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Elizabeth Bear
View on WikipediaSarah Bear Elizabeth Wishnevsky (born September 22, 1971) is an American author who works primarily in speculative fiction genres, writing under the name Elizabeth Bear. She won the 2005 John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer, the 2008 Hugo Award for Best Short Story for "Tideline", and the 2009 Hugo Award for Best Novelette for "Shoggoths in Bloom".[1] She is one of a small number of writers who have gone on to win multiple Hugo Awards for fiction after winning the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer (the others include C. J. Cherryh, Orson Scott Card, Spider Robinson, Ted Chiang and Mary Robinette Kowal).
Key Information
Life and career
[edit]
Born in Hartford, Connecticut, Bear studied English and anthropology at the University of Connecticut but did not graduate. She worked as a technical writer, stable hand, reporter and held various office jobs. She sold a few stories in the 1990s and began writing seriously in 2001.[2]
Bear's first novel, Hammered, was published in January 2005 and was followed by Scardown in July and Worldwired in November of the same year. The trilogy features Canadian Master Warrant Officer Jenny Casey, who is also the main character in the short story "Gone to Flowers". Hammered won the Locus Award for Best First Novel in 2006.
The Chains That You Refuse, a collection of her short fiction, was published May 2006 by Night Shade Books. Blood and Iron, the first book in the fantasy series entitled The Promethean Age, debuted June 27, 2006. She is also a coauthor of the ongoing Shadow Unit website/pseudo-TV series.
In 2008, she donated her archive to the department of Rare Books and Special Collections at Northern Illinois University.[3]
She is an instructor at the Viable Paradise writer's workshop and has taught at Clarion West Writers Workshop.
The opening quote in Criminal Minds episode "Lauren" (6.18) was a direct quote of the second and third lines of Bear's book Seven for a Secret: "The secret to lying is to believe with all your heart. That goes for lying to yourself even more than lying to another."
She is one of the regular panelists on podcast SF Squeecast, which won the 2012 and 2013 Hugo Awards for Best Fancast.[4]
Bear married novelist Scott Lynch in October 2016.[5]
In 2021, Bear announced that she had been diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer.[6]
Bibliography
[edit]Novels
[edit]- Carnival (November 2006, Bantam Spectra)
- Undertow (August 2007, Bantam Spectra)
- Bone and Jewel Creatures (novella) (2010, Subterranean Press)
- The Cobbler's Boy (2018)
- The Jenny Casey trilogy
- Hammered (January 2005, Bantam Spectra)
- Scardown (July 2005, Bantam Spectra)
- Worldwired (November 2005, Bantam Spectra)
- The Promethean Age
- Blood and Iron (June 2006, ROC)
- Whiskey and Water (July 2007, ROC)
- The Stratford Man:
- Volume I: Ink and Steel (July 2008, ROC)
- Volume II: Hell and Earth (August 2008, ROC)
- One Eyed Jack (November 2013, Prime Books)[7]
- Jacob's Ladder trilogy
- Dust (December 2007, Spectra)
- Chill (February 2010, Spectra)
- Grail (February 2011, Spectra)
- The Edda of Burdens
- All the Windwracked Stars (November 2008, Tor Books)
- By the Mountain Bound (November 2009, Tor Books)
- The Sea thy Mistress (February 2011, Tor)
- The Iskryne series
- A Companion to Wolves, co-written with Sarah Monette (October 2007, Tor Books)
- The Tempering of Men, co-written with Sarah Monette (August 2011, Tor Books)
- An Apprentice to Elves, co-written with Sarah Monette (June 25, 2015, Tor Books)
- New Amsterdam series
- New Amsterdam (May 2007, Subterranean Press)
- Seven for a Secret (novella; March 2009, Subterranean Press)
- The White City (novella; 2011, Subterranean Press)
- Ad Eternum (novella; February 2012, Subterranean Press)
- Garrett Investigates (November 2012, Subterranean Press)
- Eternal Sky Trilogy
- Range of Ghosts (March 2012, Tor Books)
- Shattered Pillars (2013, Tor Books)
- Steles of the Sky (2014, Tor Books)[8]
- The Lotus Kingdoms
- The Stone in the Skull (2017, Tor Books)
- The Red-Stained Wings (2019, Tor Books)
- The Origin of Storms (2022, Tor Books)
- Karen Memory
- Karen Memory (2015, Tor-Forge)
- Stone Mad (2018, Tor-Forge)
- White Space
- Ancestral Night (2018, Gallery / Saga Press)
- Machine (2020, Gallery / Saga Press)
- The Folded Sky (2025, Saga Press)
Short fiction
[edit]- Collections
- The Chains That You Refuse (May 2006, Night Shade Books)
- Jewels and Stones (2010)
- Shoggoths in Bloom (October 2012, Prime Books)
- The Best of Elizabeth Bear (2020)
- Short stories
- Love-In-Idleness (1998) (In anthology Midsummer Night's Dreams: One Story, Many Tales edited by M. Christian)
- The Company of Four (2000) (E.B.'s The Chains that You Refuse.
Also appeared in Scheherazade issue #20 in 2000.)
- Speak! (2003) (In On Spec magazine, Winter 2003)
- Tiger! Tiger! (2003) (In anthology Shadows Over Baker Street (2003), edited by John Pelan & Michael Reaves.)
- Ice (2003) (Ideomancer, Apr. 2003 & (Lod: Polish-language version) in Nowa Fantastyka #7, Summer 2004.)
