Gary Wolf
In 1988, the Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation was awarded in connection with work tied to Gary K. Wolf's fiction — a marker that brought considerable attention to this American author and novelist.
Wolf was born on January 24, 1941, in Earlville, and grew up to become a citizen of the United States who writes in English. He studied at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign before building a career as a science fiction writer and novelist. Alongside his writing, he also works as an art collector, making that a notable part of his life outside the page.
His most recognized work is the novel Who Censored Roger Rabbit?, which became the basis for wider cultural attention and contributed to his receiving the Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation. Wolf continues to be identified as an American author working in science fiction, a field he has contributed to across several decades.
Quotes by Gary Wolf

Even as the Internet has revived hope of a universal library and Google seems to promise an answer to every query, books have remained a dark region in the universe of information. We want books to be as accessible and searchable as the Web. On the other hand, we still want them to be books.

The Internet's great promise is to make the world's information universally accessible and useful.

Craigslist is not only gigantic in scale and totally resistant to business cooperation, it is also mostly free.

Every day the choristers of the social web chirp their advice about openness and trust; craigslist follows none of it, and every day it grows.

To the small group of editors and designers who would launch Wired in January 1993, technology represented the future's best hope; but to the media, the tech boom was yesterday's story.

Steve Jobs has been right twice. The first time we got Apple. The second time we got NeXT. The Macintosh ruled. NeXT tanked. Still, Jobs was right both times.

Human attention is limited, and a massive number of newly browsable books from the long tail necessarily compete with the biggest best-sellers, just as cable siphons audience from the major networks, and just as the Web pulls viewers from TV.

As a science fiction fan, I had always assumed that when computers supplemented our intelligence, it would be because we outsourced some of our memory to them. We would ask questions, and our machines would give oracular - or supremely practical - replies.

Being a 911 operator means balancing seemingly contradictory skills. On one hand, operators have to be fanatically precise and well-organized. On the other, they must be able to establish rapport with panicky callers.
