Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Esther Friesner

American novelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Esther Friesner
Remove ads

Esther Mona Friesner-Stutzman (née Friesner; born July 16, 1951) is an American science fiction and fantasy author. She is also a poet and playwright.[1] She is best known for her humorous style of writing, both in the titles and the works themselves. This humor allows her to discuss with broader audiences issues like gender equality and social justice.[2]

Quick Facts Born, Occupation ...
Remove ads

Life

Friesner attended the Hunter College High School, a public magnet high school in New York City, as well as Vassar College. At Vassar, she completed A.B.s in both Spanish and Drama.[3] While at Vassar, she became friendly with Paula Volsky and Jane Bishop. Together they wrote at least one film script for student production, "Lavinia: a Girl of the Street", which demonstrated Esther's trademark tongue-in-cheek style. She holds a Ph.D. in Spanish and was a college Spanish professor at Yale University before becoming a writer.[citation needed] She currently resides with her husband in Connecticut.[1]

Remove ads

Career

Summarize
Perspective

During her early career as a writer, Friesner penned an advice column entitled "Ask Auntie Esther" for Pulphouse Magazine.[3] Her first short story, "The Stuff of Heroes" was sold in 1982.[2]

In addition to short stories, Friesner has published a number of novels and is a prolific editor of anthologies. "Thunderbolt," a short story in Random House's Young Warriors anthology lead to creation of her recent books Nobody's Princess, which takes the Greek legend of Helen of Sparta and gives it a new beginning, and its sequel, Nobody's Prize.[1]

Alien Pregnant By Elvis was her first effort as an anthology editor as part of a collection of tabloid science fiction for DAW books in conjunction with Martin H. Greenberg. She also collaborated with Greenberg on an Amazonian comedy anthology for Baen Books entitled Chicks In Chainmail and a vampire anthology for Donald I Fine, Inc. called Blood Muse.[3]

She is a frequent guest of honor at science fiction conventions, having appeared at Bubonicon, Arisia, Boskone, Baycon and Albacon in the 1990s and in the 21st century. Her story "Love's Eldritch Ichor" was featured at one of these conventions, the World Fantasy convention, in 1990.[3]

Friesner is credited as one of the founders of a parody movement in the 1980s called cyberprep.[4]

Remove ads

Awards

Summarize
Perspective

Friesner was named Outstanding New Fantasy Writer by Romantic Times in 1986.[citation needed] She won the Skylark Award in 1994.[5] She has been nominated a number of times for the Hugo and Nebula awards, winning the Nebula Award for Best Short Story in 1995 and 1996 for, respectively, "Death and the Librarian" and "A Birthday". "A Birthday" was additionally a Hugo Award finalist in 1996. Her short story, "All Vows" was also a finalist for the Nebula in 1994 and took second place in Asimov's SF Magazine Readers' Poll in 1993.

Friesner's Star Trek: Deep Space Nine novel, Warchild, also made the USA TODAY bestseller list.[3]

Nebula Awards and Nominations

Source:[6]

  • 1993- “All Vows”, published by Asimov’s Magazine, Nominated for Best Short Story
  • 1995- “Jesus at the Bat” published by The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Nominated for Best Novelette 1995
  • 1995- “Death and the Librarian” published by Asimov’s Magazine, Winner, Best Short story
  • 1996- “A Birthday” published by The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Winner, Best Short Story
  • 1999- “How to Make Unicorn Pie” published by The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Nominated for Best Novelette
  • 2001- Toastmaster for World Science Fiction Convention 2001
  • 2006- “Helen Remembers the Stork Club”, published by The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Nominated for Best Short Story of 2006

Locus Awards

Source:[7]

 Locus Awards — for SF/F/H works, polled by readers of Locus Magazine (10 nominations)

  • 2006: “The Fraud” (Asimov's Mar 2005) — novelette — 24th place
  • 2006: “Last Man Standing” (F&SF Jan 2005) — novelette — 17th place
  • 2006: “Helen Remembers the Stork Club” (F&SF Oct/Nov 2005) — short story — 15th place
  •  2000: “How to Make Unicorn Pie” (F&SF Jan 1999) — novelette — 14th place
  • 1999: “Brown Dust” (Starlight 2) — novelette — 16th place
  • 1996: “A Birthday” (F&SF Aug 1995) — short story — 4th place
  • 1996: Chicks in Chainmail (Baen) — anthology — 19th place
  • 1993: “All Vows” (Asimov's Nov 1992) — short story — 17th place
  • 1989: Druid's Blood (NAL Signet) — fantasy novel — 13th place
  • 1987: New York by Knight (Signet) — fantasy novel — 19th place