- The Chains That You Refuse (2004) (ChiZine magazine, Apr.-June 2004)
- This Tragic Glass (2004) (Sci Fiction webzine, Apr. 2004)
- Old Leatherwings (2004)
- Seven Dragons Mountains (2004) (Appeared in anthology All-Star Zeppelin Adventure Stories, edited by Jay Lake & David Moles.)
- Sleeping Dogs Lie (2004) (Flytrap magazine, Nov. 2004)
- When You Visit the Magoebaskloof Hotel, Be Certain Not to Miss the Samango Monkeys (2004) (Interzone 195, Nov/Dec 2004)
- Los Empujadores Furiosos (2005) (On Spec magazine, Winter 2006)
- The House of the Rising Sun (2005) (Anthology By Blood We Live, edited by John Joseph Adams & in The Third Alternative #42, Summer 2005)
- Wax (2005) (Interzone #201, Nov/Dec 2005 & reprinted in Fantasy: The Best of the Year 2006 edition, June 2006)
- Two Dreams on Trains (2005) (Strange Horizons webzine, Jan. 2005; reprinted in Year's Best Science Fiction: 23rd Annual Collection (July 2006) & reprinted in Rewired: The Post-Cyberpunk Anthology. Spanish-language version, Dos Sueños con Trenes, appeared in Cuasar #42, Marzo 2006)
- Follow Me Light (2005) (Sci Fiction webzine, Jan. 2005, reprinted in Best New Paranormal Romance (Nov. 2006) & Year's Best Fantasy and Horror (Sept. 2006)
- Botticelli (2005) (The Agony Column, Feb. 2005)
- And the Deep Blue Sea (2005) (Sci Fiction webzine, May 2005 & anthology Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse edited by John Joseph Adams)
- Long Cold Day (2005) (Sci Fiction webzine, Sept. 2005)
- The Inevitable Heat Death of the Universe (2006) (Subterranean Magazine #4, 2006)
- One-Eyed Jack and the Suicide King (2005)
- Gone to Flowers (2006) (Appeared in anthology Eidolon I, edited by Jonathan Strahan & Jeremy G. Byrne)
- High Iron (2006)
- Wane (2006) (Interzone #203 Mar/Apr 2006)
- Love Among the Talus (2006) (Strange Horizons, Dec. 2006)
- L'Esprit d'Escalier: Not a Play in One Act (2006)
- Lucifugous (2006) (Subterranean Magazine #5 (2006)
- Schrödinger's Cat Chases the Super String (2006)
- The Ile of Dogges (with Sarah Monette) (2006) (Aeon 7, 2006)
- The Cold Blacksmith (2006) (Jim Baen's Universe, June 2006)
- Sounding (2006) (Strange Horizons, Sept. 2006)
- The Devil You Don't (2006) (Amberzine 11)
- Stella Nova (2006)
- Limerent (2007) (Subterranean Magazine #6, 2007)
- Orm the Beautiful (Appeared at [9] in Clarkesworld Magazine, Jan. 2007)
- The Something-Dreaming Game (2007) (Fast Forward 1)
- War Stories (2007) (Jim Baen's Universe, Feb. 2007)
- Cryptic Coloration (2007) (Jim Baen's Universe ebook magazine, June 2007)
- Tideline (2007) (Asimov's Science Fiction, June 2007)
- Black Is the Color (2007) (Subterranean Magazine, Summer 2007)
- The Rest of Your Life in a Day (2007) (Jim Baen's Universe, Oct. 2007)
- Inelastic Collisions (2007) (Appeared in anthology Inferno: New Tales of Terror and the Supernatural edited by Ellen Datlow)
- The Ladies (2007) (Coyote Wild, Dec. 2007)
- Abjure the Realm (2007) (Coyote Wild, Winter 2007 & the anthology The Mammoth Book of Warriors and Wizardry edited by Sean Wallace)
- Annie Webber (2008) (Nature magazine, Jan. 2008)
- Boojum (with Sarah Monette) (2008) (Anthology Fast Ships, Black Sails, edited by Ann & Jeff VanderMeer)
- Hobnoblin Blues (2008) (Realms of Fantasy magazine, Feb. 2008)
- Shoggoths in Bloom (2008) (Asimov's Science Fiction, Mar. 2008)
- Your Collar (2008) (Subterranean Magazine, 2008)
- Sonny Liston Takes the Fall (2008) (Anthology The Del Rey Book of Science Fiction and Fantasy edited by Ellen Datlow)
- The Red in the Sky Is Our Blood (2008) (Anthology METAtropolis edited by John Scalzi)
- The Girl Who Sang Rose Madder (2008)
- Snow Dragons (2009) (Subterranean Magazine, Summer 2009)
- Mongoose (with Sarah Monette) (2009) (Lovecraft Unbound (2009, Dark Horse Comics. Reprinted in The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twenty-Seventh Annual Collection)
- Formidable Terrain (2009) (H. P. Lovecraft's Magazine of Horror, Spring 2009)
- Cuckoo (2009) (with Leah Bobet & Emma Bull)
- Swell (2009) (Anthology Eclipse Three edited by Jonathan Strahan)
- The Horrid Glory of Its Wings (2009) (At Tor.com/Dec. 2009)
- Dolly (2011)
- The Romance (2011) (Anthology Supernatural Noir edited by Ellen Datlow)
- Gods of the Forge (2011)
- The Leavings of the Wolf (2011)
- King Pole, Gallows Pole, Bottle Tree (2011) (Anthology Naked City: New Tales of Urban Fantasy edited by Ellen Datlow)
- Needles (2011)
- The Salt Sea and the Sky (2012) (Anthology Brave New Love: 15 Dystopian Tales of Desire edited by Paula Guran)
- ad eternum (2012)
- The Slaughtered Lamb (2012)
- Faster Gun (2012)
