Editing Michael A. Stackpole

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'''Michael A. Stackpole''' (b. 1957) is a game designer and science fiction author best known for his ''[[w:Star Wars|Star Wars]]'' and ''[[BattleTech]]'' books.
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'''Michael A. Stackpole''' (b. 1957) is a game designer and science fiction author best known for his ''[[w:Star Wars|Star Wars]]'' and ''[[BattleTech]]'' books.
  
 
==Personal history==
 
==Personal history==
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From 1977 on, he worked as a designer of role-playing games for various gaming companies, and wrote dozens of magazine articles for the industry.  
 
From 1977 on, he worked as a designer of role-playing games for various gaming companies, and wrote dozens of magazine articles for the industry.  
  
In the 1980s, Stackpole began designing computer games, working (among others) on ''[[w:The Bard's Tale III: Thief of Fate|Bard's Tale III]]'' and ''[[w:Wasteland (video game)|Wasteland]]'', both published in 1988. On the latter game, he is credited as a designer alongside [[Ken St. Andre]] and [[Liz Danforth]], both of whom also worked on BattleTech in its early days.
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In the 1980s, Stackpole began designing computer games, working (among others) on ''[[w:The Bard's Tale III: Thief of Fate|Bard's Tale III]]'' and ''[[w:Wasteland (video game)|Wasteland]]'', both published in 1988. On the latter game, he is credited as a designer alongside [[Ken St. Andre]] and [[Liz Danforth]], both of whom also worked on BattleTech.
  
 
In 1986, Stackpole wrote his first novel, ''Talion: Revenant.'' However, the manuscript would not be published until 1997. In 1987, he began writing novels set in the BattleTech universe for [[FASA]], and became one of the most popular authors in that genre.
 
In 1986, Stackpole wrote his first novel, ''Talion: Revenant.'' However, the manuscript would not be published until 1997. In 1987, he began writing novels set in the BattleTech universe for [[FASA]], and became one of the most popular authors in that genre.
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==BattleTech==
 
==BattleTech==
Michael Stackpole is a prolific contributor to BattleTech fiction, being one of the lead authors during the settings's formative years. He made his entrance to BattleTech with the [[Warrior trilogy]], published in 1988/1989. While the [[Fourth Succession War]] had already been foreshadowed in the game's earliest background information from the rulebook, Stackpole's novelisation of the events leading up to the war and how it played out profoundly shaped the nascent BattleTech universe. Working closely with [[Jordan Weisman]] and other BattleTech writers at [[FASA]], Stackpole would go on to bring the entire setting from the [[Succession Wars era]] into a new, unexpected era with the [[Blood of Kerensky]] trilogy (1989-1991) that started the [[Clan Invasion era]]. He would continue to write "spine" novels, in the sense that the events and stories in his books typically imparted momentous changes to the BattleTech universe as the timeline evolved.
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Michael Stackpole made his entrance to BattleTech with the [[Warrior trilogy]], published in 1988/1989. While the [[Fourth Succession War]] had already been foreshadowed in the game's earliest background information from the rulebook, Stackpole's novelisation of the events leading up to the war and how it played out profoundly shaped the nascent BattleTech universe. Working closely with [[Jordan Weisman]] and other BattleTech writers at [[FASA]], Stackpole would go on to bring the entire setting from the [[Succession Wars era]] into a new, unexpected era with the [[Blood of Kerensky]] trilogy (1989-1991) that started the [[Clan Invasion era]]. He would continue to write "spine" novels, in the sense that the events and stories in his books typically imparted momentous changes to the BattleTech universe as the timeline evolved.
 
