Authors who write themselves into the book

Philip José Farmer did in several of his novels, I believe. In his Riverworld series, one of his characters is Peter Jairus Frigate, a science fiction writer. Farmer not only was a sci-fi/fantasy writer, but he was also from Peoria, Illinois, and if I recall correctly Frigate was from the Midwest US as well. And in his World of Tiers series, a principal character is Paul Janus Finnegan.

See the OP

double post

Here’s an obscure one: in the unfinished story The Notion Club Papers by J.R.R. Tolkien, a minor character is the grumpy Professor Rashbold, an expert in the Anglo-Saxon language. Tolkien was of course a scholar of the Anglo-Saxon language and elsewhere he noted that his name is derived from the German “Tollkiehn” meaning “foolhardy”.

There was an issue of * Fantastic Four* where they meet God, who is Jack Kirby, in 2004.

Martin Amis wrote himself into Money: A Suicide Note.

What do others think of Martin Amis? I loved his Time’s Arrow: or The Nature of the Offence; so I bought several others of his novels of which I found only Money tolerable. (I see that Money appears on a List of the 100 Best Novels Ever Written in English.)

(I think he wrote himself into London Fields also, possibly with a different name but keeping the initials M.A.)

George R.R. Martin has written himself into A Song of Ice and Fire as Sam Tarley.

what names did they gives themselves?

Yes, but since Jack Kirby died in 1994, I don’t think he wrote himself into that issue.

Unless…:eek:

It’s probably been close to 20 years since I’ve read this, but Wikipedia says Niven was Nat Reynolds, and Pournelle was Wade Curtis. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Footfall

In the late 80s, Grant Morrison wrote himself into the DC comic Animal Man. The series was pretty meta before meta was a thing and Morrison ran the character through a wringer before wrapping it all up at the end.

In movies, writer Charles Kauffman made himself the lead character of * Adaptation*

Jack Kerouac? He and his buddies were all in there and apparently he slipped up a couple of times and put “Neal” instead of “Dean” (That would be Dean Moriarty as a pseud for Neal Cassidy)

Yes, and included a thinly-disguised Heinlein under another name, too, advising the President on how best to handle an alien invasion.

In one of his Spenser books, I forget which one, Robert B. Parker had the Boston PI in a bar, sitting at a wooden table on which someone had carved, “RBP [hearts] JHP,” the initials of the author and his wife, Joan Hall Parker.

in the original transformers marvel comic the"robot master" who claimed to be the master of the transformers on tv (for a publicity stunt) in a small arc was a fired marvel comics freelance writer

And yes Megatron used him for no good and it ended badly and the 'bots had to save him

Robert Anton Wilson wrote himself into some of his novels.