- Author: Mark Adlard Author Record # 126
- Legal Name: Adlard, Peter Marcus
- Birthplace: Seaton Carew, Hartlepool, County Durham, England, UK
- Birthdate: 19 June 1932
- Language: English
- Webpages: SFE, Wikipedia-EN
Other views: | Summary Awards Chronological |
Novels
- Helt om! [Swedish] (1974)
- Interface (1971)
- Interface [French] (1975)
- Multiface (1975)
- Volteface (1972)
- Ash Shadow (1971)
- Friction Free (1968)
- Theophilus (1973)
- A Labour of Love (1974)
- British SF: A British View of an American View (1977)
- D. G. Compton and New Standards of Excellence (1973)
- Dreams of Empire (1979)
- Letter (Matrix 15) (1977)
- Letter (Riverside Quarterly, February 1972) (1972)
- Letter (Speculation 29) (1971)
- Letter (Speculation 30) (1972)
- Letter (Vector 65) (1973)
- Letter (Vector 85) (1978)
- Special Feature: Discussion Panel of SF Writers (1972) with James Blish and John Brunner and Kenneth Bulmer and David Gerrold and Anne McCaffrey and Christopher Priest
- Special Feature: Discussion Panel of SF Writers (1972) with James Blish and John Brunner and Ken Bulmer and David Gerrold and Anne McCaffrey and Christopher Priest
- The Infinity Box (Vector 80) (1977) with John Clute and Chris Evans and Brian Griffin and Chris Morgan and Brian Stableford and David Wingrove
- The Other Tradition of Science Fiction (1973)
- Twenty Years After Player Piano (1972)
- Billion Year Spree (1974) by Brian W. Aldiss
- Bruno Lipshitz and the Disciples of Dogma (1977) by John Robert King
- City of the Chasch (1977) by Jack Vance
- Echo Round His Bones (1971) by Thomas M. Disch
- Frankenstein Unbound (1975) by Brian W. Aldiss
- Nebula Maker (1977) by Olaf Stapledon
- New Worlds for Old: The Apocalyptic Imagination, Science Fiction, and American Literature (1975) by David Ketterer
- Ox (1979) by Piers Anthony
- Servants of the Wankh (1977) by Jack Vance
- The Dirdir (1977) by Jack Vance
- The Dream Millenium (1975) by James White
- The Man Who Folded Himself (1974) by David Gerrold
- The Pnume (1977) by Jack Vance
- To Open the Sky (1971) by Robert Silverberg
- Peter Tate: An Interview (1972) with Peter Tate