Catriona Sparks

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Catriona (Cat) Sparks

Cat Sparks (author)
Born (1965-09-11) 11 September 1965
Nationality Australian
Genres Speculative fiction

www.catsparks.net

Catriona (Cat) Sparks (born 11 September 1965, Sydney, New South Wales) is an Australian science fiction writer, editor and publisher.

As manager and editor of Agog! Press with her partner, Australian horror writer Rob Hood, Sparks has produced ten anthologies of speculative fiction. She is also a writer, graphic designer, photographer and desktop publisher, with stories and artwork appearing in a selection of magazines and anthologies. She has won eleven Ditmar Awards for writing, editing and artwork,[1] her most recent in 2009, when her short story Seventeen was awarded a Ditmar for Best Science young Adult Short Story.[2] She was nominated for the Aurealis Peter McNamara Convenors' Award for Excellence in 2003 and won one in 2004 for services to the Australian SF publishing industry. In 2006 Sparks was convenor of the Horror judging panel of the Aurealis Awards, and in 2008 she was Guest of Honour at the Conflux 5 Science Fiction Convention in Canberra.[3]

Sparks has concentrated on her writing in recent years.[4] In 2004 Sparks graduated the inaugural Clarion South Writers' Workshop in Queensland[5] and won third prize in the first quarter of the Writers of the Future competition.[6] Her short fiction has been nominated for the Aurealis Awards in 2004, 2005, 2007 and 2008.[7] Her short story Hollywood Roadkill won both the Aurealis Award for Best Science Fiction Short Story and the Golden Aurealis Award[8] in the 2007 Aurealis Awards. Her short story Seventeen won the Aurealis Award for Best Science young Adult Short Story[9] in the 2009 Aurealis Awards.

In 2010 Sparks was announced as the new Fiction Editor of Cosmos Magazine replacing Damien Broderick.[10]

In January 2012 she was one of 12 students chosen to participate in Margaret Atwood’s The Time Machine Doorway workshop as part of the Key West Literary Seminar Yet Another World: literature of the future. Her participation was funded by an Australia Council emerging writers grant.

In 2012 she became a provisional candidate for a Doctorate of Philosophy – Media, Culture and Creative Arts through Curtin University.

An active member of Science Fiction Writers of America, her fiction is represented by Jill Grinberg Literary Management, New York.

Works edited

Anthologies edited and published by Sparks through Agog! Press

Works published

Anthologies published by Sparks through Agog! Press

Published fiction

Fiction written by Sparks and published in Australian and International markets.

  • Chinaman’s Bluff (2013). SQ Mag
  • Scarp”, In The Bride Price (2013). Ticonderoga Publications
  • Beyond the Farthest Stone (2013). In The Bride Price, Ticonderoga Publications
  • Daughters of Battendown (2013). In One Small Step, ed. Tehani Wessely, Fablecroft Publishing
  • The Alabaster Child (2011). In Gutshot: Weird West Tales, ed. Conrad Williams, PS Publishing - Anthology nominated for a British Fantasy Award
  • The Sleeping and the Dead (2011). In Ishtar, Morrigan Books - Nominated for a DITMAR Award
  • Dead Low’ (2011). In Midnight Echo #6, The Australian Horror Writers Association - Nominated for an Aurealis Award
  • Beautiful (2011). In Anywhere But Earth, Coeur de Lion Publishing
  • All the Love in the World (2010). In Sprawl, ed. Alisa Krasnostein, Twelfth Planet Press
  • The Piano Song (2010). In Scenes from the Second Storey, eds. Amanda Pillar and Pete Kempshaw, Morrigan Books
  • Heart of Stone (2009). In X6, ed. Keith Stevenson, Coeur de Lion Publishing
  • The Snow Leopard (2009), Borderlands Magazine, #11
  • Seventeen (2009), In. Masques, ed. Gillian Polack, Canberra Speculative Fiction Guild.

Awarded Best Young Adult Short Story in the 2009 Aurealis Awards

Awarded Best Fantasy Short Story in the 2008 Aurealis Awards Short Story in 2008 Aurealis Awards
Reprinted in Award Winning Australian Writing 2009, Melbourne Books

  • A Million Shades of Nightmare (2007), Dark Animus, #10.

