Scortia was born in
Alton, Illinois. He attended
Washington University in St. Louis, where he earned a degree in chemistry in 1949. He worked for a number of aerospace companies during the 1950s and 1960s/early 1970s, and held a patent for the fuel used by one of the
Jupiter fly-by missions. Scortia had been writing in his spare time while still working in the aerospace field. When the industry began to see increased unemployment in the early 1970s, Scortia decided to try his hand at full-time writing. His novel,
The Glass Inferno (in collaboration with Frank M. Robinson) was, in combination with the novel
The Tower by
Richard Martin Stern, the basis for the 1974 film
The Towering Inferno. Scortia also collaborated with
Dalton Trumbo on the novel
The Endangered Species. Scortia died in
La Verne, California on April 29, 1986 while being treated for
leukemia.
Harlan Ellison credited Scortia with having "literally saved [Ellison] from being
courtmartialed back in 1958". ==Works==