Nathan Lowell

Nathan Lowell is a science fiction writer mostly known for his The Golden Age of the Solar Clipper series.

Nathan Lowell
BornNathan Lowell
(1952-10-12) October 12, 1952
Portland, Maine, United States
OccupationNovelist
GenreScience fiction
Notable worksThe Golden Age of the Solar Clipper
Website
nathanlowell.com

Dr. Nathan Lowell holds a Ph.D. in Educational Technology with specializations in Distance Education and Instructional Design. He also holds an M.A. in Educational Technology and a BS in Business Administration. He grew up on the south coast of Maine and is strongly rooted in the maritime heritage of the sea-farer. He served in the USCG from 1970 to 1975, seeing duty aboard a cutter on hurricane patrol in the North Atlantic and at a communications station in Kodiak, Alaska. He currently lives in the plains east of the Rocky Mountains with his wife and two daughters.[1][2]

In an interview with Lindsay Buroker, he explains that he started his publishing as a self-published author at podiobooks in 2007, but later signed with Ridan Publishing.[3]

Lowell has won the PARSEC Awards two times, in 2010 for the Captain's Share and 2011 for Owner's Share.

Bibliography

Trader's Tales From the Golden Age Of The Solar Clipper

  1. Quarter Share
  2. Half Share
  3. Full Share
  4. Double Share
  5. Captain's Share
  6. Owner's Share

Tanyth Fairport Adventures

  1. Ravenwood
  2. Zypheria's Call
  3. The Hermit of Lammas Wood

Tales From The Deep Dark

  • A Light In The Dark

Tales From The Archives Short Stories

  • The Astonishing Amulet of Amenartas

Shaman’s Tales From the Golden Age Of The Solar Clipper

  1. South Coast
  2. Cape Grace

Seeker’s Tales From The Golden Age Of The Solar Clipper

  1. In Ashes Born
  2. To Fire Called
  3. By Darkness Forged

Smuggler's Tales from the Golden Age of the Solar Clipper

  1. Milk Run
  2. Suicide Run
  3. Home Run
gollark: By "new and improved" they mean "hahaha you will have a Microsoft account now, this is not optional".
gollark: https://www.minecraft.net/en-us/article/java-edition-moving-houseThis seems quite bad.
gollark: The "summon large amounts of bees riding sheep" bit is easy enough, but it's feeding into a "disapionator" outside the big triangular base there, and someone somehow rigged it to draw in bees, kill them when they get near a central thing, and produce cool particle effects while doing so.
gollark: No, that was earlier.
gollark: Technically, they're already self-replicating. The bot production machinery uses bots.

References

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