Difference between revisions of "Michael A. Stackpole"

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[[Image:Stackpole_michael.jpg|frame|right|Michael A. Stackpole]]
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{{InfoBoxRealPerson2
'''Michael A. Stackpole''' (born 1957) is, among other things, a science fiction author best known for his ''Star Wars'' and ''[[Battletech]]'' books.
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| name              = Michael A. Stackpole
 +
| image            = Michael Stackpole by Gage Skidmore.jpg
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| caption          = Stackpole at the 2017 [[w:Phoenix Comicon|Phoenix Comicon]]
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| birthdate        = {{Birth date and age|1957|11|27|df=yes}}
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| died              =
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| nationality      = American
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| occupation        = Writer, game designer
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| years_active      = 1988 - Present
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| known_for        = <!-- A brief description of why the person is notable, if relevant and not if their occupation and/or title already contain the reason  -->
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| works     = {{cl|Works by Michael A. Stackpole}}
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| sarnaname        = <!-- if relevant -->
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| btforumhandle    = <!-- if relevant -->
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| btpersona        = [[Gustavus Michaels]]
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| homepage          = http://stormwolf.com/
 +
}}
 +
'''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.
  
==Description==
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==Personal history==
'''Michael A. Stackpole''' was born in Wausau, Wisconsin, but raised in Vermont. He has a BA in History from the University of Vermont.   
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Stackpole was born in Wausau, Wisconsin, but raised in Vermont. He has a BA in History from the University of Vermont.   
  
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.  During this time, in response to the accusations of Patricia Pulling and a few others who felt that the "occult" elements of ''Dungeons & Dragons'' were driving people to Satanism, murder and suicide, perhaps even as part of a vast Satanic ritual abuse conspiracy, Stackpole did a research study on all American legal cases where injury or death had been attributed to gaming, and found that not only were the links to gaming very weak, but that even if all of the reports had been valid, they showed that gamers were violent or suicidal far less often than the general public (see [[#External links|External links]] below).
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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.  
  
In the 1980s, Stackpole began designing computer games for Coleco and then Interplay Productions.  The best known was ''Bard's Tale III''.  He also designed and wrote for role-playing games such as ''Mercenaries, Spies and Private Eyes'' and ''Wasteland''. In the case of ''Wasteland'', he is featured not only in the credits, but also in a photo on the inside cover of the box art, where 6 of the game's scenario designers and 1 tester donned costumes to represent ingame characters. [http://www.mobygames.com/game/wasteland/cover-art/gameCoverId,697/]
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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 its early days.
  
In 1986, Stackpole wrote his first novel, the fantasy story of ''Talion: Revenant.'' However, the manuscript would not be published until 1997 by Bantam Books. His editors believed that a 175,000 word book was too long for an unknown author.  The story remained unpublished for the next 11 years and then only minor changes were effected by Stackpole's editor, Anne Lesley Groell.  Stackpole clarifies these issues himself in the afterword of the published version of ''Talion.''
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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 1987, he began writing novels set in the [[BattleTech]] universe for [[FASA]], and became one of the most popular authors in that genre.  Some of his BattleTech books were used as the source for a televised animated series.
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Based on that popularity, he was selected to write several novels in the ''Star Wars'' universe for Bantam Books.
  
Based on that popularity, he was selected to write several novels in the ''Star Wars'' universe for Bantam Books.
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In addition, he has written several highly praised novels and short stories based in settings of his own creation.
  
In addition, he has written several highly praised novels and short stories based in settings of his own creation. His most recent complete series is called the ''DragonCrown War Cycle''. Like many of his works, these books break many fantasy conventions: among other things, the stories feature the advent of firearms in a fantasy setting.  
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==BattleTech==
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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.
  
Stackpole contributed one of the four stories in Roger Zelazny's shared world anthology called ''Forever After''. Baen Books published ''Forever After'' in 1995. He was also a contributor in the 1998 anthology ''Lord of the Fantastic'' commemorating Zelazny.
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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...]]''.
  
The first of his next series (''The Age of Discovery'' trilogy) came out in March of 2005, and is set in yet another all-new fantasy world, with an unconventional approach to magic and mastery in any given field. The second in this new trilogy was released February 28, 2006.
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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.
  
