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Eando Binder is a pen name used by two mid-20th-century science fiction authors, Earl Andrew Binder (1904–1965) and his brother Otto Binder (1911–1974). The name is derived from their first initials (E and O Binder).

Earl Andrew Binder
and Otto Binder
Born1904, 1911
United States
DiedUnited States
Pen nameEando Binder
LanguageEnglish
GenreScience fiction

Under the Eando name, the Binders wrote some published science fiction, including stories featuring a heroic robot named Adam Link. The first Adam Link story, published in 1939, is titled I, Robot.[citation needed]

By 1939, Otto had taken over all of the writing, leaving Earl to act as his literary agent.[1] Under his own name, Otto wrote for the Captain Marvel line of comic books published by Fawcett Comics (1941–1953) and the Superman line for Detective Comics (1948–1969), as well as numerous other publishers, with credited stories numbering over 4400.[2] The pen-name Eando Binder is also credited with over 160 comic book stories.[3]

Otto Binder was born in Chicago and moved to New York in 1936. He worked as a literary agent for Otis Adelbert Kline for a year, then became a free-lance writer. He sold his first story in 1930 and 129 more during the next decade. He lived in Englewood, New Jersey, from 1944 until he moved to Chestertown in 1968.[4] Otto Binder attended Crane College in Chicago and told Amazing Stories he was once "an amateur chemist with a home laboratory."[5]

He wrote comic-book scripts, novels, and magazine articles. His books included Riddles of Astronomy, Careers in Space, and Mankind, Child of the Stars.[4]

He was a member of the Journal of American Literature, the American Rocket Society, the American Interplanetary Society, the National Space Flight Association, and the Aerospace Writers Association.[4]

He died October 14, 1974, and was survived by his wife, Ione; a brother, Jack, and two sisters, Marie Hackstock of Chicago and Teresa Samuelson of Estes Park, Colorado.[4]

Earl Binder worked as a mechanical parts inspector for a "large industrial concern" during the 1930s.[5]


Novels



Bibliography


Binder's The Robot Aliens was the cover story in the February 1935 issue of Wonder Stories
Binder's The Robot Aliens was the cover story in the February 1935 issue of Wonder Stories
The Binder novelette Where Eternity Ends was cover-featured on the June 1939 issue of Science Fiction, illustrated by Frank R. Paul
The Binder novelette "Where Eternity Ends" was cover-featured on the June 1939 issue of Science Fiction, illustrated by Frank R. Paul

References


  1. Otto Binder, Autobiographical afterword to "I, Robot", from the January 1939 issue of Amazing Stories Archived August 29, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
  2. "GCD :: Story Search Results". www.comics.org. Retrieved July 10, 2018.
  3. "GCD :: Story Search Results".
  4. "Otto Binder, 63, Writer in Science-Fiction Field," The Record, Hackensack, New Jersey, October 16, 1974, image 48
  5. "Meet the Authors," Amazing Stories, June 1938, page 7



На других языках


- [en] Eando Binder

[ru] Эндо Биндер

Эндо Биндер (англ. Eando Binder) — литературный псевдоним, под которым получили известность Эрл Эндрю Биндер (англ. Earl Andrew Binder; 1904 (1904)—1965) и Отто Биндер (англ. Otto Binder; 1911 (1911)—1974) — американские писатели-фантасты. Эндо — производное от первых букв имён братьев.



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