Later his husband, Bosnian architect Tarik Dreca, was convicted for his murder.
Tarik had apparently staged the death to make it look like a suicide.
[2] Tarik's defense attorney theorized that Harland had recreated a plot from his book The Hand That Takes,[3] which has a man commit suicide and set up his partner, but the court rejected the idea.
[5] Four times, Harland won the King Kong Award, the major Dutch award for short science fiction, fantasy or horror stories, for "Fuga in frictieloos porcelein" (1984), "De wintertuin" (1990), "Retrometheus" (1992), and "Onkruid en stenen" (1995).
After his death the King Kong Award was renamed the Paul Harland Prize in his honor.