Steven Barnes
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Steven Barnes | |
---|---|
Born | Los Angeles, California, U.S. | March 1, 1952
Alma mater | Los Angeles High School Pepperdine University |
Occupation | Writer |
Spouse | Tananarive Due |
Steven Barnes (born March 1, 1952) is an American science fiction, fantasy, and mystery writer. He has written novels, short fiction, screen plays for television, scripts for comic books, animation, newspaper copy, and magazine articles.
Early life and education
Barnes, was born on March 1, 1952, in
Career
Barnes wrote several episodes of
Barnes's alternate history novel
Together with his wife, Tananarive Due, and actor Blair Underwood, Barnes won the 2009 NAACP Image Award for outstanding Literary Work - Fiction for In the Night of the Heat: A Tennyson Hardwick Novel.[5]
Personal life
Barnes is married to Tananarive Due, a writer.[4] The couple live in Los Angeles and host a video blog together. They also taught a course together at UCLA called "The Sunken Place: Racism, Survival & Black Horror" that experienced a surprise visit from Get Out director Jordan Peele. The course is now available as a webinar.[6] Barnes has a daughter from his first marriage and a son from his current marriage.
Barnes is also an avid practitioner of
under Hawkins Cheung.He is an intermediate student in self-defense pistol shooting (preferring the
Bibliography
- The Dream Park series:
- Dream Park (1981; with Larry Niven)
- The Barsoom Project (1989; with Larry Niven)
- The California Voodoo Game (1992; with Larry Niven)
- The Moon Maze Game (2011; with Larry Niven)
- The Aubry Knight series:
- Street Lethal (1983)
- Gorgon Child (1989)
- Firedance (1993)
- The Heorot series:
- The Legacy of Heorot (1987; with Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle)
- The Dragons of Heorot (1995; with Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle)
- Beowulf's Children (1995; with Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle)
- Starborn and Godsons (2020; with Larry Niven and Jerry Pournelle)
- The Insh'Allah series:
- Lion's Blood (2002; winner of the 2003 Endeavour Award)
- Zulu Heart (2003)
- The "Ibandi" series:
- Great Sky Woman (2006)
- Shadow Valley (2009)
- The Tennyson Hardwick Novels:
- Casanegra (2007; with Blair Underwood and Tananarive Due)
- In the Night of the Heat (2008; with Blair Underwood and Tananarive Due)
- From Cape Town with Love (2010; with Blair Underwood and Tananarive Due)
- South by Southeast (September 2012; with Blair Underwood and Tananarive Due)
- Stand-alone novels, screenplays, and other works:
- The Descent of Anansi (1982; with Larry Niven)
- "To See the Invisible Man" (1986; a television script adapting a short story by Robert Silverberg, for the 1980s revival of The Twilight Zone)
- The Kundalini Equation (1986)
- Fusion (1987) (issues #1–5 only)
- Achilles' Choice (1991) (with Larry Niven)
- Blood Brothers (1996)
- Iron Shadows (1997)
- Far Beyond the Stars (1998) (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine novelization)
- The Lives of Dax: "The Music Between the Notes" (1999)
- Saturn's Race (2000) (with Larry Niven)
- Charisma (2002)
- The Cestus Deception (2004) (Star Wars novel set in the Clone Wars)
- Assassin and Other Stories (2010), a collection, ISFiC Press
- The Invisible Imam, a novel included in Assassin and Other Stories (2010)
- Devil's Wake (2012; with Tananarive Due)
- Domino Falls (2013; with Tananarive Due)
- Star Wars Saved My Life: Be the HERO in the adventure of your lifetime! (2015), illustrated by Trey Jackson and Angelina Greenwood
- The Seascape Tattoo (2016; with Larry Niven)
- Twelve Days (2017)
- Short stories
- "The Woman in the Wall" (2000; novelette)
- "Danikil", Whose Future Is It? (2018)[7]
References
- ^ a b Steven Barnes: White & Black. Locus Magazine; vol/issue 50/3[506] 2003. Pages 84-86. (excerpts)
- ^ Award nominees Archived November 20, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ interview
- ^ a b Interview: Steven Barnes Archived October 8, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, by Greg Beatty. Strange Horizons, July 29, 2002. Retrieved August 31, 2013
- ^ 'Bees' big at NAACP Image Awards, by N'neka Hite. Variety, February 12, 2009. Retrieved July 25, 2019
- Consequence of Sound, March 29, 2019
- ISBN 978-1-949688-02-3.
External links
- Steven Barnes' blog
- Steven Barnes' Homepage (archived)
- Steven Barnes at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- "Black Science Fiction and Fantasy" with Tananarive Due, Steven Barnes, and Sheree R. Thomas on NPR, News & Notes, August 13, 2007 (audio and transcript)
- Audio Interview - Steven Barnes on the Horace J. Digby Report
- Lightspeed magazine Interview with Steven Barnes, by Christian A. Coleman, in May 2017 (Issue 84)
- Apex Magazine: Interview with Author Steven Barnes, by Andrea Johnson on May 16, 2019