In the forward to his book ''Outbound Flight'', Timothy Zahn thanks Stackpole and issues a challenge at ''Star Wars Trivial Pursuit''.
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===Self-referential in-joke and Gus Michaels===
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[[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==
 
===Newsletter===
 
===Newsletter===
Michael Stackpole also writes and publishes an online newsletter entitled ''The Secrets''. ''The Secrets'' newsletter offers tips, tricks, and tidbits about writing (focusing on, but not limited it, science fiction and fantasy). It is aimed towards the serious writer, and includes information about getting books published, but casual writers can certainly benefit as well.  
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Michael Stackpole also writes and publishes an online newsletter entitled ''The Secrets''. ''The Secrets'' newsletter offers tips, tricks, and tidbits about writing (focusing on -- but not limited to -- science fiction and fantasy). It is aimed towards the serious writer, and includes information about getting books published, but casual writers can certainly benefit as well.  
 
Topics discussed in the newsletter range from how to beat writer's block to how to build a world, and even how to manage writing as a career.
 
Topics discussed in the newsletter range from how to beat writer's block to how to build a world, and even how to manage writing as a career.
  
Line 35: Line 52:
 
The podcasts are free and require no subscription, but older episodes have been retired and are no longer available on the [http://stormwolf.com/thesecrets/podcasts/index.html main archive].
 
The podcasts are free and require no subscription, but older episodes have been retired and are no longer available on the [http://stormwolf.com/thesecrets/podcasts/index.html main archive].
  
==Novels==
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==See also==
===Age of Discovery===
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:[[:Category:Works by Michael A. Stackpole|Works by Michael A. Stackpole]] (BattleTech-related)
''Published by Bantam Books''
 
*2005 ''A Secret Atlas''
 
*2006 ''Cartomancy''
 
*200? ''A New World'' (Release date unknown)
 
 
 
===DragonCrown War===
 
''Published by Bantam Books''
 
*2000 ''The Dark Glory War''
 
*2001 ''Fortress Draconis''
 
*2002 ''When Dragons Rage''
 
*2003 ''The Grand Crusade''
 
 
 
===BattleTech===
 
''Published by [[FASA]]''
 
=====Warrior=====
 
*1988 ''Warrior: En Garde''
 
*1988 ''Warrior: Riposte''
 
*1989 ''Warrior: Coupé''
 
 
 
=====Blood of Kerensky=====
 
*1989 ''Lethal Heritage''  (FASA)
 
*1990 ''Blood Legacy''  (FASA)
 
*1991 ''Lost Destiny''  (FASA)
 
 
 
=====Other BattleTech=====
 
*1992 ''Natural Selection''  (FASA/[[ROC]])
 
*1993 ''Assumption of Risk'' (ROC/FASA)
 
*1994 ''Bred For War''  (ROC/FASA)
 
*1996 ''Malicious Intent''  (ROC/FASA)
 
*1997 ''Grave Covenant''  (ROC/FASA)
 
*1998 ''Prince of Havoc'' (ROC/FASA)
 
*2002 ''Ghost War'' (ROC/[[WizKids]])
 
*2007 ''Masters of War'' (ROC/WizKids)
 
 
 
===Star Wars===
 
*1996 ''X-Wing: Rogue Squadron''  (Bantam Books)
 
*1996 ''X-Wing: Wedge's Gamble''  (Bantam Books)
 
*1996 ''X-Wing: The Krytos Trap'' (Bantam Books)
 
*1997 ''X-Wing: The Bacta War''  (Bantam Books)
 
*1998 ''I, Jedi'' (Bantam Books)
 
*1999 ''X-Wing: Isard's Revenge'' (Bantam Books)
 
*2000 ''The New Jedi Order - Dark Tide I: Onslaught'' (Del Rey Books)
 
*2000 ''New Jedi Order - Dark Tide II: Ruin'' (Del Rey Books)
 
 
 
===Dark Conspiracy===
 
''Published by GDW''
 
*1991 ''A Gathering Evil''
 
*1991 ''Evil Ascending''
 
*1992 ''Evil Triumphant''
 
 
 
===Others===
 
*1994 ''Once a Hero''  (Bantam Books)
 
*1994 ''Dementia''  (Roc/Target)
 
*1997 ''Talion: Revenant''  (Bantam Books)
 
*1997 ''A Hero Born''  (HarperPrism)
 
*1998 ''An Enemy Reborn'' (HarperPrism)
 
*1998 ''Wolf and Raven'' (Roc/FASA)
 
*1998 ''Eyes of Silver'' (Bantam Books)
 
