About
the Editors
Delia
Sherman considers
herself a "recovering academic." She got her PhD in Renaissance
Studies and taught at Boston University and Northeastern, during which
time she wrote her first novel, Through a Brazen Mirror. She
left the academy in 1993 to write and edit full time, co-editing anthologies
of science fiction and fantasy with Terri Windling and Ellen Kushner
and serving as a consulting editor at Tor Books. Her other adult novels
are The Porcelain Dove and The Fall of the Kings,
written with partner Ellen Kushner. In 2006, Viking published her first
novel for young readers, Changeling. Her short fiction has
appeared most recently in The Faery Reel, Salon Fantastique, The
Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Coyote Road, and The
Year’s Best Fantasy & Horror. She satisfies her continuing
desire to teach by serving as an instructor at various writing workshops
in the U.S. and Europe, including Odyssey, Wiscon, and Clarion. A founding
member of the Interstitial Arts Foundation, she lives in New York City.
Theodora
Goss was born in Hungary and spent her childhood in various
European countries before her family moved to the United States. Although
she grew up on the classics of English literature, her writing has been
influenced by an Eastern European literary tradition in which the boundaries
between realism and the fantastic are often ambiguous. She is completing
a PhD in English literature at Boston University, where she teaches
classes on fantasy and the gothic. Her short story collection, In
the Forest of Forgetting, was published in 2006 by Prime Books.
She lives in Boston with her husband Kendrick and daughter Ophelia.
About the Contributors
Karen Jordan Allen spent
her mostly happy childhood in rural Indiana. She now lives in Maine
with her husband and daughter, a cat, and a rabbit. Her fiction has
appeared in a number of magazines and anthologies, including Century,
A Nightmare’s Dozen, Bruce Coville’s Strange Worlds, Black
Gate, First Heroes: New Tales of the Bronze Age, and Asimov’s
Science Fiction.
Christopher Barzak spent
two years in Japan, teaching English in a suburb of Tokyo, and returned
home to Youngstown, Ohio last year. His first novel, One for Sorrow,
was published by Bantam Books in August 2007.
K. Tempest Bradford is
an Ohio native and alumna of the Clarion West and Online Writing Workshops.
She currently lives in New York City (at the very tip-top with the ravens).
She spends most of her time trying to find a place with free tea and
Internet where she can write.
Matthew Cheney’s
work has appeared in One Story, Locus, Web Conjunctions, Rain Taxi,
Strange Horizons, and elsewhere. His weblog, The
Mumpsimus, was nominated for a World Fantasy Award in 2005, and
he is the series editor for the annual Best American Fantasy anthology
from Prime Books.
Michael J. DeLuca would
like to tell you he lives in a cave in Western MA, pronouncing false
prophecy in exchange for such essential sustenance as food, water and
wireless internet. Unfortunately such caves are few and far between,
and often occupied by fearsome squatters, so he advises that you not
go looking for him and visit his website
instead.
Adrián Ferrero
was born in La Plata (República Argentina) and attended the Universidad
Nacional de La Plata, where he is currently doing his PhD. He has published
academic articles in compiled editions and journals in his country,
the U.S.A., France, Germany, and Spain. Fiction publications include
Verse, a collection of short stories, and Cantares,
a book of poetry. He is also co-editor of the digital magazine on creative
writing Diagonautas.
Colin Greenland is
English: born in Dover, educated at Oxford, with homes in Cambridge
and the Peak District. His books include Finding Helen and
the space opera trilogy that began with the multi-award winning Take
Back Plenty. He lives with Susanna Clarke, author of Jonathan
Strange and Mr Norrell.
Csilla Kleinheincz is
a Hungarian-Vietnamese fantasy writer living in Erkel, Hungary. Besides
translating classics of fantasy, such as Peter S. Beagle’s works,
she works as an editor at Delta Vision, a major Hungarian fantasy publisher.
Her first novel, published in 2005, and most of her short stories are
part of Hungarian slipstream literature.
Joy
Marchand lives in a lopsided, historic rowhouse in Salem,
Massachusetts. In the last two years she’s shifted her focus from
short stories to longer works, and she’s currently writing a series
of linked urban legends for her interstitial novel-within-a-novel set
in the Chihuahuan Desert of West Texas. .
Holly Phillips is
the author of the award-winning story collection In the Palace of
Repose. She lives in the mountains of western Canada.
Rachel Pollack is
the author of 30 books of fiction and non-fiction, including the award-winning
novels Unquenchable Fire and Godmother Night. She
is also a poet and a visual artist, creator of the Shining Tribe Tarot
deck. She lives online and
offline in New York’s Hudson Valley.
Veronica Schanoes is
a writer and a scholar with a particular interest in fairy tales and
genre theory. Her work has appeared in Lady Churchill’s Rosebud
Wristlet, Trunk Stories, Endicott Studio, and Jabberwocky.
Léa Silhol was
born in Africa and grew up in Europe, but considers herself a “citizen
of the world.” She is considered one of the leading writers in
fantasy in the French language, with four short stories collections
and a novel, La Sève et le Givre, which won the Fantasy
Merlin Award in 2003.
Jon Singer grew
up in Brooklyn, NY, wanting to be a scientist. That didn’t work
out, but he is now semi-officially a Mad Scientist, which may even be
better. You can find some of his work here.
Vandana Singh is
an Indian speculative fiction writer born and raised in New Delhi. She
lives in the Boston area, where she also teaches college physics and
has published a children’s book: Younguncle Comes to Town
(Viking 2006).
Anna Tambour currently
lives in the Australian bush with a large family of other species, including
one man. Her collection, Monterra’s Deliciosa & Other
Tales &, and her novel, Spotted Lily, are Locus
Recommended Reading List selections. Her website is Anna
Tambour and Others and she blogs at medlarcomfits.blogspot.com.
Mikal Trimm has
sold works of speculative fiction and poetry to a number of venues in
the past few years. Recent or upcoming stories may be found in Weird
Tales, Black Gate, Postscripts, Polyphony 6, and Shadowed Realms.
He maintains a web presence (for no apparent reason) here.
Catherynne
M. Valente is the author of the Orphan’s Tales series,
as well as The Labyrinth, Yume no Hon: The Book of Dreams,
The Grass-Cutting Sword, and four books of poetry, Music of
a Proto-Suicide, Apocrypha, The Descent of Inanna, and Oracles.
She has been nominated for the Rhysling and Spectrum Awards as well
as the Pushcart Prize. She was born in the Pacific Northwest and currently
lives in Ohio with her two dogs.
Leslie What is
a Nebula Award-winning author who writes short stories, essays, and
novels. Visit Whatworld.