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Bruce McAllister

Bruce McAllister (born 1946) is an American author of fantasy, science fiction, poetry, and non-fiction. He is known primarily for his short fiction. Over the years his short stories have been published in the major fantasy and science fiction magazines, theme anthologies, college readers, and "year's best" anthologies, including Best American Short Stories 2007, guest-edited by Stephen King.

Bruce McAllister
Born1946 (age 76–77)
Baltimore, Maryland
OccupationAuthor
NationalityAmerican
GenreScience fiction, poetry, non-fiction

 Literature portal

Biography

McAllister was born in Baltimore, Maryland in 1946.[1] The son of a "peripatetic Navy family," his career-Navy-officer "Pearl-Harbor-survivor father and an underdog-championing anthropologist mother" raised Bruce and his younger brother, Jack, in Washington, D.C., Florida, California, and Italy. McAllister wrote, "The theme of the Outsider, the Other, the Alien in the larger sense, runs through almost all of my fiction. That came from being in a military family, from having a sense of being an outsider..."[2]

He wrote to Dublin-based interviewer Bob Neilson, "When I was 4½ I shook hands with natty-dresser US President Harry Truman on a laid-back avenue in Key West, Florida. I had no idea who the guy was, but my momma raised me right. I wanted to be courteous, and he offered, so I shook his hand. ...[A] week after the hand-shake we dropped over to see Mrs. Hemingway, who lived in a little beach house with palms and banana trees and who, though we didn't know her, was hospitable."[2]

He told Neilson that as a child he had a sea-shell collection of more than 2000 specimens. This interest appears in his fiction, notably in two 2010 stories, "Heart of Hearts" and "The Courtship of the Queen."[3]

McAllister also told Neilson that "One of my ancestors was a guy named John Thomson. Immigrated from Scotland to Ireland, then the US in the 1700s. Wore his kilt till the day he died, outlived five wives, had fifteen children. Maybe the right stuff for a frontier, a New World, but I've always been horrified by the thought of having to live with someone like him. The domestic, family side of Braveheart?" The family story was that their lineage on his father's side went "back to Robert the Bruce, supposedly, and laterally to Ben Franklin, or so they said...along with a Captain McAllister of the Confederate Army." McAllister also thought that his mother "was probably part Native American."[2]

Another influential childhood memory was this: "As far as our father's world went, we had, on the Navy base where we lived in San Diego, the bathyscaphe submersible in our back yard (literally we would have played on it if we could have gotten a decent grip); a year later it would make the deepest dive in the Pacific ever made, with Jacques Piccard and a Navy diver and a civilian scientist—all of them diving legends if not then, then later)." (Neilson commented in his essay about McAllister, "You can see where the themes of 'the alien' and 'the natural world'—the behavioral sciences and the biological sciences—came from in this guy's fiction.")[2]

Literary archivist and agent Sarah Funke Butler describes an enterprise McAllister undertook when he was 16:[4]

Bruce McAllister sent a four-question mimeographed survey to 150 well-known authors of literary, commercial, and science fiction. Did they consciously plant symbols in their work? he asked. Who noticed symbols appearing from their subconscious, and who saw them arrive in their text, unbidden, created in the minds of their readers? When this happened, did the authors mind? ... Confident, if not downright cocky, he thought the surveys could settle a conflict with his English teacher by proving that symbols weren't lying beneath the texts they read like buried treasure awaiting discovery.
His project involved substantial labor—this before the Internet, before e-mail—but was not impossible: many authors and their representatives were listed in the Twentieth-Century American Literature series found in the local library. More impressive is that seventy-five writers replied—most of them in earnest. Sixty-five of those responses survive (McAllister lost ten to "a kleptomaniacal friend"). Answers ranged from the secretarial blow-off to a thick packet of single-spaced typescript in reply.

When Butler interviewed McAllister decades later, he remarked, "The conclusion I came to was that nobody had asked them. New Criticism was about the scholars and the text; writers were cut out of the equation. Scholars would talk about symbolism in writing, but no one had asked the writers."

McAllister attended middle school and art school in Italy. He received degrees in English and writing from Claremont McKenna College and the University of California, Irvine.[5]

He taught literature and writing at the University of Redlands in southern California for twenty-four years.[4][5] There, he helped establish and direct the Creative Writing Program, directed both the Professional Writing track of that program and its Communications Internship program, received various teaching and service awards, and was Edith R. White Distinguished Professor of Literature and Writing from 1990 to 1995. Later, he started the company McAllister Coaching, helping writers of books and screenplays with their manuscripts.[5]

He lives in Orange, California with his wife, choreographer and Orange Coast College teacher, Amelie Hunter.[1] He has three children from a previous marriage: Annie, Ben, and Liz.

Reception

Publishers Weekly wrote, "McAllister's first novel is a stunning tour de force... Masterful interior monologues that yield eerie, tingling tension make this terrifying novel one of the most memorable chronicles of the Vietnam war."[6] Library Journal's reviewer said, "The training and the mission are suffused with madness, and the physical horrors are matched with mental ones. Throughout the narrative are interspersed transcripts of interviews, memos, etc. The apocalyptic ending does strain the willing suspension of disbelief. Still, the story is fascinating, very well told, and likely to appeal to readers of Vietnam War fiction and nonfiction."[7]

In a review of The Year's Best Science Fiction Twenty-Fourth Annual Collection, Ernest Lilley described the famous story "Kin": "a twelve-year-old boy is in the act... his 'partner' is an alien assassin he tries to hire to stop the government from killing his unborn sister. There are a lot of interesting bits in this story, and some nice nuance in the actions and ideas. As Gardner points out in his intro, McAllister may not be prolific in his output, but what he does offer us [is] excellent work."[8]

Bob Blough reviewed the short story "Blue Fire" for Tangent Online, the review magazine for short stories of science fiction and fantasy:

should be one of the most talked about stories of the year. It is flat-out brilliant. Bruce McAllister has created an entire alternate world in "Blue Fire." The alternate world is one in which vampires are real and fight against the Catholic Church for supremacy... The story takes place in the 1500s and the time of Pope Boniface XII  – a child Pope elected at 8 years of age — who is about to die after 70 years of his reign as Pope, but who has one more story to tell. The story he relates is about a visit from "the youngest drinker" while he was still a child, but early in his time as Pope. The alternate universe is dazzling, but what sets this story above so many others is the true, honest, Christ-like character of the young Pope and how he deals with a boy who has been taken by the vampires. An excellent story with honest characters; it's a beautiful work.[9]

SF Site reviewed the story "Heart of Hearts," "another of Bruce McAllister's ongoing series of fantasies about a teenaged American boy in an Italian village." Rich Horton wrote, "It's a bittersweet story, beautifully written, sensitively characterized."[10]

Blough also reviewed "Stamps" for Tangent: "one of the very few SF stories I can think of which uses stamp collecting as an integral part of the story (Norstrilia by Cordwainer Smith is another one). But if anyone can pull it off it is Bruce McAllister. 'Stamps' is told in a minor key and concerns itself with aliens coming to Earth during the Cuban missile crisis in order to avert nuclear war. The narrator is T'Phu'Bleem, one of ten Arcturians on the planet to save and eventually reveal themselves to the world. He begins collecting postage stamps to understand these earthlings: "These stamps were like a puzzle, one that could explain how human beings actually thought and felt... If he didn't try to figure that puzzle out for the sake of the human race and the Ten Galactic Principles, who would?" It is a pleasant story that lingers in the mind as an unusual way of describing first contact."[11]

After reading "The Messenger," Rena Hawkins wrote, "Tim's father is dying and the question that tears at him the most is whether his wife, Tim's mother, actually loved him. To answer his father's question and hopefully bring him some peace, Tim travels back in time to meet his parents and see for himself. A short, poignant story about whether you can ever be sure where love is concerned."[12]

