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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Chad_OliverChad Oliver - Wikipedia

    Symmes Chadwick Oliver (30 March 1928 – 9 August 1993) was an American anthropologist and science fiction and Western writer. He was born in Cincinnati, Ohio. His father was a surgeon and his mother a nurse.

  2. Mists of Dawn is a juvenile science fiction novel by science fiction writer and anthropologist Chad Oliver first published in 1952 by John C. Winston, Co. as a part of the Winston Science Fiction series of juvenile novels.

  3. Aug 10, 1993 · Symmes Chadwick Oliver (30 March 1928–9 August 1993) was an award winning science fiction and Western writer and chair of the Department of Anthropology at the University of Texas at Austin. He was also one of the founders of the Turkey City Writer's Workshop.

  4. Chad Oliver has 160 books on Goodreads with 5524 ratings. Chad Olivers most popular book is The Winds of Time.

  5. Transfusion is a science fiction short story by American writer Chad Oliver, first published in the magazine Astounding Science Fiction in June, 1959. Like many of his stories, it puts the author's own profession of anthropology into a science fiction context.

  6. Sep 9, 2014 · Yale Professor Chadwick Dearing “Chad” Oliver will be awarded the prestigious Host Country Scientific Achievement Award from the International Union of Forest Research Organization (IUFRO), the largest global network of forest researchers, during its World Congress in Salt Lake City in October.

  7. www.wikiwand.com › en › Chad_OliverChad Oliver - Wikiwand

    Symmes Chadwick Oliver (30 March 1928 – 9 August 1993) was an American anthropologist and science fiction and Western writer. He was born in Cincinnati, Ohio. His father was a surgeon and his mother a nurse.

  8. (March 30, 1928 – August 9, 1993) Symmes Chadwick Oliver was a Texas sf author. As a teenager he penned numerous letters of comment to the SF pulp magazines (67 of them published between 1942 and 1952, with some of them signed "Chad Oliver, the Looney Lad of Ledgewood"), and edited/published his own fanzine with a friend, Garvin Berry.

  9. sfdictionary.com › author › 725HDSF: Chad Oliver

    1954 C. Oliver Field Expedient in Astounding Science Fiction Jan. 89/2 After a million years or so of bashing in each other’s brains with bigger and better weapons, the human animal had finally achieved a fairly uniform, stable, planet-wide civilization.

  10. Oliver was a pioneer in the application of competent anthropological thought to sf themes, and, though awkward construction and occasional padding sometimes stifled the warmth of his earlier stories, he was a careful author whose speculative thought deserves to be more widely known and appreciated.