Literary Wonderlands

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Literary Wonderlands Page 29

by Laura Miller


  ROBERT HOLDEN

  Australia-based lecturer, curator, and historian, and the author of over thirty books. Holden has received awards from the Literature Board of the Australia Council, held a Mitchell Library Fellowship and has spoken at numerous conferences in Australia and at the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge.

  Page 136

  NICK HOLDSTOCK

  Edinburgh-based fiction writer and essayist. Holdstock is the author of The Tree That Bleeds: A Uighur Town on the Edge (2011), a study of life in China’s Xinjiang province, the nonfiction book China’s Forgotten People (2015), and the novel The Casualties (2015).

  Page 222

  KAT HOWARD

  Kat Howard lives in New Hampshire. Her short fiction has been nominated for the World Fantasy Award, anthologized in several collections, and performed on NPR. Her debut novel, Roses and Rot, was published in 2016.

  Pages 262 & 286

  MAYA JAGGI

  An award-winning cultural journalist, literary critic, and festival director in London. For a decade Jaggi was a long-form arts profile writer for The Guardian. Her 2012 honorary doctorate from the UK’s Open University was for “extending the map of international writing.” She has judged international literary awards, and holds degrees from Oxford University and the London School of Economics.

  Page 292

  LYDIA KIESLING

  San Francisco–based writer and editor of literary website The Millions. She is a member of the National Book Critics Circle and her work has appeared in The Guardian, The New York Times Magazine, Slate, and Salon.com.

  Page 308

  PAUL KINCAID

  Paul Kincaid has received both the Thomas Clareson Award and the Best Non-Fiction Award from the British Science Fiction Association. He has published two books of essays and has recently completed a book on Iain M. Banks for the University of Illinois Press.

  Page 252

  REYES LÁZARO

  Associate professor of Spanish and Portuguese at Smith College, Massachusetts. Lázaro holds a PhD in Spanish and Portuguese and a Masters in Philosophy from University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and a BA in Philosophy from the Universidad de Deusto, Bilbao, Spain.

  Pages 62 & 254

  ANN MORGAN

  Writer and editor from London. Morgan’s first book, Reading the World: Confessions of a Literary Explorer (2015), grew out of a project she undertook to spend a year reading a book from every country on Earth. Her debut novel, Beside Myself, was published in January 2016.

  Pages 156 & 224

  MAHVESH MURAD

  Book critic and editor from Karachi, Pakistan. Murad is also host of the interview podcast Midnight in Karachi on Tor.com, and editor of the Apex Book of World SF 4.

  Pages 206, 208, & 226

  JONATHAN NEWELL

  PhD candidate in English Literature at the University of British Columbia, specializing in weird fiction. He has published articles on China Miéville, George R. R. Martin, and others in journals including Horror Studies, Science Fiction Studies, and Studies in Gothic Fiction.

  Page 276

  JEFF NUNOKAWA

  Professor of English at Princeton University, New Jersey. Nunokawa has written widely on nineteenth-century literature and is the author of The Afterlife of Property (1994) and Tame Passions of Wilde: Styles of Manageable Desire (2003). His most recent project is Note Book, a collection of his writings on Facebook.

  Page 198

  ABIGAIL NUSSBAUM

  Columnist and book critic based in Israel. Nussbaum has written columns for Progressive Scan and was reviews editor for Strange Horizons for four years. She was a contributor to the third edition of The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, and has been nominated for a British Science Fiction Association award.

  Pages 166 & 256

  MARGARET J. OAKES

  Professor of English at Furman University, South Carolina, and contributor to Reading Harry Potter (2003) and Reading Harry Potter Again (2009). Oakes’s research interests are in early modern British poetry and children’s fantasy literature.

  Page 272

  LAURIE PENNY

  Columnist and author, Nieman Fellow at Harvard University, and contributing editor at New Statesman. Penny has written for The Guardian and New Statesman, and is the author of several books including Unspeakable Things (2014), Cybersexism (2013), and Meat Market: Female Flesh Under Capitalism (2011).

  Page 304

  ANDREW H. PLAKS

  Literary critic and researcher, focusing on Chinese and Japanese classical literature. Plaks was previously a Professor at Princeton University, New Jersey, and now lectures at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

  Page 58

  ERIC RABKIN

  Professor emeritus of English language and literature at the University of Michigan whose specialties include fantasy and science fiction.

