In the introduction to More Women of Wonder, published in 1976, Pamela Sargent writes: Several questions come to mind in the assembling of collections such as this one and its predecessor, Women of Wonder. The most obvious are: Why does…
Month: May 2015
Of Mist and Grass and Sand by Vonda N. McIntyre
I suspect the first time I tried to read this story, I abandoned it because of the setting and the set-up. I’m not fond of post-tech cultures, if indeed that’s what this is. It has the sense of a certain…
The Ship Who Sang by Anne McCaffrey
I always feel at a disadvantage when I read a story I’d heard about forever. Especially a story that I’ve been told I’ll love, a story that someone felt I had to read right now. I’m such a contrary cuss…
First Woman Nominated for Best Novel Hugo?
Not Ursula K. Le Guin, as I had always heard, but Marion Zimmer Bradley in 1963. Best Novel Winner: The Man in the High Castle by Philip K. Dick [Putnam, 1962] Runners-up: Sword of Aldones by Marion Zimmer Bradley [Ace, 1961]…
Contagion by Katherine MacLean
This may be the first story I’ve ever read by McLean. Published in 1950, the story feels remarkably current. I’m not sure how accurate the science is for our time, but it feels right. There are one or two dated…
Tanith Lee
This morning, I heard that Tanith Lee passed away. I’m quite sad about it. Tanith was one of my favorite writers. I bought her work for Pulphouse and The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. I’d been thinking of contacting…
Index to Female Writers in Science Fiction, Fantasy & Utopia
When I made the announcement on Facebook, Kimberly Unger posted this in the comments section. She did some digging in the web archive known as the Wayback Machine, and found this marvelous link. It’s an old (in web terms) link…
Thank You
I announced this website today and the Tough Mothers project, and got so much support! I just want to say thank you for the enthusiasm. It makes me want to work harder. A lot of people are sending information or…
Best New Author of 1958
I started this project because I thought I knew a lot about women in science fiction. So much has been forgotten from my generation of writers which is something I want to redress. I also knew about the generations ahead of…
Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley—Again
I love learning something new. In Pamela Sargent’s introduction to More Women of Wonder, she discusses the history of the field. She, of course, mentions Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein as one of the first (if not the first) major sf novel.…