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# {{cite book|title=[[My Enemy, My Ally]]|series=Star Trek: TOS #18 (Rihannsu #1)|year= 1984}}
# {{cite book|title=[[My Enemy, My Ally]]|series=Star Trek: TOS #18 (Rihannsu #1)|year= 1984}}
# {{cite book|title=[[The Romulan Way]]|series=Star Trek: TOS #35 (Rihannsu #2)|year= 1987}} (co-written with husband Peter Morwood)
# {{cite book|title=[[The Romulan Way]]|series=Star Trek: TOS #35 (Rihannsu #2)|year= 1987}} (co-written with husband Peter Morwood)
# {{cite book|title=[[Spock's World]]|series=Star Trek|year= 1988}}
# {{cite book|title=[[Spock's World]]|series=Star Trek: TOS|year= 1988}}
# {{cite book|title=[[Doctor's Orders (novel)|Doctor's Orders]]|series=Star Trek: TOS #50|year= 1990}}
# {{cite book|title=[[Doctor's Orders (novel)|Doctor's Orders]]|series=Star Trek: TOS #50|year= 1990}}
# {{cite book|title=[[Dark Mirror (Star Trek novel)]]|series=Star Trek: TNG|year= 1993|isbn= 0-671-79377-2}}
# {{cite book|title=[[Dark Mirror (Star Trek novel)]]|series=Star Trek: TNG|year= 1993|isbn= 0-671-79377-2}}

Revision as of 23:03, 19 May 2009

Diane Duane
OccupationAuthor
NationalityAmerican
GenreScience fiction, fantasy, animation
Website
http://dianeduane.com/
Diane Duane and Charles Stross in Dublin

Diane Duane (born May 18, 1952) is an American science fiction and fantasy author. Her works include the Young Wizards young adult fantasy series and the Rihannsu Star Trek novels.

Biography

Born in New York City, she grew up in Roosevelt, Long Island. After school, she studied nursing and practiced as a psychiatric nurse for two years until 1976, when she moved to California and worked as an assistant to David Gerrold. Her first novel was published by Dell Books in 1979, and she subsequently worked as a freelance writer. (Gerrold wrote an "overture" to that novel, on the grounds that he'd rather be making overtures than introductions to Diane.[1]) In 1981 she moved to Pennsylvania. She married Northern Irish author Peter Morwood in 1987; they moved to the UK and then to Ireland, where she currently resides in County Wicklow.

Bibliography

  1. So You Want to be a Wizard. Delacorte. 1983. ISBN 0-15-204738-7.
  2. Deep Wizardry. Delacorte. 1985. ISBN 0-15-216257-7.
  3. High Wizardry. Corgi. 1990. ISBN 0-15-216244-5.
  4. A Wizard Abroad. Corgi. 1993. ISBN 0-15-216238-0.
  5. The Wizard's Dilemma. Harcourt. 2001. ISBN 0-15-202551-0.
  6. A Wizard Alone. 2002. ISBN 0-15-204562-7.
  7. Wizard's Holiday. 2003. ISBN 0-15-204771-9.
  8. Wizards at War. 2005. ISBN 0-15-204772-7.
  9. A Wizard of Mars. Harcourt. 2009. {{cite book}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |month= (help)

A short story within the same universe, "Uptown Local", has also been published as part of Jane Yolen's Dragons and Dreams anthology, and a mp3 of Duane reading it is freely available from her website as a podcast. A film script, "Wizards on Call" was being constructed at [1]. Readers were able to participate in contributing and editing the script. Currently, the project is on hold.

Feline Wizards

The series focuses on cat-wizards, who maintain the worldgates that wizards use for travel between the sheaf of canonical universes. They take place in the same setting as the Young Wizards novels.

  1. Book of Night With Moon. 1997. ISBN 0-340-69329-0.
  2. To Visit the Queen. 1998. ISBN 0-446-67318-8., published in the UK as On Her Majesty's Wizardly Service. 1998. ISBN ISBN 0-340-69330-4. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help)
  3. The Big Meow (being written as a subscriber-supported novel) (in progress and being released on the Web in individual chapters)

Adult Wizards

Books about adult wizards set in the same universe of the Young Wizards series.

  • Short Circuit (projected) [2]
  • "Theobroma" featured in Wizards, Inc. (November 2007) [3]

Alternate Universes

The Young Wizards universe contains canonical alternate universes (So You Want to Be a Wizard and Book of Night With Moon are good examples: the protagonists travel to alternate universes to solve problems there).

  • Stealing the Elf-King's Roses (ISBN 0-446-60983-8) is set in a sheaf of universes originally mentioned in Nita's studies in So You Want To Be A Wizard.

