'' with cover art by
Alan Lee. Holdstock's first published story, "Pauper's Plot", appeared in the magazine
New Worlds in 1968. His first novel was a science fiction work,
Eye Among the Blind, published in 1976. During the late 1970s and throughout the 1980s Holdstock wrote many fantasy and science fiction novels along with a number of short stories, most of which were published under a pseudonym. Robert Holdstock's pseudonyms included Robert Faulcon, Chris Carlsen, Richard Kirk, Robert Black, Ken Blake, and Steven Eisler. These included some adaptions of television scripts for
novelisations of television series including
The Professionals. During this same period he wrote the text for
Space Wars, Worlds and Weapons, a large format book in which he provided essays concerning the tropes of science fiction (and, in one chapter,
sword and sorcery), accompanied by colour reproductions of related artwork. In 1980 Holdstock wrote
Tour of the Universe with
Malcolm Edwards. The rights were subsequently sold for a space shuttle simulation ride at the
CN Tower, also called the
Tour of the Universe. Holdstock wrote
The Dark Wheel, the first novella to be included for distribution with a video game,
Elite, in 1984. He wrote an adaptation of
The Emerald Forest, a film directed by
John Boorman, and novelised episodes of the
Granada Television series
Bulman. Holdstock's breakthrough novel
Mythago Wood was published in 1984. It began the Ryhope Wood series, which continued until the appearance of
Avilion in 2009. Holdstock was guest of honour at the annual
Novacon in 1984, and a limited-edition chapbook featuring his fantasy story 'Thorn' was presented to the first 500 attendees. Between 2001 and 2007 Holdstock produced a trilogy of fantasy novels, the Merlin Codex, consisting of
Celtika,
The Iron Grail and
The Broken Kings. Holdstock wrote, edited or contributed to a number of nonfiction works, including
Alien Landscapes,
Tour of the Universe,
Horror: 100 Best Novels and
Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (a different publication than
The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction published in 1979, edited by
Peter Nicholls). ==Death==