Steph Swainston
Steph Swainston | |
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Born | Stephanie Jane Swainston 1974 (age 49–50) Bradford, Yorkshire, England, UK |
Occupation | Novelist |
Genre | Literary fantasy New Weird |
Website | |
stephswainston |
Stephanie Jane "Steph" Swainston is a British literary fantasy/science fiction author, known for the Castle series. Her debut novel, The Year of Our War (2004), won the 2005 Crawford Award and a nomination for the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer.
Swainston took a break from writing in 2011 to become a chemistry teacher,[1] but subsequently returned to writing.[2] Her fifth novel, Fair Rebel, was published in 2016.
Early life and education
Born in Bradford in 1974, Swainston attended St. Joseph's College, Bradford, followed by Girton College, University of Cambridge, and the University of Wales. Outside writing, Swainston has had a broad range of occupations, including bookseller, archaeologist, lock keeper, information scientist, and pyrotechnician.[3]
Novels
Swainston's work in the Castle series so far has been set in the "Fourlands", which the author has described as a secret childhood paracosm,[4][5] further influenced by aspects of her later adult life, including the competitive academic world.[6] The novels centre on the life of the "Circle", an elite group of immortals created and sustained by the Emperor, a near god-like figure engaged in a prolonged conflict with insectoid creatures, apparently from another world. Told in the first person, the novels follow the life of Jant, a winged humanoid with a distinctly flawed personality. The Castle series is also marked by the existence of multiple worlds, including the fantastic, baroque "Shift". [citation needed]
While characterised by others as a member of the New Weird fantasy literary genre, which aims to reform fantasy literature by transcending its traditional boundaries, Swainston has argued against labeling writers – including herself – within genres, arguing that good fantasy and mainstream literature instead form a continuum.[5] She has been critical of the conservative nature of much commercial fantasy writing,[6] and her approach embraces narrative themes unfamiliar to conventional fantasy, including drug use and graphic sex scenes, alongside the hyper-realistic depiction of warfare.[4] Swainston describes her work as appealing to the ongoing deep structures of universal storytelling, as literature written as much in response to the author's own needs than as a response to specific market requirements.[5]
Bibliography
Castle books
- The Year of Our War (Gollancz SF, 2004) ISBN 978-0-575-07642-6
- The Year of Our War (Gollancz SF, 2006) ISBN 978-0-575-07798-0
- No Present Like Time (Gollancz SF, 2005, hardcover) ISBN 978-0-575-07006-6
- No Present Like Time (Gollancz SF, 2006, paperback) ISBN 978-0-575-07798-0
- The Modern World (Gollancz SF, 2007, paperback) ISBN 978-0-575-08221-2
- The Castle Omnibus: "The Year of Our War", "No Present Like Time", "The Modern World" (Gollancz SF, 2009, paperback) ISBN 978-0-575-09125-2
- Above the Snowline (Gollancz SF, 2010, hardcover) ISBN 978-0-575-08158-1
- Fair Rebel (Gollancz SF, 2016, paperback) ISBN 978-0575081697
- Turning Point - short story collection (Air and Nothingness Press, 2018, paperback) ISBN 978-0-9991953-1-4
Castle short stories
- The Wheel of Fortune in the anthology The Best British Fantasy 2013 (Salt Publishing, 2013, paperback) ISBN 978-1907773358
- Wrought Gothic (Air and Nothingness Press, 2016, paperback) ISBN 978-0-9679429-7-1
- Aftermath (Air and Nothingness Press, 2016, paperback) ISBN 978-0-9679429-8-8
External links
- Official website
- Steph Swainston at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Interview conducted by Jeff VanderMeer for Clarkesworld Magazine
- Interview conducted in 2006 by Jay Tomio
- Reviews of all three books in the Castle series
- HarperCollins interview
References
- ^ Steph Swainston: 'I need to return to reality'
- ^ Blog entry: Fair Rebel - the fifth Castle book (2 October 2015)
- ^ "Biography". Steph Swainston. 8 March 2016. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
- ^ a b Profile at orionbooks.co.uk
- ^ a b c Interview at clarkesworldmagazine.com Archived 18 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Profile at uksfbooknews.net Archived 3 July 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- 1974 births
- Living people
- Alumni of Girton College, Cambridge
- Alumni of the University of Wales
- English fantasy writers
- People from Bradford
- British women short story writers
- Women science fiction and fantasy writers
- English women novelists
- 21st-century British women writers
- 21st-century English writers
- 21st-century British novelists
- People educated at St. Joseph's Catholic College, Bradford
- 21st-century British short story writers