Kurt von Trojan (born Vienna, Austria, 1937 – 22 March 2006) was an Australian journalist and science fiction author. He also worked as a psychiatric nurse and a cinema projectionist.

Early life

Kurt von Trojan was the son of the Last Knight of Austria. He studied at the London Film School and the South Australian School of Art. (1976–1977)

Career

Short fiction by von Trojan appeared in magazines including Terror Australis.

On 25 January 2006 he was diagnosed with bone and kidney cancer and told he had only a few months to live. He is reported to have told his doctors "Oh, I was hoping to squeeze a few more weeks in."[1] A final collection of short stories was published as a memorial by Altair Australia. Kurt von Trojan's last published work When I Close My Eyes was organized by Robert N. Stephenson and funded by the speculative fiction community. The book was printed and a copy presented to Kurt on his birthday a few days before his death.[2]

Recognition

He won the

  • International Pater Award
  • Ian Reed Award
  • Colin Thiele Award
  • Tom Howard Award

Bibliography

Long fiction

  • Bedmates, 1984
  • The Transing Syndrome, 1985, Nominated for the Ditmar Award, Best Australian Long Fiction, 1986
  • Mars in Scorpio, 1990, Wakefield Press, ISBN 1 86254 257 0
  • Tenocha, 1995, ISBN 978-0-646-20951-7
  • Coup, 1997, Permanent Press, from a grant from literature S.A. ISBN 1 86417 008 5
  • The Atrocity Shop, 1998, ISBN 0-646-35405-1

Short fiction

  • The Man Who Snatched Marilyn's Body, 1994, published in Alien Shores, 1994, eds. Peter McNamara, Margaret Winch, ISBN 1-875346-09-0

Non-fiction

  • Creative Writing: a no-nonsense approach, 1989 The Wednesday Press, ISBN 0-947249-13-3

References

  1. ^ "Ansible 223, February 2006". news.ansible.uk. Retrieved 2 March 2025.
  2. ^ "Altair Australia". 20 September 2007. Archived from the original on 20 September 2007. Retrieved 2 March 2025.
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