John Rankine
John Rankine was a British science fiction author, who wrote books as John Rankine and Douglas R. Mason. Rankine was born in Hawarden, Flintshire, Wales and first attended Chester Grammar School and in 1937 went to study English Literature and Experimental Psychology at the University of Manchester, where he was a friend of Anthony Burgess.
We know little of his life until 1966, when his first short stories and novels were published while he was in his mid-forties. The novels have a very 1960s and 1970s feel to them. One theme he worked with was that of a shorter life span, possibly borrowed from William F. Nolan's Logan's Run, but while the background and theme seemed similar, The Resurrection of Roger Diment took the concept in a totally different direction.
Rankine also wrote television novels in the universe.Novels["Binary Z" (1969)]
- From Carthage Then I Came a.k.a. Eight Against Utopia
- Ring of Violence
- The Tower of Rizwan
- Landfall is a State of Mind
- The Weisman experiment
- The Janus Syndrome
- Matrix
- Horizon Alpha
- Dilation Effect
- Satellite 54-Zero
- The Resurrection of Roger Diment
- The End Bringers
- The Phaeton Condition
- Operation Umanaq
- The Omega Worm
- Pitman's Progress
- Euphor Unfree
- Mission to Pactolus R.
- The Typhon Intervention
- In the Eye of the Storm
- The Darkling Plain
Series
Dag Fletcher
- The Blockade of Sinitron
- Interstellar Two-Five
- One is One
- The Plantos Affair
- The Ring of Garamas
- The Bromius Phenomenon
Space 1999
- 2 Moon Odyssey
- 5 Lunar Attack
- 6 Astral Quest
- 8 Android Planet
- 10 Phoenix of Megaron
Space Corporation
- Never the Same Door
- Moons of Triopus
Also
Binary Z Collections
- Tuo Yaw
- BAZOZZ ZZZ DZZ: And Other Short Stories
Anthologies containing stories by Douglas R Mason
- New Writings in SF 7
- New Writings in SF 9
- New Writings in SF 11
- New Writings in SF 16
- New Writings in SF 21
Short stories
- "Folly to Be Wise"
- "The Man Who Missed the Ferry"
- "There Was This Fella..."
- ""
- "All Done by Mirrors"
- "Algora One Six"
- "Second Run at the Data"