N. Lee Wood
N. Lee Wood | |
---|---|
Born |
Connecticut, United States | November 15, 1955
Education | Open University |
Occupation | Writer |
Spouse(s) | Norman Spinrad (m. 1990–2005) |
N. Lee Wood (born November 15, 1955, in Hartford, Connecticut) is an American author. She has written science fiction, fantasy, crime and mainstream novels.
Biography
Wood holds a Master's degree in English literature from the Open University of Great Britain. She is an alumnus of the Clarion West Writers Workshop.
Her novel Looking for the Mahdi was nominated for the 1997 Arthur C. Clarke Award.
Personal life
Wood has travelled widely, and lived in the UK, France, Australia, and New Zealand.
Wood was married to author Norman Spinrad from 1990 to 2005.[1] She met her current partner, electrical engineer Greg Speer, in Dunedin. They currently live in Taranaki, New Zealand.
Bibliography
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Novels
- Faraday's Orphans (1995)
- Looking for the Mahdi[2] (1996)
- Bloodrights (1999)
- Master of None (2002)
- Redemption (as Lee Jackson, 2007)
Inspector Keen Dunliffe Series
- Kingdom of Lies (2005)
- Kingdom of Silence (2009)
Short fiction
- "Molly Haskowin" (1990)
- "Memories that Dance Like Dust in the Summer Heat" (1990)
- "In the Land of No" (1991)
- "Three Merry Pranksters at the Louvre" (2000)
- "Thicker than Water" (2001)
- "Balzac" (2003)
- "Scapegoats" (2014)
Title | Year | First published | Reprinted/collected | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Three merry pranksters at the Louvre | 2000 | Wood, N. Lee (Jun 2000). "Three merry pranksters at the Louvre". F&SF. 98 (6): 47–67. | ||
Anthologies
- Nemira '94[3] with Romulus Bărbulescu, George Anania and Norman Spinrad (1994)
Essays
- "Report from Clarion West" (1985)
- "Magnum Opus Con (III)" (1988)
- "1988 World Sf Meeting in Budapest" (1989)
- "ABA, Parisienne Style" (1989)
- "SF in France" (Locus #357) (1990)
- "World SF Meeting at Den Haag" (1990)
- "Parcon '90 Report" (1991)
- "SF in France" (Locus #372) (1992)
- "1992 Salon du Livre" (1992)
- "Freucon/1992 World SF Meeting" (1992)
- "Étonnants Voyaguers Festival" (1993)
- "1993 Salon du Livre" (1993)
References
External links
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