Ian Wallace is the pen name of American science-fiction author John Wallace Pritchard (December 4, 1912 – July 7, 1998).

Biography

Dr. John Wallace Pritchard was born in Chicago, Illinois in 1912 and spent his professional life in Detroit, Michigan, later retiring to North Carolina and Las Vegas, Nevada, where he died in 1998. Wallace attended primary and secondary school in Detroit and received a Bachelor's of Arts degree in English from the University of Michigan in 1934 and began his career with the Detroit Public Schools administration. In 1936 he received his Teacher's Certificate in special education from Wayne State University.

During the second World War, Pritchard served as a Captain in the United States Army, applying his training as a clinical psychologist. He returned to Detroit Public Schools and a part-time faculty position at Wayne State after the war, beginning also his PhD studies.

Writing

In the late 1940s, Pritchard began publishing short stories ultimately culminating in his psychological novel Every Crazy Wind in 1952. His 1957 doctoral dissertation, A Novel as Pro-Inquiry: A Critique of Some Adult Value-Conflicts Conditioned by Education included an abridged novel, Pan's Last April. His most prolific period of publication started with the 1967 space opera Croyd and lasted through the early 1980s. His last novel, Megalomania, was published in 1989.

Bibliography

{| class=wikitable border="1" width="500 px"

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! colspan="4"|Adventures of Minds-in-Bodies

|-

| colspan="4"| Attributed to John Wallace Pritchard:

|-

| style width="200 px"|Every Crazy Wind

|(1952)

|

| style width="130 px"|

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| Pan's Last April (Abridged)

|(1957)

|

|

|-

| colspan="4"|

|-

| colspan="4"| Attributed to Ian Wallace:

|-

|Pan Sagittarius

|(1973)

|

|

|-

|The World Asunder||(1976)||||

|-

|The Lucifer Comet||(1980)||||

|}

{| class=wikitable border="1" width="500 px"

|-

! colspan="4"|The Croyd Spacetime Manoeuvres

|-

| style width="200 px"|Croyd

|(1967)

|

| style width="130 px"|

|-

|Dr. Orpheus||(1968)||||

|-

|A Voyage to Dari||(1974)||||

|-

|Z-Sting||(1978)||||

|-

|Megalomania||(1989)||||

|}

{| class=wikitable border="1" width="500 px"

|-

! colspan="4"|The Claudine St. Cyr Interplanetary Detective Mysteries

|-

| style width="200 px"|Deathstar Voyage

|(1969)

|

| style width="130 px"|

|-

|The Purloined Prince||(1971)||||

|-

|The Sign of the Mute Medusa||(1977)||||

|-

|Heller's Leap||(1980)||||

|}

{| class=wikitable border="1" width="500 px"

|-

! colspan="4"|Others

|-

| style width="200 px"|The Rape of the Sun

|(1982)

|

| style width="130 px"|

|}

Notes