Bone, Jesse F. (Jesse Franklin), 1916-2006
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Fuller Name
Variants
Bone, J. F. (Jesse Franklin), 1916-2006
Bone, Jesse (Jesse Franklin), 1916-2006
Bone, Jesse Franklin, 1916-2006
Identifies LC/NAF RWO
Identifies RWO
Exact Matching Concepts from Other Schemes
Closely Matching Concepts from Other Schemes
Sources
found: His Observations on the ovaries of infertile and reportedly infertile dairy cattle, 1954.
found: His Animal anatomy and physiology, c1982:CIP t.p. (Jesse F. Bone)
found: Writer's dir., 1988-90(Bone, J(esse) F.; writes science fiction, fantasy, on animals; lists works)
found: SFE, the encyclopedia of science fiction, 2 March 2018(Bone, J.F.; Jesse Franklin Bone; born Tacoma, Washington: 15 June 1916; died Sierra Vista, Arizona: 6 January 2006; veterinarian; professor of veterinary medicine; wrote speculative fiction short stories and novels)
found: NLM files, 7/13/88(hdg.: Bone, Jesse F. (Jesse Franklin), 1916- ; usage: Jesse F. Bone, J.F. Bone)
found: Information from 678 converted Dec. 8, 2014(veterinarian)
found: Wikipedia, viewed Nov.1, 2024:Jesse F. Bone (Jesse Franklin Bone (born June 15, 1916 in Tacoma , Washington ; died January 6, 2006 in Sierra Vista , Arizona ) was an American veterinarian and science fiction writer. Bone was the son of Homer Bone , U.S. Senator and judge of the United States Court of Appeals , and Eva K. Seabury Wildt. He graduated from Washington State College in 1937 and then joined the U.S. Army as a veterinarian , where he reached the rank of lieutenant colonel . After World War II, he returned to Washington State College and earned his doctorate. In 1950, he married and moved with his wife Felizitaz to Corvallis , where he worked as a professor of comparative anatomy at Oregon State University . The couple had four children. He retired from military service in 1976 and was awarded professor emeritus status from Oregon State University in 1978. After retirement, the couple lived in Sierra Vista, Arizona. Bone is buried in the cemetery at Fort Huachuca base. In addition to specialist literature, Bone published a number of science fiction stories and novels. His first science fiction short story, Survival Type, appeared in March 1957 in the magazine Galaxy Science Fiction . In 1962 his first novel, The Lani People , was published and was also translated into German under the title The Slaves of Kardon 1. The Lani are an extraterrestrial race of humanoid women who are only happy when they are naked and making a man happy. It is not surprising that such a "product" finds buyers throughout the entire galaxy. By the end of the 1970s, Bone had written four more SF novels and a total of around 30 short stories. His story Triggerman was nominated for the Hugo Award in the short story category in 1959) - https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesse_F._Bone
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Change Notes
1982-01-26: new
2024-11-10: revised
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