Felix Gilman
Felix John Gilman (11 November 1974 in London)[1] is a British writer of fantasy and weird fiction.[2] His 2007 novel Thunderer (published by Bantam Spectra) was nominated for the 2009 Locus Award for Best First Novel,[3] and earned him a nomination for the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in both 2009 and 2010.
Felix Gilman | |
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![]() Felix Gilman gives a reading at the 2010 Brooklyn Indie Mart Steampunk Show | |
Born | Felix John Gilman 11 November 1974 London, England |
Occupation | Attorney, Author |
Language | English |
Nationality | British |
Genre | Science fiction, Steampunk, Fantasy |
Notable works | Thunderer, The Half-Made World |
Website | |
www |
Personal life
Gilman lives in New York City, where he practices law.[4]
Bibliography
Novels
- Thunderer. Spectra. 2007. ISBN 0-553-80676-9.
- Gears of the City. Spectra. 2008. ISBN 0-553-80677-7.
- The Half-Made World. Tor. 2010. ASIN B005DI8998. ISBN 0-7653-2552-7.
- The Rise of Ransom City. Tor. 2012. ASIN B008E8NO76.
- The Revolutions. Tor Books. 2014. ISBN 9780765337177.
gollark: There's JPEG-XL or something, which will apparently allow *lossless* higher-efficiency representation of existing JPEGs. Very exciting.
gollark: Consider all those annoying mostly irrelevant images in articles. Those don't really need to actually be very high quality, and if you can lossily compress them to 20KB or so you can really shave off loading times.
gollark: Although vector graphics would often be nicer, they're not always practical.
gollark: It's perfectly fine for other things where you can get nice small images with little perceptible quality loss.
gollark: Thus, small lossily compressed files.
References
- "Felix Gilman: Making the World Stranger", from Locus issue 589, volume 64 number 2, page 81
- "Blog Archive ยป Campbell Nominee Interview: Felix Gilman". Mary Robinette Kowal. 21 April 2009. Retrieved 16 August 2009.
- "Locus Online News: 2009 Locus Award Finalists". Locusmag.com. 27 April 2009. Archived from the original on 30 April 2009. Retrieved 16 August 2009.
- Rodger Turner, Webmaster. "Dispatches From Smaragdine by Jeff VanderMeer". The SF Site. Retrieved 16 August 2009.
External links
- Felix Gilman at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- The story behind The Revolutions - Online Essay by Felix Gilman at Upcoming4.me
- Official site (archived)
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