Lisa Goldstein
Lisa Goldstein (b. November 21, 1953 in Los Angeles) is a Nebula, Hugo, and World Fantasy Award nominated fantasy and science fiction writer. Her 1982 novel The Red Magician won the American Book Award for best paperback novel, and was praised by Philip K. Dick shortly before his death. Goldstein writes science fiction and fantasy; her two novels Daughter of Exile and The Divided Crown are considered literary fantasy.[1] Her most recent novel is The Uncertain Places.
Elizabeth Joy "Lisa" Goldstein's father was Heinz Jurgen "Harry" Goldstein (b. June 8, 1922 in Krefeld, Germany; d. May 24, 1974 in Los Angeles), a survivor of concentration camp Bergen-Belsen; her mother, Miriam Roth, was born in Czechoslovakia and survived the extermination camp Auschwitz. Her parents came to the United States in 1947 and met in an ESL class.
She has published two fantasy novels under the pen name Isabel Glass. She chose to use a pseudonym to separate the novels from her other work. The "Isabel" is from Point Isabel Regional Shoreline, a local park which includes a dog run, and "Glass" was chosen because it fits Tor's requirements for pseudonyms.[2]
She married Douglas A. Asherman in 1986, and lives in Oakland, California.
Bibliography
Novels
The Uncertain Places (2011)
- Tachyon Publications - ISBN 978-1-61696-014-8 (Paperback)
The Divided Crown (2005) as by Isabel Glass
- Tor Books - ISBN 0-7653-0746-4
Daughter of Exile (2004) as by Isabel Glass
- Tor Books - ISBN 0-7653-0745-6 (Hardcover) - ISBN 0-7653-4658-3 (Paperback)
The Alchemist's Door (2002)
- Tor Books - ISBN 0-7653-0150-4 (Hardcover) - ISBN 0-7653-0151-2 (Paperback)
Dark Cities Underground (1999)
- Tor Books - ISBN 0-312-86828-6 (Hardcover) - ISBN 0-312-86827-8 (Paperback)
Walking the Labyrinth (1996)
- Tor Books - ISBN 0-312-86175-3 (Hardcover) - ISBN 0-312-85968-6 (Paperback)
Summer King, Winter Fool (1994)
- Tor Books - ISBN 0-312-85632-6 (Hardcover) - ISBN 0-8125-3503-0 (Paperback)
Strange Devices of the Sun and Moon (1993)
- Tor Books - ISBN 0-312-85460-9 (Hardcover) - ISBN 0-8125-1951-5 (Paperback)
Tourists (1989)
- Simon & Schuster - ISBN 0-671-67531-1 (Hardcover) - ISBN 0-312-89011-7 (1994 Tor Books paperback reprint)
A Mask for the General (1987)
- Bantam Books - ISBN 0-553-05239-X (Hardcover) - ISBN 0-553-27312-4 (Paperback)
The Dream Years (1985)
- Bantam Books - ISBN 0-553-05090-7 (Hardcover) - ISBN 0-553-25693-9 (Paperback)
The Red Magician (1982)
- Pocket Books - ISBN 0-671-41161-6 (1982 Paperback) - ISBN 0-671-49907-6 (1983 Paperback reprint) - ISBN 0-312-85462-5 (1993 Tor Books hardcover reprint) - ISBN 0-312-89007-9 (1995 Orb Books paperback reprint)
Collections
Daily Voices (1989)
Travellers in Magic (1994)
Awards and nominations
- American Book Award (1983) for The Red Magician
- World Fantasy Award for Best Novel nominee (1986) for The Dream Years
- Arthur C. Clarke Award nominee (1987) for A Mask for the General
- Hugo Award for Best Short Story nominee (1988) for "Cassandra's Photographs"
- Nebula Award for Best Short Story nominee (1988) for "Cassandra's Photographs"
- World Fantasy Award for Best Short story nominee (1993) for "Alfred"
- Nebula Award for Best Short Story nominee (1994) for "Alfred"
- World Fantasy Best Collection nominee (1995) for Travellers In Magic
- Nebula Award for Best Short Story nominee (1996) for "The Narcissus Plague"
- World Fantasy Award for Best Short story nominee (1998) for "Fortune and Misfortune"
- Nebula Award for Best Short Story nominee (1999) for "Fortune and Misfortune"
- British Fantasy Society Best Novel nominee (1999) for Dark Cities Underground
See also
References
- ^ Biography at Fantastic Fiction. [1]. Retrieved on 2008-12-11.
- ^ Why I Became Isabel Glass. [2]. Retrieved on 2008-12-11.
External links
Persondata |
Name |
Goldstein, Lisa |
Alternative names |
|
Short description |
fantasy and science fiction writer |
Date of birth |
November 21, 1953 |
Place of birth |
Los Angeles, California |
Date of death |
|
Place of death |
|