Barbara Roden

Barbara Roden (born 1963), is a Canadian horror writer and editor.

Barbara Roden
Born1963
NationalityCanadian

Biography

Barbara Roden was born in 1963 in Vancouver, British Columbia. She studied journalism. With her husband Christopher Roden, she founded Ash-Tree Press in 1994. She is editor of All Hallows from the Ghost Story Society. She is a longstanding Sherlock Holmes fan and she and her husband have edited a number of titles as well as one she wrote. Roden has won World Fantasy Awards as editor and publisher. She has also written fiction and her work has gained awards.[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8]

Roden now lives in Ashcroft and in 2018 she was elected Mayor of the village. She is the editor of The Ashcroft-Cache Creek Journal and in 2018 she was awarded the Jack Webster Award for Community Reporting.[9][10]

Awards

  • 1997 World Fantasy Awards —special award
  • 2000 Bram Stoker Awards —specialty press award
  • 2005 World Fantasy Awards —anthology — Acquainted with the Night
  • 2005 International Horror Guild Awards —anthology — Acquainted with the Night

Bibliography

  • Northwest Passages (2009)
  • All Hallows
  • Lady Stanhope's Manuscript and Other Supernatural Tales (1994)
  • Forgotten Ghosts: The Supernatural Anthologies of Hugh Lamb (1996)
  • Midnight Never Comes (1997)
  • Shadows and Silence (2000)
  • Acquainted with the Night (2004)
  • At Ease with the Dead (2007)
  • Shades of Darkness (2008)
Short Fiction
  • Dead Man's Pears (1994)
  • The Adventure of the Suspect Servant (1997)
  • Tourist Trap (2000)
  • Northwest Passage (2004)
  • The Appointed Time (2005)
  • The Palace (2007)
  • The Wide, Wide Sea (2007)
  • The Hiding Place (2007)
  • Association Copy (2008)
  • Endless Night (2008)
  • Back Roads (2008)
  • The Things That Shall Come Upon Them (2008)
  • The Haunted House in Etobicoke (2009)
  • The Brink of Eternity (2009)
  • After (2009)
  • Out and Back (2009)
  • Home on the Range (2009)
  • Flu Season (2010)
  • 404 (2011)
  • Sweet Sorrow (2011)
  • Night Visitors (2012)
  • All Souls Day (2013)
  • Undesirable Residence (2013)
  • Strone House (2015)

References and sources

  1. "Barbara Roden – File 770". File 770. 2018-12-30. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
  2. "Summary Bibliography: Barbara Roden". The Internet Speculative Fiction Database. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
  3. "sfadb : Barbara Roden Awards". Science Fiction Awards Database (in Bosnian). Retrieved 2020-02-16.
  4. "Barbara Roden". Worlds Without End. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
  5. Roden, B. (2012). Mammoth Books presents Out and Back. Mammoth Books. Little, Brown Book Group. p. 3. ISBN 978-1-4721-0241-6. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
  6. Prepolec, C.; Campbell, J.R.; Klinger, L.S.; Volk, S.; Connolly, L.C.; Meikle, W.; Moore, J.A.; Maynard, W.P.; Trenholm, H.; Jackson, N. (2009). Gaslight Grotesque: Nightmare Tales of Sherlock Holmes. Gaslight. Hades Publications Incorporated. p. 228. ISBN 978-1-894063-70-8. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
  7. Datlow, E. (2009). Poe: New Tales Inspired by Edgar Allan Poe. Rebellion. p. 92. ISBN 978-1-84997-210-9. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
  8. Roden, Barbara (2019-07-17). "Barbara Roden – Page 5 – BC Local News". BC Local News. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
  9. Jure, Brendan Kyle (2018-10-20). "Barbara Roden elected mayor of Ashcroft". Ashcroft Cache Creek Journal. Retrieved 2020-02-16.
  10. "Council Bio – Village of Ashcroft". Village of Ashcroft – Wellness Awaits You. 2018-10-10. Retrieved 2020-02-16.


gollark: No, if the eye could see it it would be gamma ray colored.
gollark: Also, they can ionise things without stopping.
gollark: My physics knowledge is obviously not really that complete, and you're not being very specific, but it's probably that they can only go through a bit of matter, or at least are *sometimes* absorbed and sometimes go through.
gollark: It seems harder to shield humans and the weird biological processes which get affected against radiation than computers, where it basically just boils down to more redundancy and possibly better materials/processes.
gollark: (there's ECC support in RAM and SSDs and stuff, but as far as I know they just put radiation shielding on for CPUs)
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