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Bruce Balfour was born in Tulsa, Oklahoma,
in 1958. In response, the American government created the space program.
Balfour
moved to Orange County, California when he was ten. An avid science
fiction reader, he started writing short fiction when he
was fourteen. Hundreds of short stories later, his first professional
sales occurred in 1981, when he was finally able to beat the
editor of Twilight Zone Magazine into submission with a flurry
of manuscripts.
Balfour
continued to write a variety of SF, contemporary fantasy, and horror
stories that were published during the following
years
as Balfour supported his habit by working as a delivery truck
driver, comic book writer, commercial photographer, low-budget
screenwriter,
engineering test driver for Subaru, college bookstore manager,
freelance journalist, NASA scientist, and computer game writer/designer.
Some
might say that Balfour can't hold a job, but he says there are
three explanations for his variety of occupations – he
likes to learn new things, he likes to write, and he likes to
eat.
After living around Los Angeles for ten years,
Balfour felt obligated to study film production at UCLA. When
he realized that there were
only about eight people in California who were actually employed
in film production, he made the natural switch and became a computer
science major at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Desperate
for people with artificial intelligence training, NASA hired Balfour
at Ames Research Center. When they needed someone to push computer
buttons on the Kuiper Airborne Observatory, a high-altitude research
aircraft, NASA put Balfour on a team to capture infrared images
of the Space Shuttle on reentry.
He
enjoyed pushing buttons, and there were a few occupations he hadn't
worked at yet, so Balfour became a computer
game designer.
Involved in early and successful efforts to bring extensive stories
and deeper characters into computer adventure games, several
of Balfour's original and adapted PC games – such as Neuromancer, Wasteland,
Outpost, and The Dagger of Amon Ra – became
award-winning bestsellers. This also gave him the chance to use
other aspects
of his artificial
intelligence training.

While managing the development of his computer games, Balfour's
first novel, Star Crusader, was published in 1995. A
non-fiction book that explained the science behind his Outpost space simulation
game – sometimes characterized as "Sim City in space" – was
published in 1994. Adopted as a teaching tool by many high school
science classes, the Outpost game and book remained in print
until 2000.
Fearing that he might miss something during the dot-com boom, Balfour
moved from the mountains near Yosemite and returned to the San Francisco
Bay Area. As the director of product development for a large educational
software company, he managed the creation of complex websites and
distance learning products. A highly-paid cog in the machine of a
multinational corporation, Balfour spent way too much time with high-tech
executives, cultish software developers, and the possibilities of
advanced Internet technologies, causing the darker themes of his
next novels to ferment in his head.
Balfour's
recent novels, which explore such diverse subjects as artificial
intelligence, nanotechnology, international politics, the
future of the
Internet,
and the future
of marketing, have been well-received. The Forge
of Mars,
published by Berkley/Ace in September of 2002, was a national
bestseller. The 2003 sequel, The Digital Dead,
examined realistic near-future technologies that simulate
immortality and how they might be used by unscrupulous marketers
and politicians. His most recent novel, Prometheus
Road,
was published by Berkley/Ace in October of 2004.
Returning to the world of Big Science and Big Shiny Objects such
as x-ray synchrotrons and supercomputers, Balfour now spends
his days writing for the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
in Berkeley,
California.
In his spare time, he is writing yet another novel. He lives
with his wife, two daughters, and various pets in Novato, California,
a few miles north of San
Francisco in Marin County.

"Writer at Work" by Rich Powell
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