Difference between revisions of "Martin Delrio"

m (link fix)
(InfoBoxRealPerson)
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 3 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
"Martin Delrio" is a pen name used by '''[[w:Debra Doyle|Debra Doyle]]''' and her husband '''[[w:James D. Macdonald|James D. Macdonald]]''' for their collaboratively written fiction. Numerous books from several fictional settings including Spiderman and Mortal Kombat are credited to the name (sometimes as co-writer).
+
{{InfoBoxRealPerson
 +
| image              =
 +
| image caption      =
 +
| name                = Debra Doyle<br/>James D. Macdonald
 +
| birthdate          =
 +
| died                =
 +
| Occupation          = Author
 +
| penname            = Martin Delrio
 +
| Sarnaname          =
 +
| Forumhandle        =
 +
| BTPersona          =
 +
| homepage            =
 +
}}
 +
 
 +
'''"Martin Delrio"''' is a pen name for the late '''[[w:Debra Doyle|Debra Doyle]]''' (1952 - 31 October 2020) and her husband and coauthor '''[[w:James D. Macdonald|James D. Macdonald]]''' in their collaborative fiction. Numerous books from several fictional settings—including [[w:Spider-Man|Spider-Man]] and [[w:Mortal Kombat|Mortal Kombat]]—are credited to the name (sometimes as cowriter).
  
 
For [[BattleTech]], three novels in the [[MechWarrior: Dark Age]] series are credited to Martin Delrio: ''[[A Silence in the Heavens]]'', ''[[Truth and Shadows]]'' and ''[[Service for the Dead]]'', collectively also known as the "[[Proving Grounds Trilogy]]".
 
For [[BattleTech]], three novels in the [[MechWarrior: Dark Age]] series are credited to Martin Delrio: ''[[A Silence in the Heavens]]'', ''[[Truth and Shadows]]'' and ''[[Service for the Dead]]'', collectively also known as the "[[Proving Grounds Trilogy]]".
  
The pseudonym may have been inspired by the real, historical [[w:Martin Delrio|Martin Delrio]], a Jesuit theologian, scholar and professor. Of the many books he wrote, one, written in 1599/1600 as a guide for inquisitors and judges, deals with witchcraft and the occult. It was reprinted many times over the following 150 years and Delrio is accused of having contributed greatly to witch hunts through it, and having been the principal cause for contemporary witch hunts in the southern Netherlands in particular.
+
==Notes==
 +
* The pseudonym may have been inspired by the nonfictional [[w:Martin Delrio|Martin Delrio]], a Jesuit theologian, scholar and professor. Of the many books the historical Martin Delrio wrote, one, written in 1599/1600 as a guide for inquisitors and judges, is particularly well known, dealing with witchcraft and the occult. It was reprinted many times over the following 150 years and Delrio is accused of having contributed greatly to witch hunts through it, and having been the principal cause for contemporary witch hunts in the southern Netherlands in particular.
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==
 
* BattleTech-related [[:Category:Works by Martin Delrio|works by Martin Delrio]]
 
* BattleTech-related [[:Category:Works by Martin Delrio|works by Martin Delrio]]
* [http://www.sff.net/people/doylemacdonald/ Official Doyle/Macdonald website]
+
* [https://web.archive.org/web/20210307123635/http://doyleandmacdonald.com/ Official Doyle/Macdonald website (via Web Archive (2021-03-07)]
 +
 
  
 
[[Category:Authors|Delrio, Martin]]
 
[[Category:Authors|Delrio, Martin]]
 
[[Category:PeopleReal|Delrio, Martin]]
 
[[Category:PeopleReal|Delrio, Martin]]

Latest revision as of 17:51, 16 November 2023

Debra Doyle
James D. Macdonald
Occupation Author
Alias name(s) Martin Delrio

"Martin Delrio" is a pen name for the late Debra Doyle (1952 - 31 October 2020) and her husband and coauthor James D. Macdonald in their collaborative fiction. Numerous books from several fictional settings—including Spider-Man and Mortal Kombat—are credited to the name (sometimes as cowriter).

For BattleTech, three novels in the MechWarrior: Dark Age series are credited to Martin Delrio: A Silence in the Heavens, Truth and Shadows and Service for the Dead, collectively also known as the "Proving Grounds Trilogy".

Notes[edit]

  • The pseudonym may have been inspired by the nonfictional Martin Delrio, a Jesuit theologian, scholar and professor. Of the many books the historical Martin Delrio wrote, one, written in 1599/1600 as a guide for inquisitors and judges, is particularly well known, dealing with witchcraft and the occult. It was reprinted many times over the following 150 years and Delrio is accused of having contributed greatly to witch hunts through it, and having been the principal cause for contemporary witch hunts in the southern Netherlands in particular.

See also[edit]