Rob Swigart (born January 7, 1941) is an American novelist, poet, short story writer, futurist, and archaeology scholar best known for his satirical work, archaeology writing, science fiction, and interactive novel computer game, Portal (Activision, 1986). He is the author of sixteen books, including fourteen novels, one business book, and one translated prose poem.
His second novel, A.K.A./A Cosmic Fable, was nominated for a BSFA Best Novel Award in 1979.
His latest novel, Mixed Harvest, won a Nautilus Gold Award in 2019.
Swigart's poetry and fiction have appeared in a number of magazines, including Antaeus, Atlantic Monthly, Epoch, Fiction, Michigan Quarterly Review, New England Review, New York Quarterly, Poetry, Poetry Northwest, and South Carolina Review.
Life and career
Rob Swigart was born in Chicago to attorney Eugene Swigart Jr. and actress Ruth Robison Swigart. His family moved to Cincinnati, where Swigart grew up, in 1947. He currently lives in California.
Swigart majored in English at Princeton University and received a PhD in comparative literature from the State University of New York at Buffalo.
Teaching
Rob Swigart was an associate professor at San Jose University for 35 years, after which he was visiting scholar at the Stanford University Archaeology Center. His research, teaching, and archaeological writing focus on ancient societies and the 6,000âÂÂ8,000 years during which humans adopted agriculture, as well as the consequences of this switch from a nomadic hunter-gatherer lifestyle to farming.
Writing
Swigart began writing at a young age, first poetry and then short stories. He started writing seriously in graduate school, as he studied literature and taught fiction writing. The stories he wrote as a graduate student grew into his first novel, Little America (1977). He then went on to publish two more novels in a similar satirical style.
In the 1970s and into the 1980s, Swigart's poetry was published in a number of literary magazines across the United States, including Poetry, Poetry Northwest, Beloit Poetry Journal, The Reed, New York Quarterly, and Michigan Quarterly magazines.
Building upon an early interest in archaeology discovered while visiting sites around Central America, Swigart later wrote two archaeological novels published as textbooks, Xibalbá Gate (2005) and Stone Mirror (2007), while he was a visiting scholar at the Stanford Archaeology Center.
Following the release of Stone Mirror, he attended a series of seminars at ÃÂatalhöyük, where he was a novelist in residence in 2005. The seminars, focusing on the connection between religion and the development of cities, inspired his collection of stories about the human past, Mixed Harvest (2019), which explores what happened before religion and sedentism.
Swigart also published the Thriller in Paradise series, technothrillers set in Hawaii; and the ongoing Lisa Emmer series of historical thrillers.
Electronic literature
Swigart contributed to the Eastgate Quarterly Review of Hypertext, a digital literary periodical produced by Eastgate Systems and distributed via floppy disks in folios. His multimedia hypertext work, âÂÂDirections,â was published in issue 1:4 (Eastgate Quarterly Review of Hypertext, 1994). The work includes astronomical images, scientific graphs and maps, poetry, prose, black and white BITMAP images, and sound effects all arranged in a modified Periodic Table of Elements.
Following, Swigart was a founding member and secretary of the Electronic Literature Organization (ELO). During his time at ELO, Swigart participated in the Preservation, Archiving, Dissemination Project, an initiative that considered how to move electronic literature from defunct platforms to current technologies. He also published interactive multimedia novella About Time and other hypertext fiction and poetry, including short story âÂÂSeeking."
Futurist
Swigart worked as a research affiliate for the Institute for the Future, US-based not-for-profit think tank established to help organizations understand trends and plan for the future.
As a futurist, Swigart developed scenarios and wrote stories around topics such as climate change.
Satire fiction
Swigart published three satire novels in the late 1970s: Little America (1977), A.K.A./A Cosmic Fable (1978), and The Time Trip (1979). Swigart's satirical work has been called avant-garde and postmodern, as well as absurd and iconoclastic for its unconventional style and content.
A.K.A./A Cosmic Fable was nominated for the BSFA Best Novel Award in 1979, alongside J. G. BallardâÂÂs The Unlimited Dream Company, Tom ReamyâÂÂs Blind Voices, Thomas M. DischâÂÂs On Wings of Song, and Arthur C. ClarkeâÂÂs The Fountains of Paradise.
Science fiction
Though Swigart's satirical work has elements of science fiction, Swigart's first science fiction novel, The Book of Revelations, was published by E. P. Dutton Co. in 1981. It is an experimental New Wave science fiction novel about a futures researcher in California.
Portal (1986)
Portal is a text-driven adventure computer game published for the Amiga in 1986 by Activision. Ports to the Commodore 64, Apple II, MS-DOS, and Macintosh were released later. A version for the Atari ST was announced and developed but never released.
The user plays as an unnamed astronaut who returns from a failed 100-year voyage, only to find that humans have disappeared from Earth. The astronaut discovers a barely functional computer connected to a storytelling mainframe called Homer. Homer tells stories of the past, but much of his memory is missing. With the computer and Homer's help, the player attempts to piece together a narrative and discover what happened to the human race.
