Kathleen Sky
Kathleen Sky (born Kathleen McKinney, August 5, 1943)[1][2] is the pen name of Kathleen McKinney Goldin, an American science fiction and fantasy author. Her pen name is her former married name from her marriage to first husband Karl Sky. From 1972 to 1982 she was married to fellow author and collaborator Stephen Goldin.[1][3]
Kathleen Sky | |
---|---|
Born | Alhambra, California | August 5, 1943
Occupation | Writer |
Genre | Speculative fiction |
Most of her fiction is romantic in nature.[1] Her books include Vulcan! and Death's Angel, two of the earliest original novels based on the 1960s Star Trek TV series.[4]
Bibliography
Star Trek novels
- Vulcan! reissued as Star Trek Adventures 11: Vulcan! (Bantam Books, September 1978, ISBN 0-553-12137-5; Titan Books reissue, April 20, 1995, ISBN 1-85286-537-7; Spectra October 6, 1998, ISBN 0-553-24633-X)
- Death's Angel reissued as Star Trek Adventures 10: Death's Angel (Bantam Books, April 1981, ISBN 0-553-24983-5; Titan Books reissue, February 15, 1994, ISBN 1-85286-536-9; Spectra reissue, May 1, 1995, ISBN 0-553-24983-5)
Other novels
- Birthright (1975)
- Ice Prison (1976)
- Witchdame (1984)
Collections
- Star Rooks (ebook) (Embiid Publishing, January 2004, ISBN 1-58787-252-8) (with Stephen Goldin)
Short stories
- "One Ordinary Day, with Box" (1972)
- "Lament of the Keeku Bird" (1973)
- "Door to Malequar" (1975)
- "A Daisychain for Pav" (1976)
- "Motherbeast" (1978)
- "The Devil Behind the Leaves" (1981) (with Stephen Goldin)
- "But I Don't Do Dragons" (1982)
- "Painting the Roses Red" (2004) (with Stephen Goldin)
Nonfiction
- "Sauerbraten" (1973)
- An Hour with Kathleen Sky (cassette audiobook) (1979) (with Stephen Goldin)
- The Business of Being a Writer (1982) (with Stephen Goldin)
Notes
- Entry on Kathleen Sky in SFE: The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction
- Internet Speculative Fiction Database entry for Kathleen Sky
- "Stephen Goldin: Bio Sketch" at website of Stephen Goldin Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine
- Guide to the Early Star Trek Novels Archived 2007-03-12 at the Wayback Machine
gollark: Managed funds do not on average do better than this.
gollark: Index funds just invest in literally everything automatically.
gollark: It goes down by some amount with regularity, but on average it's a net positive thing.
gollark: If the entire stock market entirely loses all value, you will probably have bigger problems.
gollark: Even after inflation.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.