User:Hayford Peirce
Today is Thursday, September 26, 2024
- See also TI:Hayford Peirce for Topic Informant items.
- See also Hayford Peirce for a Citizendium article about me
- See also Matt Helm/Signed Articles/Hayford Peirce
I was born in Bangor, Maine, in 1942, and attended Exeter, Stanford, and Harvard. I graduated from Harvard in 1964 as a member of the class of 1963, having majored in English. I then moved to Tahiti, where I lived for 23 years, working as a businessman in various companies that I helped found and as a minor writer of science fiction and mystery stories. In 1988 I returned to the States to live and have been in Tucson, Arizona, since 1994.
My particular interests are old-time tennis (up until about the start of the Open Era in 1968), some branches of mystery stories and science fiction, food and cooking, and an eclectic selection of baseball players and writers and personalities such as Johnny Mize, Evelyn Waugh, John O'Hara, and S.J. Perelman. I originated and wrote a number of lengthy Wikipedia articles, particularly those about Bill Tilden and Pancho Gonzales, as well as many other old-time tennis players and British mystery writers such as Michael Gilbert.
Articles that I've created in Citizendium
- Baseball players
- Biographies
{{rpl|Larry Sanger}} gives:
- Larry Sanger: American former philosophy professor who co-founded Wikipedia and founded Citizendium as an alternative (born 1968). [e]
{{r|George Jones}} gives:
- George Jones [r]: An iconic American country singer, born in Texas on September 12, 1931, who is known for the heart-felt emotion conveyed by his phrasing and vocalizations and who is frequently called "the greatest living country singer." [e]
*{{pl|Hayford Peirce}} gives:
- Food and drink
- Catalog of cocktails — an expanding list
- Catalog of exotic foods — an expanding list
- Catalog of famous restaurants — an expanding list
- Catalog of French cuisine — an expanding list
- Catalog of popular foods — an expanding list
- Bearnaise sauce
- Blanquette de veau
- Bolognese sauce
- Camembert
- Confit of duck
- Don the Beachcomber
- French fries
- Hamburger
- Hollandaise
- Lawry's
- Mai tai
- Manhattan (cocktail)
- Martini
- Mayonnaise
- Navy Grog
- Osso buco
- Po'e
- Pommes Anna
- Rhubarb pie
- Tagliatelle
- Tartiflette
- Vitello tonnato
- Zombie
- Mystery novels
- The Interlopers, featuring Matt Helm
- Mystery writers
- Catalog of prominent mystery writers
- David M. Alexander
- Manning Coles, creator of:
- Michael Gilbert, creator of:
- Donald Hamilton, creator of:
- Collin Wilcox, creator of:
- Tennis, particularly old-time players
Pictures that I've uploaded in Citizendium
- Tennis
- Food and drink
- Basic White Bread
- Bearnaise Sauce
- Blanquette de Veau
- Bolognese sauce — all photos, including those in the Bolognese sauce/Gallery
- Confit of duck — all photos, including those in the Confit of duck/Gallery
- Don the Beachcomber Menu, Front Cover
- Don the Beachcomber Menu, Back Cover
- Dry Martini Ingredients
- French Fries and a Burger
- French Fries Cooking
- French Fries Draining
- 4th of July Hamburgers and Corn
- Lobsters
- Lyonnaise potatoes — all photos, including those in the Lyonnaise potatoes/Gallery
- Mai tai
- Manhattan Cocktail Ingredients
- Mayonnaise ingredients
- Osso buco — all photos, including those in the Osso buco/Gallery
- Pommes Anna
- Rhubarb Pie
- Tagliatelle — all photos, including those in the Tagliatelle/Gallery
- Tartiflette in Preparation
- Tartiflette with Grilled Ham
- Vitello Tonnato #1
- Vitello Tonnato #2
- Personalities
Books that I've written
Science Fiction
- Napoleon Disentimed (1987), Tor, ISBN 1-58715-267-3
- The Thirteenth Majestral (1989), Tor, also reissued as Dinosaur Park (1994) ISBN 0-8125-4892-2 for both books
- Phylum Monsters (1989), Tor, ISBN 0-8125-4894-9
- Chap Foey Rider, Capitalist to the Stars (2000)
- Jonathan White, Stockbroker in Orbit (2001)
- The Burr in the Garden of Eden (2001)
- Sam Fearon: Time Scanner (2001)
- Flickerman (2001)
- The Spark of Life (2001)
- Black Hole Planet (2003)
- Aliens (2003)
- With a Bang, and Other Forbidden Delights (2005)
- The 13th Death of Yuri Gellaski (2005)
Mysteries and Spy Thrillers
- Blood on the Hibiscus|Trouble in Tahiti: Blood on the Hibiscus (2000)
- Trouble in Tahiti: P.I. Joe Caneili, Discrétion Assurée (2000)
- Trouble in Tahiti: Commissaire Tama, Chief of Police (2000)
- Trouble in Tahiti: The Gauguin Murders (2001)
- The Bel Air Blitz (2002)
Internet article
- Some Thoughts on Matt Helm's Birthday, an analysis of when Donald Hamilton's fictional character, the counter-agent and assassin Matt Helm, was actually born. It can be found at [1]
Trivia
Chap Foey Rider, the Anglo-Chinese protagonist of one of my science-fiction series, is an anagram of Hayford Peirce. The first story in the series was originally written as a joke letter to the editor of Analog magazine.