  
==Other Publications==
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== External links ==
*1989 ''Game Hysteria and the Truth''
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* [[w:Michael A. Stackpole|Michael A. Stackpole]] page on Wikipedia
*1990 ''[http://www.rpgstudies.net/stackpole/pulling_report.html The Pulling Report]''
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* [http://scifan.com/writers/ss/StackpoleMichael.asp Bibliography]
*1994 GAMA News, ''Model Retailer'', March, 98-99
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* [http://members.tripod.com/~limsk/pulling.htm The Pulling Report]: Stackpole's research into BADD and their occultism claims
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* [http://warstcg.fanhq.com/Articles/Article.aspx?ID=438 Wars CCG Short Story collection online]
 +
* [http://pc.gamespy.com/articles/539/539635p1.html Interview with Mike Stackpole by GameSpy]
 +
* [http://www.pen-paper.net/rpgdb.php?op=showcreator&creatorid=2192 Pen & Paper listing for Mike Stackpole]
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* [http://www.sliceofscifi.com/archives/slice_of_sci-fi_023.html Interview with Michael Stackpole] on Slice of SciFi
  
==External links==
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{{wikipedia|75607731}}
*[http://www.stormwolf.com Personal Website] (index page last updated 15 October 2005)
 
*[http://scifan.com/writers/ss/StackpoleMichael.asp Bibliography]
 
*[http://members.tripod.com/~limsk/pulling.htm The Pulling Report]: the result of Stackpole's research (see above)
 
*[http://warstcg.fanhq.com/Articles/Article.aspx?ID=438 Wars CCG Short Story collection online]
 
*[http://pc.gamespy.com/articles/539/539635p1.html Interview with Mike Stackpole by GameSpy]
 
*[http://www.pen-paper.net/rpgdb.php?op=showcreator&creatorid=2192 Pen & Paper listing for Mike Stackpole]
 
*[http://www.sliceofscifi.com/archives/slice_of_sci-fi_023.html Interview with Michael Stackpole] on Slice of SciFi
 
  
<!-- Categories -->
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[[Category:Authors|Stackpole, Michael]]
[[Category:PeopleReal]]
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[[Category:PeopleReal|Stackpole, Michael]]

Latest revision as of 21:15, 10 February 2024

Michael A. Stackpole
Stackpole at the 2017 Phoenix Comicon
Stackpole at the 2017 Phoenix Comicon
Personal profile
Birthdate (1957-11-27) 27 November 1957 (age 66)
NationalityAmerican
OccupationWriter, game designer
Years active1988 - Present
WorksCategory:Works by Michael A. Stackpole
Social Information
Offical Websitehttp://stormwolf.com/
In-universe personaGustavus Michaels

Michael A. Stackpole (b. 1957) is a game designer and science fiction author best known for his Star Wars and BattleTech books.

Personal history[edit]

Stackpole was born in Wausau, Wisconsin, but raised in Vermont. He has a BA in History from the University of Vermont.

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 Bard's Tale III and 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.

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.

Based on that popularity, he was selected to write several novels in the Star Wars universe for Bantam Books.

In addition, he has written several highly praised novels and short stories based in settings of his own creation.

BattleTech[edit]

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.

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 serialized novel to go with their successful BattleTech video game. In 2020, the 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.

Self-referential in-joke and Gus Michaels[edit]

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[edit]

Newsletter[edit]

Michael Stackpole also writes and publishes an online newsletter entitled The Secrets. The Secrets newsletter offers tips, tricks, and tidbits about writing (focusing on -- but not limited to -- science fiction and fantasy). It is aimed towards the serious writer, and includes information about getting books published, but casual writers can certainly benefit as well. Topics discussed in the newsletter range from how to beat writer's block to how to build a world, and even how to manage writing as a career.

The Secrets newsletter requires a subscription. Issues are released every two weeks. Several sample issues are available on Stackpole's website.

Podcast[edit]

The Secrets newsletter has an "audio companion" in The Secrets podcast. The first ten podcasts were based on material from the first ten issues of The Secrets newsletter. After the first series ended, the content of the podcast diverged from the newsletter. The podcasts average twenty-five minutes long and are voiced and produced by Stackpole.

The podcasts are free and require no subscription, but older episodes have been retired and are no longer available on the main archive.

See also[edit]

Works by Michael A. Stackpole (BattleTech-related)

External links[edit]


The text in this article is based on this revision of the Wikipedia article "Michael A. Stackpole" used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. See the BattleTechWiki's copyright notice.