Homer Eon Flint

Homer Eon Flint (born as Homer Eon Flindt; 1888 1924) was an American writer of pulp science fiction novels and short stories.

Homer Eon Flint
Born
Homer Eon Flindt

1888
Died1924

He began working as a scenarist for silent films in 1912 (reportedly at his wife's insistence).[1] In 1918, he published "The Planeteer" in All-Story Weekly. His "Dr. Kinney" stories were reprinted by Ace Books in 1965, and with Austin Hall he co-wrote the novel The Blind Spot.

He died in 1924 under mysterious circumstances, his body found at the bottom of a canyon underneath a stolen taxi. [2]

His son was Max Hugh Flindt (1915–2004), the co-founder of The Ancient Astronaut Society. With Otto Binder, he co-authored Mankind – Child of the Stars in 1974. He also had a daughter, Bonnie Palmer.[3]

Works

(from the Internet Speculative Fiction Database)

Novels

  • The Blind Spot (1921) with Austin Hall

Story collections

  • The Lord of Death and The Queen of Life (1965)
  • The Devolutionist and The Emancipatrix (1965)
  • The Interplanetary Adventures of Dr. Kinney (2008)

Serials

  • Out of the Moon (1924)

Short fiction

  • "The Planeteer" (1918)
  • "The King of Conserve Island" (1918)
  • "The Man in the Moon" (1919)
  • "The Lord of Death" (1919)
  • "The Queen of Life" (1919)
  • "The Greater Miracle" (1920)
  • "The Devolutionist" (1921)
  • "The Emancipatrix" (1921)
  • "The Nth Man" (1928), adapted in 1957 as the AIP feature film The Amazing Colossal Man
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gollark: Imagine using distributions with installers.
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References

  1. Munn, Vella (March 19, 2001). Homer Eon Flint: A Legacy. Strange Horizons. Retrieved January 11, 2019.
  2. Science Fiction Pioneer Homer Eon Flint Gets Second Chance at Publishing Career, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, 15 Jan 2012; retrieved 17 July 2020
  3. Flindt obituary, Mercury News
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