Lyndon Hardy | |
---|---|
Born | Los Angeles, California | April 16, 1941
Occupation | Writer |
Nationality | American |
Period | 1980–1988 and 2016–present |
Genre | Fantasy |
Website | |
alodar |
Lyndon Mauriece Hardy is an American physicist, fantasy author, and business owner.
Biography
Hardy was born April 16, 1941 in Los Angeles, the son of Leonard and Zell (Smith) Hardy.[1][2][3]
He attended California Institute of Technology as an undergraduate and the University of California Berkeley for his Ph.D.[4]
In 1961, Hardy masterminded the Great Rose Bowl Hoax, in which Caltech students rearranged the cards used by Washington to spell out words during halftime.[5]
In his college years, he became fascinated with fantasy literature. In addition to being a fantasy author, he worked for 30 years at the aerospace company TRW, and started a computer consulting company named Alodar Systems Inc. that, among other things, helped develop intelligence tools for medical research and enterprise resource planning software for small businesses. He is married and has two daughters.
Hardy is a member of the Science Fiction Writers of America.[6] His primary work of fiction is the six-novel Magic by the Numbers series, published 1980–1988 and 2017–2020.[3]
Bibliography
Magic by the Numbers
- Master of the Five Magics (1980)
- Secret of the Sixth Magic (1984)
- Riddle of the Seven Realms (1988)
- The Archimage's Fourth Daughter (2017)
- Magic Times Three (2020)
- Double Magic (2020)
References
- ↑ California Live Birth Index, 1905-1995, entry for Lyndon Mauriece Hardy.
- ↑ U.S. Census, 1950, Culver City, Los Angeles, California, E.D. 19-411, Sheet 13, lines 19-22, April 11, 1950.
- 1 2 Lyndon Hardy at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- ↑ "LinkedIn entry for Lyndon Hardy". LinkedIn. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
- ↑ Crowe, Jerry (2010-12-26), "Fifty Years Ago, Caltech Pulled Off a Prank for the Memory Banks at Rose Bowl", Los Angeles Times, retrieved 2010-12-27
- ↑ "Science Fiction Writers of America Member Directory". Science Fiction Writers of America. Retrieved 6 March 2010.