American science fiction writer (1945–2022)
Tom Maddox
Maddox at the Internet Identity Workshop in 2006
Born (1945-10-00 ) October , 1945Beckley, West Virginia , U.S.Died October 18, 2022 (aged 77)Occupation
Professor
novelist
short story author
Period 1985–2000 Genre Science fiction
Tom Maddox (October 1945 – October 18, 2022) was an American science fiction writer, known for his part in the early cyberpunk movement.
Maddox's only novel was Halo (ISBN 0-312-85249-5 ), published in 1991 by Tor Books. His story "Snake Eyes" appeared in the 1986 collection Mirrorshades , edited by Bruce Sterling . He was perhaps best known as a friend and writing partner of William Gibson . They wrote two episodes of The X-Files together, "Kill Switch " and "First Person Shooter ".
The term Intrusion Countermeasures Electronics (ICE) was conceived by Maddox. According to him,[ 1] he coined the term in the manuscript of an unpublished story that he showed to Gibson at a science fiction convention in Portland , Oregon . Gibson asked permission to use the acronym, and Maddox agreed. The term was then used in Gibson's early short stories and eventually popularized in the novel Neuromancer , in which Maddox was acknowledged.
Maddox licensed his work under a Creative Commons license, making a significant part of it available on his website: Tom Maddox Fiction and Nonfiction Archive .
Maddox also served as a professor of literary studies at The Evergreen State College in Olympia , Washington .[ 2]
Maddox died from a stroke on October 18, 2022, at the age of 77.[ 3]
Works
Novels
Short stories
"The Mind Like a Strange Balloon" (1985)
"Snake-Eyes" (1986)
"Spirit of the Night" (1987)
"The Robot and the One You Love" (1988)
"Florida" (1989)—a very short story written to fit on a bookmark—contributed to Magicon .
"Baby Strange" (1989)
"Gravity's Angel" (1992)
External links