Matt Hughes (writer)

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BornMay 1949 (age 76)
OccupationAuthor
LanguageEnglish
NationalityCanadian
Matthew Hughes
Matthew Hughes at Dublin 2019 - An Irish Worldcon
BornMay 1949 (age 76)
OccupationAuthor
LanguageEnglish
NationalityCanadian
Period1994 – present
GenreFantasy, science fiction, mystery
Notable worksArchonate series, To Hell and Back, What the Wind Brings
Website
www.matthewhughes.org

Matthew Hughes (born 1949) is a Canadian author who writes science fiction under the name Matthew Hughes, crime fiction as Matt Hughes and media tie-ins as Hugh Matthews. Prior to his work in fiction, he was a freelance speechwriter. Hughes has written over twenty novels and he is also a prolific author of short fiction whose work has appeared in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Asimov's Science Fiction, Alfred Hitchcock's Mystery Magazine, Lightspeed, Postscripts, Interzone, Pulp Literature, and original anthologies edited by George R. R. Martin and Gardner Dozois.[1][2][3] In 2020 he was inducted into the Canadian SF and Fantasy Association Hall of Fame.[4]

Matthew Hughes was born in Liverpool in May 1949.[5] His family moved to Canada when he was five. As a teenager, he was a member of the Company of Young Canadians and worked a variety of jobs before becoming a journalist. He then moved into speechwriting, first on the staff of the Minister of Justice and the Minister of the Environment and subsequently as a freelance writer for corporate executives and politicians in British Columbia.[6] While working as a speechwriter in 1982, he wrote a 27,000-word novella for a competition which he saw advertised in the Vancouver Sun. Although he did not win the contest, he returned to the story years later and expanded it into his first published novel, Fools Errant, which was released in 1994.[7] Since 2007 he has worked across the world as a housesitter to support his fiction career. He has been married since the late 1960s and has three sons.[6] One of his sons has high-functioning autism, which led Hughes to write the "To Hell and Back" books from the perspective of a high-functioning autistic character.[7]

Influences

Hughes's Archonate stories and novels have been compared to the works of Jack Vance: Booklist called him Vance's "heir apparent" in their August 2005 review of The Gist Hunter and Other Stories.[8] Hughes has written an authorised Dying Earth story ("Grolion of Almery") for the 2009 Vance tribute anthology Songs of the Dying Earth and in February 2020 was working on an authorised sequel to Vance's Demon Princes books,[8] which was published in August 2021 as Barbarians of the Beyond.[9] Hughes has praised Vance as being "a unique voice of genius."[9] However, Hughes has cited his 2008 novel Template as being "the only time I've consciously tried to write a "Jack Vance novel," although the themes and concerns embodied in the story are my own."[10]

Other significant early influences include P. G. Wodehouse, Thorne Smith, L. Sprague de Camp (especially historical novels such as An Elephant for Aristotle), Ray Bradbury, Robert A. Heinlein, Isaac Asimov, Kurt Vonnegut, Joseph Heller and Philip K. Dick.[7] Hughes still rereads Jack Vance, P. G. Wodehouse and Gene Wolfe but has not followed the science fiction and fantasy field since the mid-1980s[11] and instead reads mostly crime fiction by authors such as Lawrence Block, Donald E. Westlake, Robert B. Parker and James Lee Burke, whom Hughes considers to be "the finest American crime novelist of them all."[7]

Awards and nominations

Hughes's work has been shortlisted for numerous major science fiction awards, included the Nebula Award, Philip K. Dick Award, Locus Award, Aurora Award (English-language) and Endeavour Award.[12] In 2000, his story "One More Kill" won the Arthur Ellis Award for Best Crime Short Story presented by the Crime Writers of Canada.[13] In 2020 his contributions to science fiction and fantasy were recognised with the CSFFA Hall of Fame Trophy.[4] What the Wind Brings, a slipstream historical magical realism novel was nominated for the 2020 Neffy Award[14] and won the 2020 Endeavour Award.[15]

Bibliography

References

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