Other Awards and Nominations

Source:[7]

  • James Tiptree Jr Memorial Award — for SF/F that explores and expands the roles of women and men, juried (1 nomination)
    • 1999: “In the Realms of Dragons” (Asimov's Feb 1998) — long list
  • Asimov's Reader Poll — for stories, poems, and art published by Asimov's, polled by readers (4 nominations)
    • 2001: “The Shunned Trailer” (Asimov's Feb 2000) — short story — 10th place
    • 1995: “Death and the Librarian” (Asimov's Dec 1994) — short story — 2nd place
    • 1994: “'White!' Said Fred” (Asimov's Oct 1993) — short story — 3rd place (tie)
    • 1993: “All Vows” (Asimov's Nov 1992) — short story — 2nd place
  • ·Gaylactic Spectrum Awards — for SF/F/H on GLBT themes, voted by members of Gaylactic Network (1 nomination)
    • 2000: “Chanoyu” (Asimov's Mar 1999) — short fiction — nomination
  • HOMer Awards — for SF/F works, voted by members of SF/F forum on CompuServe (2 nominations)
    • 2000: “Chanoyu” (Asimov's Mar 1999) — novelette — nomination
    • 2000: “How to Make Unicorn Pie” (F&SF Jan 1999) — novelette — nomination
Remove ads

Bibliography

Summarize
Perspective

Novels

  • Harlot's Ruse (1986)
  • The Silver Mountain (1986)
  • Druid's Blood (1988)
  • Yesterday We Saw Mermaids (1992)
  • Split Heirs (1993) with Lawrence Watt-Evans
  • Wishing Season (1993)
  • The Sherwood Game (1995)
  • Child of the Eagle: A Myth of Rome (1996)
  • Playing with Fire (1997)
  • Knock on Wood (2000)
  • E.Godz (2003) with Robert Asprin
  • Temping Fate (2006)
  • Threads and Flames (2010)
Becca of Wiserways (Psalms) series
  1. The Psalms Of Herod (1996)
  2. The Sword Of Mary (1996)
Chronicles of the Twelve Kingdoms series
  1. Mustapha and His Wise Dog (1985)
  2. Spells of Mortal Weaving (1986)
  3. The Witchwood Cradle (1987)
  4. The Water King's Laughter (1989)
Demons series
  1. Here Be Demons (1988)
  2. Demon Blues (1989)
  3. Hooray For Hellywood (1990)
Gnome Man's Land series
  1. Gnome Man's Land (1991)
  2. Harpy High (1991)
  3. Unicorn U (1992)
Majyk series
  1. Majyk by Accident (1993)
  2. Majyk by Hook Or Crook (1994)
  3. Majyk by Design (1995)
Men in Black novelizations
  • Men in Black II (2002)
New York by Knight series
  1. New York by Knight (1986)
  2. Elf Defense (1988)
  3. Sphynxes Wild (1989)
Princesses of Myth series
Helen of Troy
  1. Nobody's Princess (2007)
  2. Nobody's Prize (2008)
Nefertiti
  1. Sphinx's Princess (2009)
  2. Sphinx's Queen (2010)
Himiko
  1. Spirit's Princess (2012)
  2. Spirit's Chosen (2013)
Maeve
  1. Deception's Princess (2014)
  2. Deception's Pawn (2015)
Sabrina the Teenage Witch
  • #11 Prisoner of Cabin 13
  • #22 Witchopoly (1999)
Star Trek universe

Short fiction

Collections
  • It's Been Fun (1991)
  • Up The Wall & Other Tales of King Arthur and His Knights (2000)
  • Death and the Librarian and Other Stories (2002)
Series
  • Cthulhu Mythos series:
    • "Love's Eldritch Ichor" (1990)
  • Riverworld series:
    • "Legends" (1993)
  • Zoli of the Brazen Shield series:
  1. "Cross CHILDREN Walk" (1999) aka "Cross Children Walk"
  2. "Troll by Jury" (2000)
Stories[10]
More information Title, Year ...

