Mark London Williams

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mark London Williams is an American author, playwright, journalist, and creator of the Golden Duck-nominated, Los Angeles Times Bestselling [1]young adult time travel series Danger Boy, and author of Max Random and the Zombie 500.[1]

Biography[]

As a journalist, Williams has written for Variety, Los Angeles Times online, Los Angeles Business Journal, and others, and was formerly an executive editor for . Currently, he is a columnist for British Cinematographer magazine[2] , writing a recurring U.S. dispatch, and a contributor to several other sites covering the crafts side of film and TV making. "[2]

Williams has also written short fiction and comic books. He worked as a video game script doctor, and has had several plays produced in Los Angeles, San Francisco, and London. Max Random is in development as a series by Event Horizon productions.[citation needed]

He lives in Los Angeles.

Partial bibliography[]

Danger Boy series

  • Ancient Fire
  • Dragon Sword
    • (Tricycle press edition (as Dino Sword)
  • Trail of Bones
  • City of Ruins

Comic Book Work

  • "Zoo" art by John LeCour (Omnibus: Modern Perversity, Blackbird Comics 1991)
  • "Stockman" credited as "Douglas Williams" art by Brian Stelfreeze (Fast Forward #2 Family, Piranha Press 1992)
  • "Bigfoot Vs. Donkey Kong" art by Phil Hester with Marc Erickson and Fredd Gorham (The Big Bigfoot Book (ISBN 1-885418-07-8), Mojo Press 1996)

Other Works

  • Curious George Tadpole Trouble Houghton Mifflin, 2007 (credited as adapter of the television episode based on characters created by H.A. and Margret Rey) (ISBN 0-6187-7712-1)
  • "Escape Map" (Our White House: Looking In, Looking Out, Candlewick, 2009) (ISBN 0-7636-2067-X)
  • Magical Mayhem Ambush Books, 2012 Anthology contributor
  • GhostDance: Showdown at Carthay Circle Fast Foreword, 2013, Kindle Edition
  • Max Random and the Zombie 500 Trifecta Publishing, 2018

References[]

  1. ^ "Williams, Mark London". WorldCat identities. Retrieved 6 April 2010.
  2. ^ "Mark London Williams". National Children’s Book and Literacy Alliance: Our White House. Archived from the original on 2009-02-28. Retrieved 6 April 2010.

External links[]

Retrieved from ""