Nick Sagan
At age six,
Nick Sagan’s greeting,
“Hello from the children of planet
Earth”, was recorded and placed aboard the
NASA Voyager Interstellar
Record. Launched with a selection of terrestrial greetings, sights,
sounds, and music, the Voyager I and Voyager II spacecraft have since
left the solar system; they are now the most distant human-made objects
in the universe.
The son of Carl Sagan and Linda Salzman, Nick has been steadily writing
for Hollywood since 1992, crafting screenplays, teleplays, animation
episodes and computer games. He has worked for a variety of studios and
production companies, including Paramount, Warner Brothers, New Line,
Universal, Disney, actor/producer Tom Cruise, and directors David
Fincher and Martin Scorsese. Nick co-wrote the award-winning computer
adventure game,
Zork Nemesis: The Forbidden Lands.
His film
credits
include adaptations of novels by Orson Scott Card, Ursula K. LeGuin,
Pierre Ouellette, and Charles Pellegrino. His television credits include
two episodes of
Star Trek: The Next Generation and five episodes of
Star
Trek: Voyager, where he worked as a story editor. At the turn of
the
millennium, astronaut Sally Ride recruited him to work for SPACE.com as
Executive Producer of Entertainment & Games. During his tenure there,
the spark for a series of novels came to Nick,
The Idlewild Trilogy,
which he sold to Penguin Putnam in 2002.
Idlewild received a starred review from Kirkus, a Book Sense
76 pick,
and selection from both Borders and Barnes & Noble as one of the best
science fiction/fantasy novels of the year. Neil Gaiman called it
“absolutely fun, like a roller-coaster ride of fusion fiction” and “the
kind of book you simply don’t want to stop reading”.
Edenborn
continues the story from
Idlewild, but can also be read as a
standalone. SFX Magazine gave Edenborn a perfect five star review,
declaring it “one of the best post-apocalyptic novels you will ever
read”. SF Crowsnest hailed Nick as “an adrenaline shot straight into the
heart of science fiction,” while SF Site called the novel “elegant SF,
dark and haunting, with characters who linger in memory long after the
last page is turned”.
Everfree is third in the series and now available in stores.
Sci Fi
Weekly praised it as “startlingly original” and “undeniably satisfying
and triumphant”. Kirkus: “Sagan’s mind-blowing post-apocalyptic trilogy
comes to a satisfying, terrifying conclusion.” They go on to hail the
book as “a powerful plea for sensible human cooperation delivered via a
knockout story”.
Nick coauthored
You Call This the Future?: The Greatest Inventions Sci-Fi Imagined
and
Science Promised.
He authored
The Future of Science Fiction.
Read his blog.
Read
After the post-apocalypse,
Modern Science, and
A Conversation with Nick Sagan.
Watch
Carl Sagan Pavilion Ribbon Cutting in Second Life.