
T. L. Sherred
27 August 1915 – 16 April 1985
10 works on record
Biography
Thomas L. Sherred (August 27, 1915 – April 16, 1985) was an American science fiction writer and the author of a slim body of science fiction, consisting of a collection of stories, a novel, and the beginning of a novel that was completed by another author after Sherred's death in 1985. Sherred's stories were often set in Detroit and featured the down-to-earth laborers with whom the author was acquainted through his career in the automotive field, where he advanced from tool rooms to technical writing and public relations. He published few works of fiction, but his novella "E for Effort" (1947), about a time viewer, was voted into the Science Fiction Hall of Fame.
Algis Budrys wrote, "With one story, 'E for Effort', in the ASF [Astounding Science Fiction] of the wartime Forties, he handed the field such a knock that many old plinths are still loose in their sockets." Sherred published his only novel, Alien Island, in 1970. A darkly humorous tale, Alien Island revolves around the devastating events that occur when aliens covertly inhabit Earth. Budrys found it disappointing, saying "It reads padded, uncoordinated, and unintentionally whimsical."
At his death in 1985, Sherred left an unfinished sequel to Alien Island, which author Lloyd Biggle, Jr. completed and published as Alien Main. His writing career ceased in 1971 after he suffered a mild stroke.
Works

Again, Dangerous Visions
1972

Isaac Asimov Presents The Great SF Stories 9 (1947)

Alien Island

Alien Main

The Golden Years of Science Fiction -- Fifth Series

Century of Great Short Science Fiction Novels

First Person, Peculiar
Phantom der Freiheit
Phantom der Freiheit
A century of great short science fiction novels
A century of great short science fiction novels

Science Fiction Hall of Fame--Volume Two B