The Middle Kingdoms

Also known as the Tale of the Five, this high fantasy series has been awaiting completion since 1992. The books center on some of the same themes as her more well-known Young Wizards series; those who wield the Blue Fire have many of the same responsibilities as the wizards and fight the same battle against entropy. In So You Want to Be a Wizard Nita's wizardry manual is written by "Hearnssen", a reference to the protagonist of The Door Into Fire, Herewiss s'Hearn (son of Hearn), so it may be that the Middle Kingdoms are part of the same sheaf of universes as the Young Wizards setting. Adding to this, one interdimensional portal in The Door into Fire appears to open over New York City. Unlike Duane's children's books, however, the Tale of the Five series deals openly with issues of alternative sexuality. Within the Middle Kingdoms, bisexuality and group marriage are the norm. Duane is working on the final volume. The Door into Fire and The Door into Shadow have an omnibus reprint called Tale of Five: The Sword and the Dragon. http://www.amazon.com/Tale-Five-Dragon-Diane-Duane/dp/1892065517/ref=pd_sim_b_7

  1. The Door into Fire (1979)
  2. The Door into Shadow (1984)
  3. The Door into Sunset (1992)
  4. The Door into Starlight (not yet published)

Star Trek

She has also written a number of Star Trek novels:

The Original Series is abbreviated TOS, The Next Generation TNG

  1. The Wounded Sky. Star Trek: TOS #13. 1983.
  2. My Enemy, My Ally. Star Trek: TOS #18 (Rihannsu #1). 1984.
  3. The Romulan Way. Star Trek: TOS #35 (Rihannsu #2). 1987. (co-written with husband Peter Morwood)
  4. Spock's World. Star Trek: TOS. 1988.
  5. Doctor's Orders. Star Trek: TOS #50. 1990.
  6. Dark Mirror (Star Trek novel). Star Trek: TNG. 1993. ISBN 0-671-79377-2.
  7. Intellivore. Star Trek: TNG: #45. 1997. ISBN 0-671-56832-9.
  8. Swordhunt. Star Trek: TOS #95 (Rihannsu #3). 2000. ISBN 0671042092.
  9. Honor Blade. Star Trek: TOS #96 (Rihannsu #4). 2000. ISBN 0-671-04210-6.
  10. Sand and Stars. Star Trek: TOS. 2004. ISBN 0-7434-9658-2. (omnibus, containing Spock's World and A. C. Crispin's Sarek)
  11. The Empty Chair. Star Trek: TOS (Rihannsu #5). 2006. ISBN 1416508910.
  12. Rihannsu: The Bloodwing Voyages. Star Trek: TOS. 2006. ISBN 1-416-52577-7. An omnibus of the first four Rihannsu novels, containing minor tweaks for consistency and reediting Swordhunt and Honor Blade.

Duane also shares story credit on the TNG episode "Where No One Has Gone Before" with Michael Reaves, making her one of the few authors who can claim to be proudly canonical and proudly non-canonical.[2]

Harbinger

The Harbinger Trilogy, published by Wizards of the Coast, is set in the Star*Drive universe. While Duane is not the only author to write for this universe, she was the first.

  1. Starrise at Corrivale. 1998. ISBN 0-7869-1179-4. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  2. Storm at Eldala. 1999. ISBN 0-7869-1334-7. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  3. Nightfall at Algemron. 2000. ISBN 0-7869-1563-3. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)

Spider-Man

Duane wrote a number of Spider-Man novels for Byron-Preiss Multimedia from 1994 to 1998. These works include:

Guardians of the Three

  • Keeper of the City. 1989. Book 2 of the series (written with Peter Morwood).

SeaQuest DSV

Space Cops

  1. Mindblast. Avon Books. 1991. ISBN 0-380-75852-0. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  2. Kill Station. Avon Books. 1992. ISBN 0-380-75854-7. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  3. High Moon. Avon Books. 1992. ISBN 0-380-75855-5. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)

X-COM

X-Men

Net Force

Co-authored with Tom Clancy and Steve Pieczenik

  • Book 1: Virtual Vandals
  • Book 3: One Is the Loneliest Number
  • Book 6: End Game
  • Book 10: Safe House
  • Book 13: Deathworld
  • Book 16: Runaways
  • Book 18: Death Match

Short Stories

  • "Parting Gifts" featured in Flashing Swords! #5: Demons and Daggers (1981), and released for free on her website as part of International Pixel-Stained Technopeasant Day
  • "Lior and the Sea" featured in Moonsinger's Friends (1986)
  • "Apparitions" featured in The Further Adventures of Superman (1993)
  • "The Dovrefell Cat" featured in Xanadu 2 (1995)
  • "Don't Put That in Your Mouth, You Don't Know Where It's Been" featured in Don't Forget Your Space Suit, Dear (1996)
  • "Recensions" featured in Amazing Magazine (1998)
  • "Blank Check" in On Crusade: More Tales of the Knights Templar (1998)
  • "1-900-nodream" featured in Perchance to Dream (2000)
  • "Night Whispers" featured in Star Trek: Enterprise Logs (2000)
  • "Herself" featured in "Emerald Magic" (2004)
  • "Goths and Robbers" featured in the Doctor Who anthology Short Trips: The Quality of Leadership (2008)

Comics

  • "Ill Wind", five part graphic novel/miniseries for STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION, DC Comics, New York: Autumn 1995-Spring 1996.
  • "The Tale of Prince Ivan the Not-Too-Experienced", six-part comic script for THE DREAMERY, Epic Comics, December 1987 through August 1988.
  • "The Last Word", STAR TREK #28: single-issue comic script for DC Comics, NYC, April 1986.
  • "Double Blind", STAR TREK #24-25: two-part (comedy) comic script for DC Comics, NYC, Jan/Feb 1986.

