Arthur C. Clarke - Playboy Collection - Fully Processed, 1960-1971
| Cushing Library

The fiction titles are:
"Blue Network" (submission title), published as "I Remember Babylon" Published May 1960
"The Food of the Gods" published May 1964.
"The Shining Ones" published July 1964
"The Light of Darkness" published June 1966
Nonfiction titles are:
"Rocket to the Renaissance," published July 1960
"The Obselescence of Man," published as Machina ex Deux, July 1961
"The Hazards of Prophecy," published March 1962
"You Can't Get There From Here," published April 1962
"The Road to Lilliput," published June 1962
"The Future of Transportation," published August 1962
"The Meddlers March," published March 1964
"Beyond Centaurus," published November 1964

Sir Arthur C. Clarke (1917-2008) was one of the most famous and important science fiction and science writers of the 20th century. He was born in Somerset, England on December 16, 1917. During World War II Clarke served as a radar specialist and instructor with the Royal Air Force, an experience that contributed to his early interest in communications technology. After being demobilized from the RAF after the war with the rank of First Lieutenant, <span class="highlight0 bold">Clarke</span> attended King's College London, where he obtained a first-class degree in mathematics and physics.
<span class="highlight0 bold">Clarke</span> was the Chairman of the British Interplanetary Society from 1946-1947, and it was as a member of the BIS in 1945 that he wrote a paper (later that year published in Wireless World) suggesting the idea that geostationary satellites could be used as telecommunications relays. For this insight Clarke has been generally credited with inventing the concept of satellite communciation. (As a tribute to Clarke's contributions in this field, the International Astronomical Union has officially named the geostationary orbit of 22,000 miles above the equator the "<span class="highlight0 bold">Clarke</span> Orbit.")
Over the course of his career, <span class="highlight0 bold">Clarke</span> wrote a number of works of nonfiction promoting science for a popular audience, especially the idea of space travel, starting in 1950 with Interplanetary Flight: An Introduction to Astronautics. Other scientific works of <span class="highlight0 bold">Clarke</span> include The Exploration of the Moon (1951), The View From Serendip (1977), and How The World Was One (1992).
However, <span class="highlight0 bold">Clarke</span>'s fame derives largely from his storied career as a science fiction writer. His first sale as a professional writer was the short story "Loophole", which appeared in Astounding Science Fiction in April 1946. This story was the first of over one hundred stories that <span class="highlight0 bold">Clarke</span> produced in the course of his career. The most famous of these was probably "The Sentinel", published in 1948. This story was not only the basis for the 1968 film 2001: A Space Odyssey (which was filmed concurrently with Clarke's novel of the same name), but was the first of <span class="highlight0 bold">Clarke</span>'s works to display a common theme in his work, that of a humanity being watched over by an unknowable cosmic intelligence.
<span class="highlight0 bold">Clarke</span>'s first novel was Against the Fall of Night (1948), which had originally been serialized in Startling Stories, appeared in book form in 1953, and was later expanded and revised as The City and The Stars in 1956. Childhood's End, probably his most famous novel, was published in 1953. It tells the story of a future Earth in which peace and order have been instituted after a friendly invasion by the mysterious alien race nicknamed the "Overlords". Over time Overlord rule results in the accelerated evolution of humanity into a new, transcendent form of life.
<span class="highlight0 bold">Clarke</span>'s other novels include, among others, the 2001 sequence: 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968), 2010: Odyssey Two (1982), 2061: Odyssey Three (1987), and 3001: The Final Odyssey (1997); the Rama sequence: Rendezvous with Rama (1972), Rama II (1989), The Garden of Rama (1991), and Rama Revealed (1993), the last three co-written with Gentry Lee; The Songs of Distant Earth (1986), and The Hammer of God (1993). His novels and stories earned <span class="highlight0 bold">Clarke</span> a lasting literary reputation that has placed him in many eyes as one of the "Big Three" of Science Fiction, together with Isaac Asimov and Robert A. Heinlein.
Clarke moved from Great Britain to Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) in 1956, where he lived until his death. Over the years, Clarke gathered numerous honors, including a Hugo Award in 1956 (for the short story "The Star"), the 1961 UNESCO-Kalinga Prize for the Popularization of Science, and the 2004 Heinlein Award. He was named a Science Fiction Grand Master in1985 by the Science Fiction Writers of America, and was inducted into the Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame in 1997. In 2000 <span class="highlight0 bold">Clarke</span> received a knighthood from Queen Elizabeth II.
Clarke was married to Marilyn Mayfield for six months in 1953. Their divorce was finalized in 1964, and <span class="highlight0 bold">Clarke</span> never remarries. He died in Columbo, Sri Lanka on March 19, 2008.
