American writer (born 1957)
Elizabeth Hand (born March 29, 1957) is an American writer.
Life and career
Hand grew up in Yonkers and Pound Ridge, New York . She studied drama and anthropology at the Catholic University of America . Since 1988, Hand has lived in coastal Maine , the setting for many of her stories, and as of 2000 lives in Lincolnville .[ 1] She also lives part-time in Camden Town , London which has been the setting for Mortal Love and the short story "Cleopatra Brimstone".
Hand's first published story, "Prince of Flowers", appeared in 1988 in The Twilight Zone Magazine ,[ 2] [ 3] and her first novel, Winterlong , was published in 1990. With Paul Witcover, she created and wrote DC Comics ' 1990s cult series Anima .[ 4] Hand's other works include Aestival Tide (1992); Icarus Descending (1993); Waking the Moon (1994), which won the Tiptree Award and the Mythopoeic Fantasy Award ; the post-apocalyptic novel Glimmering (1997); contemporary fantasy Black Light (1999), a New York Times Notable Book; the historical fantasy Mortal Love (2004), a Washington Post Notable Book; the psychological thriller Generation Loss (2007), and the World Fantasy Award -winning "The Maiden Flight of McCauley's Bellerophon ". Her story collections are Last Summer at Mars Hill (1998) (which includes the Nebula and World Fantasy award-winning title novella); Bibliomancy (2002), winner of the World Fantasy Award;[ 5] and Saffron and Brimstone: Strange Stories , which includes the Nebula Award-winning "Echo" (2006). Mortal Love was also shortlisted for the 2005 Mythopoeic Fantasy Award for Adult Literature.
Among Hand's other recent short fiction, "Pavane for a Prince of the Air" (2002) and "Cleopatra Brimstone" (2001) won International Horror Guild Awards.[ 6] Most recently, she won the Shirley Jackson Award for Generation Loss and the World Fantasy Award in 2008 for Illyria ,[ 5] and the Inkpot Award in 2018.[ 7]
She also writes movie and television spin-offs, including Star Wars tie-in novels and novelizations of such films as The X-Files and 12 Monkeys . She contributed a Bride of Frankenstein novel to the recent series of classic movie monster novels published by Dark Horse Comics .
One of Hand's themes from the Winterlong saga is the remorseless exploitation of animal and plant species to create what she calls "geneslaves." Examples include a three-hundred-year-old genetically reconstructed and cerebrally augmented Basilosaurus by the name of Zalophus; the aardmen, hybrids of dog and man; hydrapithecenes, human-fish or human-cuttlefish hybrids somewhat resembling Davy Jones and his crew from the Pirates of the Caribbean film series ; and sagittals, whelks genetically engineered to be worn as a bracelet and, when its host feels threatened or agitated, extrude a spine laced with a deadly neurotoxin .
Hand is a longtime reviewer and critic for The Washington Post , Los Angeles Times , Boston Review , Salon , and Village Voice , among others. She also writes a regular review column for The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction .
Bibliography
Novels
Cass Neary Crime Novels
Star Wars Expanded Universe
Adaptations
Short fiction
Collections
Stories
1990 "Jangletown" (with Paul Witcover; in The Further Adventures of The Joker )
1993 "Lucifer Over Lancaster" (with Paul Witcover; in The Further Adventures of Superman )
1994 "The Erl-King"
Book reviews
Year
Review article
Work(s) reviewed
2000
Hand, Elizabeth (May 2000). "Books" . F&SF . 98 (5): 29– 34.
Bailey, Dale (1999). American nightmares : the haunted house formula in American popular fiction . Bowling Green State University Popular Press.
2011
Hand, Elizabeth (July–August 2011). "Books" . F&SF . 121 (1&2): 42– 48.
Pacitti, Tony (2010). My best friend is a Wookie . Adams Media.
Yu, Charles (2010). How to live in a science fictional universe . Pantheon.
Kimmel, Daniel M. (2011). Jar Jar Binks must die ... and other observations about science fiction movies . Fantastic Books.
^ Elizabeth Hand Biography - life, family, children, parents, name, story, history, mother, young, book - Newsmakers Cumulation Retrieved 2017-04-28.
^ Myman, Francesca (October 18, 2015). "Elizabeth Hand: Sunlit Horror" . Locus . Retrieved November 17, 2024 .
^ Hand, Elizabeth (1988). "Prince of Flowers" . The Twilight Zone Magazine . Vol. 7, no. 6. TZ Publications. p. 38 . Retrieved November 17, 2024 .
^ Elizabeth Hand – SCIFIPEDIA Archived July 21, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
^ a b World Fantasy Convention (2010). "Award Winners and Nominees" . Archived from the original on December 1, 2010. Retrieved February 4, 2011 .
^ "ElizabethHand.com" . Archived from the original on May 18, 2006. Retrieved June 5, 2020 .
^ Inkpot Award
^ Publishers Weekly. "Elizabeth Hand.com" . Elizabeth Hand.com. Archived from the original on July 16, 2012. Retrieved October 19, 2012 .
External links
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019
1966–1980 1981–2000 2001–2020 2021–present
1966–1980 1981–2000 2001–2020 2021–present
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