Agent to the Stars is a science fiction novel by American writer John Scalzi . It tells the story of Tom Stein, a young Hollywood agent who is hired by an alien race to handle the revelation of their presence to humanity.
50-634: John Michael Scalzi II (born May 10, 1969) is an American science fiction author and former president of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America . He is best known for his Old Man's War series , three novels of which have been nominated for the Hugo Award , and for his blog Whatever , where he has written on a number of topics since 1998. He won the Hugo Award for Best Fan Writer in 2008 based predominantly on that blog, which he has also used for several charity drives. His novel Redshirts won
100-498: A "predictable plot" that was nonetheless "entertaining". Amazing Stories described it as "disposable, cynical fun with a big heart" and "rather low-key for a first contact story", with a "knowingly silly set-up", "reasonably sharp" characters and dialogue, and a realistic-feeling portrayal of life in a talent agency . The SF Site compared it to the work of Spider Robinson and Robert Heinlein , calling it "(t)hought-provoking and entertaining", and praising Scalzi for exploring
150-465: A Holocaust survivor, Michelle absorbs her memories and delivers a blistering audition. The movie is an unparalleled success, and Michelle wins an Academy Award for Best Actress. During her acceptance speech, she gradually asserts her normal, clear gelatinous shape, while making a call for acceptance regardless of appearance or form. The Yherjak, revealed at last, are widely accepted. Publishers Weekly considered it to be "slick" and "lightweight", with
200-567: A centuries-long war for human colonization of space. It was inspired by the works of Robert Heinlein , especially Starship Troopers . Scalzi intended to sell the book commercially, so he chose the genre of military science fiction because he felt it would be the most marketable. Like Agent to the Stars , it was first published on Whatever ; Scalzi serialized a chapter a day in December 2002. Tor Books executive editor Patrick Nielsen Hayden offered to buy
250-516: A coin. Heads was science fiction. Tails was mystery. The coin came up heads. Scalzi's childhood was spent in poverty, an experience that inspired him to write his most famous essay, "Being Poor." He attended the Webb School of California , a boarding school in Claremont , on a scholarship. One of his classmates was blogger and journalist Josh Marshall . After high school, Scalzi studied philosophy at
300-552: A college student, working freelance for the Chicago Sun-Times . Scalzi graduated from Chicago in 1991 with a Bachelor of Arts . After graduating, Scalzi became a corporate consultant and wrote opinion columns and film reviews for the Fresno Bee . His experience as a film critic influenced his writing, particularly his humorous works, as films were meant to be an accessible form of storytelling. In 1996, he and his family moved to
350-507: A different view of the events covered in The Last Colony , was published in August 2008. Zoe's Tale was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 2009. Also in 2008, Audible.com released the audiobook anthology METAtropolis , edited by Scalzi and featuring short fiction in a shared world created by Scalzi, Elizabeth Bear, Tobias Buckell, Jay Lake, and Karl Schroeder. METAtropolis
400-451: A limited edition print run of METAtropolis , which was subsequently published by Tor in a standard hardcover edition, in 2010. Fuzzy Nation , Scalzi's ninth novel, began as a writing exercise. Scalzi explained that it had been "basically written just for the fun of it and for sort of getting into the habit of actually enjoying writing science fiction again." It was an adaptation of Little Fuzzy , published by H. Beam Piper in 1962, and
450-544: A musical production based on the series. Scalzi was the writer for the 2015 mobile device video game by Industrial Toys called Midnight Star . Scalzi wrote the story for the prequel to the game, in a graphic novel called Midnight Rises . On March 30, 2016, the Los Angeles Times announced that Scalzi was one of ten "Critics-at-Large" who would contribute to the newspaper as a columnist writing on literature and culture. He met his wife Kristine Ann Blauser when he
500-418: A newspaper- or column-like format, which he had done prior to his novel-writing career. The name suggests the wide range of topics Scalzi writes about there, although many of Scalzi's postings center on the topics of politics and writing. A number of writings originally posted there have gone on to be published in traditional media, including his "I Hate Your Politics" and "Being Poor" entries, the latter of which
550-610: A novelette set in the Old Man's War universe, called "The Sagan Diary", was published as a hardcover by Subterranean Press. Scalzi has commented that he originally wrote the book as free verse poetry, then converted it into prose format. An audio reading of "The Sagan Diary" was offered through Scalzi's website in February 2007, featuring the voices of fellow science fiction authors Elizabeth Bear , Mary Robinette Kowal , Ellen Kushner , Cherie Priest , Karen Meisner and Helen Smith. In November of
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#1732880633164600-543: A sentient member of a species is the most atrocious act among the Yherjak, and also that Michelle committed suicide. Upon further inspection, and learning that Michelle had suffocated by accident, the Yherjak agree and Michelle reemerges, now a mental amalgam of Michelle, Joshua, Carl, and Ralph the dog. Tom stumbles on the idea of casting Michelle in the Holocaust film Hard Memories . After meeting Tom's grandmother Sarah Rosenthal,
650-532: Is a celebrity agent, representing a handful of Hollywood actors, the most famous of which is Michelle Beck, an earnest but brainless blonde who wants to break into serious acting despite having very limited talent. Carl Lupo, Tom's boss, tells him to drop all his clients in order to take on Joshua. Joshua, as it turns out, is a Yherjak, an amorphous ameboid species that communicate through olfactory transmission, and smell horrifically awful, that have traveled to Earth in an asteroid to make first contact. Realizing they fit
700-513: Is a list of notable science-fiction authors, in alphabetical order: Agent to the Stars Scalzi started Agent to the Stars in 1997 as his "practice" novel, to see if he could write a novel. He published it as a shareware novel on his web site in 1999, requesting that readers send him $ 1 if they liked the story. After five years, during which he reports he made about $ 4,000, he stopped asking for further donations. After
750-417: Is about a young Hollywood agent hired by a space alien to make their species more appealing to humans. It received mixed reviews; Booklist called it "absurd, funny, and satirically perceptive," while Publishers Weekly criticized the plot as predictable. Scalzi's first traditionally published novel was Old Man's War , a military science fiction novel about a 75-year-old man who is recruited to fight
800-464: Is of Italian descent . Scalzi grew up reading science fiction and mystery, which inspired him to become a science fiction writer—a decision made randomly. As he recalled in an interview with the Dayton Daily News : When I decided to start writing novels, I wanted to write in a genre I already knew and loved as a reader. So, it was either going to be science fiction or mystery. I decided to flip
850-475: Is proud to announce the launch of John Scalzi's new fantasy trilogy, The Shadow War of the Night Dragons, which kicks off with book one: The Dead City." This excerpt from an imaginary novel took on a life of its own, winning the 2011 Tor.com Readers' Choice Awards for short fiction. It was also nominated for the 2012 Hugo Award for Best Short Story . This was followed up on April 1, 2013 by an "announcement" about
900-454: The Dayton Daily News through 2006, and writes for other magazines and newspapers on an occasional basis. He also works as a consultant for businesses, primarily in the online and financial fields. In 2009, Scalzi was a creative consultant on science-fiction television show Stargate Universe . He was credited as such for 39 episodes. On April 1, 2011, Tor Books collaborated with Scalzi on an April Fool's prank, with Tor claiming "Tor Books
950-458: The Hugo Award for Best Related Book in 2009. A third collection, The Mallet of Loving Correction , was released in 2013 and named after his nickname for moderating activities on his blog. A fourth collection, Don't Live For Your Obituary , was released in December 2017. Scalzi began writing for his personal blog Whatever in September 1998. He started it because he wanted to practice writing in
1000-570: The University of Chicago . Scalzi's thesis advisor, for a brief time, was Saul Bellow . Scalzi abandoned his course of study with Bellow after he was elected Student Ombudsman of the University. Ted Cohen, a philosophy professor, became his next thesis advisor, but Scalzi graduated without completing his thesis project. During his 1989–1990 school year, Scalzi was the editor-in-chief of The Chicago Maroon . He began writing professionally in 1990, while
1050-484: The Washington, D.C. area after he was hired as the in-house writer and editor at AOL . He was laid off in 1998, and since then he has been a full-time freelance writer and author. Scalzi was first elected president of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America in 2010. He was the only nominee on the ballot. He had previously run as a write-in candidate in 2007, challenging the sole ballot nominee that year, but
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#17328806331641100-599: The 2013 Hugo Award for Best Novel . He has written non-fiction books and columns on diverse topics such as finance, video games, films, astronomy, writing and politics, and served as a creative consultant for the TV series Stargate Universe . Scalzi was born in Fairfield, California , on May 10, 1969. One of three children born to a single mother, he grew up in the Los Angeles suburbs of Covina , Glendora , Azusa , and San Dimas . He
1150-476: The 2013 Hugo Award for Best Novel. Scalzi decided to write Redshirts after noticing that while many short satirical works dealt with the idea of "' redshirts '—the unnamed, low-ranking characters of Star Trek who always died on away missions," there was a dearth of novels exploring the concept. On May 24, 2015, Tor announced that it had agreed to a $ 3.4 million deal with Scalzi spanning 10 years and 13 books: 10 adult books and three young adult books. Among
1200-464: The Hollywood movie description of an alien monster, the aliens contacted Carl surreptitiously and created Joshua through an amalgam of Yherjak and Carl's thoughts. Joshua hides at Tom's house, and fuses with Ralph, an elderly dog that Tom had been caring for, after Ralph suffered a heart attack. In order to give Joshua something to do, he begins hiring Joshua the dog out for roles, and he instantly becomes
1250-529: The Separation of Church and State after fellow writer Joe Hill challenged him to go visit the Creation Museum that had just opened near Cincinnati, not far from Scalzi's Ohio home, if Hill paid for the ticket, offering to match the cost with a donation to the charity of Scalzi's choice after he filed a comprehensive report on the trip online. Scalzi extended the deal to all Whatever readers, raised 256 times
1300-527: The Stars , was written in 1997 and published free to read on his website in 1999. He asked readers to donate money to him if they enjoyed the novel and earned around $ 4,000 over a period of five years. Subterranean Press released a limited-edition hardcover version in July 2005, featuring cover art from Penny Arcade artist Mike Krahulik ; the novel was later released in trade and mass-market paperback by Tor and audiobook by Audible . A first-contact story, it
1350-756: The Weekend Assignment and Monday Photo Shoot), answered questions about blogging from AOL members, and posted interesting links for readers. Readers of both Scalzi's personal site and his AOL Journal "By the Way" noted distinct differences in tone at each site. Scalzi has acknowledged this tonal difference, based on the different missions of each site. Scalzi also blogged professionally for AOL's Ficlets site beginning in March 2007, writing about literature and other related topics. On December 7, 2007, Scalzi announced that by mutual agreement, his contract with AOL would not be renewed at
1400-645: The admission price, and posted his critical report on the Creation Museum on November 12, 2007. In September 2010 he joined with Subterranean Press and authors Wil Wheaton , Patrick Rothfuss , Catherynne M. Valente , Rachel Swirsky and others to create a story collection called Clash of the Geeks , offered online in exchange for donations to the Michigan/Indiana affiliate of the Lupus Alliance of America. Some of
1450-456: The books included in this deal is another book within his Old Man's War universe, the sequel to Lock In (a near-future thriller published by Scalzi in 2014) titled Head On , a new space opera series and several standalone books. The deal was finalized on November 25, 2015. The first book produced in this contract was the space opera The Collapsing Empire in March 2017. In 2019, three of his short stories were adapted for episodes of
1500-520: The end of the year, in part so that he would have more time to devote to writing books. In 2008, Scalzi began writing a weekly column on science fiction/fantasy films for AMCTV.com, the Web site of cable television network AMC . For traditional media, Scalzi wrote a DVD review column and an opinion column for the Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine from 2000 through 2006, wrote an additional DVD review column for
