Lish McBride

Lish McBride is an American writer of urban fantasy.[1] Her first book was Hold Me Closer, Necromancer, a young-adult novel about a fast-food fry cook who learns he is a necromancer.[2] It won a 2011 Washington State Book Award[3] and was a finalist for the William C. Morris YA Debut Award. Her second novel, Necromancing the Stone, was released in September 2012.

McBride grew up outside Seattle. She moved to Seattle when she was 21, then to University of New Orleans for her MFA in fiction. After completing her degree, she returned to Seattle, where she lived as of late 2010.[4]

Bibliography

Necromancer Series

  • Hold Me Closer, Necromancer (October 2010, ISBN 9780805090987)
  • Necromancing the Stone (September 2012, ISBN 9780805090994)
  • "Halfway Through the Wood" (short story) and You Make Me Feel So Young" (short story) in Freaks & Other Family (Dec 21, 2016 ISBN 0998403202)
  • "We Should Get Jerseys 'Cause We Make a Good Team" (short story) in the anthology Cornered: 14 Stories of Bullying and Defiance (ISBN 0762444282)
  • "Death & Waffles" (short story) in Burniac, Lauren, ed. (2015). Fierce Reads: Kisses and Curses. Square Fish. ISBN 9781250060532.
  • "Heads Will Roll" (short story)

Firebug series

  • Firebug (September 2014, ISBN 9780805098624)
  • Pyromantic (March 2017, ISBN 9780805098631), sequel to Firebug
  • "Burnt Sugar" (short story) in released on Tor.com

Other

  • "School of Fish (short story) in What to Read in the Rain anthology
  • "Just the Mustache" published in The Normal School: A Literary Magazine
gollark: That's probably one of them. I'm writing.
gollark: > If you oppose compromises to privacy on the grounds that you could do something that is misidentified as a crime, being more transparent does helpI mean, sure. But I worry about lacking privacy for reasons other than "maybe the government will use partial data or something and accidentally think I'm doing crimes".
gollark: Also, you can probably just treat privacy as a "terminal goal" like all the other weird drives us foolish humans have, but I think there are good reasons for it based on other stuff.
gollark: Are you missing some negatives or something? I'm failing to parse that.
gollark: I don't understand what you're saying.

See also

References

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