(1943-2008) US writer known principally for his Alternate-History series, the Adventures of Conrad Stargard: The Cross-Time Engineer (1986), The High-Tech Knight (1989) and The Radiant Warrior (1989), all three assembled as Conrad Stargard: The Radiant Warrior (omni 2004), plus The Flying Warlord (1989), Lord Conrad's Lady (1990) and Conrad's Quest for Rubber (1998), all three assembled as Conrad's Lady (omni 2005), plus Conrad's Time Machine (2002), a prequel to the series as a whole. The series features a Polish-US engineer, Stargard, who in the first volume is transported to medieval Poland via Time Travel, where he settles down quite happily to the task of reshaping his native land into a country capable of surviving the next perilous decades; all the while he is protectively overseen by the time-travellers who have mistakenly conveyed him there. In a style first promulgated by Mark Twain in A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1889), he proceeds to transform the technology of medieval Poland; in doing so, Stargard is of course changing timelines – in orthodox-enough sf-adventure fashion his irruption into Europe can itself be seen as the Jonbar Point that creates the Alternate History of the sequence – but the author's clear indifference to the plotting rigours normally expected in tales of this sort increasingly detracts from the flow of the story.
A second series – the Boy and his Tank tales comprising A Boy and His Tank (1999), The War with Earth (2003) with Dave {GROSSMAN} and Kren of the Mitchegai (2004) with Dave {GROSSMAN} – is Military SF which intensifies the weapon/human interface exploited by Keith Laumer in his Bolo sequence: here the "boy", native of a metal planet, interfaces by Virtual Reality with a sentient tank, and hires out as a mercenary; eventually an uneasy alliance with Earth is created in order to defend life against an Alien civilization which sterilizes any planet in their way. Of his singletons, Copernick's Rebellion (1987) deals with Genetic Engineering in a Near-Future Polish setting, where Frankowski's inability to create women (though he is strong on breasts) is seriously irritating; The Fata Morgana (1999) engagingly depicts the discovery of the Western Isles by engineer buddies; The Two-Space War (2004) with Dave {GROSSMAN} posits a complex universe whose incompatible parts are described in terms of the divisions between sf and fantasy (> Science and Sorcery). [JC]
Leo A Frankowski
born Detroit, Michigan: 13 February 1943
died Lake Elsinore, California: 25 December 2008
works
Adventures of Conrad Stargard:
- The Cross-Time Engineer (New York: Ballantine Books/Del Rey, 1986) [Adventures of Conrad Stargard: pb/Dan Brown]
- The High-Tech Knight (New York: Ballantine Books/Del Rey, 1989) [Adventures of Conrad Stargard: pb/Barclay Shaw]
- The Radiant Warrior (New York: Ballantine Books/Del Rey, 1989) [Adventures of Conrad Stargard: pb/Barclay Shaw]
- The Flying Warlord (New York: Ballantine Books/Del Rey, 1989) [Adventures of Conrad Stargard: pb/Barclay Shaw]
- Lord Conrad's Lady (New York: Ballantine Books/Del Rey, 1990) [Adventures of Conrad Stargard: pb/Barclay Shaw]
- Conrad's Quest for Rubber (New York: Ballantine Books/Del Rey, 1998) [Adventures of Conrad Stargard: pb/Peter Peebles]
- Conrad's Lady (New York: Baen Books, 2005) [omni of the above three: Adventures of Conrad Stargard: hb/Gary Ruddell]
- Conrad's Time Machine (New York: Baen Books, 2002) [Adventures of Conrad Stargard: hb/David Mattingly]
- Lord Conrad's Crusade (San Bernardino, California: Great Authors Online, 2008) with Rodger Olsen [Adventures of Conrad Stargard: pb/]
A Boy and his Tank
individual titles
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