Hayford Peirce
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Hayford Peirce (born January 7, 1942, Bangor, Maine) is a writer of science fiction, mysteries, and spy thrillers. He has written numerous short stories for the science-fiction magazines Analog, Galaxy, and Omni, as well as mystery shorts for Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine and Ellery Queen's Mystery Magazine. Most of his stories are light-hearted and satiric in tone, with elements of black humor and occasional surprising grimness.
He has also written a number of science-fiction and mystery novels, some of which were published by Tor, and the others by Wildside Press. They have been translated into several languages. Typical of them are Napoleon Disentimed and Blood on the Hibiscus. His one spy thriller, written in London in 1968 at the height of the fictional spy mania, is The Bel Air Blitz.
Many of Peirce's short stories concern on-going protagonists. In the science-fiction field there have been collections of his Chap Foey Rider, Capitalist to the Stars stories, of his Jonathan White, Stockbroker in Orbit stories, and of his Sam Fearon, Time Scanner stories. In the mystery field, he has had two collections about protagonists living in Tahiti, Commissaire Tama, a chief of police, and Joe Caneili, a private eye.
Peirce has also collaborated with David M. Alexander on stories that have appeared in Analog.
He is the nephew of the American painter Waldo Peirce.
Books
Science Fiction
- Napoleon Disentimed (1987)
- The Thirteenth Majestral (1989) also reissued as Dinosaur Park (1992)
- Phylum Monsters (1989)
- Chap Foey Rider, Capitalist to the Stars (2000)
- Jonathan White, Stockbroker in Orbit (2001)
- The Burr in the Garden of Eden (2001)
- Sam Fearon: Time Scanner (2001)
- Flickerman (2001)
- The Spark of Life (2001)
- Black Hole Planet (2003)
- Aliens (2003)
- With a Bang, and Other Forbidden Delights (2005)
- The 13th Death of Yuri Gellaski (2005)