Marge Simon

Marge Baliff Simon (born 1942) is an American artist and a writer of speculative poetry and fiction. Her poems, short fiction, and illustrations have appeared in hundreds of publications, including Amazing Stories, Nebula Awards 32, Strange Horizons, The Pedestal Magazine, Chizine, Niteblade, Vestal Review, and Daily Science Fiction.

Marge Simon
OccupationWriter, poet, painter
NationalityAmerican
Genrespeculative fiction
SpouseBruce Boston

Early years

Marge Simon was born in Bethesda, MD, but grew up in Boulder, CO. She received her BA and MA degrees from the University of Northern Colorado, and then continued her studies at the Art Center College of Design. Deciding against a career as a commercial artist, she began working as an art teacher in elementary schools instead.[1]

Writing career

In the mid-1980s, Simon began writing and illustrating for the small press and went on to become an award-winning writer. She received the Rhysling Award's Best Long Poem for speculative poetry in 1996.[2] She won the Bram Stoker Award for her collaborative poetry collection with Charlee Jacob, Vectors: A Week in the Death of a Planet in 2008, and again in 2012 for her collection Vampires, Zombies, and Wanton Souls. Her poetry has also won the Dwarf Stars Award, the Strange Horizons Readers Poll and the Elgin Award for Best Poetry Collection, "Sweet Poison" with Mary A. Turzillo. She was awarded the Science Fiction Poetry Association's Grand Master poetry award in 2015.[3]

Simon is a former president of the Small Press Writers and Artists Organization and the Science Fiction Poetry Association, and a former editor of Star*Line, SFPA's bimonthly journal. In 2013 she began editing the column "Blood and Spades: Poets of the Dark Side" for the monthly newsletter of the Horror Writers Association. She also serves as the Chair of the HWA Board of Trustees.[2]

Personal life

Simon lives in Ocala, Florida, with her husband, writer Bruce Boston, with whom she sometimes collaborates.

Bibliography

Poetry books

  • Poets of the Fantastic (co-ed. with Steve Eng). AE Press, 1993
  • Eonian Variations. Dark Regions, 1995
  • Night Smoke with Bruce Boston, ebook. Miniature Sun/Quixsilver, 2003 (Bram Stoker Award finalist)
  • Artist of Antithesis, ebook. Miniature Sun, 2004 (Bram Stoker Award finalist)
  • Vectors: A Week in the Death of a Planet with Charlee Jacob. Dark Regions, 2007 (Bram Stoker Award winner)
  • Night Smoke with Bruce Boston, expanded print edition of the 2003 ebook. Kelp Queen Press, 2007
  • Uneathly Delights. Sam's Dot Publishing, 2011
  • The Mad Hattery. Elektrik Milk Bath Press, 2011
  • The Four Elements with Linda Addison, Rain Graves, and Charlee Jacob. Bad Moon Books, 2012
  • Dangerous Dreams with Sandy DeLuca. Elektrik Milk Bath Press, 2013

Poetry and fiction books

  • Dragon Soup with Mary Turzillo. vanZeno Press, 2008
  • Legends of the Fallen Sky with Malcolm Deeley. Sam's Dot Publishing, 2008
  • City of a Thousand Gods with Malcolm Deeley. Sam's Dot Publishing, 2010

Fiction books

  • Like Birds in the Rain. Sam's Dot Publishing, 2007
  • Christina's World. Sam's Dot Publishing, 2008
  • The Dragon's Dictionary with Mary Turzillo. Sam's Dot Publishing, 2010

Art

  • Gallery of color art at Strange Horizons.
  • Soho Galleries, black and white art.
gollark: *Languages* can be, since they often don't actually specify memory limits, implementations do.
gollark: It's not Turing-complete if it has limited memory.
gollark: Not *really*. In languages with an abstract model that doesn't specify limited memory sizes, yes, but PotatOS Assembly Languageā„¢'s addresses are 16 bits, so you can't address any more RAM than that.
gollark: Technically it's not even going to be Turing-complete because of the limited address space, unlike in BF.
gollark: I have an amazing FIVE INSTRUCTIONS implemented!

References

  1. An interview with Marge Simon, 7 March 2013, archived from the original on February 18, 2015, retrieved 27 April 2016CS1 maint: unfit url (link)
  2. The 2013 Rhysling Winners, retrieved 27 April 2016
  3. 2015 SFPA Grand Masters, retrieved 27 April 2016
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