Anne Bishop

For those of the same or a similar name, see Ann Bishop (disambiguation).
Anne Bishop
Occupation Writer
Nationality American
Genre Fantasy
Website
annebishop.com

Anne Bishop is an American fantasy writer. Her most noted work is the Black Jewels series.[1][2] She won the Crawford Award in 2000 for the first three Black Jewels books, sometimes called the Black Jewels trilogy: Daughter of the Blood, Heir to the Shadows, and Queen of the Darkness.[3]

Biography

Born in 1955, Anne Bishop started her writing career by publishing short stories.[4] She is best known for her award-winning novels, The Black Jewels Trilogy,[5] Daughter of the Blood, Heir to the Shadows, and Queen of the Darkness. Bishop has also created The Tir Alainn Trilogy,[6] and The Landscapes of Ephemera Series.[7] She is currently residing in upstate New York working on The Others,[8] her newest series of which the first four books, Written in Red, Murder of Crows, Vision in Silver, and Marked in Flesh are available in the United States and Canada. Many of her novels are also available internationally.[9]

She lives in upstate New York.[10]

Works

Series

Speculative fiction series constitute most of Bishop's published work.[11]

Black Jewels

The first volume of the original trilogy, and first novel set in the Black Jewels universe, Daughter of the Blood, was published in March 1998. Heir to the Shadows and Queen of the Darkness, published in April 1999 and January 2000, completed the trilogy. An omnibus edition was released in 2003. Also in 2000, Bishop released her first stand alone novel for the Black Jewels universe, The Invisible Ring. Taking place prior to the trilogy itself, readers were able to pick up the novel either before or after reading the trilogy, though Bishop recommends reading it after. In 2005, Bishop then released the book of four short stories known as Dreams Made Flesh. Once again, this collection of short stories allowed a reader to taste the rich universe Bishop had created without needing to have read the core trilogy. Although, reading the trilogy added to the depth of the individual short stories and vice versa. 2008 brought about another stand-alone novel, Tangled Webs. Then in 2009, Bishop's novel The Shadow Queen was published and here she did something a little different. Unlike her prior releases, this novel was related to characters and events which occurred during another of her stand-alone novels, The Invisible Ring as well as the events of the original trilogy. Shalador's Lady, released in 2010, is the sequel to "The Shadow Queen" and in March 2011, Twilight's Dawn hit the shelves. It contains four more short stories which help to answer some questions reader's had about different parts of the universe/story. Two short stories, "By the Time the Witchblood Blooms" and "The Price" were originally published (March 2000 and October 2004 respectively) in anthologies of short stories from a variety of authors. "By the Time the Witchblood Blooms" can also be found at the end of Tangled Webs.

In publication order the titles are:

Tir Alainn
Ephemera
The Others

Short stories

References

  1. Bishop, Anne (September 28, 2008). Anne Bishop Interview. (Interview). Darkstars Fantasy News. Archived from the original on April 15, 2009. Retrieved April 15, 2009.
  2. Bishop, Anne (January 4, 2002). Darkly Woven Dreams. Interview with Dodge, Shelley. Romantic SF. Archived from the original on April 15, 2009. Retrieved April 15, 2009.
  3. "2000 William L. Crawford – IAFA Fantasy Award". The Locus Index to SF Awards. Locus. Retrieved September 1, 2011.
  4. Bishop, "Short Stories".
  5. Bishop, "Black Jewels".
  6. Bishop, "Tir Alainn".
  7. Bishop, "Ephemera".
  8. Bishop, "The Others"
  9. Bishop, "Book List".
  10. Bishop, "Biography".
  11. 1 2 "Anne Bishop – Summary Bibliography". Internet Speculative Fiction Database (ISFDB). Retrieved July 28, 2014. Select a title to see its linked publication history and general information. Select a particular edition (title) for more data at that level, such as a front cover image or linked contents.
  12. "Orbiter". worldcat.org. Retrieved 26 August 2014.
  13. "Summer in Mossy Creek". worldcat.org. Retrieved 26 October 2014.
Citations

External links

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