The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America is reporting the death of one of their own. Short story author George M. Ewing died 18 May 2010 of a massive heart attack. He was 64 years old. A resident of Florida, most of his sf sales were to Asimov’s.
In memory of his friend, Bill Higgins writes: “George was a character and a half! He loved electronics and the Upper Peninsula and crazy inventions and odd corners of history and ham radio and techie culture, and he could roll all those things together into a sizzling science fiction story. I have many memories of sharing coffee from his battered green thermos and hearing him tell stories by a campfire.
“He was a master of scrounging, stretching, or recycling a great variety of stuff, and even published a book about it: Living on a Shoestring: A Scrounge Manual for the Hobbyist. He taught high school English in Cheboygan, Michigan for many years. Later he spent summers in Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan, and winters in Florida. He wrote nonfiction regularly for Computer Shopper and other magazines.
“George attended the Clarion Workshop in 1973 and began selling soon after. Among his stories were ‘Black Fly’, ‘QRP’, ‘Letter Rip’, ‘A Little Farther Up the Fox’, and ‘Pyros’, marked by jargon-slinging characters and adroit handling of high technology. He was Pro Guest of Honor at Nanocon in Houghton in 1996, and the Permanent Floating Riot Club published a chapbook of his stories for the occasion.
“I looked forward to the demented reviews he published in fanzines. George loved a good SF movie, and would always find something good to say about a bad SF movie. He was involved with General Technics, a group of fans devoted to do-it-yourself technology, as soon as it began. George served as an avuncular inspiration who showed us what it meant to be a techie. It was a joy to know him.”