Brian Hodge

Brian Hodge is a prolific writer in a number of genres and subgenres, as well as an avid connoisseur of music. He lives in Boulder, Colorado, where he is working on his latest novel.

Brian Hodge
OccupationNovelist, Essayist, Music Journalist, Musician
NationalityAmerican
Genrehorror, crime
Website
www.brianhodge.net

Brian Hodge's novels are often dark in nature, containing themes such as self-sacrifice. He often explores unique belief systems in his stories.[1]

He has been nominated for numerous awards, and won the International Horror Guild Award for best short fiction.[2]

Bibliography

Novels

  • Mad Dogs (Cemetery Dance Publications, 2007) ISBN 1-58767-149-2
  • World of Hurt (Earthling Publications, 2006) ISBN 0-9766339-7-3
  • Hellboy: On Earth As It Is In Hell (Pocket Books, 2005) ISBN 1-4165-0782-5
  • Wild Horses (William Morrow & Co., 1999, hardcover and Ballantine, 2000, paperback) ISBN 0-345-43810-8
  • Prototype (Dell, 1996, and Delirium Books, 2007, hardcover) ISBN 0-7615-6219-2
  • The Darker Saints (Dell, 1993) ISBN 0-440-21113-1
  • Deathgrip (Dell, 1992, paperback and Delirium Books, 2005, hardcover) ISBN 0-440-21112-3
  • Nightlife (Dell, 1991) ISBN 0-440-20754-1
  • Oasis (Tor Books, 1989) ISBN 0-8125-1900-0
  • Dark Advent (Pinnacle, 1988) ISBN 1-55817-088-X

Short fiction collections

Known convention appearances

World Horror Convention '93, '96, '99, and '00. Death Equinox '97, '98, '99, and '01. Brian was the Horrific Literatist GoH at Death Equinox '97, and a Veteran GoH for each following year.

gollark: I too want to ship a large and probably slow Lua VM with my application.
gollark: At this point I'm actually very tempted to just use BBCode or something.
gollark: Unfortunately it has a weird bug with emphasis/bold and punctuation in some places, so I had to look at this.
gollark: I'm using an existing Markdown parsing library and using its vaguely tokenized output to produce virtual DOM.
gollark: This is an actual regex used to parse Markdown by one project:```^(?:(\*(?=[`\]!"#$%&'()+\-./:;<=>?@\[^_{|}~]))|\*)(?![\*\s])((?:(?:(?!\[.*?\]|`.*?`|<.*?>)(?:[^\*]|[\\s]\*)|\[.*?\]|`.*?`|<.*?>)|(?:(?:(?!\[.*?\]|`.*?`|<.*?>)(?:[^\*]|[\\s]\*)|\[.*?\]|`.*?`|<.*?>)*?(?<!\)\*){2})*?)(?:(?<![`\s\]!"#$%&'()+\-./:;<=>?@\[^_{|}~])\*(?!\*)|(?<=[`\]!"#$%&'()+\-./:;<=>?@\[^_{|}~])\*(?!\*)(?:(?=[`\s\]!"#$%&'()+\-./:;<=>?@\[^_{|}~]|$)))|^_([^\s_])_(?!_)|^_([^\s_<][\s\S]*?[^\s_])_(?!_|[^\s,!"#$%&'()+\-./:;<=>?@\[^_{|}~])|^_([^\s_<][\s\S]*?[^\s])_(?!_|[^\s,!"#$%&'()+\-./:;<=>?@\[^_{|}~])```(it's generated from a slightly less insane one with`punctuation` in place of the big mess of punctuation characters, to be fair)

References

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