Nancy Asire

Nancy Asire (born 1945) is an American fantasy and science fiction author, best known for her Twilight's Kingdoms fantasy trilogy and her contributions to the shared universe series Heroes in Hell, Sword of Knowledge and Merovingen Nights. [1] [2] [3]

Nancy Asire
Born1945
OccupationAuthor
NationalityUnited States
GenreFantasy, science fiction

Bibliography

Twilight's Kingdoms

  • Twilight's Kingdoms (1987)
  • Tears of Time (1993)
  • To Fall Like Stars (1996)

Heroes in Hell

  • Heroes in Hell (1986)
  • Rebels in Hell (1986)
  • Crusaders in Hell (1987)
  • Angels in Hell (1987)
  • Masters in Hell (1987)
  • War in Hell (1988)
  • Prophets in Hell (1989)
  • Lawyers in Hell (2011)
  • Rogues in Hell (2012)
  • Dreamers in Hell (2013)
  • Poets in Hell (2014)
  • Doctors in Hell (2015)

Merovingen Nights

  • Festival Moon (1987)
  • Fever Season (1987)
  • Troubled Waters (1988)
  • Smugglers Gold (1988)
  • Divine Right (1989)
  • Flood Tide (1990)
  • Endgame (1991)

Sword of Knowledge

Note: C. J. Cherryh was the primary writer, and worked with a different collaborator in each volume, thus Nancy Asire is listed for only Volume 2, Wizard Spawn, and the Omnibus.

Short stories

  • "Table with a View" (1986)
  • "A Walk in the Park" (1986)
  • "By Invitation Only" (1987)
  • "Cat's Tale" (1987)
  • "Night Ride" (1987)
  • "The Conscience of the King" (1987) (with C. J. Cherryh)
  • "Houseguests" (1987)
  • "Fallout" (1988)
  • "By a Woman's Hand" (1988)
  • "A Fish Story" (1988)
  • "Fast Food" (1989)
  • "Draw Me a Picture" (1989)
  • "The Testing" (1990)
  • "The Testing (Reprised) (#1)" (1990)
  • "The Testing (Reprised) (#2)" (1990)
  • "The Testing (Reprised) (#3)" (1990)
  • "Bookworms" (1991)
  • "Family Ties" (1991)
  • "Family Ties" (Reprised) (#1) (1991)
  • "Family Ties" (Reprised) (#2) (1991)
  • "Owl Light" (1999) appeared in Flights of Fancy edited by Mercedes Lackey
  • "The Cat Who Came to Dinner" (2003)
  • "The Boogey Man's Wife" (2013) appeared in What Scares the Boogey Man? edited by John Manning
gollark: Except conlangs, which are weird in precisely defined ways, typically.
gollark: All languages are weird.
gollark: More like 701%.
gollark: One of the cool things about Iceland is that you can in fact wear sunglasses at times normally considered night, due to the weird day/night cycle.
gollark: I mean, dares are quite stupid anyway.

References

  1. "Summary Bibliography: Nancy Asire". ISFDB. Retrieved 2019-07-25.
  2. "Nancy Asire". Fantastic Fiction. Retrieved 2019-07-25.
  3. "Nancy Asire". The Perseid Press. Retrieved 2020-06-30.
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