
She is currently working on a novel about an unhealthy relationship between a teenage stand-up comedian and a depressed math teacher. Her fiction has been published in Lumina and Anamesa, and her criticism has appeared on Electric Literature.

Her story, “Bracelet,“ received an Honorable Mention in Lumina’s 2013 Fiction Contest, judged by George Saunders. Leah Schneibach is a staff writer for Tor.com and the Fiction Editor of No Tokens journal. Metaphysics, or How Very Hard it Is to Un-Learn Freud. It’ll blow your mind (editorial interjection by HF). Her first novel, Too Like the Lightning, Book 1 of the four volume science fiction series Terra Ignota will come out in May. She teaches in the History Department at the University of Chicago. He blogs at The Sphinx Blog and is on Twitter at We Philhellenists.Īda Palmer is a historian, an author of science fiction and fantasy, and a composer.

Neville Morley is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Bristol and author of such significant works on classical antiquity as ‘Civil War and Succession Crisis in Roman Beekeeping’ and ‘Thucydides, History and Historicism in Wilhelm Roscher’. Intertextuality, Feminism, and Reinforced Arguments in Thessaly You can follow her on Twitter or on Identi.ca as her personal blog is Cogito, Ergo Sumana. She co-edited the 2009 speculative fiction anthology Thoughtcrime Experiments and frequently speaks and performs at WisCon and writes about tech and fiction at Geek Feminism. Sumana Harihareswara is a project management consultant and open source expert living in Queens, New York. Under the Lemon Tree, Distracted by Chores. She makes home-made vanilla, obsesses about game design, gives unsolicited advice, occasionally attempts to save the world, and blogs sporadically about these things at her Livejournal and Twitter. She lives in a mysterious manor house on the outskirts of Washington DC with her wife and their large, strange family. Winter Tide, her first novel, will be available from Macmillan’s Tor.com imprint in Spring 2017. Ruthanna Emrys’s short fiction–featuring Lovecraftian social justice activists, heroic xenopsychologists, and golem librarians (not all at once)–has appeared at Tor.com, Strange Horizons, and Analog. If you want to link to the entire seminar, all the posts are available here.Īlternatively, here’s a list by participant (with biographies for non-Crooked Timber regulars). Here are the posts in our seminar on Jo Walton’s books, _The Just City_ and _The Philosopher Kings_ (the third book, _Necessity_, comes out in June).
