Bill Ransom co-authored three Ace Science Fiction novels with
Frank Herbert, following up on Herbert's
Destination: Void. The Pandora series included:
The Jesus Incident (1979),
The Lazarus Effect (1983) and
The Ascension Factor (1988) from the Putnam/Berkley Publishing Group. In addition the novelette "
Songs of a Sentient Flute" (1979) from the
Medea series was the precursor version of
The Jesus Incident, but the two were set on different planets due to copyright issues, being published by different publishers. Ransom has published six
novels, six poetry collections, numerous short stories and articles.
Learning the Ropes (Utah State University Press), a collection of poetry, short fiction and essays, was billed as "a creative autobiography." Three of his short stories from this collection have been selections of the PEN/NEA Syndicated Fiction Project, often called "The Pulitzer Prize of the Short Story": "Uncle Hungry," "What Elena Said" and "Learning the Ropes." These appeared in the Sunday magazine editions of major newspapers around the country. His 1973 poetry collection
Finding True North & Critter was nominated for both the
Pulitzer Prize and the
National Book Award. His most recent novel is
Burn (Ace, 1995), a sequel to
ViraVax (Ace, 1993). Recent poetry is in
Puerto del Sol,
Spillway and
Petroglyph.
Jaguar, a 1990 Ace paperback, came out on the
internet via Alexandria Digital Literature in 1999, and was the first novel to outstrip short stories for the bestseller slot.
Jaguar remained on the bestseller list from January through June, 2000;
Wildside Press re-released it as a physical book in 2001. With
Richard Landerman, he wrote screenplays of his novels
Jaguar,
ViraVax and
Burn. ==Personal life==