Gary Braver is the pen name of Gary Goshgarian, a science fiction and thriller novelist and professor of English Literature at Northeastern University, Boston. The thriller is a broad Genre of Literature, Film, Gaming and Television. A novel (from Italian novella, Spanish novela, French nouvelle for "new" "news" or "short story The term English literature refers to Literature written in the English language, including literature composed in English by Writers not necessarily from Northeastern University, abbreviated NU or NEU, is a private University in Boston Massachusetts.
Contents |
Braver is the editor of the short fiction anthology Horrorscape (1993), as well as the author of six novels, including Atlantis Fire (1980), Rough Beast (1995), and The Stone Circle (1997), all published under his real name, and Elixir (2000), Gray Matter (2004), and Flashback (2005), all published under his nom de plume. Flashback won the 2006 Massachusetts Book Award in Fiction Honors from the Massachusetts Center for the Book. [1]
Braver's next novel, Skin Deep, will be released in 2008. [2] His previous work has dealt with subject matter as diverse as cutting-edge biotechnology, a la Michael Crichton, and the dark and sometimes sinister history of the Massachusetts and New England areas, a la H. P. Lovecraft and Stephen King. John Michael Crichton, ˈkraɪtən, (born October 23 1942 is an American author Film producer, Film director, Medical doctor, and Television producer Howard Phillips Lovecraft ( August 20, 1890 – March 15, 1937) was an American author of horror, fantasy Stephen Edwin King (born September 21, 1947) is an American Author, Screenwriter, Musician, Columnist,
To his students, Gary Braver is known as Gary Goshgarian, and has a reputation as an affable and wryly humorous teacher with an encyclopedic knowledge of science fiction, horror fiction, and other popular fictional genres. His dedication to these genres sets him in contrast to those teachers, more prevalent in universities today, who tend to advance an appreciation of high-minded literary fiction to the exclusion and even denigration of other kinds of texts.