Toggle navigation
LazyLibrarian
eBooks
Series
AudioBooks
Magazines
Manage
History
Logs
Config
Help
Searching, please wait...
Edit Author
Author Name:
Born:
Died:
Added by:
AKA:
GoodReads:
OpenLibrary:
HardCover:
Author Description
Esther M. Friesner was educated at Vassar College, where she completed B.A's in both Spanish and Drama. She went to on to Yale University; within five years she was awarded an M.A. and Ph.D. in Spanish. She taught Spanish at Yale for a number of years before going on to become a full-time author of fantasy and science fiction. She has published twenty-seven novels so far; her most recent titles include
Temping Fate
from Penguin-Puffin and
Nobody's Princess
from Random House.
Her short fiction and poetry have appeared in
Asimov's
,
Fantasy & Science Fiction
,
Aboriginal SF
,
Pulphouse Magazine
,
Amazing
, and
Fantasy Book
, as well as in numerous anthologies. Her story, "Love's Eldritch Ichor," was featured in the 1990 World Fantasy Convention book.
Her first stint as an anthology editor was
Alien Pregnant By Elvis
, a collection of truly gonzo original tabloid SF for DAW books. Wisely, she undertook this project with the able collaboration of Martin H. Greenberg. Not having learned their lesson, they have also co-edited the
Chicks In Chainmail
Amazon comedy anthology series for Baen Books, as well as
Blood Muse
, an anthology of vampire stories for Donald I Fine, Inc.
"Ask Auntie Esther" was her regular etiquette and advice column to the SFlorn in
Pulphouse Magazine
. Being paid for telling other people how to run their lives sounds like a pretty good deal to her.
Ms. Friesner won the Nebula Award for Best Short Story of 1995 for her work, "Death and the Librarian," and the Nebula for Best Short Story of 1996 for "A Birth Day." (A Birth Day" was also a 1996 Hugo Award finalist.) Her novelette, "Jesus at the Bat" was on the final Nebula ballot in the same year that "Death and the Librarian" won the award. In addition, she has won the Romantic Times award for Best New Fantasy Writer in 1986 and the Skylark Award in 1994. Her short story, "All Vows," took second place in the Asimov's SF Magazine Readers' Poll for 1993 and was a finalist for the Nebula in 1994. Her Star Trek: Deep Space Nine novel,
Warchild
, made the USA TODAY bestseller list.
She lives in Connecticut with her husband, two children, two rambunctious cats, and a fluctuating population of hamsters.
Current Image:
Filenames must be full path to file or a URL, or put none to remove author image
Filename and URL need to end with .jpg/.jpeg/.png/.webp
000001.jpg
000002.jpg
000003.jpg
000004.jpg
000005.jpg
Change image to:
No change
File/URL
000001.jpg
000002.jpg
000003.jpg
000004.jpg
000005.jpg
Lock settings