Brian A. Dixon
American author, primarily of short fiction / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Brian A. Dixon (born April 19, 1980) is an American author, cultural studies scholar, and media critic. His first published short story, "The McMillen Golf Penalty," was awarded the Shannon Searles Fiction Prize by Connecticut Review in 2002.[1] He has since published short fiction in a number of outlets in addition to work on plays and novels. Dixon served as the editor of Revelation magazine, an independent literary magazine about the apocalypse. Columbia & Britannia (2009), an alternate history anthology edited by Brian A. Dixon and Adam Chamberlain,[2] was nominated for the 2010 Sidewise Award for Alternate History.[3][4] Dixon and Chamberlain are also the editors of Back to Frank Black (2012), a volume of original essays and interviews celebrating Chris Carter's Millennium.[5][6]