Edmund R. Schubert

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Edmund R. Schubert
Born Long Island, NY
Occupation writer/editor
Nationality American
Period 2001 - present

www.edmundrschubert.com

Portal icon Literature portal

Edmund R. Schubert is an American author and editor best known for his work in the fields of science fiction and fantasy, though some of his short stories are mysteries, including one that was a preliminary nominee for an Edgar Award in 2006 for Best Short Story.[1] He has also written for and edited several business magazines.

Fiction writing/editing

As a fiction author, Schubert has published over 35 short stories[2] and one novel (Dreaming Creek, LBF Books, Oct. 2008).[3][4] About half of his short stories are collected in The Trouble With Eating Clouds: A Collection of Mysteries, Magic, and Madness (Spotlight Publishing, June 2011). Schubert's stories cover a variety of genres, appearing in magazines and anthologies in the U.S. and Great Britain. His short fiction has been: included on storySouth’s Year’s Notable list; reprinted in The Writer’s Post Journal’s Year’s Best issue; a #1 rated story on Zoetrope.com; a preliminary nominee for an Edgar Award from the Mystery Writers of America for Best Short Story; and First Prize Winner in Lynx Eye’s Captivating Beginnings contest.

Since 2006, he has been the editor of the online magazine publishing science fiction and fantasy, Orson Scott Card's InterGalactic Medicine Show,[5] also co-editing with Orson Scott Card an IGMS anthology (Tor Books, Aug. 2008).[6] A second IGMS anthology, the InterGalactic Medicine Show Awards Anthology was published by Spotlight in Jan. of 2012. Stories edited by Schubert for IGMS have appeared in various Year's Best anthologies, been nominated for several national awards, and won the WSFA Small Press Award for Best Short Story (2009).[7] He is also editor of and contributor to a non-fiction book about the business and craft of writing: How To Write Magical Words: A Writer's Companion (Bella Rosa Books, January, 2011).[8]

Schubert is a regular speaker at sf conventions in the southeastern United States,[9][10] appearing on panels and teaching workshops. From June 2010 to Dec. 2011 he was a regular blogger at MagicalWords.net[11] (a writing blog designed to help newer writers, founded by authors Faith Hunter, David B. Coe, and Misty Massey), which was the basis for the How To Write Magical Words book. And he has taught writing workshops at UNC-Greensboro in Greensboro, North Carolina,[12] for the North Carolina Writer's Network Conference, and at Southern Virginia University in Buena Vista, VA.[13]

Business writing/editing

In the area of business writing, Schubert was executive editor of the regional business magazine, North Carolina Career Network Magazine from 2005–2007,[14] and managing editor of the nationally-distributed Diversity Woman from 2007-2010.[15] In those capacities he has interviewed and written about a wide variety of people, ranging from Jeff Kane, Officer in Charge of the Charlotte, NC branch of the Federal Reserve,[16] to African-America icon Maya Angelou.[17]

Partial Bibliography

Books

  • Futures Mystery Anthology, Twilight Publishing, May 2006 (anthology, contributor, "Good With Directions")
  • Tales From The Asylum: Year 3, From The Asylum Press, 2006 (anthology, contributor, "About Time")
  • Crypto-Critters II, Padwolf Publishing, 2007 (anthology, contributor, "Lair of the Ice Rat")
  • Beauty & Dynamite, Apex Publications, June 2008 (anthology, contributor, "Edmund Schubert says...")
  • InterGalactic Medicine Show, Tor, Aug. 2008 (anthology, co-editor)
  • Dreaming Creek, Lachesis/LBF Books, Oct. 2008 (novel, author)
  • How To Write Magical Words: A Writer's Companion, Bella Rosa Books, Jan. 2011 (non-fiction anthology, editor, contributor (multiple essays))
  • The Trouble With Eating Clouds: A Collection of Mysteries, Magic, and Madness, Spotlight Publishing, June 2011 (short story collection, author)
  • InterGalactic Medicine Show Awards Anthology, Vol. I, Spotlight Publishing, Jan. 2012 (anthology, co-editor, contributor)

References

External links

Interviews

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.