Michael Scott Rohan

Michael Scott Rohan (22 January 1951 – 12 August 2018) was a Scottish fantasy and science fiction author and writer on opera.

He had a number of short stories published before his first books, the science fiction novel ''Run to the Stars'' and the non-fiction ''First Byte''. He then collaborated with Allan J. Scott on the nonfiction ''The Hammer and The Cross'' (an account of Christianity arriving in Viking lands, not to be confused with Harry Harrison's similarly themed novel trilogy of the same name) and the fantasy novels ''The Ice King'' and ''A Spell of Empire''.

Rohan is best known for the trilogy ''The Winter of the World'', set in the Ice Age. He also wrote the ''Spiral'' novels, in which our world is the Hub, or Core, of a spiral of mythic and legendary versions of familiar cities, countries and continents.

In the "Author's Note" to ''The Lord of Middle Air'', Rohan asserted that he and Walter Scott have a common ancestor in Michael Scot, who is a character in the novel.

According to his entry on the website of the Little, Brown Book Group, "after many years in Oxford and Yorkshire (they moved to Leeds in 1984), he and his American wife Deborah (Archives Conservator for Cambridgeshire) lived (as of 1994) in a small village near Cambridge, next to the pub." Provided by Wikipedia
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