Awards

Bibliography

Novels

  • Humanity Prime (Ace Books, 1971; Wildside Press, 2008, ISBN 978-1-4344-0163-2)[13] ("When Man's emerging star-empire met that of the savage Cromanths, the alien hordes began a war of extinction against humankind" —from Publisher's description) (Ace SF Special, Series 1)
  • Dream Baby (Tor/St. Martin's, 1989, ISBN 0-312-93197-2)[14] ("The acclaimed visionary chronicle of the nightmare that was Vietnam. Army nurse Mary Damico can see the future. She knows which soldiers will die on the battlefields. Col. John Bucannon, commander of the CIA's secret psychic warfare project, wants to exploit her dark gift, regardless of the apocalyptic carnage his experiment will unleash." —from Publisher's description)
  • The Village Sang to the Sea: A Memoir of Magic (Aeon Press, Dublin, Ireland, 2013. ISBN 978-0953478-49-1) (“During the Cold War a 13-year-old American boy, Brad Lattimer, moves with his family to a fishing village in Northern Italy. It is no ordinary village. Brad is welcomed like a long-lost cousin. This village wants Brad to become something other than a boy—something that can never leave it—something it can have as its own forever.” –from the Publisher’s description)

Short fiction

Collections
  • The Girl Who Loved Animals and Other Stories (Golden Gryphon Press, 2007; ISBN 978-1-930846-49-4).[15] “From his first professional story written when he was 16, "The Faces Outside," to his most critically acclaimed work, the novelette Dream Baby, a finalist for both the Hugo and Nebula awards, these 17 stories showcase the author's five decades of science fiction writing. The book also features story notes that reveal each story's origin as well as the influences-both literary and human-on the author's life and writing career.” –from Publisher’s description. Introduction by Harry Harrison; afterword by Barry N. Malzberg. McAllister included mini-essays for each story.
Stories[16]
Title Year First published Reprinted/collected Notes
My father's crab 2015 McAllister, Bruce (October 2015). "My father's crab". Analog Science Fiction and Fact. 135 (10): 64–69.

References

  1. ^ a b . Tor Books. Archived from the original on June 19, 2017. Retrieved August 5, 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d Neilson, Bob (January 30, 2012). "Bruce McAllister – A Masterclass in how to use answers to improve questions". Bob Neilson Org. Retrieved September 1, 2012.
  3. ^ McAllister, Bruce (2010). "The Courtship of the Queen [full text]". Tor.com. Retrieved September 1, 2012.
  4. ^ a b Butler, Sarah Funke (December 5, 2011). "Document: The Symbolism Survey". The Paris Review. New York City: The Paris Review Foundation. ISSN 0031-2037. Retrieved September 1, 2012.
  5. ^ a b c McAllister, Bruce. "McAllister Coaching: Bio". Retrieved September 1, 2012.
  6. ^ "Dream Baby". Publishers Weekly. 1989. Retrieved September 1, 2012.
  7. ^ Donahugh, Robert H. (1989). "Dream Baby". Library Journal. Retrieved September 1, 2012.
  8. ^ Lilley, Ernest (2007). "The Year's Best Science Fiction Twenty-Fourth Annual Collection by Gardner Dozois". SF Revu. Retrieved September 1, 2012.
  9. ^ Blough, Bob (5 March 2010). "The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction - Mar/Apr 2010". Tangent Online. Retrieved September 1, 2012.
  10. ^ Horton, Rich (2010). "The SF Site Featured Review: Albedo One, Issue 38". SF Site. Retrieved September 1, 2012.
  11. ^ Blough, Bob (1 August 2012). "Asimov's, August 2012". Tangent Online. Retrieved September 1, 2012.
  12. ^ Hawkins, Rena (2011). "Asimov's, July 2011". Tangent Online. Retrieved September 1, 2012.
  13. ^ Mcallister, Bruce (September 21, 2007). Humanity Prime. Wildside Press. ISBN 978-1-4344-0163-2.
  14. ^ Mcallister, Bruce (October 1989). Dream Baby. ISBN 978-0-312-93197-1.
  15. ^ The Girl Who Loved Animals: And Other Stories. ISBN 1930846495.
  16. ^ Short stories unless otherwise noted.
  17. ^ Hugo Award for Best Novelette
  18. ^ "American Gothic Tales (William Abrahams) (9780452274891): Joyce Carol Oates: Books". Amazon.com. Retrieved 2010-08-26.
  19. ^ . Goldengryphon.com. Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2010-08-26.
  20. ^ "Glimmer Train Stories, Winter 2006 #57 (9781595530066): Randy F. Nelson & Bruce". Amazon.com. 2009-09-09. Retrieved 2010-08-26.
  21. ^ The Best American Short Stories 2007
  22. ^ "Image ◊ Journal ◊ Back Issues ◊ Issue 59". Imagejournal.org. Retrieved 2010-08-26.

Other sources

  • Bourquin, David Ray. The Work Of Bruce Mcallister: An Annotated Bibliography & Guide. San Bernardino, Calif.: Borgo Press, 1985. (ISBN 089370489X (pbk.); ISBN 0893703893 (hardcover))
  • Lohr, Michael. "California Daydreaming: An Interview With Bruce McAllister." Aeon Seven, May, 2006 (Scorpius Digital Publishing, ISBN 1-931386-77-3).

External links

  • The Official Site of Bruce McAllister - Full Biography, Publications, Writing Coaching & Consulting
  • - About The Girl Who Loved Animals and Other Stories
  • Escape Pod Official Site - For Podcast of Hugo Award-nominated Story "Kin"
  • LeVar Burton Reads - For Podcast of Hugo Award-nominated Story "Kin"

bruce, mcallister, canadian, politician, politician, born, 1946, american, author, fantasy, science, fiction, poetry, fiction, known, primarily, short, fiction, over, years, short, stories, have, been, published, major, fantasy, science, fiction, magazines, th. For the Canadian politician see Bruce McAllister politician Bruce McAllister born 1946 is an American author of fantasy science fiction poetry and non fiction He is known primarily for his short fiction Over the years his short stories have been published in the major fantasy and science fiction magazines theme anthologies college readers and year s best anthologies including Best American Short Stories 2007 guest edited by Stephen King Bruce McAllisterBorn1946 age 76 77 Baltimore MarylandOccupationAuthorNationalityAmericanGenreScience fiction poetry non fiction Literature portal Contents 1 Biography 2 Reception 3 Awards 4 Bibliography 4 1 Novels 4 2 Short fiction 5 References 6 Other sources 7 External linksBiography EditMcAllister was born in Baltimore Maryland in 1946 1 The son of a peripatetic Navy family his career Navy officer Pearl Harbor survivor father and an underdog championing anthropologist mother raised Bruce and his younger brother Jack in Washington D C Florida California and Italy McAllister wrote The theme of the Outsider the Other the Alien in the larger sense runs through almost all of my fiction That came from being in a military family from having a sense of being an outsider 2 He wrote to Dublin based interviewer Bob Neilson When I was 4 I shook hands with natty dresser US President Harry Truman on a laid back avenue in Key West Florida I had no idea who the guy was but my momma raised me right I wanted to be courteous and he offered so I shook his hand A week after the hand shake we dropped over to see Mrs Hemingway who lived in a little beach house with palms and banana trees and who though we didn t know her was hospitable 2 He told Neilson that as a child he had a sea shell collection of more than 2000 specimens This interest appears in his fiction notably in two 2010 stories Heart of Hearts and The Courtship of the Queen 3 McAllister also told Neilson that One of my ancestors was a guy named John Thomson Immigrated from Scotland to Ireland then the US in the 1700s Wore his kilt till the day he died outlived five wives had fifteen children Maybe the right stuff for a frontier a New World but I ve always been horrified by the thought of having to live with someone like him The domestic family side of Braveheart The family story was that their lineage on his father s side went back to Robert the Bruce supposedly and laterally to Ben Franklin or so they said along with a Captain McAllister of the Confederate Army McAllister also thought that his mother was probably part Native American 2 Another influential childhood memory was this As far as our father s world went we had on the Navy base where we lived in San Diego the bathyscaphe submersible in our back yard literally we would have played on it if we could have gotten a decent grip a year later it would make the deepest dive in the Pacific ever made with Jacques Piccard and a Navy diver and a civilian scientist all of them diving legends if not then then later Neilson commented in his essay about McAllister You can see where the themes of the alien and the natural world the behavioral sciences