Other prose works

Duane has recently made available in various e-formats a previously unpublished book which was sold to at least two European publishers, but never actually brought out due to internal restructuring at one publishing house (Corgi) and the sale of another (Heyne Verlag). The novel, A Wind from the South, is the first of a projected trilogy telling the story of a young girl born in the 11th century in a remote region of the Alps. This girl slowly discovers that she is the intended physical avatar of an exiled Roman goddess, while (as she grows) she becomes caught up in the political turmoil of William Tell's time.

Duane was also responsible for a novelization of X-COM: UFO Defense, and for prose adaptations of several scripts from The Outer Limits. She has also written numerous short stories, about equally divided between fantasy and science fiction, which have appeared in various anthologies and collections over the last twenty years.

Screen works: film and television

Duane has worked in television since the early 1980s, initially becoming involved in script work at the Hanna-Barbera animation studio (now Cartoon Network). After writing numerous scripts for such series as Scooby and Scrappy-Doo, Captain Caveman, Space Stars, Fonz and the Happy Days Gang, Biskitts, and Laverne and Shirley in the Army, she moved on to work in development and serve as a staff writer at Filmation, and in 1985 was hired to story-edit the DiC animated series Dinosaucers. During this period she also wrote scripts for Sunbow Productions (GloFriends, Transformers, and My Little Pony) and Walt Disney Productions (Duck Tales). In 1986, she co-wrote (with Michael Reaves) the script of one of the earliest episodes of Star Trek:TNG, "Where No One Has Gone Before".

In the early 1990s Duane was brought on board as the head writer on the BBC Television educational series "Science Challenge". Shortly thereafter she co-wrote (with her husband) scripts for Warner Bros. Television's Batman: The Animated Series and for Walt Disney's Gargoyles. She also wrote the screenplay for the 1996 space adventure game Privateer 2 - The Darkening, which starred Clive Owen, Christopher Walken, Jürgen Prochnow and Mathilda May. Other screen work from that period includes the screenplay for the Space Island One episode "Not In My Back Yard" (1998-1999).

In 2003, after doing nearly four years' development work with the production company Tandem Communications of Munich, Germany, Duane and Peter Morwood co-wrote the script for the German TV miniseries Die Nibelungen. The miniseries aired in Germany on the Sat.1 network in late November 2004, and a feature version (titled Sword of Xanten) screened in the UK in December 2004. A "megafeature" cut of the entire miniseries was aired on Channel Four television in the UK in December 2005. The miniseries aired on the Sci-Fi Channel in the US in late March of 2006 under the title Dark Kingdom: The Dragon King. The miniseries has also been released on DVD in the US and numerous other markets, under various titles (the previous US title was Curse of the Ring).

Duane was also the co-author of the Barbie movie Barbie: Fairytopia

An adaptation of So You Want to be a Wizard is currently in the works.

Awards

  • "Midnight Snack" (Cassette version): Award for Excellence in Education from Media & Methods Magazine, 1987.
  • The Door Into Fire: Two-time John W. Campbell Award nominee for best new writer.
  • "Young Wizards" series: special commendation in the Anne Spencer Lindbergh Prize in Children's Literature, 2003[3].
  • Wizard's Dilemma: Mythopoeic award nominee, 2002[4].
  • Wizards at War: Mythopoeic award nominee, 2006[4].

References

  1. ^ Duane, Diane (1979). The Door Into Fire (1st ed.). New York City: Dell Publishing Co., Inc. pp. 7 (footnote). ISBN 0440118743.
  2. ^ Duane, Diane. "LiveJournal Userpics". Retrieved 2007-12-31.
  3. ^ " So You Want to Be a Wizard" got the Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers award, 1984 "Anne Spencer Lindbergh Prize: Previous Winners". Retrieved 2007-07-11. In addition to the prize-winning book, the Committee of judges issued a special commendation to the Young Wizard's series by Diane Duane "for its courage in tackling moral and emotional issues set on the frontiers of magic. In addition, the author's diverse worldview enhances the appeal of the series."
  4. ^ a b "Nominees for the Mythopoeic Fantasy Award". Mythopoeic Society. Retrieved 2007-07-11.


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