Harvey Stanbrough was born in New Mexico, seasoned in Texas and baked in Arizona. He’s pretty well done.
For a time, because he was unable to do otherwise, he split his writing personality among five personas and slipped in and out among several pseudonyms—strictly to be cagey. But he takes a pill for that now and writes only under his own name. Mostly.
Harvey is an award-winning writer who follows Heinlein’s Rules avidly. He has written and published over 95 novels, 9 novellas, and over 240 short stories. He has also written 16 or so nonfiction books on writing, and he’s compiled and published 30 collections of short fiction and 5 critically acclaimed poetry collections.
Extended Information
Some of Harvey's poetry collections have been nominated for the Frankfurt (Germany) Book Fair Award, the Foreword Magazine Engraver’s Award, the Pushcart Prize, and the National Book Award. One of his books on writing (Writing Realistic Dialogue & Flash Fiction) finished in 5th place for the BEA (NY) Book of the Year Award (Education).
Harvey’s titles are available in every ebook format in over 400 markets and 1200 libraries worldwide. Several of his longer works also are available in trade paperback editions at Amazon.
Some of Harvey’s short fiction still appears under the names of his various personas. They refused to let go. Hence, you can find those under his own name as well as those of Gervasio Arrancado, Eric Stringer, and Nicolas Z Porter.
Harvey misses and envies his former personas. He envies Gervasio Arrancado his rich cultural heritage and his wealth of acquaintances, Eric Stringer his frenetic frenzy, and Nick Porter his plethora of experiences. He still studies them and their works and writes whatever scraps they leave to him. And he is appreciative. After all, there are writers starving in China.
Oh, the ball cap. Harvey was never a POW, though he was a US Marine and supports those who were or are POWs. That’s the story on the ball cap.