Sara King

Sara J. King (born 1982) is an Alaskan Fantasy writer residing in the Alaska Bush.[1] She is currently working on her 11th novel, part of the "After Earth" series

History

Sara King was born in Fairbanks, Alaska, in 1982. She has remained an Alaskan ever since, graduating from Chugiak High School in 2001 and beginning her full-time writing career shortly thereafter. She is an outdoors enthusiast.[2] Her works have appeared in short-story magazines, including Apex Science Fiction and Horror, BBT Magazine, and Aberrant Dreams.

In March 2007, Sara King was chosen from a pool of 50 candidates to edit Aberrant Dreams, where she works as a contributing editor.[3]

In August 2007, 7500-word short piece "The Moldy Dead," a short story spinoff of the After Earth series, became Sara's first published short work in Apex Science Fiction and Horror Digest,[4] where it received a positive review from the reviewer.[5]

In March 2008, Sara King joined the Codex Writers Group, an online gathering of professional speculative fiction writers, editors, and agents. Here, she workshopped both of her most recent short fantasy works "The Sheet-Charmer of Broketoe" and "The Auldhund," which won semi-finalist in the First Quarter 2008Writers of the Future Contest,.[6]

In July 2008, Sara King graduated from the 6-week Odyssey Writing Workshop in New Hampshire.

Bibliography

Aulds of the SPYRE

Guardians of the First Realm

The Legend of ZERO

Other

Millennium Potion

Outer Bounds

Terms of Mercy

Short stories

Awards & recognitions

In 2001, Sara King received an Honorable Mention from the University of Alaska's 21st Annual Creative Writing Contest for her poetry piece, "Untitled." [7][8]

Sara King has twice received Honorable Mentions from the Writers of the Future Contest; her first from the First Quarter 2007 contest for her 8,000-word short work "Parasite" and her second in the Fourth Quarter 2007 for the 7,900-word short piece "Fury of the Sphinx". She became a semi-finalist in the contest in the First Quarter 2008 with the 10,000-word novelette "The Auldhund." [6]

References

External links

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