  Pages 164 & 260

  ADAM ROBERTS

  British science-fiction writer and professor of nineteenth-century literature at Royal Holloway, University of London.

  Pages 138, 194, 204, 232, & 296

  DAVID SEED

  Professor of English at Liverpool University. Seed specializes in science fiction, Cold War culture and spy fiction, and the interface between fiction and film.

  Page 162

  TOM SHIPPEY

  Emeritus professor of Saint Louis University, his publications include The Road to Middle-earth (4 expanded editions, 1982 to 2004), Beowulf: The Critical Heritage (1998), The Shadow-Walkers (2005), and Hard Reading: Learning from Science Fiction (2016). He currently reviews fantasy and science fiction for The Wall Street Journal.

  Pages 18, 22, 30, 34, 36, 40, 44, 48, 52, 54, 64, 68, 74, 96, & 188

  JARED SHURIN

  Shurin has edited over a dozen anthologies on topics ranging from mummies to Dickens. He has been a finalist for the Shirley Jackson and Hugo Awards, and twice won the British Fantasy Award for Non-Fiction. He is also the editor of Pornokitsch, a pop culture website.

  Pages 210, 218, & 244

  SHARON SIEBER

  Professor of Spanish at Idaho State University. Sieber’s research focuses on Latin American and twentieth-century Spanish literature.

  Page 192

  JAMES SMYTHE

  London-based novelist and creative writing teacher. Smythe regularly writes for The Guardian and his novels include The Testimony, The Explorer, The Machine, and the Australia Trilogy.

  Pages 238 & 288

  MAUREEN SPELLER

  A critic and reviewer of science fiction and fantasy. Speller is senior reviews editor at Strange Horizons and assistant editor of Foundation: The International Review of Science Fiction.

  Pages 240 & 284

  DARRYL STERK

  Assistant professor of translation at National Taiwan University, specializing in the representation of Taiwan’s aboriginal peoples in film and fiction.

  Page 302

  MATTHEW STRECHER

  Professor of Japanese literature in the Faculty of Liberal Arts, Sophia University, Tokyo. Strecher is a specialist in contemporary Japanese literature and is the author of several books on Haruki Murakami, including The Forbidden Worlds of Haruki Murakami (2014).

  Page 298

  JOHN SUTHERLAND

  Journalist, author, and professor of modern English at University College London. His books include How to Read a Novel: A User’s Guide (2006), Curiosities of Literature: A Feast for Book Lovers (2008), and Magic Moments: Life-Changing Encounters with Books, Film, Music… (2008). He is a regular contributor to The Guardian, The New Statesman and The London Review of Books.

  Pages 80, 82, 88, 94, 100, 104, 106, 108, 110, 116, 130, 132, 140, 212, & 290

  ANDREW TAYLOR

  Freelance writer and journalist based in the UK. He read English at Oxford University and his books include God’s Fugitive: The Life of C. M. Doughty (1999), The Pocket Guide to Poets and Poetry (2011), Walking Wounded: The Life and Poetry of Vernon Scannell (2013), and Books
that changed the World (2014).

  Pages 134, 144, 148, 154, 170, & 200

  KOLA TUBOSUN

  Writer, critic, and language professor, Tubosun recently coedited a collection of essays on African linguistics. His work has appeared in various publications, including the International Literary Quarterly, Aké Review, The Guardian, and The Maple Tree Literary Supplement.

  Page 306

  LISA TUTTLE

  Lisa Tuttle is an award-winning author of horror, fantasy, and science fiction. Her novels include Windhaven (written with George R. R. Martin) and The Curious Affair of the Somnambulist and the Psychic Thief (2016). Her nonfiction includes the Encyclopedia of Feminism (1986) and Writing Fantasy and Science Fiction (2001).

  Pages 186, 230, 248, & 294

  BENJAMIN WIDISS

  Widiss teaches literature at Hamilton College, New York. He is the author of Obscure Invitations: The Persistence of the Author in Twentieth-Century American Literature (2011), and is currently working on a monograph Flirting with Embodiment: Textual Metaphors and Textual Presences in Contemporary Narrative.

  Page 158

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