Dylan Otto Krider

Dylan Otto Krider is a writer who lives in Broomfield, CO. He has written for the Colorado Daily, Boulder Weekly, Houston Press, Houston Chronicle, Kenyon Review, Fiction Writer and others. He was the Grand Prize Winner of the L. Ron Hubbard Writers of the Future Contest and Asimov Award, and was a finalist for the Katie Award. He has also written a number of anime dub scripts for ADV films, including the first two seasons of Saiyuki.
Dylan's Novel TAKING OVER is also a Semi-Finalist in Amazon's Breakthrough Novel Award.
Here is what Publisher's Weekly has said about the novel:
This book takes off - quite literally - when Jamie's high school friend Wilbur, just back from a tour of duty in Iraq, "borrows" his dad's Cessna to show Jamie a tiny island just off the Florida coast. Wilbur (now sporting muscles and tattoos and calling himself "Will") has brought along a duffle bag (possibly full of guns,) and reveals that, using skills honed as a member of the elite Special Forces, he plans to invade a similar nearby island and invites Jamie to come along. The book captures the enthusiastic, not particularly rational, thinking that propels the two young men to stage an actual invasion: Wilbur, humorless, obsessive and determined; Jamie, bright but without a world view to anchor him to the reality. Will transfers his energies from the Special Forces to his new invasion plan, recruiting his assault team from a loosely knit brotherhood of paranoid neo-Nazi survivalists he meets on the Internet and enlisting the support of his legendary Special Forces instructor, the fearsome Sergeant Hanson. Jamie goes along for the ride. And the author provides quite a ride, in this deceptively plain-spoken tale that turns out to be filled with clever, surrealistic, and darkly humorous plot twists.
He now writes frequently for Boulder Weekly, Westword and Colorado Daily. He is currently the National Underground Examiner.
Bibliography
FICTION
[http://startrek.wikia.com/wiki/What_Went_Through_Data%27s_Mind_0.68_Seconds_Before_the_Satellite_Hit "What Went Through Data's Mind 0.68 Seconds Before the Satellite Hit]" ( short story, 1998)
L. Ron Hubbard's Writer's of the Future, Vol. XVIII
"Kurt Cobain. In a Box. Might Go Off." Confrontation No. 80/81
"The Day Sergeant Porter Lost His Fingers," Eclipse (July 2003)
"Apathy Landing," Absolute Magnitude (Spring 2004)

TELEVISION/RADIO/FILM/MULTIMEDIA
Steel Angel Kurumi: Encore
Steel Angel Kurumi Mark II
Gekigangar
Saiyuki Vol. II-XII.
Blue Seed 2
Voice Over Scripts, KUAT-TV
Radio Ads, Various Stations
CD ROM, Harper Collins

INTERVIEWS
The Kenyon Review ( Kazuo Ishiguro)
Two Girl's Review (Helen Gurley Brown)
Houston Press

POETRY
Asimov's (August 1996 & January 1999)
Altair (#1 & 4)
The Leading Edge (#31)
Star*line (#12-3 & #22-3)
Beyond

ARTICLES
Westword
Colorado Daily
Yellow Scene
Houston Press
Boulder Weekly
Writer's Digest
Outsmart Magazine
Fiction Writer Magazine
State Lines, Texas Magazine (Houston Chronicle)
Sage
Tucson Citizen
Totally Tucson
Green Valley News
TV, Sports and Entertainment Magazine.

STAGE
, a one-act performed by Love Creek Theater in New York, and nominated for Samuel French Award.
The Door is Open, one-act performed by Stage Door Players, awarded best play that year;
Comedy Corner Staff Writer (1992-1995)
EXTERNAL RESOURCES:
Author's Website
[http://www.houstonpress.com/2001-04-12/news/what-s-in-a-name/ "What's in a Name?"] Feature story on the grandson of Renoir.
"Alien-ated Youth" Cover story about indigo children.
"Sleeping with the Anime" Cover story on ADV director Steven Foster.
"The Politicization of Science in the Bush Administration", for Skeptic Magazine.
"Politicized Science", for Dissent Magazine.
"Global Warming is Good for You", for Houston Press.
National Underground Examiner.
 
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