Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

M. C. A. Hogarth

American novelist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Remove ads

Maggie C. A. Hogarth (née de Alarcon[1]) is an American writer and artist who works in the science fiction, fantasy, and anthropomorphic animal genres. The Internet Speculative Fiction Database catalogs her illustrations as by Maggie de Alarcon (1990 to 1997) and Micah Hogarth (1997 and 1998).[1]

Quick Facts Born, Pen name ...

In May 2015, after working on SFWA's indie committee, Hogarth was elected Vice President of SFWA;[2][3] she served in that capacity for three years before stepping down.[4]

Remove ads

Biography

Hogarth was born in the United States, the daughter of two Cuban political exiles.[5] As of December 2013, she lives in Florida, US.[6]

"Space Marine" controversy

In mid-December 2012, Games Workshop made a complaint to Amazon.com about Hogarth's novel Spots the Space Marine (a near-future military science fiction novel about real marines). Games Workshop indicated that the work infringed on their trademark of the words "space marine", and, as a result, Amazon blocked sales of the book.[7][8][9]

This led to an internet backlash from commentators such as Cory Doctorow[10] and digital rights group the Electronic Frontier Foundation,[11] who questioned the right of Games Workshop to trademark the term.[12] Subsequently, Spots the Space Marine reappeared on Amazon, and Games Workshop issued no further legal action.[13]

Remove ads

Honors and awards

Hogarth was a guest of honor at the Midwest FurFest furry convention in 2003 and 2009. She was also the guest of honor at the inaugural Son of SilverCon in 2023.

Her short story "Freedom, Spiced and Drunk" made the Tiptree Award's secondary reading list in 2002.[14] Her short story "Unspeakable" won the Strange Horizons Reader's Choice award in 2002[15] and was a finalist for the Gaylactic Spectrum Award in the short story category in 2003. Her short story "In the Line of Duty" was the winner of the 2003 Ursa Major Award for Best Anthropomorphic Short Fiction.[16] In 2004, her story The Flight of the Godkin Griffin was nominated in the Best Other Work category of the Gaylactic Spectrum Awards.[17]

Remove ads

Bibliography

Summarize
Perspective
More information Type, Genre ...

In addition, short stories by the author have been published in Raconteur Press anthologies.

Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads