Occupation Writer, Archeologist Name Dana Cameron Genre Mystery, Urban Fantasy | Period 2002 to Present Education Ph.D. Role Author | |
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Awards Macavity Awards for Best Short Story, Anthony Award for Best Paperback Original, Agatha Award for Best Short Story Nominations Edgar Award for Best Short Story, Anthony Award for Best Short Story Books Site Unseen, Ashes and Bones: An Emma Fi, A fugitive truth, Past malice, Grave Consequences |
Dana Cameron ALS Ice Bucket Challenge
Dana Cameron (born 1965) is an American archaeologist, and author of award-winning crime fiction and urban fantasy.
Contents
- Dana Cameron ALS Ice Bucket Challenge
- kameel interviews authors at mystery writers conference
- Life and career
- Emma Fielding Archaeology Mysteries
- Fangborn Urban Fantasy
- Short stories
- Fangborn
- Anna Hoyt Colonial Noir
- aka Jayne thrillers
- Awards and honors
- References
kameel interviews authors at mystery writer's conference
Life and career
Born and raised in Massachusetts, Dana Cameron began her professional career as an historical archaeologist specializing in British and New English cultural history from 1607-1760. She presently lives in Beverly, Massachusetts.
Her archaeological training and experiences in the field led her to write fiction; the first of six archaeology mysteries was published in 2002. The novels feature amateur sleuth Professor Emma Fielding and all are set in fictional towns in New England, with the exception of Grave Consequences, which takes place in a fictional town in the southeast of England. Each novel features some aspect of archaeological research and considers how the past and the present are enmeshed. One Emma Fielding short story, “Mischief in Mesopotamia,” was published in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine in 2012. Shortlisted for the prestigious Mystery Writers of America's Edgar Award, Dana Cameron has won multiple Agatha, Anthony, and Macavity awards.
Cameron's short stories are also informed by her research, with historical and fantastic elements an integral part of the world-building. Her stories cover the range from traditional mystery, historical, noir, thriller, and urban fantasy, and often follow a character through several stories. “The Night Things Changed” eventually led to a series of urban novels set in the urban fantasy Fangborn universe, featuring vampires, werewolves, and oracles dedicated to secretly fighting evil. The protagonist, Zoe Miller, is an archaeologist who is forced to accept that she is also werewolf and Fangborn and must use those powers, along with her archaeology training, to keep artifacts with potentially world-ending power from falling into the hands of human and Fangborn foes.
Cameron’s professional affiliations include the Mystery Writers of America, Sisters in Crime (she served on the board and as Vice President and President of the New England Chapter), The Femmes Fatales (a circle of writers including Donna Andrews, Charlaine Harris, Dean James (a/k/a Miranda James), Toni L.P. Kelner, Catriona McPherson, Kris Neri, Hank Phillippi Ryan, Mary Saums, Marcia Talley, and Elaine Viets), and the American Crime Writers League.
Emma Fielding Archaeology Mysteries
Fangborn Urban Fantasy
Short stories
Fangborn
Anna Hoyt "Colonial Noir"
"a/k/a Jayne" thrillers
Awards and honors
2007: Ashes and Bones, Anthony Award(winner) Best Paperback Original “The Lords of Misrule,” Anthony Award nominee, Best Short Story
2009: “The Night Things Changed,” Agatha Award ((2008) winner), Anthony Award (nominee), Macavity Award (winner), Best Short Story
2010: “Femme Sole,” Edgar Award (nominee), Agatha Award ((2009) nominee), Anthony Award (nominee), Macavity Award (nominee), Best Short Story
2011: “Swing Shift,” Agatha Award ((2010), nominee), Anthony Award (winner), Macavity Award (winner), Best Short story
2012: “Disarming,” Agatha Award ((2011), winner), Anthony Award (winner), Macavity Award (winner), Best Short Story Toast Master, Malice Domestic 24 “One Soul at Time” was named a “Black Mask” feature in Ellery Queen Mystery Magazine
2013: “Mischief in Mesopotamia,” Agatha Award ((2012), winner), Anthony Award (winner), Best Short Story