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Ryder Syvertsen

Ryder Syvertsen (1941–2015) was an American author of science fiction, fantasy, and action-adventure novels.

Life

Syvertsen was born Reidar Otto Syvertsen on April 19, 1941, son of Otto and Lillian Syvertsen. A lifelong New Yorker, he graduated from Taft High School and went on to receive his BA in 1969 and MA in 1971 from SUNY Binghamton. In 1979 he was awarded his Teaching Certification from Hunter College. He then taught science at the Martin Luther King Jr. High School in Manhattan and essay writing as an adjunct professor at St. John's University, Pace University, and CUNY College of Staten Island. He was also a creative writing instructor in the Mystery Writers of America “Mentor Program.” His Buddhist faith and study of meditation with Tibetan monks led to a lasting interest in Tibet as a setting for his fiction as well as sympathy with the Tibetan resistance to Chinese rule.

Syvertsen authored or co-authored a total of 34 science fiction, action-adventure, and fantasy books. He is best known for Doomsday Warrior, a series of 19 novellas set in and after 2089, depicting the struggle to free America from Soviet domination following defeat in a nuclear conflagration, under the command of rebel leader Ted Rockson. The first four books in the Doomsday Warrior series were written in collaboration with Jan Stacy; the remainder were written by Syvertsen alone. The series was published as part of the Zebra Books’ Men’s Adventure series, under the pseudonym of Ryder Stacy. GraphicAudio versions of all 19 books were produced.

A second series, the Computerized Attack/Defense System (C.A.D.S.) novels, features Colonel Dean Sturgis as commander of a new generation of high-tech soldiers. The first of the C.A.D.S. novels was written in collaboration with Jan Stacy, #2-8 solely by Syvertsen. (Four additional books, C.A.D.S. #9-12, were written by David Alexander as sole author.) A third series, Syvertsen’s personal favorite, is the six-part Mystic Rebel series, set in Tibet and featuring CIA operative Bart Lasker. Syvertsen’s only stand-alone work of fiction, Psychic Spawn, co-authored with Rosemary Ellen Guiley writing under the name of Adrian Fletcher, was singled out by Visionary Living as enjoying “a rebirth of deserved attention."[1] It follows the adventures of Rainer Stern, tortured by the Nazis as a child, as he confronts a band of psychic super-children bred by his old Nazi nemesis thirty years later.

In addition to his works of fiction, Syvertsen co-authored (with Jan Stacy) three reference books on the film industry.[2] The two described themselves as "pop sociologists".[3] Two – the Great Book of Movie Monsters[4] and the Great Book of Movie Villains – are encyclopedia-like compilations; the third, Rockin’ Reels, is a genre book listing and exploring the history of rock-n-roll themed movies.[5]

In 1989, Syvertsen married Paige Lewis. The couple had one son, born in 1993. Syvertsen died on Feb. 24, 2015.[6]

Books

Fiction

Doomsday Warrior (series), published under the pseudonym Ryder Stacy

C.A.D.S. (Computerized Attack/Defense System) (series), published under the pseudonym John Sievert

Mystic Rebel (series), by Ryder Syvertsen

Stand-alone title, by Ryder Syvertsen and Adrian Fletcher (pseudonym of Rosemary Ellen Guiley)

Nonfiction

References

  1. ^ “Ryder Syvertsen: Author Bio”, Visionary Living. Retrieved 2019-06-23.
  2. ^ Pollack, Joe (December 16, 1984). "Elusive Les Blank is Captured on Paper". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. p. 4H.
  3. ^ McGarry, Peter (December 22, 1984). "Blockbusters That Failed to Explode". Coventry Evening Telegraph. p. 16.
  4. ^ "Paperback Talk: How Horror's Holding Up”, by Judith Appelbaum, New York Times, Oct 30, 1983. Retrieved 2019-06-23.
  5. ^ Risky Business: Rock in Film, by R. Serge Denisoff and William D. Romanowski. Piscataway NJ: Transaction Publishers (1991), p. 773.
  6. ^ “Obituary: SYVERTSEN--Reidar Otto”, New York Times, May 17, 2015. Retrieved 2019-06-23. via Legacy.com
  7. ^ Aooelbaum, Judith (October 30, 1983). "How Horror's Holding Up". The New York Times. pp. 39–40. Retrieved February 20, 2024.
  8. ^ Cunningham, George (January 16, 1985). "Hiss! Boo! Bah! Let's Give a Cheer for the 'Villains'". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Knight-Ridder News Service. p. D1. ISSN 0889-0013.
  9. ^ "'Terms' Conveys Pregnant Emotion". The Olympian. Gannett News Service. January 13, 1985. p. 9C. ISSN 0746-7575.
  10. ^ Becker, Bart (February 3, 1985). "Rock 'n' Roll Movies". Lincoln Journal Star. p. 18TV. ISSN 1084-5283.
  11. ^ "Western Novelist's Essays Dry Reading". Green Bay Press-Gazette. Gannet News Service. January 20, 1985. p. 19.

External links