
James Patrick Hogan was a British science fiction author. Hogan was was raised in the Portobello Road area on the west side of London. After leaving school at the age of sixteen, he worked various odd jobs until, after receiving a scholarship, he began a five-year program at the Royal Aircraft Establishment at Farnborough covering the practical and theoretical sides of electrical, electronic, and mechanical engineering. He first married at the age of twenty, and he has had three other subsequent marriages and fathered six children. Hogan worked as a design engineer for several companies and eventually moved into sales in the 1960s, travelling around Europe as a sales engineer for Honeywell. In the 1970s he joined the Digital Equipment Corporation's Laboratory Data Processing Group and in 1977 moved to Boston, Massachusetts to run its sales training program. He published his first novel, Inherit the Stars, in the same year to win an office bet. He quit DEC in 1979 and began writing full time, moving to Orlando, Florida, for a year where he met his third wife Jackie. They then moved to Sonora, California. Hogan's style of science fiction is usually hard science fiction. In his earlier works he conveyed a sense of what science and scientists were about. His philosophical view on how science should be done comes through in many of his novels; theories should be formulated based on empirical research, not the other way around. If a theory does not match the facts, it is theory that should be discarded, not the facts. This is very evident in the Giants series, which begins with the discovery of a 50,000 year-old human body on the Moon. This discovery leads to a series of investigations, and as facts are discovered, theories on how the astronaut's body arrived on the Moon 50,000 years ago are elaborated, discarded, and replaced. Hogan's fiction also reflects anti-authoritarian social views. Many of his novels have strong anarchist or libertarian themes, often promoting the idea that new technological advances render certain social conventions obsolete. For example, the effectively limitless availability of energy that would result from the development of controlled nuclear fusion would make it unnecessary to limit access to energy resources. In essence, energy would become free. This melding of scientific and social speculation is clearly present in the novel Voyage from Yesteryear (strongly influenced by Eric Frank Russell's famous story "And Then There Were None"), which describes the contact between a high-tech anarchist society on a planet in the Alpha Centauri system, with a starship sent from Earth by a dictatorial government. The story uses many elements of civil disobedience. James Hogan died unexpectedly from a heart attack at his home in Ireland.
Series
Books

Bug Park
1997

Rockets, Redheads & Revolution
1999

Inherit the Stars
1977

Moon Flower
2008

Code of the Lifemaker
1983

The Gentle Giants of Ganymede
1978

The Proteus Operation
1985

Infinity Gambit
1991

The Mirror Maze
1989

Star Child
1998

Worlds in Chaos
2014

Mind Matters
1998

Outward Bound
1999

Endgame Enigma
1987

Out Of Time
1993

Echoes of an Alien Sky
2007

Thrice Upon A Time
1980

Immortality Option
1995

Mission to Minerva
2005

Giants' Star
1981

Martian Knightlife
2001

Voyage from Yesteryear
1982

Entoverse
1991

The Anguished Dawn
2003

Migration
2010

Cradle of Saturn
1999

Catastrophes, Chaos & Convolutions
2005

The Legend That Was Earth
2000

Paths to Otherwhere
1996

The Multiplex Man
1992

The Two Faces of Tomorrow
1979

Minds, Machines & Evolution
1988

Realtime Interrupt
1995

Kicking the Sacred Cow
2004

The Genesis Machine
1978