SAN FRANCISCO — Jack Vance, an award-winning mystery, fantasy and science-fiction author who wrote more than 60 books, has died. He was 96. Vance died Sunday evening at his home in Oakland, said his son John Vance II.
Jack Vance, whose legal name was John Holbrook, published most of his work as Jack Vance, but he also wrote 11 mysteries as John Holbrook Vance and three as Ellery Queen, as well as books under the pen names of Alan Wade, Peter Held, John van See and Jay Kavanse, according to the Jack Vance website, which is maintained by family and friends.
He collected a number of awards over the years, including Hugo Awards for “The Dragon Masters” in 1963, “The Last Castle” in 1967, and for his memoir “This is Me, Jack Vance!” in 2010. He was perhaps best known for his landmark “Dying Earth” series.
Born in San Francisco, Vance graduated from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1942. He worked for a while as an electrician in the naval shipyards at Pearl Harbor, leaving about a month before the Japanese attack there, according to the website.
Described as a “blue-collar guy” by his son, Vance worked over the years as a seaman, a surveyor and carpenter. His first book was published in 1945, but Vance did not establish himself as a writer until 20 years later. The Associated Press



