D. F. Lewis
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D. F. Lewis (born January 18, 1948) is a British author who has had approximately 1,500 short fictions published in print from 1986 to 2000, some in hard-to-find outlets and others in literary journals (eg: Stand, Iron, Orbis, Panurge, London Magazine, etc.) and professional book anthologies. He currently acts as editor and publisher of the Nemonymous "megazanthus" of short fiction.
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[edit] Biography
D. F. Lewis was born in Walton-on-Naze, Essex. He attended Lancaster University from 1966-1969, where he formed the Zeroist Group. He and his wife, Denise, have two adult children.
He has coined these words and expressions: zeroism, egnisomicon, egnisism, whofage, agra aska, weirdmonger, wordhunger, nemonymous, nemonymity, late-labelling, veils-&-piques, denemonise, megazanthus, weirdonymous, chasing the noumenon, wordonymous, wordominous, the-ominous-imagination, a woven fire-wall of words, bespoke publication selling, nemoguity, vexed texture of text, fictipathy, and the modern use of brainwright.
[edit] Literary awards
- 1998 - British Fantasy Society Karl Edward Wagner Award
[edit] Partial bibliography
[edit] Book publications
- 1992 - Best of D.F. Lewis
- 1998 - Only Connect, Cartref. Original collection of ten ghostly tales in collaboration with his father, Gordon Lewis, born 1922.
- 1998 - Agra Aska, Scorpion Press.
- 2003 - Weirdmonger, Prime Books. (400 pages, ISBN 1-894815-84-X)
[edit] Magazine and anthology publications
- 1990 - Best New Horror, "Mort au Monde"
- 1991 - Best New Horror 2, "Madge"
- 1993 - The Year's Best Horror 21, "Welsh Pepper"
- 1994 - Cthulhu's Heirs, "Watch the Whiskers Sprout"
- 1995 - Weirdbook29 [1], "Encounters with Terror"
- 1996 - Peeping Tom No 21, "Late Night Jamming"
- 1997 - Best New Horror 8, "Kites and Kisses"
- 1998 - Cthulhu Codex #14, "No Answer"
- 1998 - Darkside - Horror for the Next Millennium, "Sisters in Death"
- 1998 - Midnight Carnival 2, "The Mentioning"
- 1999 - Nasty Snips (Christopher C. Teague, Editor)
- 2000 - Dreams and Nightmares, "The Proscenium of Dispossession"
[edit] Edited by D.F. Lewis
- 2001 - Nemonymous One
- 2002 - Nemonymous Two
- 2003 - Nemonymous Part Three
- 2004 - Nemonymous Part Four
- 2005 - Nemonymous Five
- 2006 - Nemonymous Six
[edit] External links
- Nemonymous - Nemonymous website
- Weirdmonger - DF Lewis website
- The Hawler - online novel
- Klaxon City - online novel in progress, sequel to The Hawler
[edit] Interviews
- 2002 - Fantastic Metropolis, with Luís Rodrigues
- 2004 - Lost Pages, with Neddal Ayad
[edit] Reviews
- 2005 - Nemonymous 5, by Christopher C. Teague
- 2005 - Thomas Ligotti Online, by Barry Wood