1550-524: The first season of the Netflix anthology series Love, Death & Robots : "Three Robots", "When the Yogurt Took Over", and "Missives From Possible Futures #1: Alternate History Search Results". His story "Automated Customer Service" was also adapted for the second season of Love, Death & Robots , with Scalzi himself co-writing the script. Scalzi wrote a sequel to "Three Robots" for the third season of
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1600-402: The magazine itself but only in a separated chapter book reserved for the people who bought the hardcover limited edition. In April 2008 Scalzi released the story as a "shareware short story" on his website. On March 29, 2007, it was announced that Scalzi had again been nominated for a Hugo Award, this time in the category Best Fan Writer, for his online writing about the science-fiction field. He
1650-419: The most wanted canine actor in Hollywood, given his apparent abilities. Later, after a disastrous reading for a part in a Holocaust drama movie, Michelle is accidentally smothered while making a special effect mask for a sci-fi movie. Realizing that the Yherjak could heal her by bonding, similar to how Joshua bonded with Ralph the dog, he conspires to take her to the ship. This causes an uproar, as bonding with
1700-470: The novel, and it was published by Tor in January 2005. In 2006, Scalzi won a nomination for the Hugo Award for Best Novel for Old Man's War . The Ghost Brigades was released in 2006. While a direct sequel to Old Man's War , it focuses not on John Perry, the protagonist of Old Man's War , but on the special forces units. The Ghost Brigades television rights were purchased by Syfy in 2014. 2006 also saw
1750-476: The publication of Scalzi's second book, Old Man's War , by Tor Books , a limited edition of Agent to the Stars was published in 2005 by Subterranean Press , with a cover by Mike Krahulik of Penny Arcade fame. Tor later released a trade paperback edition in November 2008, and a mass market edition in December 2010. An audiobook version narrated by Wil Wheaton was released on December 7, 2010. Tom Stein
1800-474: The release of The Android's Dream . A satire, it was well received by Publishers Weekly , which called it an "effervescent but intelligent romp"; it was criticized by Dave Itzkoff of The New York Times , who said it was "merely sarcastic when it should be satirical." In August 2006, Scalzi was awarded the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer for best new science fiction writer of 2005. In February 2007,
1850-466: The run of the Whatever, his blog, would be compiled into a book from Subterranean Press . The book, You're Not Fooling Anyone When You Take Your Laptop to a Coffee Shop: Scalzi on Writing ; was released by Subterranean Press in February 2007. Another collection of entries from Whatever, entitled Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded: A Decade of Whatever 1998–2008 was released in September 2008. It subsequently won
1900-451: The same year, Subterranean Press also made "The Sagan Diary" text freely available online. In April 2008 Audible Frontiers produced an audiobook of the novelette, read by Stephanie Wolfe. The third novel set in the same universe, The Last Colony , was released in April 2007. It was nominated for the 2008 Hugo Award for Best Novel. Zoe's Tale , the fourth Old Man's War novel, presenting
1950-403: The series. His 2022 novel The Kaiju Preservation Society was named a 2023 Alex Award winner as one of "ten books written for adults that have special appeal to young adults ages 12 through 18." Though best known for his science fiction works, Scalzi has written several non-fiction books as well, including a trio for London publisher Rough Guides' reference line of books. The first of these
2000-514: The stories were selected from a competition run on Whatever to write a story to explain a painting Scalzi had commissioned from Jeff Zugale, which featured Scalzi as an orc and Wheaton riding a unicorn pegasus kitten. Scalzi's notable online presence and support for feminist causes have often led to harassment and trolling. After writing a satirical blog post in October 2012 criticizing some conservative politicians for their positions on abortion, Scalzi