Swigart later published a hardcover novel building upon the story, Portal: A Dataspace Retrieval (1988).
In April 2012, Subliminal Games launched a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign to recreate Portal as a modern third-person adventure game. The project was cancelled in June 2012 after falling short of the funding target.
Awards and nominations
Bibliography
Novels
- Little America (1977). Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
- A.K.A./A Cosmic Fable (1978). Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
- Nominated for BSFA Best Novel Award, 1979
- The Time Trip (1979). Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
- The Book of Revelations (1981) Boston: E. P. Dutton.
- Vector (1986) New York: St. Martin's Press.
- Portal: A Dataspace Retrieval (1988) New York: St. Martin's Press.
- First published as interactive software Portal by Activision (1986, 1987)
- Toxin (1989) New York: St Martin's Press.
- Venom (1991) New York: St Martin's Press.
- Xibalbá Gate: A Novel of the Ancient Maya (2005) Lanham: AltaMira Press.
- Stone Mirror: A Novel of the Neolithic (2007) Walnut Creek: Routledge.
- The White Pig (2007) Nel Mezzo Della Vita Press.
- The Delphi Agenda (2013) BooksBNimble.
- Tablet of Destinies (2016) BooksBNimble.
- Mixed Harvest (2019) Berghahn Books.
- Winner of Nautilus Gold Award in the Multicultural and Indigenous category, 2019
Short fiction
- âÂÂIn the Net of Life and Timeâ (1987, in Fantasy Book)
- âÂÂDown Timeâ (Fall 1987, in New England Review)
- âÂÂThe Glitchâ (Winter 1992, in Fiction)
- âÂÂDispersionâ (2006, in Electronic Book Review)
- âÂÂSeekingâ (2007, in Electronic Book Review)
- âÂÂWaterâ (2019, in the Fictional Café)
- âÂÂMineâ (Spring 2020, in Jet Fuel Review)
- âÂÂThe Factoryâ (Spring 2020, in Deadly Writers Patrol)
- âÂÂSigridâ (2020, in Sublunary Review)
- "Disappointment" (Winter 2021, in Stonecoast Review)
- "Floater" (Spring 2021, in South Carolina Review)
- "The Memory of Charles Babbage" (Spring 2021, in mojo)
- "A Kind Word Alone" (Summer 2021, in The Nonconformist)
- Republished in print edition (2022, in The Nonconformist #1)
Poetry
- âÂÂThe Sin of Sevenâ (1973, in Poetry #112)
- "Retroactive Debridementâ (1975, in Poetry #126)
- "Still Livesâ (1975, in Poetry #126)
- âÂÂOn Reading the Norton Anthology of Poetryâ (1971, in Epoch #20)
- âÂÂThe Relationship Between a Police Report and a Poemâ (1971âÂÂ72, in Poetry Northwest #12.4)
- âÂÂGod=3d Law of Thermodynamicsâ (1971âÂÂ72, in Poetry Northwest #12.4)
- âÂÂUncle ToyâÂÂs Garlic Armchair Dieselâ (1972, in the Beloit Poetry Journal #22)
- âÂÂGalactophilia: According to Hoyleâ (1972, in the Beloit Poetry Journal #22)
- âÂÂMountain Stormâ (1972, in Choice: A Magazine of Poetry and Graphics #7/8)
- âÂÂTwo Shades of Blueâ (1972, in Choice: A Magazine of Poetry and Graphics #7/8)
- âÂÂA Regrettable But Necessary Sacrificeâ (1972, in Choice: A Magazine of Poetry and Graphics #7/8)
- âÂÂSome Saturday Afternoons in Lackawanna, New York, I see An Anonymous Coupleâ (1972, in Choice: A Magazine of Poetry and Graphics #7/8)
- Translations from modern Greek of C.P. Cavafy, âÂÂNeroâÂÂs Term,â âÂÂKing Demetrios,â âÂÂThe Retinue of Dionysus,â âÂÂOrophernesâ (1972, in Anteaus #7)
- âÂÂLove Poem for Janeâ (1972, in Rapport #2/3)
- âÂÂThe Wind Tunnelâ (1972, in Poetry Northwest #14.4)
- âÂÂFourteen Arms of the Dancing Godâ (1973, in Buffalo Spree)
- âÂÂEarâ (1973, in Buffalo Spree)
- âÂÂNight Sky Over Belsenâ (1973, in Buffalo Spree)
- âÂÂThe Bridgemaker Takes a Strollâ (1973, in The Reed #26)
- âÂÂRecipeâ (1973, in The Reed #26)
- âÂÂThe Executionâ (1973, in the New York Quarterly #15)
- âÂÂLittle Girl Lostâ (1974, in Poetry Northwest #15.1)
- âÂÂJousting at the Ballparkâ (1974, in The Reed)
