Jean-Claude Dunyach
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Jean-Claude Dunyach (born 1957) is a French science fiction writer.
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[edit] Overview
Dunyach has a Ph.D. in applied mathematics and supercomputing. He works for Airbus in Toulouse in southwestern France.
Dunyach has been writing science fiction since the beginning of the 1980s and has already published seven novels and seven collections of short stories, garnering the French Science-Fiction award in 1983 and the Prix Rosny-Aîné Awards in 1992, as well as the Grand Prix de l’Imaginaire and the Prix Ozone in 1997.
His short story Déchiffrer la Trame (Unravelling the Thread) won both the Prix de l’Imaginaire and the Rosny Award in 1998, and was voted Best Story of the Year by the readers of the magazine Interzone.
His latest novel, Etoiles Mourantes (Dying Stars), written in collaboration with the French author Ayerdhal, won the prestigious Eiffel Tower Award in 1999 as well as the Prix Ozone.
Dunyach’s works have been translated into English, Bulgarian, Croatian, Danish, German, Italian, Russian and Spanish.
Dunyach also writes lyrics for several French singers, which served as an inspiration for one of his novels about a rock and roll singer touring in Antarctica with a zombie philharmonic orchestra....
[edit] Bibliography
- Autoportrait (Self-Portrait) (collection) (Présence du Futur No. 415, Denoël, Paris, 1986)
- Le Temple de Chair (Le Jeu des Sabliers, Tome 1) (The Temple of Flesh (The Game of the Hourglass, Vol. 1)) (Anticipation No. 1592, Fleuve Noir, Paris, 1987)
- Le Temple d’Os (Le Jeu des Sabliers, Tome 2) (The Temple of Bones (The Game of the Hourglass, Vol. 2)) (Anticipation No. 1609, Fleuve Noir, Paris, 1988)
- Nivôse (Étoiles Mortes, Tome1) (Nivose (Dead Stars, Vol. 1)) (Anticipation No.1837, Fleuve Noir, Paris, 1991)
- Aigue-Marine (Étoiles Mortes, Tome 2) (Aigue-Marine (Dead Stars, Vol. 2)) (Anticipation No.1838, Fleuve Noir, Paris, 1991)
- Voleurs de Silence (Étoiles Mortes, Tome 3) (Thieves of Silence (Dead Stars, Vol. 3) (Anticipation No. 1858, Fleuve Noir, Paris, 1992)
- Roll Over, Amundsen (Anticipation No. 1912, Fleuve Noir, Paris, 1993)
- La Guerre des Cercles (The War of the Circles) (Anticipation No. 1963, Fleuve Noir, Paris, 1995)
- Étoiles Mourantes (Dying Stars) (with Ayerdhal) (J’ai Lu Millénaire, Paris, 1999)
- La Station de l’Agnelle (Station of the Lamb) (collection) (L’Atalante, Nantes, 2000)
- Dix Jours Sans Voir la Mer (Ten Days Without Looking at the Sea) (collection) (L’Atalante, Nantes, 2000)
- Étoiles Mortes (Dead Stars) (J’ai Lu, Paris, 2000)
- Déchiffrer la Trame (Unravelling the Thread) (collection) (L’Atalante, Nantes, 2001)
- Le Jeu des Sabliers (The Game of the Hourglass) (ISF, Paris, 2003)
- Les Nageurs de Sable (The Sand Swimmers) (collection) (L’Atalante, Nantes, 2003)
- Le temps, en s'évaporant... (Time, as it evaporates...) (collection) (L’Atalante, Nantes, 2005)
- Séparations (Separations) (collection) (L’Atalante, Nantes, 2007)
[edit] In English
- In Medicis Gardens, in Full Spectrum 4, Bantam Spectra, New York, 1993
- The Dead Eye of the Camera, in Full Spectrum 5, Bantam Spectra, New York, 1995
- Unravelling the Thread, in Interzone 133, Brighton, UK, July 1998; reprinted in Year’s Best SF 4, HarperPrism, New York, 1999
- Come Into My Parlor, in Altair 1, Blackwood, SA, Australia, 1998
- Footprints in the Snow, in Interzone 150, Brighton, UK, December 1999
- Station of the Lamb, in Altair 6, Blackwood, SA, Australia, 2000
- All the Roads to Heaven, in Interzone 156, Brighton, UK, June 2000
- Orchids in the Night, in Interzone 160, Brighton, UK, October 2000
- Watch Me When I Sleep, appeared in Interzone 168, Brighton, UK, June 2001; reprinted in Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror, Tor Books, New York, 2002
- Enter the Worms, in On Spec, Volume 14, Number 2, Ed-monton, Canada, Summer 2002
- What the Dead Know, in On Spec, Volume 16, Number 1, Ed-monton, Canada, Spring 2004
- The Night Orchid: Conan Doyle in Toulouse, (collection of short stories) Black Coat Press, 2004 ISBN 0-9740711-7-X
- Separations, in The SFWA European Hall of Fame, Edited by James and Kathryn Morrow, Tor 2007