and the biological sciences came from in this guy s fiction 2 Literary archivist and agent Sarah Funke Butler describes an enterprise McAllister undertook when he was 16 4 Bruce McAllister sent a four question mimeographed survey to 150 well known authors of literary commercial and science fiction Did they consciously plant symbols in their work he asked Who noticed symbols appearing from their subconscious and who saw them arrive in their text unbidden created in the minds of their readers When this happened did the authors mind Confident if not downright cocky he thought the surveys could settle a conflict with his English teacher by proving that symbols weren t lying beneath the texts they read like buried treasure awaiting discovery His project involved substantial labor this before the Internet before e mail but was not impossible many authors and their representatives were listed in the Twentieth Century American Literature series found in the local library More impressive is that seventy five writers replied most of them in earnest Sixty five of those responses survive McAllister lost ten to a kleptomaniacal friend Answers ranged from the secretarial blow off to a thick packet of single spaced typescript in reply When Butler interviewed McAllister decades later he remarked The conclusion I came to was that nobody had asked them New Criticism was about the scholars and the text writers were cut out of the equation Scholars would talk about symbolism in writing but no one had asked the writers McAllister attended middle school and art school in Italy He received degrees in English and writing from Claremont McKenna College and the University of California Irvine 5 He taught literature and writing at the University of Redlands in southern California for twenty four years 4 5 There he helped establish and direct the Creative Writing Program directed both the Professional Writing track of that program and its Communications Internship program received various teaching and service awards and was Edith R White Distinguished Professor of Literature and Writing from 1990 to 1995 Later he started the company McAllister Coaching helping writers of books and screenplays with their manuscripts 5 He lives in Orange California with his wife choreographer and Orange Coast College teacher Amelie Hunter 1 He has three children from a previous marriage Annie Ben and Liz Reception EditPublishers Weekly wrote McAllister s first novel is a stunning tour de force Masterful interior monologues that yield eerie tingling tension make this terrifying novel one of the most memorable chronicles of the Vietnam war 6 Library Journal s reviewer said The training and the mission are suffused with madness and the physical horrors are matched with mental ones Throughout the narrative are interspersed transcripts of interviews memos etc The apocalyptic ending does strain the willing suspension of disbelief Still the story is fascinating very well told and likely to appeal to readers of Vietnam War fiction and nonfiction 7 In a review of The Year s Best Science Fiction Twenty Fourth Annual Collection Ernest Lilley described the famous story Kin a twelve year old boy is in the act his partner is an alien assassin he tries to hire to stop the government from killing his unborn sister There are a lot of interesting bits in this story and some nice nuance in the actions and ideas As Gardner points out in his intro McAllister may not be prolific in his output but what he does offer us is excellent work 8 Bob Blough reviewed the short story Blue Fire for Tangent Online the review magazine for short stories of science fiction and fantasy should be one of the most talked about stories of the year It is flat out brilliant Bruce McAllister has created an entire alternate world in Blue Fire The alternate world is one in which vampires are real and fight against the Catholic Church for supremacy The story takes place in the 1500s and the time of Pope Boniface XII a child Pope elected at 8 years of age who is about to die after 70 years of his reign as Pope but who has one more story to tell The story he relates is about a visit from the youngest drinker while he was still a child but early in his time as Pope The alternate universe is dazzling but what sets this story above so many others is the true honest Christ like character of the young Pope and how he deals with a boy who has been taken by the vampires An excellent story with honest characters it s a beautiful work 9 SF Site reviewed the story Heart of Hearts another of Bruce McAllister s ongoing series of fantasies about a teenaged American boy in an Italian village Rich Horton wrote It s a bittersweet story beautifully written sensitively characterized 10 Blough also reviewed Stamps for Tangent one of the very few SF stories I can think of which uses stamp collecting as an integral part of the story Norstrilia by Cordwainer Smith is another one But if anyone can pull it off it is Bruce McAllister Stamps is told in a minor key and concerns itself with aliens coming to Earth during the Cuban missile crisis in order to avert nuclear war The narrator is T Phu Bleem one of ten Arcturians on the planet to save and eventually reveal themselves to the world He begins collecting postage stamps to understand these earthlings These stamps were like a puzzle one that could explain how human beings actually thought and felt If he didn t try to figure that puzzle out for the sake of the human race and the Ten Galactic Principles who would It is a pleasant story that lingers in the mind as an unusual way of describing first contact 11 After reading The Messenger Rena Hawkins wrote Tim s father is dying and the question that tears at him the most is whether his wife Tim s mother actually loved him To answer his father s question and hopefully bring him some peace Tim travels back in time to meet his parents and see for himself A short poignant story about whether you can ever be sure where love is concerned 12 Awards EditNational Endowment for the Arts creative writing fellowship for Dream Baby 1991 https www arts gov literature fellowships list last name m litfellows type 1 amp page 4 Third Place Very Short Fiction Contest Glimmer Train 2005 White Heron http www glimmertrain com pages finalists 2005 01 winter vsfa 25 php Finalist Fall Story Contest Narrative 2015 The Painting of It http www narrativemagazine com fall 2015 story contest winner Finalist Hugo Award 1988 Novelette Category Dream Baby http www thehugoawards org hugo history 1988 hugo awards Finalist Hugo Award 2007 Short Story Category Kin http www thehugoawards org hugo history 2007 hugo awards Nominee Nebula Award 1987 Novelette Category Dream Baby https nebulas sfwa org award year 1987 Shirley Jackson Award 2012 Novelette Category The Crying Child http www shirleyjacksonawards org award winners 2012 shirley jackson awards winners Honorable Mention Fiction Open 2013 Glimmer Train Stealing God http www glimmertrain com pages finalists 2015 07 july vsfa hm php Honorable Mention Very Short Fiction Contest 2015 Glimmer Train Beautiful Day http www glimmertrain com pages finalists 2015 07 july vsfa hm phpBibliography EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items July 2022 Novels Edit Humanity Prime Ace Books 1971 Wildside Press 2008 ISBN 978 1 4344 0163 2 13 When Man s emerging star empire met that of the savage Cromanths the alien hordes began a war of extinction against humankind from Publisher s description Ace SF Special Series 1 Dream Baby Tor St Martin s 1989 ISBN 0 312 93197 2 14 The acclaimed visionary chronicle of the nightmare that was Vietnam Army nurse Mary Damico can see the future She knows which soldiers will die on the battlefields Col John Bucannon commander of the CIA s secret psychic warfare project wants to exploit her dark gift regardless of the apocalyptic carnage his experiment will unleash from Publisher s description The Village Sang to the Sea A Memoir of Magic Aeon Press Dublin Ireland 2013 ISBN 978 0953478 49 1 During the Cold War a 13 year old American boy Brad Lattimer moves with his family to a