Life, the Universe, & Everything

Last updated
Life, the Universe, & Everything
Life, the Universe, & Everything symposium logo.png
StatusActive
Genre Fantasy, horror, science fiction
VenueProvo Marriott Hotel & Conference Center
Location(s) Provo, Utah
Country United States
Inaugurated1982
Attendance600–1700
Organized byUtah County Events, LLC
Website ltue.net

Life, the Universe, & Everything: The Marion K. "Doc" Smith Symposium on Science Fiction and Fantasy is an academic conference held annually since 1983 in Provo, Utah. It is the longest-running science fiction and fantasy convention in Utah, [1] and one of the largest and longest-running academic science fiction conferences. [2] [3] An annual proceedings volume, Deep Thoughts (named after the computer Deep Thought from The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy), publishes the academic papers and main addresses given at the event. The symposium was named, jokingly, after the Douglas Adams novel Life, the Universe and Everything . [4]

Contents

History

The roots of the Life, the Universe, & Everything (LTUE) and other science fiction efforts at Brigham Young University (BYU) began with a one-day symposium on science fiction held on January 20, 1976. [4] Four years later, Orson Scott Card gave a speech in 1980 at the university about morality in writing, which showed some of the students and faculty that a serious, academic forum for discussion of science fiction writing was a possibility at BYU, but there weren't enough students interested in trying to make things work at that time. [4]

This changed in February 1982 when Ben Bova was invited to speak at a university forum event. The English Department assigned Marion Smith, the professor whose name is now part of the title of the symposium, to take care of Bova while he wasn't speaking. He [5] and a handful of his writing students (including M. Shayne Bell) got together and held a discussion with Bova. This inspired those students to try to create something like that the following year, when they invited Card back to be the first guest of honor. [4] The first official symposium was held in 1983.

From 1982 through 2011, the symposium was held at BYU. In 2012, it was held at Utah Valley University, and in 2013, it moved to the Provo Marriott Hotel and Conference Center in downtown Provo.

The Leading Edge science fiction and fantasy magazine was started by these same students, [6] all members of a 1980 creative writing class at BYU.

Guests

This is a list of Guests of Honor (in bold) and notable Special Guests.

