Awards & Winners

P. J. Plauger

Date of Birth 13-January-1944
Place of Birth Petersburg
(Grant County, West Virginia, United States of America)
Nationality United States of America
Profession Writer
Phillip James Plauger is an author and entrepreneur. He has written and co-written articles and books about programming style, software tools, and the C programming language. He founded Whitesmiths, the first company to sell a C compiler and Unix-like operating system. He has since been involved in C and C++ standardization and is now the president of Dinkumware. In January 2009 he became the convener of the ISO C++ standards committee, but in October 2009 he tendered his resignation after failing to pass a resolution to stop processing any new features in order to facilitate the promised shipping date for the C++0x standard. Plauger has been credited with inventing pair programming while leading Whitesmiths Ltd. Plauger wrote a science fiction short story, "Child of All Ages", first published in Analog in the March 1975 issue, whose protagonist was granted immortality before attaining puberty and finds that being a child who never grows up is far removed from an idyllic Peter Pan-like existence. The story was nominated for a Nebula Award in 1975 and a Hugo Award in 1976. He won the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in 1975—notably beating John Varley for the award—and subsequently sold a story to The Last Dangerous Visions.

Awards by P. J. Plauger

Check all the awards nominated and won by P. J. Plauger.

1977


Nominations 1977 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Locus Award for Best Short Story Con Artist

1976


Nominations 1976 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Locus Award for Best Short Story Child of All Ages
Hugo Award for Best Short Story Child of All Ages

1975


John W. Campbell Award for the Best New Writer

Nominations 1975 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Nebula Award for Best Short Story Child of All Ages