fiction.wikisort.org - Writer
Ian R. MacLeod (born 1956) is a British science fiction and fantasy writer.
British science fiction and fantasy writer
Not to be confused with Iain Macleod, the British politician.
He was born in Solihull near Birmingham. He studied law and worked as a civil servant before going freelance in early 1990s soon after he started publishing stories, attracting critical praise and awards nominations.
Writings
He is the author of seven novels, including The Light Ages and The House of Storms, which are set in an alternate universe nineteenth century England, where aether, a substance that can be controlled by the mind, has ossified English society into guilds and has retarded technological progress. His other novels and short stories feature a mixture of fantastic, historical, and futuristic elements, combined with a concern for character and vividly descriptive writing. His novel Song of Time, told from a viewpoint of a classical violinist and set in the near future, won the Arthur C. Clarke Award for Year's Best SF Novel,[1] and his novel Wake up and Dream, set in an alternative 1940s Los Angeles, won Sidewise Award for Best Alternative History.[2] His novel Red Snow follows the path of a vampire across several centuries in Europe and the United States.
MacLeod's novella "The Summer Isles" (Asimov's Science Fiction October/November 1998) won the Sidewise Award for Alternate History, Short Form and the World Fantasy Award for Best Novella.[3] It is an alternate history where Britain, having been defeated in the World War I, develops its own form of fascism in 1930s. The narrator is a closeted homosexual Oxford historian who had known the leader in youth. It was written as a novel, which however could not sell; MacLeod published the cut version, with the full-length version only being published in a limited edition in 2005. This novel version also won the Sidewise Award for Alternate History, Long Form, thus becoming the only story to win the same award twice in two differing formats, novel and novella.
MacLeod won the World Fantasy Award again in for his 2000 novelette "The Chop Girl".[3] His shorter fiction has been collected in Voyages by Starlight, Breathmoss and Other Exhalations, Past Magic, Journeys, and the Frost on Glass.
MacLeod was Guest of Honour at the 38th Novacon, held in November 2008.
Bibliography
Novels
- The great wheel. Harcourt. 1997.[4]
- The Light Ages (Earthlight imprint of Simon & Schuster, 2003) (2004 nomination for World Fantasy Award)
- The House of Storms (Simon & Schuster, 2005)
- The Summer Isles (Aio Publishing, 2005) (2005 Sidewise Award) Expanded version of the original 1998 novella, which also won the award.
- Song of Time (PS Publishing, 2008) (2009 Arthur C. Clarke Award, 2009 John W. Campbell Memorial Award)
- Wake Up and Dream (PS Publishing, 2011) (2011 Sidewise Award)
- Red Snow (2017, PS Publishing)
Short fiction
- Collections
- Voyages by Starlight (1996, Arkham House)
- Breathmoss and Other Exhalations (2004, Golden Gryphon Press)
- Past Magic (2006, PS Publishing)
- Journeys (2010, Subterranean Press)
- Snodgrass and Other Illusions: The Best Short Stories of Ian R. MacLeod (Open Road Media, 2013)
- Frost on Glass (2015, PS Publishing)
- Everywhere (JABberwocky, ebook collection volume 1. 2019)
- Nowhere (JABberwocky, ebook collection volume 2. 2019)
- Stories[5]
Title |
Year |
First published |
Reprinted/collected |
Notes |
The discovered country |
2013 |
"The discovered country". Asimov's Science Fiction. 37 (9): 10–28. September 2013. |
|
Novelette |
Entangled |
2013 |
"Entangled". Asimov's Science Fiction. 37 (12): 90–106. December 2013. |
|
Novelette |
The Réparateur of Strasbourg |
2013 |
The Réparateur of Strasbourg. PS Publishing. 2013. |
|
Chapbook |
References
External links
Interviews
World Fantasy Award—Novella |
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1982–2000 | |
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2001–present | |
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World Fantasy Award—Short Fiction |
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1975–2000 |
- Pages from a Young Girl's Journal by Robert Aickman (1975)
- Belsen Express by Fritz Leiber (1976)
- There's a Long, Long Trail A-Winding by Russell Kirk (1977)
- The Chimney by Ramsey Campbell (1978)
- Naples by Avram Davidson (1979)
- Mackintosh Willy by Ramsey Campbell (1980, tie)
- The Woman Who Loved the Moon by Elizabeth A. Lynn (1980, tie)
- The Ugly Chickens by Howard Waldrop (1981)
- The Dark Country by Dennis Etchison (1982, tie)
- Do the Dead Sing? by Stephen King (1982, tie)
- The Gorgon by Tanith Lee (1983)
- Elle Est Trois, (La Mort) by Tanith Lee (1984)
- The Bones Wizard by Alan Ryan (1985, tie)
- Still Life with Scorpion by Scott Baker (1985, tie)
- Paper Dragons by James Blaylock (1986)
- Red Light by David J. Schow (1987)
- Friend's Best Man by Jonathan Carroll (1988)
- Winter Solstice, Camelot Station by John M. Ford (1989)
- The Illusionist by Steven Millhauser (1990)
- A Midsummer Night's Dream by Neil Gaiman and Charles Vess (1991)
- The Somewhere Doors by Fred Chappell (1992)
- Graves by Joe Haldeman (1993, tie)
- This Year's Class Picture by Dan Simmons (1993, tie)
- The Lodger by Fred Chappell (1994)
- The Man in the Black Suit by Stephen King (1995)
- The Grass Princess by Gwyneth (1996)
- Thirteen Phantasms by James Blaylock (1997)
- Dust Motes by P. D. Cacek (1998)
- The Specialist's Hat by Kelly Link (1999)
- The Chop Girl by Ian R. MacLeod (2000)
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2001–present | |
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Authority control  |
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General | |
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National libraries | |
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Other |
- SUDOC (France)
- Trove (Australia)
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