http://www.comicmix.com/news/2007/07/02/in-memoriam-fred-saberhagen-1930-2007/

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In Memoriam: Fred Saberhagen (1930-2007)
American Science Fiction Writer, Creator of the Berserkers
Frederick Thomas Saberhagen is reported to have died at his home in
Albuquerque, NM on the afternoon of Friday, June 29th, after a
two-year battle with cancer.

Fred Saberhagen was best known for the long series of novels and
stories about the implacable life-destroying thinking machines known
as the Bersekers; the series began with the collection Berserker
(1967) and ran for nearly two dozen books in the years since. The
Berserkers typified the central SFnal conflict of Humanity versus the
coldness of the universe, and Saberhagen rang dozens of changes on
that idea, always championing the impulse of life to go on and thrive
against all odds. He also wrote many other science fiction novels and
stories, beginning in 1961, when Galaxy published his debut story,
"Volume PAA-PYX."

Saberhagen's fantasy work was centered around the long "Book of
Swords" series, which began as a trilogy in the early 1980s and
extended into a further eight-novel "Book of Lost Swords" sequence, a
connection to his earlier Empire of the East trilogy, and a new series
begun with 2006's Ardneh's Sword. Saberhagen was quoted at the time as
wanting to try a fantasy series with a large number of magical objects
-- the twelve swords -- since most such series had only one or two
powerful items.

Saberhagen's horror novels were also notable, with his The Dracula
Tape (1975) being a then-modern, very atmospheric retelling of the
events of Bram Stoker's Dracula from the point-of-view of the Count,
in his own words. The series continued for another nine books,
including The Holmes-Dracula File (1978), in which Dracula encounters
Sherlock Holmes.


One other claim that Saberhagen had to fame was that, during his
1967-1973 stint as an editor for the Encyclopedia Brittanica, he wrote
that reference work's definition of science fiction: "A literary genre
developed principally in the 20th Century, dealing with scientific
discovery or development that, whether set in the future, or the
fictitious present, or in the putative past, is superior to or simply
other than that known to exist."

Saberhagen was always an underrated writer, even within the itself
underrated science fiction field; some of his novels, such as The
Black Throne (1990, written with Roger Zelazny), are as good as
anyone's. And the complex metaphor at the heart of Saberhagen's The
Veils of Azlaroc (1978) is also worthy of greater attention.

His official website is here; his family will announce a memorial
service to be held later in the year and ask that any donations in
lieu of flowers be made to the SFWA Emergency Medical Fund, Doctors
Without Frontiers, Catholic Relief Services, or the John XXIII Church
in Albuqurque.

ComicMix

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