Carol Severance

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Carol Severance (1944 – February 19, 2015) was a U.S. science fiction writer.

Life

Carol Severance was a Hawaii-based Science Fiction and Fantasy writer known for her strong female characters. As an artist she had a special interest in Pacific Island peoples and their environments. In high school she held the Amateur Rocketry Association’s High Altitude Record. After growing up in Denver and earning an art degree, she served with the Peace Corps on remote atolls in Micronesia and traveled interisland on traditional sailing canoes. She found that her oil paints were too dull to capture the vivid colors of the reefs and lagoons, so she began “painting with words” by keeping a detailed journal of people and cultural events. She later assisted with anthropological field work in Micronesia, and went on to earn an M.A. in Journalism at the University of South Carolina. She was a news editor and feature writer and did many feature stories for the Hawaii Tribune Herald. She graduated from the 1984 Clarion West Science Fiction Writer’s Workshop. Carol wrote short stories, a prize-winning play and published four novels. Reefsong won the 1992 Compton Crook Award for the Best First Novel in the Field. The Island Warrior Series; Demon Drums, Storm Caller, and Sorcerous Sea are based partly on Pacific Island folklore, environments, and the conflict between good and evil. All her novels are available through Open Road Media.

Severance was born in Ohio and grew up in

Hilo, Hawaii with her husband, former Peace Corps volunteer Craig J. Severance.[3]

Writing

Much of Severance's writing includes references to

Pacific Island
lore and lifestyle.

Severance won the Compton Crook Award for her debut novel, Reefsong, in 1991.[4]

Publications

Island Warrior series

  1. Demon Drums (1992)
  2. Storm Caller (1993)
  3. Sorcerous Sea (1993)

Other novels

Short stories

  • "Day of Strange Fortune" (1987)
  • "Isle of Illusion" (1987)
  • "Shark-Killer" (1988)
  • "Whispering Cane" (1990)

Anthologies containing her work

Plays

  • "Sail to the Edge of the Moon" (1988)

References

  1. ^ Everyone Everywhere Has Tales to Tell Archived August 26, 2009, at the Wayback Machine (biographical story published on the Peace Corps web site. Accessed 2009-09-02.)
  2. .
  3. Mānoa
    . Accessed 2009-09-02.)
  4. ^ "Compton Crook Award Winners". Baltimore Science Fiction Society. Retrieved June 25, 2012.

External links