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Dorothy J Heydt

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Pen name
  
Katherine Blake

Role
  
Author

Name
  
Dorothy Heydt

Nationality
  
American

Occupation
  
writer


Genre
  
Science fiction, Fantasy

Nominations
  
Locus Award for Best First Novel

Books
  
Sword and Sorceress XVI, Sword and Sorceress XIV, Sword and Sorceress XIX, Sword and Sorceress XVII, Sword and Sorceress XVIII

Similar
  
Elisabeth Waters, Deborah J Ross, Diana L Paxson, Jennifer Roberson, Josepha Sherman

Dorothy J. Heydt is a United States author of science fiction and fantasy. She lives on the U.S. West Coast and is an active participant in the Usenet newsgroups rec.arts.sf.written and rec.arts.sf.fandom, and in science fiction fandom in general. She is the originator of the "Eight Deadly Words" ("I don't care what happens to these people"), and other fan quotes. She was the originator and first editor of the Star Trek Concordance, an extensive resource guide first published in March 1969.

A linguist, she invented one of the first widely used Vulcan conlangs in 1967 for a Star Trek fan fiction series. Its words were picked up and used by other fan fiction authors such as Claire Gabriel. One term, ni var, meaning an art form in which two contrasting aspects of a subject are compared, is still used on Star Trek: Enterprise, as the name of a Vulcan ship.

She has written numerous short stories and two novels; she sometimes writes as "Katherine Blake." Many of her stories appear in collections edited by Marion Zimmer Bradley, including the Sword and Sorceress series, and stories in the Darkover series shared world. Marion Zimmer Bradley's Fantasy Magazine published many of her stories.

While not one of the founding members of the Society for Creative Anachronism, she did participate in the early years and helped establish important elements of the ceremonies, such as the "Oath of Fealty" used in peerage ceremonies.

References

Dorothy J. Heydt Wikipedia