Myke Cole

Myke Cole is an American fantasy and science fiction writer. His debut novel, Shadow Ops: Control Point won the 2013 Compton Crook Award.[1] He was one of the investigators on the CBS reality show Hunted.[2]

Myke Cole
Cole at the 2017 Phoenix Comicon
Born
NationalityAmerican
OccupationNovelist
AwardsCompton Crook Award (2013)
Websitehttp://mykecole.com

In February 2018, Cole was one of several male authors anonymously accused of potential misconduct in the online comments to a School Library Journal article[3] that discussed the results of a survey on sexual harassment in children's publishing conducted by author Anne Ursu. Cole ultimately offered an apology on his own blog as well as a promise to contribute $500 to the Time's Up Legal Defense Fund.[4] In 2020, following new Twitter allegations, Cole was dropped by his agent and two of his publishers.[5][6]

Bibliography

Novels

Shadow Ops series

Shadow Ops trilogy
  1. Control Point (February 2012)
  2. Fortress Frontier (February 2013)
  3. Breach Zone (February 2014)
  • Weapons in the Earth (2015), Shadow Ops novelette, published in Operation Arcana (ed. by John Joseph Adams)
The Reawakening trilogy

This is a prequel to the Shadow Ops trilogy.

  1. Gemini Cell (January 2015)
  2. Javelin Rain (March 2016)
  3. Siege Line (October 2017)

The Sacred Throne series

  1. The Armored Saint (February 2018)
  2. The Queen of Crows (September 2018)
  3. The Killing Light (November 2019)

Stand alone novels

  • Sixteenth Watch (March 2020)

Short fiction

  • Shouting Down the Moon (The Best of All Flesh: Zombie Anthology) (reprint) January 2010
  • Naktong Flow (Black Gate) Spring 2009
  • A Place for Heroes (Weird Tales) January–February 2004
  • Blood and Horses (L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume XIX) August 2003[7]
  • Shouting Down the Moon (The Book of Final Flesh) July 2003
  • Car Trouble (Wildsidhe Chronicles) June 2003

Non-fiction

  • Legion versus Phalanx: The Epic Struggle for Infantry Supremacy in the Ancient World (October, 2018)[8]
  • Centuries Ago, a Man Made a Piece of Armor that Changed the Course of My Life Tor.com (February, 2013)[9]
  • How to Violate Your Security Policies: Four Easy Steps on What Not to Do When Guarding Your Security Gates Infosecurity Professional Insights (January 2013)
  • Company Commanders: Leaders in and out of Rating U.S. Coast Guard Leadership News (October 2012)
  • Ready for the Real Thing U.S. Coast Guard Forum (May 2012)
  • Art Imitates War: Post Traumatic Stress Disorder in A Song of Ice and Fire Beyond the Wall: Exploring George R.R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire (June 2012)
  • A Warrior's Complexity: Orphanage by Robert Buettner Tor.com (January 2012)
  • 5 Minutes to Midnight: Warhammer 40,000 and Apocalypse Literature SFSignal (November 2011)
  • Why Every Writer Should Join the US Military Johnmiereau.com (July 2011) Reposted at Tor.com (Part II) (January 2012)
  • The Kids Are All Right: Greg van Eekhout and Carrie Vaughn on YA and MG Tor.com (June 2011)
  • The Analyst's Toolbox Journal of Counterterrorism and Homeland Security International (February 2006)
  • The Taxonomic Obsession: Proviling as a 4GW Tactical Error On Point: Counterterrorism Journal (January 2006) Reprinted in Journal of Counterterrorism and Homeland Security International (August 2006)
  • Confronting the 4th Generation Enemy Journal of Counterterrorism and Homeland Security International (November 2005)
  • Meet the New War, Same as the Old War: Could 5GW Come Full Circle On Point: Counterterrorism Journal (November 2005) Reprinted in Journal of Counterterrorism and Homeland Security International (March 2007)
  • Comic Book Warning: An Unlikely Insight into Warfare's 5th Generation Small Wars Journal (October 2005)
  • Lessons from the Military: Applying 4GW Theory to the Intelligence Community Defense and The National Interest (August 10, 2005) Reprinted in On Point: Counterterrorism Journal (September 9, 2005)
  • Steam Power to the People: China Miéville’s Iron Council Strange Horizons (November, 2004)
  • Rising Sun vs. Morning Calm: The Birth of a Korean Fencing Tradition Strange Horizons (December, 2002)

References

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