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:''"Kent Richards" redirects here. For the leader in the LDS Church, see Kent F. Richards.'' Kendell Foster Crossen (July 25, 1910 – November 29, 1981) was an American pulp fiction and science fiction writer. He was the creator and writer of stories about the Green Lama (a pulp and comic book hero) and the Milo March detective novels. His pen names included Richard Foster, Bennett Barlay, Kent Richards and Clay Richards, Christopher Monig (allegedly the name of a ghost of the town of Crossen on the Oder), and M. E. Chaber (from the Hebrew word ''mechaber'', meaning author). Some bylines use the abbreviated name Ken Crossen. ==Biography== Kendell Foster Crossen was born in Albany, Ohio (outside Athens), the only child of farmers Sam Crossen and Chlo Foster Crossen. He attended Rio Grande College in Ohio where he played football. He was an amateur boxer and worked at jobs ranging from carnival barker to insurance investigator. In the 1930s he was employed as a writer on Works Progress Administration (WPA) projects, including a ''New York City Guidebook'', before becoming editor of ''Detective Fiction Weekly''. In the 1940s he wrote pulp detective fiction and novels under his own name as well as the pseudonyms Richard Foster, M. E. Chaber, Christopher Monig, Clay Richards, Bennett Barley, and others. He originated the pulp and comic book character the Green Lama, a crime-fighting Buddhist superhero whose powers emerged upon the recitation of the Tibetan mantra "om mani padme hum." He wrote hundreds of radio scripts for ''Suspense'', ''The Saint'', ''Mystery Theater'', and others. His later television credits include ''77 Sunset Strip'', ''The Man from Blackhawk'', ''Man and the Challenge'', and ''Perry Mason''. In the 1950s Crossen began writing science fiction for publications such as ''Thrilling Wonder Stories'', including the humorous Manning Draco stories about an intergalactic insurance investigator (four of which are featured in the book ''Once Upon a Star'', 1953). His novels in the genre are ''Murder Out of Mind'' (1945), ''Year of Consent'' (1954), dealing with a 1990 America run by tyrannical "social engineers", and ''The Rest Must Die'' (1959), about survivors of a nuclear catastrophe in New York City. Novellas include ''Passport to Pax'' (1952) and ''Things of Distinction'' (1952). He edited two sci-fi anthologies, ''Adventures in Tomorrow'' (1951) and ''Future Tense'' (1952). 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Kendell Foster Crossen」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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