secret agents, all of whom, even when having differing orders, still find ways to actually work together for the common good." The reviewer also wrote that the authors introduces a lot of technical wiz-gimmickry in a way that "it's done smoothly enough that you don't feel like you're being given a lecture".[8] The reviewer for SFFWorld wrote that he "thoroughly enjoyed Boundary" and "found it to be a quick and easy read, one where I was continuously kept interested on what would come next, and where it would lead from there."[9] The reviewer also wrote that "Flint and Spoor have created a memorable cast of characters and have injected a real sense of wonder into the narrative".

The 2010 co-authored novel Threshold reached number 11 on the Wall Street Journal Best-Selling Books list for Hardcover Science Fiction for a week in June 2010.[10] The book also reached number 9 on Publishers Weekly's Sci-Fi Bestseller List for a week in June 2012.[11] A reviewer for Publishers Weekly wrote "fast-paced sci-fi espionage thriller [that] is light in tone and hard on science and a fine choice for any collection".[12]

In reviewing the 2013 co-authored novel Portal, the reviewer for Astro Guyz wrote that "Portal is hard science fiction in the tradition of Ben Bova, Hal Clement and Arthur C. Clarke."[13]

Reviewers for Flint and Spoor's 2015 book Castaway Planet were less favorable. The reviewer for Rosboch Book Reviews wrote that although the reviewer mildly enjoy the struggles of the Kimei family, the reviewer "found the writing verging wildly into corny far too often" and the "story is predictable and bland" unlike the previous books in the series.[14] The reviewer for Koeur's Book Reviews wrote that the "novel went from really good to really bad, really fast. Almost like two different authors wrote separate halves."[15]

Publishers Weekly describes Spoor's 2017 novel, Princess Holy Aura, as "Spoor’s affable horror fantasy [in which] a 35-year-old man must transform into a 14-year-old girl to save the world from a Lovecraftian menace." The same reviewer also wrote that "The Lovecraftian abominations are sufficiently over-the-top and the fight scenes are lively, but awkward dialogue and lots of exposition bog down the already overstuffed narrative."[16] A reviewer for PopCultHQ found the book "hilariously enjoyable and had trouble putting it down."[17]

Bibliography

  • Digital Knight (2003), ISBN 0-7434-7161-X
  • Diamonds Are Forever (2004), (in the anthology Mountain Magic), ISBN 0-7434-8856-3
  • Paradigm Lost (2014); a revised and expanded version of Digital Knight, ISBN 978-1625793355
  • Polychrome: A Romantic Fantasy (April 2015); a novel set in the Land of Oz that was created by L. Frank Baum, ISBN 978-1619910140
  • Princess Holy Aura (December 2017), ISBN 978-1481482820
  • Revelation: Demons Of The Past (April 2018), ISBN 978-1987625196
  • French Roast Apocalypse: Volume One: Fall Of Veils (April 2018) with Kathleen Moffre-Spoor, ISBN 978-1987623741

Balanced Sword Series

  • Phoenix Rising (November 2012), ISBN 978-1-4516-3841-7
  • Phoenix in Shadow (May 2015), ISBN 978-1-4767-8037-5
  • Phoenix Ascendant (March 2016), ISBN 978-1-4767-8129-7

Boundary Series

  • Boundary (March 2006) with Eric Flint, ISBN 978-1-4165-0932-5[18]
Second edition (October 2016), revised with added material ISBN 978-1-62579-545-8
  • Threshold (June 2010) with Eric Flint, sequel to Boundary, ISBN 978-1-4391-3360-6
  • Portal (May 2013) with Eric Flint, second sequel to Boundary, ISBN 978-1-4516-3896-7
  • Skyspark (2013), short story[19]

Castaway Series

  • Disaster (2015), short story[20]
  • Castaway Planet (February 2015) with Eric Flint, third sequel to Boundary, start of a new trilogy in the same universe, ISBN 978-1-4767-8027-6
  • Castaway Odyssey (October 2016) with Eric Flint, ISBN 978-1-4767-8181-5
  • Castaway Peril (TBA) with Eric Flint

Arenaverse

  • Grand Central Arena (May 2010), ISBN 978-1-4391-3355-2
  • Spheres of Influence (November 2013), ISBN 978-1-4516-3937-7
  • Challenges of the Deep (2017), ISBN 978-1-62579-564-9

References

  1. Caprood, Tom (February 20, 2010). "Five Questions: Ryk Spoor". The Troy Record.
  2. Spoor, Ryk E. "Digital Knight". Baen Ebooks.
  3. Del Socorro, Jean-Laurent (November 2015). "Interview 2015: Ryk E. Spoor for Grand Central Arena". ActuSF.
  4. "Locus Bestsellers for January 2004". Locus Magazine. January 2004.
  5. Caffrey, Barb (September 30, 2011). "Ryk Spoor's "Digital Knight" — A Fun Take on Things that go Bump in the Night". Shiny Book Review.
  6. Caffrey, Barb (August 13, 2011). "Ryk Spoor's "Grand Central Arena" — Imaginative Space Opera". Shiny Book Review.
  7. Suciu, Liviu (May 3, 2010). ""Grand Central Arena" by Ryk Spoor (Review)". Fantasy Book Critic.
  8. Haggerty, Paul (March 7, 2006). "Boundary by Eric Flint". SFRevu.
  9. Chitty, Mark (May 11, 2015). "Boundary by Eric Flint and Ryk E Spoor (review)". SFFWorld.
  10. "Best-Selling Books, Week Ended June 20; With data from Nielsen BookScan". Wall Street Journal. June 25, 2010. (Subscription required (help)). Alternate Link via ProQuest.
  11. "Sci-Fi Bestsellers List". Publishers Weekly. June 11, 2012.
  12. "Fiction Book Review: Threshold by Eric Flint and Ryk E. Spoor, Baen". Publishers Weekly. August 2, 2010.
  13. Dickinson, David (July 26, 2013). "Review: Portal by Eric Flint and Ryk E. Spoor". Astro Guyz.
  14. "Castaway Planet (Boundary IV) – Eric Flint & Ryk E. Spoor". Rosboch Book Reviews. February 13, 2015.
  15. "Review: Castaway Planet by Eric Flint". Koeur's Book Reviews. January 20, 2015.
  16. "Princess Holy Aura". Publishers Weekly. December 1, 2017.
  17. Carvelli, April (January 15, 2018). "[Book Review] 'Princess Holy Aura' by Ryk E. Spoor". PopCultHQ.
  18. Spoor, Ryk E. (2006). "Boundary". Baen Books.
  19. Spoor, Ryk E. (2015). "Skyspark". Baen Books.
  20. Spoor, Ryk E. (2015). "Disaster". Baen Books.


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