- Form and Void (2012) (Webzine Fireside, Winter 2012)
- The Wreck of the "Charles Dexter Ward (with Sarah Monette) (2012) (Anthology New Cthulhu 2: More Recent Weird edited by Paula Guran)
- The Death of Terrestrial Radio (2012)
- The Deeps of the Sky (2012)
- No Decent Patrimony (2012) (Asimov's Science Fiction, Feb. 2015)
- The Governess (2013)
- Book of Iron (2013) Novella
- The Hand is Quicker (2014)
- No Place to Dream, but a Place to Die (2014)
- You've Never Seen Everything (2014) (Appeared in anthology The End Is Now edited by John Joseph Adams & Hugh Howey)
- Madam Damnable's Sewing Circle (2014) (Appeared in anthology Dead Man's Hand: An Anthology of the Weird West, edited by John Joseph Adams)
- Covenant (2014)
- In the House of Aryaman, a Lonely Signal Burns (2012) (Appeared in Asimov's Science Fiction, Jan. 2012 & reprinted in The Year's Best Science Fiction: Thirtieth Annual Collection, edited by Gardner Dozois)
- This Chance Planet (2014)
- Terrior (2014)
- The Bone War(2015)
- The Heart's Filthy Lesson (2015) (Appeared in anthology Old Venus edited by Gardner Dozois & George R. R. Martin)
- In Libres (2015)
- Margin of Survival (2015) (Appeared in anthology The End Is Now edited by John Joseph Adams & Hugh Howey)
- And the Balance in Blood (2015)
- Skin in the Game (2015)
- What Someone Else Does Not Want Printed (2017) (Appears in anthology Resist: Tales from a Future Worth Fighting Against, edited by Hugh Howey)
- Perfect Gun (2017)
- The King's Evil (2017) (Appears in anthology The Book of Swords edited by Gardner Dozois)
- No Work of Mine (2018) (Appeared in the anthology The Book of Magic edited by Gardner Dozois)
- She Still Loves the Dragon (2018)
- Okay, Glory (2018)
- We Have Always Died in the Castle (2018)
- Bug's A-Life (2018)
- Particulates (2018) (Appears in anthology Particulates edited by Nalo Hopkinson)
- Deriving Life (2019)
- Lest We Forget (2019)
- No Moon and Flat Calm (2019)
- Bullet Point (2019) (Appears in the anthology Wastelands: The New Apocalypse edited by John Joseph Adams)
- Soft Edges (2019) (Appeared in webzine anthology Current Futures: A Sci-fi Ocean Anthology edited by Ann VanderMeer)
- Erase, Erase, Erase (2019)
- A Time to Reap (2019)
- Hacksilver (2020)
- On Safari in R'lyeh and Carcosa with Gun and Camera (2020)
- A Blessing of Unicorns (2020) (Appeared in Asimov's Science Fiction, Sept.-Oct. 2021)
- The Red Mother (2021)
- The Part You Throw Away (2022)
- Twin Strangers (2022) (Appeared in anthology Tasting Light: Ten Science Fiction Stories to Rewire Your Perceptions edited by A. R. Capetta & Wade Roush)
- Here Instead of There (2023) (Appeared in anthology Communications Breakdown: SF Stories About the Future of Connection edited by Jonathan Strahan)
Poetry
[edit]- "Li Bai Drowns While Embracing the Moon" in Not One of Us, Issue 42.
- "Seven Steeds" in Lone Star Stories, Issue 29, Oct. 2008.
- "e.e. 'doc' cummings" in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, March 2003.
- Hel on a Headland in Uncanny Magazine (Jan-Feb 2023)
Essays
[edit]- "We'll Make Great Pets" in Chicks Dig Time Lords (2010, Mad Norwegian Press)
Reception
[edit]Annalee Newitz of io9 wrote that Bear "is famous for combining high-octane military/spy tales with eccentric and subversive subplots".[10]
Awards
[edit]| Work | Year & Award | Category | Result | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hammered | 2005 Astounding Award for Best New Writer | Won | ||
| Two Dreams on Trains | 2005 BSFA Award | Short Fiction | Nominated | |
| Sounding | 2006 BSFA Award | Short Fiction | Nominated | |
| Carnival | 2006 Philip K. Dick Award | Won (Special Citation) | ||
| 2007 Locus Award | SF Novel | Nominated | [11] | |
| 2007 Lambda Literary Award for Speculative Fiction | LGBT Horror/Science Fiction/Fantasy | Nominated | ||
| 2007 Gaylactic Spectrum Awards | Novel | Nominated | ||
| Undertow | 2007 Philip K. Dick Award | Finalist | ||
| 2008 Locus Award | SF Novel | Nominated | ||
| Wax | 2006 Locus Award | Novelette | Nominated | |
| 2007 Interzone Readers Poll | Story | 8th Place | [12] | |
| Wane | 2007 Locus Award | Novelette | Nominated | |
| Cryptic Coloration | 2008 Locus Award | Novelette | Nominated | |
| New Amsterdam | 2008 Locus Award | Collection | Nominated | |
| 2008 Gaylactic Spectrum Awards | Novel | Nominated | ||
| Orm the Beautiful | 2008 Locus Award | Short Story | Nominated | |
| 2008 WSFA Small Press Award | Shortlisted | |||
| Tideline | 2008 Locus Award | Short Story | Nominated | |
| 2008 Asimov's Readers' Poll | Short Story | Won | [13] | |
