George Guthridge

George Guthridge (born 1948) is a U.S. author. He has published over 70 short stories and five novels, and has been a finalist for the Hugo Award and twice for the Nebula Award, for science fiction and fantasy. In 1998 he and coauthor, Janet Berliner, won the Bram Stoker Award for the year's best horror novel.

Guthridge is also known for having coached ten students from the Siberian-Yupik (Eskimo) village of Gambell, on blizzard-swept St. Lawrence Island in the Bering Sea, to national championships in academics. They became the only Native American team ever to do that—and they did it twice.[1] Guthridge is also the author of The Kids from Nowhere: The Story Behind the Arctic Educational Miracle, published by Alaska Northwest Books in 2006.[2]

Contents

Additional links

Madagascar Manifesto

  1. Child of the Light (1991)
  2. Child of the Journey (1996)
  3. Children of the Dusk (1997) Bram Stoker Award winner
  4. The Madagascar Manifesto (omnibus) (2002) (with Janet Berliner)

References

  1. ^ http://www.thekidsfromnowhere.com/
  2. ^ http:www.gacpc.com/

External links