fishing village in Northern Italy It is no ordinary village Brad is welcomed like a long lost cousin This village wants Brad to become something other than a boy something that can never leave it something it can have as its own forever from the Publisher s description Short fiction Edit CollectionsThe Girl Who Loved Animals and Other Stories Golden Gryphon Press 2007 ISBN 978 1 930846 49 4 15 From his first professional story written when he was 16 The Faces Outside to his most critically acclaimed work the novelette Dream Baby a finalist for both the Hugo and Nebula awards these 17 stories showcase the author s five decades of science fiction writing The book also features story notes that reveal each story s origin as well as the influences both literary and human on the author s life and writing career from Publisher s description Introduction by Harry Harrison afterword by Barry N Malzberg McAllister included mini essays for each story Stories 16 Title Year First published Reprinted collected NotesMy father s crab 2015 McAllister Bruce October 2015 My father s crab Analog Science Fiction and Fact 135 10 64 69 The Faces Outside 1963 McAllister s first short story published when he was a sixteen year old San Diego high school student was originally published in the magazine If July 1963 having been selected by Frederik Pohl His debut story impressed many it was selected for The 9th Annual of the Year s Best SF 1964 by Judith Merril and Isaac Asimov Presents The Great SF Stories 25 1963 edited by Isaac Asimov and Martin H Greenberg ISBN 0 88677 518 3 And So Say All of Us 1969 originally published in If September 1969 Subsequently chosen for World s Best Science Fiction 1970 ed Terry Carr Donald A Wollheim ISBN 0 575 00590 4 World of the Wars 1971 originally published in Mars We Love You Tales of Mars Men and Martians ed Jane Hipolito Willis E McNelly ISBN 0 515 03086 4 Ecce Femina 1972 originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction February 1972 Anthologized in Above the Human Landscape A Social Science Fiction Anthology 1972 ed Willis E McNelly Leon Stover ISBN 0 87620 003 X When the Fathers Go 1982 originally published in Universe 12 1982 ed Terry Carr ISBN 0 385 17923 5 Anthologized in The Best Science Fiction of the Year 12 1983 ed Terry Carr ISBN 0 671 46680 1 and Alien Sex 1990 ed Ellen Datlow ISBN 0 525 24863 3 among others Dream Baby 1987 originally published in In the Field of Fire 1987 ed Jack Dann Jeanne Van Buren Dann ISBN 0 312 93008 9 then in Asimov s Science Fiction October 1987 Frequently anthologized as in To Sleep Perchance to Dream Nightmare 1993 ed Martin H Greenberg Robert Weinberg Stefan R Dziemianowicz ISBN 0 88029 903 7 Nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Novelette 17 and Nebula Award for Best Novelette recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Creative Writing Fellowship The Girl Who Loved Animals 1988 originally published in Omni May 1988 Anthologized in American Gothic Tales 18 among others Cottage 1993 originally published in Christmas Forever 1993 ed David G Hartwell ISBN 0 312 85576 1 Reprinted in The Year s Best Fantasy and Horror Seventh Annual Collection 1994 ed Ellen Datlow Terri Windling ISBN 0 312 11103 7 Southpaw 1993 originally published in Asimov s Science Fiction August 1993 Reprinted in Roads Not Taken Tales of Alternate History 1998 ed Gardner Dozois Stanley Schmidt ISBN 0 345 42194 9 Kin 2006 originally published in Asimov s Science Fiction February 2006 Nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Short Story 19 Anthologized in Alien Contact 2012 ed Marty Halpern ISBN 978 1 59780 281 9 among others The Seventh Daughter 2004 First published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction April 2004 Chosen for Year s Best Fantasy 5 2005 ed David G Hartwell Kathryn Cramer ISBN 0 06 077605 6 Kin 2006 Podcast read by Stephen Eley http escapepod org 2007 05 31 ep108 kin Podcast read by LeVar Burton https art19 com shows levar burton reads Ombra 2006 in the magazine Glimmer Train Stories 57 Winter 