| 2008 Hugo Award | Short Story | Won | ||
| 2008 Theodore Sturgeon Award | Short Science Fiction | Won | ||
| Whiskey and Water | 2008 Locus Award | Fantasy Novel | Nominated | |
| 2008 Gaylactic Spectrum Awards | Novel | Nominated | ||
| A Companion to Wolves
(with Sarah Monette) |
2008 Lambda Literary Award for Speculative Fiction | LGBT Horror/Science Fiction/Fantasy | Nominated | |
| Dust | 2008 Gaylactic Spectrum Awards | Novel | Nominated | |
| The Stratford Man | 2009 Gaylactic Spectrum Awards | Novel | Won | |
| All the Windwracked Stars | 2009 Gaylactic Spectrum Awards | Novel | Nominated | |
| Shoggoths in Bloom | 2009 Hugo Award | Novelette | Won | |
| 2009 Locus Award | Novelette | Nominated | ||
| Shoggoths in Bloom (Collection) | 2013 Locus Award | Collection | Won | |
| Boojum | 2009 Locus Award | Short Story | Nominated | |
| By the Mountain Bound | 2010 Gaylactic Spectrum Awards | Novel | Nominated | |
| Seven for a Secret | 2010 Gaylactic Spectrum Awards | Novel | Nominated | |
| Chill | 2010 Philip K. Dick Award | Finalist | ||
| 2011 Locus Award | SF Novel | Nominated | ||
| Cuckoo
(with Leah Bobet & Emma Bull) |
2010 Locus Award | Novella | Nominated | |
| Mongoose | 2010 Locus Award | Novelette | Nominated | |
| Bone and Jewel Creatures | 2011 World Fantasy Award | Novella | Nominated | |
| 2011 Locus Award | Novella | Nominated | [14] | |
| Range of Ghosts | 2012 Otherwise Award | Honor | ||
| 2013 Locus Award | Fantasy Novel | Nominated | ||
| METAtropolis: Cascadia | 2012 Audie Award | Original Work | Won | |
| SF Squeecast | 2012 Hugo Award | Fancast | Won | |
| 2013 Hugo Award | Fancast | Won | ||
| Dolly | 2012 Locus Award | Short Story | Nominated | [15] |
| Grail | 2012 Locus Award | SF Novel | Nominated | |
| 2012 Gaylactic Spectrum Awards | Novel | Nominated | ||
| Faster Gun | 2013 Locus Award | Novelette | Nominated | [16] |
| In the House of Aryaman, a Lonely Signal Burns | 2013 Locus Award | Novella | Nominated | |
| 2013 Asimov's Readers' Poll | Novella | 4th Place | [17] | |
| No Decent Patrimony | 2013 Locus Award | Novelette | Nominated | |
| The Deeps of the Sky | 2013 Locus Award | Short Story | Nominated | |
| The Wreck of the Charles Dexter Ward | 2013 Locus Award | Novelette | Nominated | |
| Covenant | 2015 Locus Award | Short Story | Nominated | |
| Steles of the Sky | 2015 Locus Award | Fantasy Novel | Nominated | |
| The Hand is Quicker | 2015 Locus Award | Novelette | Nominated | |
| This Chance Planet | 2015 Locus Award | Short Story | Nominated | |
| Karen Memory | 2016 Locus Award | Fantasy Novel | Nominated | |
| 2016 Gaylactic Spectrum Awards | Novel | Nominated | ||
| The Heart's Filthy Lesson | 2016 Locus Award | Novelette | Nominated | |
| The Stone in the Skull | 2018 Locus Award | Fantasy Novel | Nominated | |
| Okay, Glory | 2019 Locus Award | Novelette | Nominated | |
| The Red-Stained Wings | 2020 Locus Award | Fantasy Novel | Nominated | |
| A Time to Reap | 2020 Locus Award | Novella | Nominated | |
| Ancestral Night | 2020 Locus Award | SF Novel | Nominated | |
| Erase, Erase, Erase | 2020 Locus Award | Novelette | Nominated | |
| Lest We Forget | 2020 Locus Award | Short Story | Nominated | |
| Machine | 2021 Locus Award | SF Novel | Nominated | |
| 2021 Dragon Awards | Science Fiction | Nominated | ||
| 2021 Neffy Awards | Novel | Won | [18] | |
| The Best of Elizabeth Bear | 2021 Locus Award | Collection | Nominated | |
| A Blessing of Unicorns | 2022 Asimov's Readers' Poll | Novella | Won | [19] |
| 2022 Locus Award | Novella | Nominated | ||
| The Red Mother | 2022 Locus Award | Novelette | Nominated |
References
[edit]- ^ "2009 Hugo Awards". www.locusmag.com. 2009-08-09. Archived from the original on 2009-03-26.
- ^ "Locus Online: Elizabeth Bear interview excerpts". Locus: The Magazine of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Field. April 2006. Archived from the original on 2006-04-25. Retrieved 2021-02-03.
- ^ "Elizabeth Bear Papers, 2005- 2011". Northern Illinois University. 2008-04-18. Archived from the original on 2018-07-15. Retrieved 2015-09-01.
- ^ "Elizabeth Bear - Award Bibliography". www.isfdb.org.
- ^ "Scott Lynch and Elizabeth Bear got married!". Gentlemen Bastards. October 10, 2016. Retrieved May 15, 2018.
- ^ Pixel Scroll 9/3/21 "If It Doesn’t Scroll Naturally, File It", by Mike Glyer, at File 770; published September 3, 2021; retrieved October 6, 2021
- ^ "Elizabeth Bear One Eyed Jack cover art and synopsis reveal". Upcoming4.me. May 2, 2013. Archived from the original on May 5, 2013. Retrieved May 2, 2013.
- ^ "Elizabeth Bear - Steles of the Sky cover art and synopsis reveal". Upcoming4.me. July 8, 2013. Archived from the original on January 12, 2014. Retrieved July 10, 2013.
- ^ http://clarkesworldmagazine.com/bear_01_07/
- ^ Newitz, Annalee (May 6, 2008). "Environmental Fascists Fight Gun-Loving Lesbians for Alien Technology". io9. Archived from the original on January 26, 2016. Retrieved January 19, 2016.
- ^ https://www.sfadb.com/Locus_Awards
- ^ https://www.sfadb.com/Interzone_Readers_Poll_2007
- ^ https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ay.cgi?3+2008
- ^ https://www.sfadb.com/Locus_Awards_2011
- ^ https://www.sfadb.com/Locus_Awards_2012
- ^ https://www.sfadb.com/Locus_Awards_2013
- ^ https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ay.cgi?3+2013
- ^ https://locusmag.com/2021/09/2021-neffy-awards-winners/
- ^ https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ay.cgi?3+2022
External links
[edit]- Official website

- Interview at Clarkesworld Magazine, May 2010
- Interview at SFRevu.com, April 2019
- Elizabeth Bear at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Elizabeth Bear at The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction
- Elizabeth Bear stories available free online
Elizabeth Bear
View on GrokipediaBiography
Early life and education
Elizabeth Bear, born Sarah Bear Elizabeth Wishnevsky on September 22, 1971, in Hartford, Connecticut, spent her early childhood in New England, primarily in East Hartford and Rockville, with her family briefly residing in Vermont's Northeast Kingdom during her infancy.[8] She grew up in a working-class household shaped by a queer family environment, with divorced parents and a same-sex household that included a Middle Eastern step-parent.[9][10] Her mother, an avid reader and science fiction enthusiast, provided early access to a diverse collection of books, fostering Bear's lifelong passion for reading; as a hyperlexic child, she progressed rapidly from Little Golden Books to more complex works like Watership Down by the first grade.[8] Bear initially aspired to study geology but was hindered by undiagnosed dyscalculia, leading her to pursue English and anthropology at the University of Connecticut, where she attended but did not complete a degree.[8] During her time at UConn, she gained practical experience in journalism by working as a reporter and editor for the student newspaper The Daily Campus, producing substantial volumes of writing under tight deadlines.[8] Before establishing her writing career, Bear held a variety of jobs to support herself, including as a stable hand, reporter, technical writer updating microbiology manuals at Hartford Hospital, and roles in data entry, office management, and food service such as deli and doughnut shop work.[8] She also contributed to archaeological digs by helping excavate test pits and later produced news summaries during a period in Las Vegas.[8] These early positions, often in service and media industries, reflect the economic realities of her formative years.[10]Personal life
Bear married science fiction author Scott Lynch in October 2016.[11] The couple resides in the Happy Valley region of Massachusetts, where Bear maintains a lifestyle centered on full-time writing supplemented by part-time work as a futurist; she has delivered talks on futurism at institutions including Google, MIT, and DARPA's 100 Year Starship project.[2] They share their home with four cats.[12] In September 2021, Bear was diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer and began treatment, which included surgery, radiation over 32 sessions, and hormone therapy.[13] By late 2022, a follow-up mammogram showed no evidence of recurrence, though she managed post-treatment complications such as cellulitis in the surgical site and ongoing lymphedema from lymph node removal.[14] As of 2025, Bear continues her recovery, navigating occasional sequelae from the treatments while resuming professional activities.[15]Writing career
Early career and debut
Elizabeth Bear began pursuing writing as a serious career in 2001, following a period of diverse employment that included roles as a technical writer, stable hand, reporter, and various office positions; this shift came after she lost her job in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks, prompting her to complete her first novel by early 2002.[16] Her technical writing background later influenced the precise, detail-oriented style evident in her speculative fiction, particularly in narratives involving complex technologies and systems.[17] Bear's initial forays into publishing included a handful of short stories sold to small-press magazines during the 1990s, though these were sporadic and not indicative of full-time commitment.[18] Her professional breakthrough in short fiction arrived with "e e 'doc' cummings," published in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction in March 2003, marking her entry into more prominent genre markets.[19] Bear's debut novel, Hammered, the first installment in the Jenny Casey trilogy, was published by Bantam Spectra in January 2005.[20] This cyberpunk-infused military science fiction work introduced a battle-hardened protagonist grappling with neural enhancements and global crises, establishing Bear's reputation for blending hard science with character-driven drama. The novel's release propelled her career, culminating in her receipt of the 2005 John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer, which recognized her rapid emergence as a significant voice in speculative fiction.[17] Early collaborative efforts, such as the 2007 short story "Boojum" co-written with Sarah Monette, further showcased her versatility, though these were secondary to her solo output during this foundational period.[19]Major works and series
Elizabeth Bear's early major series, the Jenny Casey trilogy (Hammered (2005), Scardown (2005), and Worldwired (2006)), marked her entry into military science fiction, exploring themes of human augmentation and geopolitical intrigue through the lens of a cybernetically enhanced protagonist.[21] This series established Bear's reputation for blending hard science fiction with character-driven narratives. Transitioning toward urban fantasy, Bear developed the Promethean Age series, beginning with Blood and Iron (2006), which introduced a modern world intertwined with faerie realms and mythological elements, followed by sequels like Whiskey and Water (2007).[22] The series expanded into historical crossovers with Ink and Steel (2008) and Hell and Earth (2008), incorporating figures like William Shakespeare and Kit Marlowe in an alternate history framework. This body of work showcased Bear's versatility in fusing contemporary settings with supernatural intrigue, earning critical acclaim for its intricate world-building. In the 2010s, Bear shifted toward epic fantasy with the Eternal Sky trilogy, commencing with Range of Ghosts (2012), Shattered Pillars (2013), and concluding with Steles of the Sky (2014), inspired by Central Asian steppes and nomadic cultures. The series highlighted her growing focus on diverse, non-Western-inspired landscapes and political machinations, receiving Nebula and Hugo nominations for its scope. The mythological fantasy Edda of Burdens trilogy (All the Windwracked Stars (2008), By the Mountain Bound (2010), and The Sea Thy Mistress (2013)) explored Norse-inspired themes of gods and apocalypse in a separate arc. Paralleling these, the space opera White Space series, connected to the universe of her Jacob's Ladder trilogy (Dust (2007), Chill (2008), Grail (2009)), began with Ancestral Night (2019) and continued with Machine (2020) and The Folded Sky (2025), delving into interstellar salvage, AI ethics, and alien artifacts.[23][24] Bear's steampunk-infused Karen Memory series further diversified her output, starting with Karen Memory (2015) and Stone Mad (2018), set in an alternate 19th-century Pacific Northwest, and culminating in Angel Maker (2025), which incorporates early film industry elements.[25] Alongside these, novels like Ancestral Night (2019) and The Origin of Storms (2022, concluding the Lotus Kingdoms trilogy: The Stone in the Skull (2018), The Red-Stained Wings (2019), The Origin of Storms (2022)) demonstrated her command of isolated, high-concept narratives in science fiction and fantasy. Ancestral Night delved into salvage operations amid alien artifacts in a richly imagined interstellar setting.[26] By the 2020s, Bear's oeuvre reflected a deliberate evolution from gritty military SF toward expansive fantasy and space opera, evident in collections like The Best of Elizabeth Bear (2020), which anthologized 27 stories spanning her career.[27] This shift allowed for deeper explorations of interstellar societies and cultural mythologies, with announcements for Shipwreck Star (2026), the next in the White Space series, signaling continued expansion into uncharted narrative territories.[28]Literary style and themes
Influences and recurring motifs
Elizabeth Bear's literary influences draw heavily from speculative fiction authors who explored social and ethical complexities within genre frameworks. She cites Ursula K. Le Guin as a key inspiration for blending anthropology, feminism, and world-building in works that challenge societal norms.[29] Other formative influences include Joanna Russ and Suzy McKee Charnas, whose feminist science fiction shaped Bear's early engagement with power structures and identity in speculative narratives.[30] Additionally, Octavia Butler's explorations of race, resilience, and alternate histories resonate in Bear's character-driven stories, while Robert A. Heinlein's emphasis on long-term relationships informs her depictions of enduring bonds amid adversity.[29] Bear also incorporates mythological and historical sources to enrich her settings and themes. Her Edda of Burdens trilogy reimagines Norse folklore, integrating elements like Ragnarok and divine hierarchies with futuristic technology to examine cycles of destruction and rebirth.[31] Similarly, the Eternal Sky trilogy draws from Mongolian epics and Central Asian history, featuring nomadic horselords, shamanic traditions, and imperial conquests to evoke vast steppes and cultural clashes.[32] These inspirations stem from Bear's anthropology background, which informs her detailed portrayals of ancient rituals and societal evolutions.[29] Recurring motifs in Bear's oeuvre include identity and transformation, often tied to posthuman enhancements and ethical dilemmas of self-alteration. In her White Space series, characters navigate surgical prostheses, mood-regulating drugs, and AI integrations that expand human agency while questioning bodily autonomy.[33] AI and posthumanism appear as sentient entities grappling with mental health and governance, as seen in an AI overseer developing psychosis on a generation ship, highlighting the vulnerabilities of machine consciousness.[33] Colonialism and power dynamics form another core motif, critiquing exploitative hierarchies through lenses of resistance and alliance. Bear's narratives often depict interstellar or imperial expansions that echo historical conquests, emphasizing collective responsibility over domination.[30] Queer representation permeates her work, portraying diverse sexualities and genders—lesbians, bisexuals, trans, and non-binary individuals—as integral to society rather than tokenized elements, influenced by her upbringing in a queer household.[29] Environmentalism emerges in motifs of ecological collapse, such as the Eschaton event in her space operas, which spurs sustainable practices and critiques resource exploitation.[33] Bear's motifs have evolved from the gritty military science fiction of her debut Jenny Casey trilogy, which focused on cybernetic soldiers in post-apocalyptic survival, to expansive epic fantasy in the Eternal Sky and Edda of Burdens series, incorporating mythic scales and cultural depth.[31] This progression continues in ambitious space operas like the White Space series (including The Folded Sky in 2025), blending hard SF with philosophical inquiries into AI ethics, interstellar ethics, family dynamics, and moral dilemmas.[33][34] Her anthropology studies and personal experiences with chronic health issues subtly inform themes of resilience and adaptation across these shifts.[29]Critical analysis
Elizabeth Bear's writing is characterized by dense world-building that immerses readers in richly detailed speculative universes, often achieved through precise, evocative prose that renders landscapes and societies tangible without overwhelming exposition.[35] In works like The Stone in the Skull, her intricate construction of the Lotus Kingdoms integrates cultural, political, and magical elements seamlessly, drawing on epic fantasy traditions while maintaining narrative momentum.[35] This technique allows for expansive scales confined to intimate character perspectives, as seen in the vast Synarche universe of Machine, where technological and ethical complexities unfold through professional salvage operations.[36] Bear frequently employs multiple points of view to explore interconnected plotlines and human motivations, enhancing thematic depth and tension.[35] In The Stone in the Skull, she adroitly shifts between characters such as the Gage, the Dead Man, and Mrithuri, using restricted perspectives to lace characterization into action and reveal broader conflicts like duty and religious coexistence.[35] This approach mirrors influences from sword-and-sorcery while innovating in epic fantasy, blending mythic elements—such as wizards and celestial phenomena—with grounded interpersonal dynamics.[35] Her narratives often subvert traditional gender and queer dynamics, presenting fluid relationships and identities as normative rather than exceptional, challenging heteronormative assumptions in speculative fiction.[29] For instance, in the Promethean Age series, long-term queer partnerships drive the plot, reflecting anthropological insights into diverse social structures.[29] Bear innovates within subgenres by hybridizing conventions to critique societal issues, notably in her steampunk novel Karen Memory, where she reimagines 19th-century Seattle as a queer-inclusive frontier rife with mad science and labor exploitation.[37] The protagonist's phonetic first-person voice and action-driven plot subvert Western tropes, centering marginalized voices like sex workers and immigrants in a genre typically dominated by male adventurers.[37] In short fiction, Bear excels at horror-SF hybrids that merge cosmic dread with scientific inquiry, as in "Shoggoths in Bloom," where Lovecraftian entities become tools for examining biological agency and historical injustices.[38] This story innovates by transforming the shoggoth from a symbol of racialized horror into a reprogrammable entity, blending hard SF ecology with mythic subversion.[38] A key strength of Bear's oeuvre lies in amplifying underrepresented voices in speculative fiction, particularly through intersectional lenses on race, gender, and power. In "Shoggoths in Bloom," an African-American protagonist confronts 1930s-era racism by ethically engaging with shoggoths, hacking Lovecraft's mythos to affirm Black agency and critique embedded racial hierarchies in horror traditions.[38] This technique fills gaps in genre coverage by repurposing alien "otherness" to highlight human prejudices, promoting sentient equality across biological and social divides.[38] Such approaches extend to her broader short fiction, where hybrid forms address exclusionary narratives, fostering inclusive speculative worlds.[36]Bibliography
Novels
Elizabeth Bear's novels encompass multiple science fiction and fantasy series, as well as standalone works, with her output in the 2020s including sequels that extend earlier trilogies into expansive universes.[39]Jenny Casey Series
The Jenny Casey series is a cyberpunk military science fiction trilogy centered on advanced technology and human augmentation in a near-future setting.[40]- Hammered (2005, Spectra), her debut novel.[41]
- Scardown (2005, Spectra).[42]
- Worldwired (2006, Spectra).[43]
Promethean Age Series
The Promethean Age series blends urban fantasy, historical fiction, and alternate history, exploring intersections between human and faerie realms.[22]- Blood and Iron (2007, ROC).[44]
- Whiskey and Water (2007, ROC).[45]
- Ink and Steel (2008, ROC).[46]
- Hell and Earth (2008, ROC).[47]
Jacob's Ladder Series
The Jacob's Ladder series is a generation-ship space opera trilogy exploring themes of humanity, divinity, and survival amid bioengineered environments.[39]- Dust (2007, Spectra).[48]
- Chill (2008, Spectra).[49]
- Grail (2008, Spectra).[50]
Edda of Burdens Series
The Edda of Burdens series is a Norse mythology-inspired epic fantasy trilogy featuring cosmic conflicts and mythic archetypes.- All the Windwracked Stars (2008, Tor Books).[51]
- By the Mountain Bound (2009, Tor Books).[52]
- The Sea Thy Mistress (2011, Tor Books).[53]
Eternal Sky Series
The Eternal Sky series is a Central Asian-inspired fantasy trilogy depicting vast steppes, empires, and shamanic elements.- Range of Ghosts (2012, Tor Books).[54]
- Shattered Pillars (2013, Tor Books).[55]
- Steles of the Sky (2014, Tor Books).[56]
Karen Memory Series
The Karen Memory series is a steampunk adventure series set in an alternate 19th-century American West with strong female leads.[57]- Karen Memory (2015, Tor Books).[58]
- Stone Mad (2018, Tor.com Publishing).[59]
- Angel Maker (2025, Sobbing Squonk Press).[60]
Lotus Kingdoms Series
The Lotus Kingdoms series is an epic fantasy trilogy drawing on South Asian influences, focusing on political intrigue and divine interventions.[61]- The Stone in the Skull (2017, Tor Books).[62]
- The Red-Stained Wings (2019, Tor Books).[63]
- The Origin of Storms (2022, Tor Books).
White Space Series
The White Space series is a hard science fiction space opera series examining AI, exploration, and interstellar law in a vast galactic frontier.[28]- Ancestral Night (2019, Saga Press).
- Machine (2020, Saga Press).
- The Folded Sky (2025, Saga Press).[64]
Short fiction and collections
Elizabeth Bear has published numerous short stories, novelettes, and novellas across science fiction and fantasy magazines and anthologies, often exploring themes of identity, technology, and mythology in concise, character-driven narratives. Her short fiction frequently intersects with broader speculative traditions, earning critical acclaim for its innovative blending of genres. Notable early works include the novelette "Tideline," published in Asimov's Science Fiction in July 2007, which won the Hugo Award for Best Novelette in 2008 and the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award, depicting a post-apocalyptic encounter between a salvager and an AI-inhabited robot. Similarly, the short story "Shoggoths in Bloom," appearing in the March 2008 issue of Asimov's, secured the 2009 Hugo Award for Best Short Story by reimagining H.P. Lovecraft's mythos through the lens of civil rights and exploitation in an alternate 1930s America.[65][66] Bear's longer short works include the 2010 novella Bone and Jewel Creatures, released by Subterranean Press, set in her Eternal Sky universe and nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Novella, where an artificer constructs companions from bones and jewels amid themes of creation and loss. Another standout is the 2012 novelette "In the House of Aryaman, a Lonely Signal Burns," originally in Asimov's January 2012 issue and winner of the 2013 Hugo Award for Best Novelette, following a detective in near-future Bangalore investigating bizarre murders involving bioengineering and cultural memory. These pieces often tie briefly to her novel universes, such as the New Amsterdam series, expanding shared worlds without relying on prior reading.[67][68] Bear's short fiction has been compiled in several collections, beginning with The Chains That You Refuse in 2006 from Night Shade Books, which gathers early stories like "Bots d'Amour" and "Two Dreams on Trains," showcasing her debut-era versatility in cyberpunk and fantasy. The 2012 collection Shoggoths in Bloom, also from Night Shade, reprints award-winning tales alongside new ones such as "The Lady and the Fox" and "The Death of Terrestrial Radio," earning a 2013 Locus Award for Best Collection. Her retrospective The Best of Elizabeth Bear, published in 2020 by Subterranean Press, selects 20 stories spanning her career, including Hugo winners and pieces like "Form and Void," highlighting her evolution in speculative storytelling. In recent years, Bear has contributed to prominent anthologies, such as "Here Instead of There" in Communications Breakdown: SF Stories About the Future of Connection (2023, edited by Jonathan Strahan for MIT Press), examining disrupted human connections in a speculative framework. She also appears in New Year, New You: A Speculative Anthology of Reinvention (2024, edited by Chris Campbell for Immortal Jellyfish Press), with a story exploring themes of personal transformation amid speculative reinvention. These contributions underscore her ongoing influence in short-form speculative fiction.Essays
Elizabeth Bear has contributed a number of essays to speculative fiction publications, often exploring the craft of writing and thematic elements within the genre. Her early non-fiction work includes "Achieving Freshness in Fantasy," published in 2004, which discusses innovative approaches to world-building in fantasy literature. Similarly, "The Politics of Dancing" (2005) examines cultural and social dynamics in narrative construction, while "Utilizing the Unexpected" (2005) addresses the role of surprise in storytelling. Bear's essays frequently delve into the mechanics of speculative genres, drawing on her experience as a prolific author. In "Old Weird, New Angles: Why Novelty Is Overrated" (2006), she argues for the value of reinterpreting established tropes over constant innovation. Later pieces, such as "Dear Speculative Fiction, I'm Glad We Had This Talk" (2012) in Clarkesworld Magazine's Another Word column, offer candid reflections on genre evolution and community expectations.[69] Another notable essay, "I Love a Good Tragedy as Much as the Next Guy" (2013), published on A Dribble of Ink, defends the emotional depth of tragic narratives in fiction.[70] Beyond genre-specific outlets, Bear has written opinion pieces and non-fiction for mainstream publications, including Popular Mechanics and The Washington Post, where her work touches on futurism and technological implications in society.[2] She has also engaged in public speaking on futurist topics at institutions such as Google, MIT, DARPA's 100 Year Starship Project, and the White House.[2] These contributions reflect her broader interest in how speculative ideas intersect with real-world advancements.Awards and recognition
Major awards
Elizabeth Bear received the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in 2005, recognizing her emergence as a significant talent in science fiction and fantasy shortly after her professional debut. This early accolade marked a pivotal point in her career, establishing her as one of the field's promising new voices and paving the way for subsequent recognition. In 2006, she won the Locus Award for Best First Novel for Hammered, the opening installment of her Jenny Casey trilogy, praised for its gritty cyberpunk elements and strong character development. Her short fiction also garnered major honors, including the 2008 Hugo Award for Best Short Story for "Tideline," a poignant tale of a sentient robot and an orphaned child set against a post-apocalyptic backdrop.[71] That same year, "Tideline" additionally secured the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award, selected from semifinalists for its exceptional literary quality in speculative short fiction. Bear's 2009 Hugo Award for Best Novelette came for "Shoggoths in Bloom," an alternate history story reimagining H.P. Lovecraft's mythos through the lens of the 1938 New England hurricane and exploited labor.[72] She has earned multiple Locus Awards for short fiction, including the 2013 win for Best Novelette with "The Deeps of the Sky" from the anthology Edge of Infinity, highlighting her skill in blending hard science fiction with emotional depth.[73] Bear won the Gaylactic Spectrum Award for Best Novel for Ink and Steel (2009), the first book of The Stratford Man duology, and again in 2019 for the novella Stone Mad.[3][74] She co-won the Hugo Award for Best Fancast for the podcast SF Squeecast in 2012 and 2013.[75][76]| Award | Year | Category | Work |
|---|---|---|---|
| John W. Campbell | 2005 | Best New Writer | N/A |
| Locus | 2006 | Best First Novel | Hammered |
| Hugo | 2008 | Best Short Story | "Tideline" |
| Theodore Sturgeon Memorial | 2008 | Short Fiction | "Tideline" |
| Hugo | 2009 | Best Novelette | "Shoggoths in Bloom" |
| Gaylactic Spectrum | 2009 | Best Novel | Ink and Steel |
| Hugo | 2012 | Best Fancast | SF Squeecast |
| Hugo | 2013 | Best Fancast | SF Squeecast |
| Locus | 2013 | Best Novelette | "The Deeps of the Sky" |
| Gaylactic Spectrum | 2019 | Best Novel | Stone Mad |