 
Ever since, Stackpole remained closely associated with BattleTech and with pushing its timeline forward through "spine novels" in the novel line, to the point where most if not all new BattleTech projects are spearheaded by fiction penned by Stackpole: When FASA closed its doors and [[Roc Books]] voiced no interest in continuing the classic BattleTech novel series, the license went to [[WizKids]] and it would be Stackpole who wrote both the very first short story in the new [[MechWarrior: Dark Age]] setting (''[[The Inheritance of Duty]]'', published by WizKids via their homepage in ca. 2002 to promote the upcoming MWDA game), and the first novel in that setting (''[[Ghost War]]'', 2002). He also contributed a short story (''[[Well Met in the Future]]'') to the ''[[BattleTech: 25 Years of Art & Fiction]]'' tome and was contracted by [[HBS]] to write a [[Heir Apparent|serialized novel]] to go with their successful [[BattleTech (Video Game)|BattleTech video game]]. In 2020, the ''[[Shrapnel (magazine)|Shrapnel]]'' magazine's first issue (out of initially four projected issues) came with part 1 of 4 of a Stackpole story, ''[[If Auld Acquaintance Be Forgot...]]''.
 
  
He wrote extensively about [[Wolf's Dragoons]] and the [[Clans]], but the unit most closely associated with him are the [[Kell Hounds]] (and [[House Kell]]) that he introduced in the "Warrior" trilogy, together with their signature BattleMech, the ''[[Wolfhound]]'', which he had personally designed and for which he had created a [[Technical Readout]]-style writeup for [[BattleTechnology]] magazine, issue #0204.
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Ever since, Stackpole remained closely associated with BattleTech and with pushing its timeline forward, to the point where most if not all new BattleTech projects are spearheaded by fiction penned by Stackpole: When FASA closed its doors and Roc Books voiced no interest in continuing the classic BattleTech novel series, the license went to [[WizKids]] and it would be Stackpole who wrote both the very first short story in the new [[MechWarrior: Dark Age]] setting (''[[The Inheritance of Duty]]'', published by WizKids via their homepage in ca. 2002 to promote the upcoming MWDA game), and the first novel in that setting (''[[Ghost War]]'', 2002).
  
===Self-referential in-joke and Gus Michaels===
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He also contributed a short story (''[[Well Met in the Future]]'') to the ''[[BattleTech: 25 Years of Art & Fiction]]'' tome and was contracted by [[HBS]] to write a [[Heir Apparent|serialized novel]] to go with their successful [[BattleTech (video game)|BattleTech video game]]. In 2020, the ''[[Shrapnel (magazine)|Shrapnel]]'' magazine's first issue (out of initially four projected issues) came with part 1 of 4 of a Stackpole story, ''[[If Auld Acquaintance Be Forgot...]]''.
[[Image:Michael Stackpole with Gus Michaels portrait.jpg‎|thumb|right|For his 66th birthday in 2023, Michael Stackpole was presented with a portrait (non-canonical fan art) of himself as Gus Michaels, commissioned by fellow BattleTech author Bryan Young and painted by Eldon "Eldonius Rex" Cowgur]]The original FASA printing of the "Warrior Trilogy" and the "Blood of Kerensky Trilogy" contained an "About the Author" section. In what became something of a running joke, Michael Stackpole took a tongue-in-cheek approach by writing these as in-universe reports where he inserted himself into the setting as a living, over 1,000 years old 20th century author writing in and later escaping from a ComStar reeducation camp. In the subsequent "Blood of Kerensky Trilogy", he continued the narrative and his purported exploits there under an unspecified alias happen to exactly match the exploits of the [[Gustavus Michaels]] character in the books' main body, establishing this otherwise fully canonical character as a stand-in for Michael Stackpole. These "About the Author" sections were not included in the ROC or InMediaRes ePub reprintings of either trilogy, and are not considered canon.
 
  
 
==The Secrets==
 
==The Secrets==
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== External links ==
 
== External links ==
 
* [[w:Michael A. Stackpole|Michael A. Stackpole]] page on Wikipedia
 
* [[w:Michael A. Stackpole|Michael A. Stackpole]] page on Wikipedia
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* [http://www.stormwolf.com Personal Website]
 
* [http://scifan.com/writers/ss/StackpoleMichael.asp Bibliography]
 
* [http://scifan.com/writers/ss/StackpoleMichael.asp Bibliography]
 
* [http://members.tripod.com/~limsk/pulling.htm The Pulling Report]: Stackpole's research into BADD and their occultism claims
 
* [http://members.tripod.com/~limsk/pulling.htm The Pulling Report]: Stackpole's research into BADD and their occultism claims

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