Marvin Kaye

Marvin Nathan Kaye
Born (1938-03-10)March 10, 1938
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Occupation Novelist, editor
Genre mystery, fantasy, science fiction, horror
Website
www.marvinkaye.com

Marvin Nathan Kaye (born 10 March 1938) is an American mystery, fantasy, science fiction, and horror author and editor. He is a World Fantasy Award winner and served as editor of Weird Tales Magazine.

Early years

Kaye was born in Philadelphia, the son of Morris and Theresa (Baroski) Kaye. He received a Bachelor of Arts in liberal arts at Penn State in 1960, as well as a Master of Arts in English literature and theater in 1962.[1][2]

Career

Kaye served as a reporter for Grit Publishing Company from 1963-1965, an assistant managing editor for Business Travel Magazine in 1965 and a senior editor for Harcourt Brace Jovanovich from 1966-1970. He worked as a free lance writer in 1970 and artistic director of The Open Book in New York City, 1974. He was a lecturer at the New School for Social Research in New York City in 1975,[1] taught at NYU as an Adjunct Professor of Creative Writing in 1976,[2] and as an adjuct professor at Mercy College from 2001-2006. He also worked as an improvisational comic at The Jekyll and Hyde Club in 2005.[1]

Kaye has edited numerous horror anthologies, such as H. P. Lovecraft's Magazine of Horror and Sherlock Holmes Mystery Magazine. An anthology he edited, The Fair Folk, won a World Fantasy Award in 2006.[3] In 2011, he became the editor of Weird Tales.[4]

Kaye is a member of the Authors Guild, the Dramatists Guild of America, the Actors' Equity Association, The Broadway League, and The Sons of the Desert (of which he served as president from 1974-1976). He is also an honorary member of the Mark Twain Society.[1]

Personal life

Kaye married Saralee Bransdorf; they have one child.[1] He currently resides in New York.[2]

Bibliography

Hillary Quayle

Marty Gold

The Masters of Solitude trilogy

The novel A Cold Blue Light, 1983 (with Parke Godwin; Berkley Books, 1983) is sometimes listed as a third volume of the trilogy, but it is unrelated. The third volume, Singer Among the Nightingales was not published before the death of Parke Godwin.

Adrian Philimore

Other novels

Edited Anthologies

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Who's Who in America, 63rd ed.
  2. 1 2 3 "Marvin Kaye's official website".
  3. World Fantasy Convention (2010). "Award Winners and Nominees". Retrieved 4 Feb 2011.
  4. Weird Tales, Update on New Publishers, filed Oct 20, 2011 by Ann VanderMeer (accessed Jan 16 2012)
  5. "Marvin Kaye Summary Bibliography-ISFDB".

External links

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