Year#DatesGuestsReferences
19831February 7–12 Orson Scott Card [4] [7]
19842February 16-18 James C. Christensen [4]
19853February 6–9 Elizabeth Boyer , C. J. Cherryh , Frederik Pohl [4]
19864February 5–8Orson Scott Card, Alan Dean Foster , Madeleine L'Engle [note 1] [4]
19875February 4–7Orson Scott Card, Stephen R. Donaldson , Jack Williamson , Julius Schwartz [4]
19886February 3–6 Algis Budrys , Tim Powers , Ray Bradbury, [note 2] Michael R. Collings, Michael Whelan [4]
19897February 1–4 Karen Anderson , Poul Anderson , David Brin , Octavia Butler [4]
19908February 7–10 Hal Clement , Robin McKinley , Mike Resnick , Tracy Hickman [4] [8]
19919February 6–9 Forrest J. Ackerman , Connie Willis [4] [9]
199210February 5–8 Jane Yolen [4]
199311February 10–13Kevin J. Anderson, Orson Scott Card, Barbara Hambly , Chris Heimerdinger, Rebecca Moesta [4] [10]
199412February 16–19 Robert L. Forward , Katherine Kurtz , Roger Zelazny [note 3] [4]
199513February 1–4 Lois McMaster Bujold , Patricia McKillip , Richard Garfield , Sam Longoria , Néné Thomas [4] [11]
199614January 31 -
February 3
Tracy Hickman, Dave Wolverton , Patricia C. Wrede , M. Shayne Bell, Michael R. Collings, Steve Jackson, Michaelene Pendleton, W. R. Thompson, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, [note 4] Dean Wesley Smith, [note 4] [12]
199715February 27 -
March 1
Orson Scott Card, Judith Moffett [13] [14]
199816March 12–14 Elizabeth Moon , Sherwood Smith , Dave Wolverton [15] [16]
199917 Kevin J. Anderson, Marty Brenneis, Michael Liebman, Rebecca Moesta [17] [18]
200018March 23–25David Howard, L.E. Modesitt, Jr. , Margaret Weis , M.K. Wren [19]
200119 Jeanne Cavelos , Tracy Hickman, Sam Longoria , Harry Turtledove [20]
200220February 21–23Marty Brenneis, Michael R. Collings, Larry Niven , Christian Ready [21]
200321February 13–15 Esther M. Friesner , Patricia C. Wrede , Orson Scott Card [22] [23]
200422February 19–21Matthew Candelaria, Michael R. Collings, Jim Conley, Robert J Defendi, Brian C. Hailes, Sam Longoria, Norman R. Peercy, William J. Widder [24] [25]
200523February 17–19Michael R. Collings, David Howard, L. E. Modesitt, Jr., Jerry Pournelle [26]
200624February 16–18Kevin J. Anderson, Michael R. Collings, Rebecca Moesta, Theresa Mather, Norman Peercy [27]
200725February 15–17 Julie E. Czerneda , Gloria Skurzynski , Howard Tayler , Stacy Whitman [28]
200826Orson Scott Card, Gail Carson Levine, Kevin Wasden
200927 Laura Hickman, Tracy Hickman
201028February 11–13Marty Brenneis, Nathan Hale , Brandon Sanderson [29]
201129February 17–19 James Dashner , Steven Keele [30]
201230 Mary Robinette Kowal, James A. Owen, Brandon Sanderson, Howard Tayler, Dan Wells
201331February 14–16 Megan Whalen Turner (literary), David Farland, Tracy and Laura Hickman, James A. Owen, Eric James Stone, Brad R. Torgersen, L.E. Modesitt, Jr. [31]
201432February 13–15 Orson Scott Card (literary), Michael R. Collings, Michaelbrent Collings, David Farland, Brian C. Hailes, L. E. Modesitt Jr., James A. Owen, Brandon Sanderson, Anne Sowards [32]
201533February 12–14 Toni Weisskopf (editor), Steven L. Peck, Eric G. Swedin, Michaelbrent Collings, Maxwell Alexander Drake, James Ganiere, Tracy Hickman, L.E. Modesitt, Jr., James A. Owen, Dan Wells [33]
201634February 11–13 Kevin J. Anderson (literary), Shannon Hale (literary), Rebecca Moesta, Brandon Sanderson, Howard Tayler, Dan Wells, Stacy Whitman, Michelle Witte [34]
201735February 16–18 Beth Meacham (editor), Dan Wells (literary), Alan Bahr, Susan Chang, Michaelbrent Collings, M. Todd Gallowglas, David Powers King, Lisa Mangum, Dennis Packard, Charlie Pulsipher [35]
201836February 15–17 Todd McCaffrey (literary), Jo Walton (literary, fandom), Alan Bahr, Susan Chang, Myke Cole, Larry Correia, Jessica Douglas, David Farland [36]
201937February 14–16 Kelly Barnhill (literary), Brett Helquist (artist), Brian C. Hailes, Charlie N. Holmberg, Matthew J. Kirby, Dr. Nik Rao, Brennan Smith, Eric D. Snider, Stacy L. Whitman [37]
202038February 13–15Bobby Cody (actor), Howard Lyon (artist), Brad R. Torgersen (literary), Kevin J. Anderson, Larry Correia, Devon Dorrity, Natasha Ence, Diana Pavlac Glyer, Megan Lloyd, Logan Long [38]
202139February 11–13Kaitlund Zupanic (artist), Melinda M. Snodgrass (screenplays), Alaya Dawn Johnson (literary), Michaelbrent Collings, Tom Durham, Ravyn Evermore, Jessica Day George, Kristy S. Gilbert, Troy Lambert, Julie Wright [39]
202240February 17–19 Jody Lynn Nye (writing), Megan Lloyd (theater & media arts), Brian C. Hailes (artist) [40]
202341February 16–18 Phil Foglio , Nina Kiriki Hoffman , Jess Smart Smiley, Brandon Mull (toastmaster), Blake Casselman, Jessica Day George, Michael F. Haspil, Aaron Johnston, M. A. Nichols, Lehua Parker, and Talysa Sainz. [41]
202442February 15–17Aaron Johnston, Rebecca Moesta , Kaela Rivera, Michael F. Haspil (toastmaster), Kevin J. Anderson, Wulf Moon, Robert Hatch.

Explanatory notes

  1. L'Engle was invited as a guest to the symposium, but came later in the spring.
  2. Bradbury was invited as a guest to the symposium, but came later in the spring.
  3. This was the last major public appearance of Zelazny before he died in 1995.
  4. 1 2 Kristine Kathryn Rusch and Dean Wesley Smith put on the Kris & Dean Show, a writing workshop, as a fundraiser for the symposium on January 5–6. They did not attend the symposium itself.

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