C. C. MacApp
C. C. MacApp, pseudonym of Carroll Mather Capps (27 November 1917 – 15 January 1971)[1] was an American science fiction author. He was also a long-time benefactor of San Francisco chess. MacApp was a former president of the San Francisco Bay Area Chess League, and won the Northern California and San Francisco chess championship several times.[2] He also wrote as Carroll J. Clem.[3]
Bibliography[]
Novels[]
As listed in Fantastic Fiction [4]
- Omha Abides (1968)
- Prisoners of the Sky (1969)
- Secret of the Sunless World (as Carroll M. Capps, 1969)
- Worlds of the Wall (1969)
- Recall Not Earth (1970)
- SUBB (1971)
- Bumsider (1972)
Short stories[]
Published in Galaxy Science Fiction:
- "The Drug" Galaxy, February 1961
- "And All the Earth a Grave" Galaxy, December 1963
- "A Flask of Fine Arcturan" Galaxy, February 1965
- "Sculptor" Galaxy, April 1965
- "The Mercurymen" Galaxy, December 1965
- "Spare That Tree" Galaxy, June 1967
Published in Worlds of If:
- "Prisoners of the Skies", Worlds of If, February 1966
- "The Impersonators", Worlds of If, January 1967
- "When Sea is Born Again", Worlds of If, May 1967
- "A Ticket to Zenner"", Worlds of If, July 1967
- "The Fortunes of Peace", Worlds of If, September 1967
- "Winter of the Llangs", Worlds of If, October 1967
- "Mail Drop", Worlds of If, November 1967
- "Where the Subbs Go", Worlds of If, May 1968
- "The Hides of Marrech", Worlds of If, July 1968
- "Dream Street", Worlds of If, September 1968
- "Mad Ship", Worlds of If, May 1969
Gree series[]
This space opera series ran in Worlds of If alongside Fred Saberhagen's Berserker series and Keith Laumer's tales of Retief, the galactic diplomat.
- "The Slavers of Gree", Worlds of If, August 1964
- "Gree's Commandos", Worlds of If, February 1965
- "Gree's Hellcats", Worlds of If, April 1965
- "No Friend of Gree", Worlds of If, June 1965
- "Gree's Damned Ones", Worlds of If, September 1965
- "Enemies of Gree", Worlds of If, September 1966
- "The Sign of Gree", Worlds of If, November 1966
- "A Beachhead for Gree", Worlds of If, February 1967
Awards[]
His novella The Mercurymen was a nominee for the 1965 Nebula Award for Best Novella.
References[]
External links[]
- Works by C. C. MacApp at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about C. C. MacApp at Internet Archive
- Works by C. C. MacApp at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- C. C. MacApp at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
Categories:
- 20th-century American novelists
- American male novelists
- American science fiction writers
- 1917 births
- 1971 deaths
- 20th-century American male writers