2006 20 The Boy in Zaquitos 2006 originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy amp Science Fiction January 2006 Reprinted in The Best American Short Stories 21 Poison 2007 First published in Asimov s Science Fiction January 2007 Chosen for Year s Best Fantasy 8 2008 ed David G Hartwell Kathryn Cramer ISBN 1 892391 76 7 Game Flash Fiction Online May 2008 http www flashfictiononline com f20080501 game bruce mcallister html Hit 2008 originally published in Aeon Thirteen 2008 ed Marti McKenna Bridget McKenna Anthologized in By Blood We Live 2009 ed John Joseph Adams ISBN 978 1 59780 156 0 and The Urban Fantasy Anthology 2011 ed Peter S Beagle Joe R Lansdale ISBN 978 1 61696 018 6 Blue Fire 2010 The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction Mar April 2010 Heart of Hearts Albedo One 38 May 2010 The Courtship of the Queen 2010 Illustration by Eric Fortune http www tor com stories 2010 05 the courtship of the queen Sun and Stone 2010 in Image A Journal of the Arts amp Religion 22 The Messenger 2011 Asimov s Science Fiction July 2011 Stamps 2012 Asimov s Science Fiction August 2012References Edit a b Bruce McAllister Author Profile Tor Books Archived from the original on June 19 2017 Retrieved August 5 2015 a b c d Neilson Bob January 30 2012 Bruce McAllister A Masterclass in how to use answers to improve questions Bob Neilson Org Retrieved September 1 2012 McAllister Bruce 2010 The Courtship of the Queen full text Tor com Retrieved September 1 2012 a b Butler Sarah Funke December 5 2011 Document The Symbolism Survey The Paris Review New York City The Paris Review Foundation ISSN 0031 2037 Retrieved September 1 2012 a b c McAllister Bruce McAllister Coaching Bio Retrieved September 1 2012 Dream Baby Publishers Weekly 1989 Retrieved September 1 2012 Donahugh Robert H 1989 Dream Baby Library Journal Retrieved September 1 2012 Lilley Ernest 2007 The Year s Best Science Fiction Twenty Fourth Annual Collection by Gardner Dozois SF Revu Retrieved September 1 2012 Blough Bob 5 March 2010 The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction Mar Apr 2010 Tangent Online Retrieved September 1 2012 Horton Rich 2010 The SF Site Featured Review Albedo One Issue 38 SF Site Retrieved September 1 2012 Blough Bob 1 August 2012 Asimov s August 2012 Tangent Online Retrieved September 1 2012 Hawkins Rena 2011 Asimov s July 2011 Tangent Online Retrieved September 1 2012 Mcallister Bruce September 21 2007 Humanity Prime Wildside Press ISBN 978 1 4344 0163 2 Mcallister Bruce October 1989 Dream Baby ISBN 978 0 312 93197 1 The Girl Who Loved Animals And Other Stories ISBN 1930846495 Short stories unless otherwise noted Hugo Award for Best Novelette American Gothic Tales William Abrahams 9780452274891 Joyce Carol Oates Books Amazon com Retrieved 2010 08 26 Golden Gryphon Press The Girl Who Loved Animals and Other Stories Goldengryphon com Archived from the original on 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2010 08 26 Glimmer Train Stories Winter 2006 57 9781595530066 Randy F Nelson amp Bruce Amazon com 2009 09 09 Retrieved 2010 08 26 The Best American Short Stories 2007 Image Journal Back Issues Issue 59 Imagejournal org Retrieved 2010 08 26 Other sources EditBourquin David Ray The Work Of Bruce Mcallister An Annotated Bibliography amp Guide San Bernardino Calif Borgo Press 1985 ISBN 089370489X pbk ISBN 0893703893 hardcover Lohr Michael California Daydreaming An Interview With Bruce McAllister Aeon Seven May 2006 Scorpius Digital Publishing ISBN 1 931386 77 3 External links EditThe Official Site of Bruce McAllister Full Biography Publications Writing Coaching amp Consulting Golden Gryphon Press official site About The Girl Who Loved Animals and Other Stories Escape Pod Official Site For Podcast of Hugo Award nominated Story Kin LeVar Burton Reads For Podcast of Hugo Award nominated Story Kin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bruce McAllister amp oldid 1098706131, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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