Eleanor Arnason
Eleanor Arnason was born in Manhattan and grew up in New York, Chicago,
London, Paris, Washington DC, Honolulu, St. Paul and Minneapolis. She
received a BA in art history from Swarthmore College and did graduate
work at the University of Minnesota, before quitting to learn about life
outside art museums and institutions of higher learning. She made her first
professional sale in 1972 while living in the Detroit inner city. Since
then she has published five novels and over thirty works of short
fiction. Her fourth novel, A Woman of the Iron People (2001), won the James
Tiptree Jr. award for gender-bending science fiction and the Mythopoeic
Society Award for adult fantasy. Her fifth novel, Ring of Swords (1995), won a
Minnesota Book Award. Since 1994 she has devoted herself to short
fiction. Her story "Dapple" won the Spectrum Award for GLBT science
fiction and was a finalist for the Sturgeon Award. Other stories have been
finalists for the World Fantasy, Hugo and Nebula Awards.
She lives in Minnesota, where she makes her living as the financial manager
for a small arts nonprofit. Aside from accounting and science fiction, her
interests include politics, economics, bird-watching, driving down two-lane
country highways and exploring the remains of the Great Lakes industrial
belt.
In spite of all setbacks and adversity, she remains a lifelong fan of
ordinary human decency and the international working class.
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