Norman Louis Knight (September 21, 1895 â April 19, 1972) was an American chemist and writer of fantasy and science fiction.
Knight was born in St. Joseph, Missouri on September 21, 1895, at 2109 Messanie Road. His parents, Louis Ruthven Knight and Mary E. Knight (née Stauber) operated a drugstore, which the
Knight joined the US Army in 1917 and was sent to France, where his service as a rider with the Signal Corps was interrupted by a bout of influenza. After demobilization, he moved to Davenport, Iowa, joined the nascent National Weather Service, and met his future wife Marie Sarah Yenn. They had one child, a girl named Paula Marie.
Knight's writing career was relatively abbreviated, consisting almost entirely of material published in Astounding between 1937 and 1942; these were mostly short stories, but included two serialized novellas. After a 20-year hiatus, Knight briefly emerged from retirement in 1965 with the novel A Torrent of Faces, co-written with James Blish. The novel was very modern in style and outlook, forming a great contrast to Knight's Golden Age fiction. It sold well, and saw numerous reprints, including an Ace Science Fiction Specials edition. It remains Knight's most prominent work. Several excerpted chapters, published independently in Galaxy Magazine in 1965 as the novelette "The Shipwrecked Hotel", were nominated for the 1966 Nebula Award.
Despite a relatively successful career in Golden Age magazines, Knight never achieved great prominence, and his work rapidly fell into obscurity. A rare contemporary critical notice was provided by Edmond Hamilton and Leigh Brackett, who praised his 1939 story Saurian Valedictory as "one of the really great stories on alien mentality", while lamenting that it was "a brilliant achievement, and nobody seems to have heard of it, or him. It was an attempt to depict a reptilian civilization before Man. It succeeded triumphantly; the values were all so different, the psychology".