Hugh Cook (science fiction author)


Hugh Cook was a cult author whose works blend fantasy and science fiction. He is best known for his epic series The Chronicles of an Age of Darkness.

Biography

Hugh Walter Gilbert Cook was born in Essex, England in 1956. After spending his early childhood in England he moved to Ocean Island. His experiences of English castles and of life on an equatorial island later influenced his writing.
He moved to, and was educated in New Zealand. His first novel, Plague Summer was published when he was 24 in 1980.
Between 1986 and 1992 he wrote the ten-novel series The Chronicles of an Age of Darkness. Disappointing sales prevented the publication of further volumes.
In 1997 he moved to Japan, and lived in Yokohama with his wife and daughter and taught English.
He subsequently published mainly online, through his site, Zen Virus. His online works include poetry, short stories, "flash fiction", and several novels.
In 2005 he underwent chemotherapy and radiation treatment for cancer in the form of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. He wrote a medical memoir, Cancer Patient, telling of this experience.
Following a relapse, Hugh Cook died on 8 November 2008, in the hospice in Auckland.

Chronicles of an Age of Darkness series

The series broadly tells the story of the events leading to the end of a dark age. The idea for the series began with an ambitious outline for a series of twenty novels. This would have been followed by two equally long series, The Chronicles of an Age of Wrath, and The Chronicles of an Age of Heroes. This sixty-volume scheme ended with the publication of the tenth volume because of disappointing sales.

Other novels