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Steven Brust (Steven Karl Zoltán Brust) was born on 23 November, 1955 in Saint Paul, Minnesota, U.S., is an American fantasy and science fiction author (born 1955). Discover Steven Brust's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 68 years old?

Popular As Steven Karl Zoltán Brust
Occupation Writer musician poker player
Age 68 years old
Zodiac Sign Sagittarius
Born 23 November, 1955
Birthday 23 November
Birthplace Saint Paul, Minnesota, U.S.
Nationality United States

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 23 November. He is a member of famous Writer with the age 68 years old group.

Steven Brust Height, Weight & Measurements

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Steven Brust Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Steven Brust worth at the age of 68 years old? Steven Brust’s income source is mostly from being a successful Writer. He is from United States. We have estimated Steven Brust's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
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Source of Income Writer

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Timeline

1955

Steven Karl Zoltán Brust (born November 23, 1955) is an American fantasy and science fiction author of Hungarian descent.

He is best known for his series of novels about the assassin Vlad Taltos, one of a disdained minority group of humans living on a world called Dragaera.

1990

Brust also co-wrote songs on two albums recorded in the mid-1990s by the band Boiled in Lead.

The Vlad Taltos series, written as high fantasy with a science fiction underpinning, is set on a planet called Dragaera.

The events of the series take place in an Empire mostly inhabited and ruled by the Dragaerans, a genetically engineered humanoid species, having characteristics such as greatly extended lifespans and heights averaging about seven feet.

Referred to as "elfs" by some humans, they refer to themselves as "human".

The Dragaeran Empire controls a region that is "enclouded" by a perpetual overcast that blocks the sun from view.

Vlad Taltos is one of the human minority (known by Dragaerans as "Easterners"), which exists as a lower class in the Empire.

Vlad also practices the human art of witchcraft; "táltos" is Hungarian for a kind of supernatural person in folklore.

Though human, he is a citizen of the Empire because his social-climbing father bought a title in one of the less reputable of the 17 Dragaeran Great Houses.

The only Great House that sells memberships this way is, not coincidentally, also the one that maintains a criminal organization.

Vlad proves surprisingly successful in this organization.

Despite being a human and a criminal, he has a number of high-ranking Dragaeran friends and often gets caught up in important events.

Brust has written 16 published novels in the series, which is proposed to run to nineteen novels – one named for each of the Great Houses, one named for Vlad himself (Taltos), and a final novel which Brust has said will be titled The Final Contract.

The first three novels resemble private-eye detective stories, perhaps the closest being Robert B. Parker's Spenser series.

The later novels are more varied than the first three.

Though they read like fantasy, there are science-fictional explanations for some things.

Brust has also written another series set in Dragaera, the Khaavren Romances, set centuries before Vlad's time.

Since Dragaerans live for thousands of years, many characters appear in both series.

It is partly an homage to Alexandre Dumas père's novels about The Three Musketeers, and is five volumes long, following the pattern of Dumas' series.

The books are presented as historical novels written by Paarfi of Roundwood, a Dragaeran roughly contemporary with Vlad.

Paarfi's old-fashioned, elaborate, and highly verbose writing is explicitly based on Dumas', though with a dialogue style that is, at times, based on Tom Stoppard's wordgames in Rosencrantz & Guildenstern Are Dead (according to Pamela Dean's introduction to Five Hundred Years After).

The Baron of Magister Valley, an additional Paarfi novel, is modeled after Dumas's The Count of Monte Cristo.

The two series are finally brought together in the thirteenth novel in the Vlad series, Tiassa, which can also be viewed as the sixth novel in the Khaavren series.

Tiassa comprises what are in effect three related novellas, each told in a different style and connected by a common theme.

The first section reads like the first three novels in the series, with first-person narration by Vlad but including Khaavren's son, Piro; the second section has a different viewpoint character in each of its chapters; and the third section is narrated by Paarfi in the style of the earlier Khaavren Romances, with Khaavren as the viewpoint character and interacting with Vlad.

Most of Brust's short stories are set in shared universes.

These include Emma Bull's and Will Shetterly's Liavek, Robert Asprin's Thieves' World, Neil Gaiman's Sandman and Terri Windling's Borderland Series.

Brust was a founding member of a Minnesota-based writers' group called The Scribblies, which included Emma Bull, Pamela Dean, Will Shetterly, Nate Bucklin, Kara Dalkey, and Patricia Wrede.

He also was a founding member of the Pre-Joycean Fellowship.

He has rejected a distinction between science fiction and fantasy, stating that no belief in such a distinction can withstand an encounter with the writing of Roger Zelazny.

There is a certain amount of variation in the writing style amongst the Taltos novels, as well as between Brust's various series.

Brust uses a different narrative approach in almost every novel in the Taltos series.

Some of these approaches are more purely stylistic and have minor effects on the actual story-telling; some are profound and involve the point of view of characters whom the reader never expected to get to know so well.

Further, as the writing of the Taltos novels has spanned over three decades, they have been influenced by events in Brust's own life.

A fascination with the Mafia – subsequently brought into a somewhat shocking perspective by the murder of a friend – profoundly influenced his storylines, as did the breakup of his marriage.

The events and arguments of his books, especially Teckla, are acknowledged by Brust to be influenced by his lifelong interest in Marxist theory and practice.

Brust's parents were activists in the Workers League, the predecessor to the Socialist Equality Party, and he continues to identify as a "Trotskyist sympathizer," linking to the SEP-affiliated World Socialist Web Site on his personal website.

2013

His recent novels also include The Incrementalists (2013) and its sequel The Skill of Our Hands (2017), with co-author Skyler White.

As a drummer and singer-songwriter, Brust has recorded one solo album and two albums as a member of Cats Laughing.