Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Sheila Finch

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Sheila Finch


Sheila Finch Cloud Appreciation Society From Sheila Finch

Sheila finch paints april coastal clouds


Sheila Finch (born 1935) is an American author of science fiction and fantasy. She is best known for her sequence of stories about the Guild of Xenolinguists.

Contents

Sheila Finch Sheila Finch Art Exclusive Original Art for Sale UGallery

Childhood and education

Sheila Finch wwwaqueductpresscomimagesauthorssheilafinchjpg

Finch was born in Fulham, London, England where she attended local elementary schools. "Because most of the schools were closed for the duration of World War II, she didn’t get a lot of normal education before her tenth birthday – which was probably a blessing in disguise as she got to spend a lot of time reading books beyond her grade level." She started her undergraduate career at Bishop Otter College in Chichester, West Sussex, England. While on holiday in Switzerland in 1955 she met her future husband, Clare Rayner, whom she married in June 1957 and emigrated with him to the United States. In the U.S., she first lived in Bloomington, Indiana where she obtained her M.A. from Indiana University in medieval literature and linguistics.

Writing career

Finch began telling and writing stories at a very young age. She quotes her mother as saying that Finch began writing "books" for her dolls to read when she was five. She always knew she wanted to publish. She wrote for the literary magazines in high school and college. And she submitted stories and manuscripts to publishers, magazines and journals for a very long time. Finch was a full-time college professor at El Camino Junior College in Torrance, California for a period of 30 years where she taught a variety of English and creative writing classes. She continues to write science fiction and teaches creative writing courses at conferences around the world.

She lives in California. She has three children, eight grandchildren, one great-grandchild, and two cats.

Xenolinguists

In her 1986 book Triad, Finch coined the term "xenolinguist" to describe the lingsters who decode alien languages. The word has gained widespread acceptance in the science fiction industry and was used to describe the character Uhura in the remake of Star Trek.

Finch created a series of tales about communicating with aliens which eventually was consolidated in collection of short stories entitled The Guild of Xenolinguists (Golden Gryphon Press, 2007). The Guild was founded on Earth in the middle of the 22nd century after first contact with a race from somewhere in the Orion Arm of the Milky Way Galaxy. A few early linguists, neurolinguists, ethnographers and computer scientists established the Guild which then took over the responsibility for training xenolinguists to make first contact and to record alien languages in the field. Later, the Guild provided translation services for the expanding commerce and colonization of the following centuries.

Novels

  • Infinity's Web (1985; winner of the 1986 Compton Crook Award)
  • Triad (1986)
  • The Garden of the Shaped (1987)
  • Shaper's Legacy (1988)
  • Shaping the Dawn (1989)
  • Tiger in the Sky (1999)
  • Reading the Bones (2005)
  • Birds (2005)
  • Villa Far From Rome (2016)
  • Collections

  • The Guild of Xenolinguists (2007)
  • Non-Fiction

  • Myths, Metaphors, and Science Fiction (2014)
  • Awards

  • "Reading the Bones" (1998) Nebula novella award winner
  • Tiger in the Sky (1999) Winner of the San Diego Book Award for Best Juvenile Fiction
  • Infinity's Web (1985) Winner of the Compton Crook Award for Best First Novel
  • References

    Sheila Finch Wikipedia