Ian Wallace was the pen name of American science-fiction author John Wallace Pritchard (1912โ1998).[1]
Introduction
Wallace was born in Chicago, Illinois, but spent most of his life living in and around Detroit, Michigan. Wallace was a practicing clinical psychologist for many years, and also had an extensive background in education. Much of his career was spent working for the Detroit public schools system.[2]
Wallace's mystery and adventure novels were generally set deep in the future, and often included characters with superhuman or telepathic abilities.
Bibliography
| Adventures of Minds-in-Bodies | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Attributed to John Wallace Pritchard: | |||
| Every Crazy Wind | (1952) | LCCN 52-7346 | |
| Attributed to Ian Wallace: | |||
| Pan Sagittarius | (1973) | ISBN 0-399-11105-0 | LCCN 72-94258 | 
| The World Asunder | (1976) | ISBN 0-87997-262-9 | |
| The Lucifer Comet | (1980) | ISBN 0-87997-581-4 | LCCN 2006-594203 | 
| The Croyd Spacetime Manoeuvres | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Croyd | (1967) | ISBN 0-8125-5625-9 | LCCN 67-23599 | 
| Dr. Orpheus | (1968) | ISBN 0-425-01767-2 | LCCN 68-25464 | 
| A Voyage to Dari | (1974) | ISBN 0-87997-142-8 | |
| Z-Sting | (1978) | ISBN 0-87997-408-7 | |
| Megalomania | (1989) | ISBN 0-88677-351-2 | LCCN 2002-559217 | 
| The Claudine St. Cyr Interplanetary Detective Mysteries | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Deathstar Voyage | (1969) | ISBN 0-425-01924-1 | LCCN 69-18198 | 
| The Purloined Prince | (1971) | ISBN 0-8415-0134-3 | LCCN 72-154251 | 
| The Sign of the Mute Medusa | (1977) | ISBN 0-445-03173-5 | |
| Heller's Leap | (1980) | ISBN 0-87997-475-3 | |
| Others | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| The Rape of the Sun | (1982) | ISBN 0-87997-704-3 | |
Notes
External links
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