Anthologies (edited)

Chicks in Chainmail series
  1. Chicks in Chainmail (1995)
  2. Did You Say Chicks?! (1998)
  3. Chicks 'n Chained Males (1999)
  4. The Chick is in the Mail (2000)
  5. Turn the Other Chick (2004)
  6. Chicks and Balances (2015)
  • Chicks Ahoy! (2010) Omnibus of first three volumes
Supernatural Suburbia series
  1. Witch Way to the Mall (2009)
  2. Strip Mauled (2009)
  3. Fangs for the Mammaries (2010)

Alien Pregnant By Elvis (1994 with Martin H. Greenberg)

Blood Muse (1995 with Martin H. Greenberg)

Poems

  • "The Shield-Maiden's Honeymoon" (1984)
  • "Chivalry" (1985)
  • "A Gaming Son" (1985)
  • "The Vampire of Gretna Green" (1985)
  • "A Short Slew of SF Clerihews" (1986)
  • "More SF Clerihews" (1986)
  • "Yet More SF Clerihews" (1986)
  • "The Sincere Symbiote" (1986)
  • "Spell for a Nuclear Witch" (1988)
  • "Who Made the Stew on Betelgeuse II?" (1988)
  • "Cat-Tech-Ism" (1988)
  • "Food for Thought" (1989)
  • "Confessio" (1989)
  • "The Hobbyist" (1989)
  • "Lovers" (1994)
  • "For Sale: One Moonbase, Never Used" (2009)

Essays

Source:[11]

  • Letter (Locus #307) (1986) with S. P. Somtow and Sharon Webb
  • Letter (Science Fiction Chronicle #85) (1986) with S. P. Somtow and Sharon Webb
  • Regrets Only (1986)
  • The Other Side: Now Revealed: Money-Making Secrets of the Shockmeisters (1987)
  • Letter (Locus #326) (1988)
  • About the Authors (Arabesques) (1988) with M. J. Engh and William R. Forstchen and Tanith Lee and Sandra Miesel and Larry Niven and Andre Norton and Elizabeth Ann Scarborough and Melissa Scott and Susan Shwartz and Nancy Springer and Judith Tarr and Harry Turtledove and Gene Wolfe and Jane Yolen
  • Letter (Locus #331) (1988)
  • Read This (NYRSF, November 1988) (1988)
  • Who Was That Alien I Saw You With Last Night? (1990)
  • Introduction (It's Been Fun) (1991)
  • Ask Auntie Esther (Pulphouse, October 25, 1991) (1991)
  • Ask Auntie Esther (Pulphouse, November 29, 1991) (1991)
  • Ask Auntie Esther (Pulphouse, December 31, 1991) (1991)
  • Ask Auntie Esther (Pulphouse, July 1992) (1992)
  • Ask Auntie Esther (Pulphouse, September–October 1992) (1992)
  • Ask Auntie Esther (Pulphouse #15) (1993)
  • Ask Auntie Esther (Pulphouse #17, 1994) (1994)
  • Introduction: Alien Pregnant by Elvis (1994)
  • Chicks in Chainmail (introduction) (1995)
  • There's nothing funny about mixing humor and SF (1995)
  • Introduction (Blood Muse) (1995)
  • Take My Wizard...Please! The Serious Business of Writing Funny Fantasy and Science Fiction (1996)
  • The Old School Spirit (1997)
  • Introduction (Did You Say Chicks?) (1998)
  • But What I Really Want to Do Is Direct (1998)
  • Introduction (Chicks 'n Chained Males) (1999)
  • Introduction (The Chick is in the Mail) (2000) only appeared as:
    • Variant: Introduction (The Chick Is in the Mail) (2000)
  • If You Give a Girl a Hobbit (2001) also appeared as:
    • Translation: Wennein Mädel an einen Hobbit gerät [German] (2002)
    • Translation: Hobbits et jeune filles en fleur [French] (2003)
  • Introduction (Death and the Librarian and Other Stories) (2002)
  • Introduction to "The Stuff of Heroes" (2003)
  • Terry Pratchett: The Man, The Myth, The Legend, The Beverage (2004)
  • Give Beast a Chance (2005)
  • About the Authors (Turn the Other Chick) (2006)
  • Introduction (Turn the Other Chick) (2006)
  • On "Helen Remembers the Stork Club" (2007)
  • Introduction (Witch Way to the Mall) (2009)
  • Leader of the Pack (2009)
  • Introduction (Fangs for the Mammaries) (2010)
  • On Judy and Darkover (2013)
  • Introduction (Bard's Road: The Collected Fiction of Lee Martindale) (2014)
  • Introduction (Chicks and Balances) (2015)
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads