Carolyn Ives Gilman
Carolyn Ives Gilman has been publishing science fiction and fantasy for
almost twenty years. Her first novel, Halfway Human, published by Avon/Eos
in 1998, was called “one of the most compelling explorations of gender
and power in recent SF” by Locus magazine. Her short fiction has
appeared in magazines and anthologies such as F&SF,
Bending the Landscape, The Year’s Best Science Fiction, Realms of Fantasy,
The Best From Fantasy & Science Fiction, Interzone, Universe, Full
Spectrum, and others. Her fiction has been translated into Italian,
Russian, German, Czech and Romanian. In 1992 she was a finalist for the Nebula Award for
her novella, “The Honeycrafters.”
In her professional career, Gilman is a historian specializing in 18th and
early 19th-century North American history, particularly frontier and Native
history. Her most recent nonfiction book, Lewis and Clark: Across the
Divide, was published in 2003 by Smithsonian Books. She has been a
guest lecturer at the Library of Congress, Harvard University, and
Monticello, and has been interviewed on All Things Considered (NPR),
Talk of the Nation (NPR), History Detectives (PBS), and the
History Channel.
Carolyn Ives Gilman lives in St. Louis and works for the Missouri
Historical Society as a historian and museum curator.
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