Charles Gramlich

Charles A. Gramlich
Born (1958-10-14) October 14, 1958
Arkansas
Occupation Novelist, short story writer, university professor
Genre fantasy, horror, science fiction
Website
charlesgramlich.blogspot.com

Charles Allen Gramlich (born October 14, 1958 in Arkansas), is an American writer best known for combining science fiction and horror in his works.

Biography

Charles Allen Gramlich was born October 14, 1958. He grew up on a farm near the foothills of the Ozark Mountains.[1] Although he had three older brothers and an older sister, the closest in age was six years older than he was. The nearest child his age lived about six miles (10 km) away. As such, dogs, cats and books kept him company growing up.[2] As a child, he came across a valley in the mountains that was so frightening to him that he could never force himself to enter it. This childhood experience formed the setting for his novel Cold in the Light.[1]

Gramlich has an M.A. and PhD in Experimental Psychology. He is an ex-member of REHupa, the Robert E. Howard United Press Association, and is an Editor of The Dark Man, the Journal of Robert E. Howard Studies.[3] He teaches psychology in the Greater New Orleans area at Xavier University of Louisiana.[4] He is married to award-winning artist and photographer, Lana Gramlich, lives on the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain and has a son named Joshua.[1][5]

Gramlich is the author of several novels and numerous short stories. Most of his work falls into the genres of science fiction, fantasy, or horror. His first novel in paperback form was Cold in the Light, a horror thriller with science fiction elements that drew comparisons with the early work of Dean Koontz.[6] His next three novels, Swords of Talera, Wings Over Talera and Witch of Talera, are Sword & Planet works in the tradition of Edgar Rice Burroughs' John Carter of Mars series.[7] In 2012, Gramlich returned to those Sword & Planet roots with Under the Ember Star, a Wildside Double book, which includes The Battle for Eden, by Mark E. Burgess, on the opposite side.[8]

Gramlich also writes poetry and non-fiction. In August 2008, Gramlich had his first poetry chapbook published, a collection of vampire haiku entitled Wanting the Mouth of a Lover. Spec House of Poetry is the publisher.

In 2009, Gramlich had a collection of his nonfiction essays on writing published under the title Write With Fire. Borgo Press, an imprint of Wildside Press, is the publisher. He also had a textbook published called Writing in Psychology: A Guidebook. This book is a collaboration with two of Gramlich's colleagues, Dr. Y. Du Bois Irvin and Dr. Elliott Hammer.[4] It was also published by The Borgo Press.

In 2010, Borgo Press published a collection of Gramlich's sword and sorcery short stories under the title Bitter Steel. In 2011, Borgo published a collection of his vampire and werewolf stories under the title Midnight in Rosary. In 2012, a collection of Gramlich's horror stories entitled In the Language of Scorpions, was published through Borgo.

Starting in 2010, Gramlich began self publishing some of his short stories and novella length works as ebooks through Amazon and Barnes & Noble.

Influences

Major influences on Gramlich's work include authors such as Edgar Rice Burroughs,[9] Robert E. Howard,[9] Louis L'Amour,[10] Ray Bradbury, John D. MacDonald, and Kenneth Bulmer[9] Perhaps because of this wide range of influences, Gramlich has indicated as a goal that he would like to publish something in every genre. So far, he has "published science fiction, westerns, children's stories, literary stories, poetry, romance, nonfiction essays and articles, and memoir."[11] Most of what he writes is "fantasy and horror."[11]

Bibliography

Novels

Serials

Chapbooks

Single author collections

Nonfiction

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Charles Gramlich, The Invisible College Press
  2. About Me, A Web Page for Charles A Gramlich
  3. "The Dark Man".
  4. 1 2 "Xavier University of Louisiana".
  5. Ann Gilbert, "Northshore Authors," Inside Northside, November–December 2007, Vol. 22, No. 6,pp. 99–100
  6. J. D. Charles, The Logan Banner
  7. Richard Tucker, "Psychology Professor Has Tales to Tell," This Month at Xavier, Vol. 38, No. 7, July 2007
  8. "Wildside Press".
  9. 1 2 3 "ERBzine".
  10. "Richard Prosch.com".
  11. 1 2 Suzanne Le Breton, "A Chat With...Charles Gramlich, St. Tammany Scene, Friday, March 9, 2012, page 2

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.