Mary H. Herbert

Mary H. Herbert (born 1957) is an American fantasy writer, author of the Dark Horse series and several Dragonlance novels.

Brief biography

Mary H. (Houser) Herbert was born in Ohio[1] in 1957.[2] Growing up in Troy, Ohio, she was interested in history and riding and was an avid reader of fantasy.[3] Her first complete Science Fiction/Fantasy short story about an orbiting space station won first prize in her high school's writing contest.[3]

She continued to write stories, essays, and poetry while studying at the University of Montana, the University of Wyoming, and the Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies in Oxford, England.[3]

Since publishing her first novel, Dark Horse, in 1990, TSR Books has published an additional two novels in the Dark Horse Series as well as Dragonlance universe and other novels, three short stories in the Forgotten Realms Anthologies (see bibliography), and a chapter on Sanction in Bertrem's Guide to the War of Souls, Volume One.[3]

Ms. Herbert “currently lives in Metro Atlanta with her husband, two teenage children, and assorted pets. She loves to read, write, work in the garden, and be with her family. She does not like housecleaning, cockroaches, or Georgia's heat.”[3]

Bibliography (incomplete)

Dark Horse Series

Hunnuli are a breed of wild horse magically created to partner and protect good magic wielders. They are huge, powerful, black and elegant, with a white lightning-bolt marking on their shoulder. Held in high regard even when humans forget their original purpose, the Hunnuli are immune to magic, fully sentient, and communicate telepathically with their chosen humans. They are intolerant of evil, and will fight to the death rather than serve an evil master.

Dragonlance Universe

Bridges of Time novel 2 in the series:

Crossroads novels 1 and 3:

Linsha novels 1, 2 and 3

War of Souls

Anthologies containing Mary H. Herbert short stories

References

  1. Inside back cover, Dark Horse by Mary H. Herbert, 1990, TSR Books
  2. Books, Listed by Author
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "Mary H. Herbert". Archived from the original on Feb 24, 2009.

External links

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