Recorded as a podcast for Outlandish Voices in 2009

  • Hollywood Roadkill (2007), On Spec, #69.

Awarded both Best Science Fiction Short Story and the Short Story Golden Aurealis in the 2007 Aurealis Awards

  • Right to Work (2007). In Workers Paradise, eds. Russell B. Farr and Nick Evans, Ticonderoga Publications.
  • Champagne and Ice (2007), Aurealis.
  • A Lady of Adestan (2007), Orb, # 7, June.

Nominated for Best Fantasy Short Story in the 2007 Aurealis Awards

  • The Bride Price (2007), New Ceres, #2, 2007
  • Arctica (2007). In Fantastic Wonder Stories, ed. Russell B. Farr, Ticonderoga Publications.

Nominated for Best Science Fiction Short Story in the 2007 Aurealis Awards

  • The Golden Hour (2006), WyR[E]d, November.
  • The Jarrah Run (2006), In c0ck, eds. Andrew Macrae and Keith Stephenson, coeur de lion press.
  • The Delicacy of Dragonflies (2006), Fables and Reflections, #8.
  • Street of the Dead (2006), Cosmos, #9, June.

Reprinted in Greek Newspaper Eleftherotypia, 2009

  • Blue Stars For All Saviours' Day (2006). In The Outcast, ed. Nicole R. Murphy, Canberra Speculative Fiction Guild.
  • The Ice Bride (2006), Shadowed Realms, #9, The Redback Edition.
  • Message in a Bottle (2005), Borderlands, #6
  • Macchiato Lane (2005), TiconderogaOnline", #5

Nominated for Best Horror Short Story in the 2005 Aurealis Awards

  • Historical Perspective (2005), Simulacrum, July.
  • Arcana (2005). In Mitch? 4: Slow Dancing in Quicksand.
  • Home by the Sea (2004), Orb, #6,

Nominated for Best Science Fiction Short Story in the 2004 Aurealis Awards
Reprinted in The Year's Best Australian Science Fiction and Fantasy, 2005, eds. Bill Congreve and Michelle Marquardt, MirrorDanse Books

  • Last Dance at the Sargeant Majors' Ball (2004). Borderlands Magazine, #3, 2004

Reprinted in L Ron Hubbard presents Writers of the Future, vol XXI, 2005.

  • Meltdown my Plutonium Heart (2004). In Encounters, eds. Maxine McArthur and Donna Maree Hanson, Canberra Speculative Fiction Guild.
  • I am my Fathers Daughters (2003), Visions Magazine, #23.
  • The Birdcage (2003). In Elsewhere, ed. Michael Barry, Canberra Speculative Fiction Guild.
  • Our Lady of Spatial Anomalies (2003), Fables and Reflections, #5.
  • Song of the Crescent Moon (2003), Gynaezine.
  • Gracelands (2003), Dark Animus, #3.
  • Roswell 14 (co-written with Max Blaxall) (2003). In Consensual 2: The Second Coming.
  • Cross the Nullarbor to the Sea (2003), In Glimpses, Vision Writer's Group.
  • Pod (2003). In Ideomancer Unbound, eds. Mikal Trimm and Chris Clarke, Fictionwise.
  • Rats Nest (2003). In Potato Monkey, #3,
  • 14 Shopping Days Till Xmas (2002), Vision Newszine.
  • Birthmark (2002), Antipodean SF, #55.
  • Arthur Nolan's Twilight (2002), Aurealis, #30.
  • Rites of Passage (2002). In Mitch?3: Hacks to the Max.
  • 100% M-Hype (2002). In Passing Strange, ed. Bill Congreve, MirrorDanse Books, 2002
  • Reigning Cats and Dogs (2002), Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine, #1.
  • Meltdown my Plutonium Heart (2002), Borderlands Convention Program.
  • Epiphany on the Wirewalk (2002), Fables and Reflections, #1.
  • Hollywood Hills (2002), Antipodean SF, #45.
  • Fuchsia Spins by Moonlight (2002), Redsine, #7
  • Invasion of the Latte Snatchers (2001). In Mitch?2: Tarts of the New Millennium.

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.