2050-672: Was The Rough Guide to Money Online , released in late October 2000. This reference book featured tips on using online financial tools. According to Scalzi, it did less-than-expected business, possibly due to the collapse of the Internet bubble at about the same time the book was released. Scalzi's next non-fiction book was The Rough Guide to the Universe , an astronomy book designed for novice-to-intermediate stargazers, released in May 2003. Scalzi's third book for Rough Guides, The Rough Guide to Sci-Fi Movies ,
John Scalzi - Misplaced Pages Continue
2100-539: Was authorized by the Piper estate. Scalzi announced the release on his blog on April 7, 2010, and the novel was published on May 10, 2011. Scalzi has not written many short stories: one of them, "After the Coup", featured as the first short story published originally on Tor.com , was a finalist for the 2009 Locus Award for best short story. Tor released it as an e-book in 2009. His 2012 book Redshirts: A Novel with Three Codas won
2150-651: Was living in Fresno , and they married in 1995. His only child, a daughter named Athena, was born in 1998. He and his family live in Bradford, Ohio , where they moved in 2001 to be closer to his wife's family. Scalzi has declared himself a feminist and, formerly, a Rockefeller Republican , though he currently supports the Democratic Party . He supports same-sex marriage and the LGBTQ community. Science fiction author This
2200-591: Was not successful. He left office when his third term expired on June 30, 2013, having not sought reelection to a fourth term. He garnered significant media attention by taping raw bacon to his cat "Ghlaghghee" in September 2006. As a result of the coverage, Scalzi began maintaining a web repository for links to "All Things Bacon" on the Whatever site. Scalzi's books are known for their humor. His style of writing has been influenced by Robert Heinlein , Orson Scott Card , and Joe Haldeman . Scalzi's first novel, Agent to
2250-432: Was planned from the beginning to be released as an audio anthology prior to any print edition. The audiobook featured the voices of Battlestar Galactica actors Michael Hogan , Alessandro Juliani and Kandyse McClure and was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form in 2009. A sequel audiobook, METAtropolis: Cascadia , edited by Jay Lake, came out in 2010. In 2009 Subterranean Press released
2300-402: Was posted in March 2005 with the unique requirements that submissions would only be accepted electronically in plain text, and ONLY during the period between 10/1/05 and 11/1/05 instead of before a traditional deadline. After the print run sold out, the issue was made available online as a free download. Scalzi's own short story, How I Proposed to My Wife: An Alien Sex Story , was not printed in
2350-482: Was published in the op-ed pages of the Chicago Tribune in September 2005. His essay "Being Poor" was based on his own experiences growing up in poverty. Scalzi also used Whatever as a way to solicit fiction and non-fiction submissions on the theme of Science Fiction Clichés in 2005 for issue No. 4 of Subterranean Magazine , which he guest edited (published in 2006 by Subterranean Press). The original solicitation
2400-506: Was released in October 2005. This book covered the history of science fiction and science fiction film and listed a "canon" of 50 significant science fiction films. Scalzi is also the author of the "Book of the Dumb" series of books from Portable Press . These books chronicle people doing stupid things. The first book in the series was released in October 2003 with a second following a year later. In November 2005, Scalzi announced that entries from
2450-671: Was targeted by writer Vox Day and his supporters. Scalzi pledged to donate $ 5 to RAINN, Emily's List, the Human Rights Campaign, and the NAACP every time Day mentioned him on his website. While he capped his donation at $ 1,000, Scalzi raised over $ 50,000 after others, including actor Wil Wheaton , promised to match this pledge. In addition to his personal site, Scalzi was a professional blogger for America Online's AOL Journals and AIM Blogs service from August 2003 through December 2007. In this role he created participatory entries (most notably
2500-631: Was the first Campbell Award winner to receive a nomination in this category. In 2008, he was again nominated for the Best Fan Writer Hugo, this time winning the award, becoming the first person to be nominated for that category and the Best Novel Hugo award at the same time since 1970. Scalzi also uses Whatever to help raise money for organizations and causes that he supports. Notably, in June 2007 he raised over $ 5000 in 6 days for Americans United for
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