John Barnes
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John Barnes

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My thirty-first commercially published novel came out in September 2013. I've published about 5 million words that I got paid for. So I'm an abundantly published very obscure writer. For readers who are wondering where to start with my work, the most common suggestions are Orbital Resonance, A Million Open Doors, Mother of Storms, Encounter with Tiber, or Tales of the Madman Underground. However, almost no one likes all five of those books--I write a wider range than most people read--so you might want to flip a few pages before buying. My most popular have been Directive 51, Mother of Storms, and the two collaborations with Buzz Aldrin. My 3 most popular series begin with A Million Open Doors, Directive 51, and Patton's Spaceship. Nearest my heart are probably One for the Morning Glory, Tales of the Madman Underground, and The Sky So Big and Black. And the most fun was had in writing Gaudeamus, Payback City, and Raise The Gipper! I used to teach in the Communication and Theatre program at Western State College. I got my PhD at Pitt in the early 90s, masters degrees at U of Montana in the mid 80s, bachelors at Washington University in the 70s; worked for Middle South Services in New Orleans in the early 80s. For a few years I did paid blogging mostly about the math of marketing analysis at TheCMOSite and All Analytics. More recently, I covered advanced technology, especially space, stories in the Government section of Information Week. If any of that is familiar to you, then yes, I am THAT John Barnes. I have also become aware of at least 72 Johns Barneses I am not. Among the more interesting ones I am not: 1. the Jamaican-born British footballer who scored that dramatic goal against Brazil 2. the occasional Marvel bit role who is the grandson of Captain America's sidekick 3. the Vietnam-era Medal of Honor winner 4&5. the lead singer for the Platters (and neither he nor I is the lead singer for the Nightcrawlers) 6.the Australian rules footballer 7. the former Red Sox pitcher 8. the Tory MP 9. the expert on Ada programming 10&11. the Cleveland-area member of the Ohio House of Representatives (though we're almost the same age and both grew up in northern Ohio) who is also not the former member of the Indiana House that ran for state senate in 2012 (one of them is a Democrat, one a Republican, and I'm a Socialist) 12. the former president of Boise State University 13. the film score composer 14. the longtime editor of The LaTrobe Journal 15. the biographer of Eva Peron 16. the manager of Panther Racing (though he and I share a tendency to come in second) 17. the British diplomat (who is not the Tory MP above) 18. the conservative Catholic cultural commentator (now there's an alliterative job) 19. the authority on Dante 20. the mycologist 21. the author of Marketing Judo (though I have an acute interest in both subjects) 22. the travel writer 23. the author of Titmice of the British Isles (originally published as Greater and Lesser Tits of England and Ireland, a title which I envy) 24. the guy who does some form of massage healing, mind/body stuff that I don't really understand at all 25. the corp-comm guy for BP (though I've taught and consulted on corp-comm) 26. the film historian, 27. the Pittsburgh-area gay rights activist (though we used to get each others' mail) 28. the guy who skipped Missoula, Montana, leaving behind a pile of bad checks, just before I moved there 29. the policeman in Gunnison, Colorado, the smallest town I've ever lived in, though he busted some of my students and I taught some of his arrestees 30. the wildlife cinematographer who made Love and Death on the Veldt and shot some of the Disney True Life Adventures ("Hortense the Presybterian Wombat" and the like) or 31. that guy that Ma said was my father. And despite perennial confusion by some science fiction fans and readers, I'm not Steve Barnes and he's not me, and we are definitely not related, though we enjoy seeing each other and occasionally corresponding (not often enough). I used to think I was the only paid consulting statistical semiotician for business and industry in the world, but I now know four of them, and can find websites for about ten more. Statistical semiotics is about the ways in which the characteristics of a population of signs come to constitute signs themselves. It has applications in marketing, poll analysis, and annoying the literary theorists who want to keep semiotics all to themselves and spend their time studying individual signs and the processes around them in very deep detail. It also shouldn't be confused with computational semiotics, which was about how software could parse complex signs to communicate with humans and other software. Just to make it a bit more confusing, both statistical and computational semiotics are being gradually subsumed into natural language processing, which in turn seems to be being absorbed into data science. Someday all universities will just have a Department of Stuff and that's what everyone will major in. Semiotics is pretty much what Louis Armstrong said about jazz, except jazz paid a lot better for him than semiotics does for me. If you're trying to place me in the semiosphere, I am a Peircean (the sign is three parts, ), a Lotmanian (art, culture, and mind are all populations of those tripartite signs) and a statistician (the mathematical structures and forms that can be found within those populations of signs are the source of meaning). Recently I've begun working on a certificate in Data Science for pretty much the same reason that the Scarecrow needed a diploma and the Lion needed a medal. I have been married three times, and divorced twice, and I believe that's quite enough in both categories. I'm a hobby cook, sometime theatre artist, and still going through the motions after many years in martial arts.
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