Sneha Girap (Editor)

David Zindell

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Occupation
  
Fiction writer

Role
  
Writer

Name
  
David Zindell

Genre
  
Speculative fiction

Nationality
  
American


David Zindell dgrassetscomauthors1312989032p5399921jpg

Born
  
November 28, 1952 (age 71) Toledo, Ohio, U.S. (
1952-11-28
)

Education
  
University of Colorado Boulder

Nominations
  
Arthur C. Clarke Award, Locus Award for Best First Novel, Locus Award for Best Science Fiction Novel

Books
  
Neverness, The Broken God, The Lightstone, The Wild, The Lord of Lies

David Zindell (born November 28, 1952) is an American writer known for science fiction and fantasy epics. He was born in Toledo, Ohio, and resides today in Boulder, Colorado, where he works as a test coach; he received a BA degree in mathematics and minored in anthropology at the University of Colorado at Boulder. His first published story was "The Dreamer's Sleep" in Fantasy Book in 1984; his novelette Shanidar, which formed the core of his first novel Neverness, won the Writers of the Future Contest in 1985. David Zindell's writing style is at once romantic, heroic, deeply poetic and concerns itself with deep philosophical issues in the human psyche. He was nominated for the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in 1986. John Clute writes that the author of Neverness is "romantic, ambitious, and skilled.", and Gene Wolfe, who is connected with Zindell in a way Wolfe himself was with Jack Vance, described Zindell as "...one of the finest talents to appear since Kim Stanley Robinson and William Gibson — perhaps the finest."

Contents

In the series started by Neverness, David Zindell probes the nature of future humanity in "an extremely ambitious tale...The young protagonist has all the necessary complexity and drivenness to occupy centre-stage 'cosmogony opera'." His fantasy series, The Ea Cycle has as a theme the evolution of consciousness, through the MO of sword-and-sorcery.

Neverness

  • "Shanidar", Writers of the Future (March 1985); online reprint at infinity plus
  • Neverness (New York: D. I. Fine, 1988)
  • A Requiem for Homo Sapiens (trilogy):
  • The Broken God (HarperCollins, 1992); US ed., Bantam, 1994
  • The Wild (Harper Voyager, 1995); US ed., Bantam, 1996
  • War in Heaven (Voyager, Bantam, 1998)
  • Ea Cycle

  • The Lightstone (London: Harper Voyager, August 2001); also published as two volumes, The Ninth Kingdom and The Silver Sword (Voyager, 2002)
  • The Lightstone, Revised (Tor Books, June 2006) – first American ed. of volume one
  • The Silver Sword (Tor, 2007) – American sequel
  • The Lord of Lies (Voyager, 2003); US ed., Tor, 2008
  • Black Jade (Voyager, 2005); not released in U.S.
  • The Diamond Warriors (Voyager, 2007); not released in U.S.
  • Short stories

  • "The Dreamer's Sleep", Fantasy Book, December 1984
  • "Caverns", Interzone (UK), Winter 1985/86
  • "When the Rose Is Dead", Full Spectrum 3, June 1991
  • Essays

  • Read This (1994)
  • References

    David Zindell Wikipedia