- âÂÂThe President and the Four Swiss Cowsâ (1974, in The Reed)
- âÂÂThe Art of Compositionâ (1974, in the Atlantic Monthly)
- "Postcard from Knossosâ (Chelsea Review #33)
- âÂÂThe Tide Ebbs from the Airport Waiting Roomâ (Chelsea Review #33)
- âÂÂThe Telephoneâ (Chelsea Review #33)
- âÂÂDeath of an Astronomer,â âÂÂFlag,â âÂÂNote to the Morning Shift,â and âÂÂGlacial,â (1974, in Famous Writersâ Anthology)
- âÂÂPrayer to the God of Empty Spaces Yawningâ (1975, in Michigan Quarterly #14)
- âÂÂThe Gardenerâ (1975, in Michigan Quarterly #14 )
- âÂÂThe âÂÂIâ of the Poem Builds a Boxâ (1975, in Poetry Northwest #16.1)
- âÂÂConstruction Zoneâ (1975, in Masks #16)
- âÂÂUp the Creekâ (1975, in Masks #16)
- âÂÂBone Poemâ (1977, in Poetry Northwest #18.1 )
- âÂÂBilly the Kid Plays Squash with the President of General Motorsâ (1977, in Choice: A Magazine of Poetry and Graphics #10)
- âÂÂA Landscape House Hawks and Usâ (1977, in Choice: A Magazine of Poetry and Graphics #10)
- âÂÂThe Speakerâ (1977, in California State Poetry Quarterly #5)
- âÂÂVariations on a Portraitâ (1977, in California State Poetry Quarterly #5)
- âÂÂSestina: Interludeâ (1979, in the Buffalo Evening News)
- âÂÂEnkidu as Track Starâ (1979, in the Buffalo Evening News)
- âÂÂTelephone Sonnetâ (1988, in Poetry Northwest #29.1)
- âÂÂBedtimeâ (1988, in Poetry Northwest #29.1)
- âÂÂDirectionsâ (1994, in The Eastgate Quarterly Review of Hypertext #1.4 )
Anthologies and collections
- Women Poets of the World . Prentice Hall, 1983.
- Translations from Ono No Komachi
- âÂÂNo moon, no chance to meetâÂÂ
- âÂÂIf it were realâÂÂ
- Since IâÂÂve felt this painâÂÂ
- Coast Light: An Anthology. Coastlight Press, 1981.
- âÂÂGilgamesh In ChinatownâÂÂ
- The Art of Human-Computer Interface Design . Addison-Wesley, 1990.
- âÂÂThe WriterâÂÂs DesktopâÂÂ
- World Poetry: An Anthology of Verse from Antiquity to Our Time. W.W. Norton & Company, 2000.
- Translation from Pan Chao, âÂÂNeedle and ThreadâÂÂ
- An Outriders Anthology: Poetry in Buffalo 1969âÂÂ1979 and After . Outriders Poetry Project, 2013.
- âÂÂBilly The Kid Plays Squash with the President of General MotorsâÂÂ
Reviews, articles, and essays
- âÂÂTheocritusâ City Womenâ (1973, in the Bucknell Review #21)
- âÂÂComputer Generationsâ (1984, in West Magazine)
- âÂÂThe Rhythm of Rockâ (1984, in California Living)
- âÂÂClassics Re-Examined: The Time of Death and the Death of Time: Genji Sex and the Victorian Sensorium Lady Murasaki.â (1984, in the San Francisco Jung Institute Library Journal #5.2 )
- âÂÂA Look at WhatâÂÂs Aheadâ (1985, in MacWorld #2.4 )
- âÂÂTheyâÂÂre Playing Our Songâ (1986, in MacWorld #3.2 )
- âÂÂSexual Fantasy and the Literature of Despairâ (1982, in Spirales, translated into French)
- âÂÂComputer Narrativeâ (1987, in New England Review #10.1)
- âÂÂDigital Puppeteersâ (1991, in NewMedia Age #1.2)
- âÂÂSpaceship Warlock: Pushing the Edgeâ (1991, in NewMedia Age #1.5)
- âÂÂTecnotetimismo in Star Trek: Primo Contattoâ (1988, in Star Trek: Il cielo è il limite, ed. Franco La Polla, Lindau, )
- âÂÂSatisfying Ambiguityâ (2002, in Tamara: A Journal of Critical Post-Modern Organizational Science #1.4)
- âÂÂSatisfying Ambiguityâ (2004, in Electronic Book Review)
- âÂÂPast Futures, FutureâÂÂs Pastâ (2004, in Electronic Book Review )
- âÂÂNot Just a Riverâ (2006, in Electronic Book Review )
- âÂÂThe Rarest Tuscan Cheeseâ (Life in Italy, 2008)
- âÂÂAnomaliesâ (2011, in Electronic Book Review)
Nonfiction and translations
- Upsizing the Individual in the Downsized Organization (1994), with Robert Johansen. Boston: Addison-Wesley.
- La Bièvre (2005), by J-K Huysmans, translated by Rob Swigart. Paris: Editions Illouz/Rob Swigart.
- Published with original lithographs by Claire Illouz.
Computer games
Film and television
References