Release
I release all my contributions to Citizendium, including those texts which I originally wrote for Wikipedia, under the Creative Commons CC-by-SA 2.5 license.
World No.1 Tennis player template
User:Hayford Peirce/my templates
Photo upload template
Title / Description
|
Please edit this page and add a title/description. |
---|---|
Author(s)
|
Please edit this page and add the real name(s) of the author(s). |
Copyright holder
|
Please edit this page and add the name of the copyright holder, or note why this is not applicable. |
Source
|
Please edit this page and add the source of this media, or note that it is unknown. |
Date created
|
Please edit this page and add the date of creation, or an estimate thereof. |
Country of first publication
|
Please edit this page and add the country of first publication, or note that it is unknown. |
Notes
|
You can edit this page and add notes here which may be useful to people who wish to re-use this media. |
Other versions
|
If there are other versions of this media on CZ, please list them here. |
Using this image on CZ
|
| , then copy the code below to add this image to a Citizendium article, changing the size, alignment, and caption as necessary.
Please send email to manager A T citizendium.org .
Licensing/Copyright status
Email form for Time Magazine permissions
http://www.time.com/time/reprints/covers
I suggest the following for this section:
- PUBLICATION INFORMATION
- Title:
- Print Run: Website
- Expected publish date: Upon receipt of permission
- Cost of publication: Free. Citizendium is a non-profit encyclopedia project without fundng to pay permission fees.
Also, this is a one-cover-per-request form.
A place to find public food photos
Speedy delete request template
- Template:Spexdydelete change the X to e
{{Speedydelete}} template can be used in the following format {{speedydelete|REASON|~~~}}
Template for "Famous tennis players"
The very top line may or may not be needed, depending on where in the list you're putting this stuff
Name | Biographical | Technique | Record | |||||||
Event | S | D | MD | Wins | ||||||
|
Nationality: |
handed Class: |
Grand Slam | |||||||
Davis Cup | teams | wins | ||||||||
World #1 player | ||||||||||
National #1 player | ||||||||||
Template for a recipe in a Subpage - Go to Edit to copy it
{recipe Add one squiggle to the left, then delete this text |align= center |name= put name here |howmany= 6-8 |what= servings |notes= Start writing notes here
|ingredients=*list ingredients, with a star in front of each
|preparation=#list the steps, with a Number Sign in front of each
|categories= Add categories, such as French cuisine, Sauces |related= Add related articles, such as Bearnaise for Hollandaise }}
Friggin' line break thingee
Why can't you remember this, you stupid idiot!?
<br/>
Neutrality policy
- "We should (in most if not all cases) present various competing views in proportion to their representation among experts on the subject, or among the concerned parties."
- "Expert knowledge and opinion receives top billing and the most extensive exposition."
- "The task is to represent the majority (scientific) view as the majority view and the minority (sometimes pseudoscientific) view as the minority view."
Wiped out again
...in an edit conflict. Perhaps that's an argument for not keeping conversations confined to one page. After all, these days it's easy to keep two windows open. Anyway, yes, I find it hard to imagine how anyone could convincingly argue against your K-Trio examples. Did some jolly impartialist come along and quote statistics, as just happened to me: '19-5 isn't exactly conclusive'? And that in response, I notice, to someone else's figure of 9-1. Still only 1000-0 will do, it seems. Any idiots out there, their views must be respected. Ro Thorpe 20:44, 9 April 2010 (UTC)