Background
Nelson was born October 3, 1931 in Schenectady, New York, the son of Walter Hughes Nelson and Marie Reed.
Nelson was born October 3, 1931 in Schenectady, New York, the son of Walter Hughes Nelson and Marie Reed.
After graduation, he attended the University of Chicago (studying theology), then spent four years studying in Paris, where he met Jean-Paul Sartre, Boris Vian and Simone de Beauvoir, as well as Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso, William Burroughs and other Beat Generation icons.
Nelson began his career writing and creating cartoons for science fiction fanzines. Later Nelson wrote many professionally published short stories including "Turn Office the Sky" and "Nightfall on the Dead Sea". His best known story "Eight O"Clock in the Morning" was published in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (November 1963).
Ray Nelson and artist Bill Wray adapted the story as their graphic comic "Nada" published in the comic book anthology Alien Encounters (Number 6, April 1986) and director John Carpenter adapted it as his film They Live (1988).
Nelson collaborated with Philip K. Dick on the 1967 alien invasion novel The Ganymede Takeover. That biographical documentary about Dick, in which Nelson is a featured interviewee, is The Penultimate Truth About Philip K. Dick produced in 2007.
In the early 1970s. Nelson ran a writers" workshop at a Unitarian church in the San Francisco area.
One of his students was Anne Rice. His 1975 book Blake"s Progress, in which the poet William Blake is a time traveler, has been the author"s greatest critical success.
Richard A. Lupoff described it as "a revelation," saying "Nelson"s style is sharply focused and carefully colored. His plotting is exactly as complex as it ought to be his characters are nicely drawn." lieutenant was rewritten and republished as 1985"s Timequest.
At the 1982 Philip K. Dick Awards, Nelson"s novel The Prometheus Manitoba gained a Special Citation (runner-up).
Ray Nelson has professed that his greatest claim to fame is to be the creator of the iconic propeller beanie as emblematic of science fiction fandom while a 10th-grader at Cadillac High School. He also claims to have invented the "Beany" character in a 1948 contest for what would become Time for Beany while visiting relatives in California. "I think it"s probably my best bet of being remembered," Nelson says.
"I"ve never been on the New York Times best seller list.".
(Book by Nelson, Ray Faraday)