Ann Downer
Ann Downer was an American writer, principally of fantasy novels for children and young adults, as well as short fiction and poetry.
Ann Downer was born in Arlington, Virginia in 1960 and grew up in Manila and Bangkok and recalled avidly reading fantasy fiction.[1]
Her first published work was a trilogy published in the late 1980s and early 1990s (The Spellkey, The Glass Salamander, and The Books of the Keepers), collected in a revised edition in 1995 as The Spellkey Trilogy. A second series for middle-grade readers, begun in 2003 with the novel Hatching Magic, continues with The Dragon of Never-Was (2006). The Spellkey series is high fantasy, taking place wholly in an invented world and chronicling a good-versus-evil story of two foundlings, a stableboy and an ostracized seer. Hatching Magic and its sequel, The Dragon of Never-Was, are contemporary fantasies with elements of time travel. The series follows a young girl, Theodora Oglethorpe, as she discovers a world of wizardry and magic. While Downer’s books are frequently compared to the work of Patricia A. McKillip and Diana Wynne Jones, she has cited the influence of Ursula K. Le Guin’s Earthsea books and the Chronicles of Prydain by Lloyd Alexander in shaping her outlook and prose style.
She was diagnosed with ALS in 2014 and died on November 19, 2015 in Boston, MA.[2]
Bibliography
Spellkey series
- The Spellkey (1987), jacket by Caldecott-medal winner David Wiesner, also a UK paperback edition from Futura/Macmillan.
- The Glass Salamander (1989), jacket by Caldecott-medal winner David Wiesner
- The Books of the Keepers (1993)
All three books were collected into a paperback omnibus edition, The Spellkey Trilogy, published by Baen Books in 1995.
Hatching Magic series U.S. edition jackets by Omar Rayyan
- Hatching Magic (2003; Scholastic Book Club selection; translated into German, Czech, Dutch, Italian, Portuguese, Polish, Thai, and Spanish; additional languages pending)
- The Dragon of Never-Was (2006)
Other Fiction
- “Somnus’s Fair Maid” (short-listed for the James Tiptree Jr. prize), a Regency retelling of the Sleeping Beauty fairy tale, in Black Thorn, White Rose, edited by Terri Windling and Ellen Datlow
- Short stories and poetry in Gargoyle Magazine in the late 1980s, including excerpts from an unpublished novel.
- “Bread-and-Butterflies” in Alice Redux (2006), a collection of short fiction inspired by Lewis Carroll and edited by Richard Peabody.
References
- ↑ "Ann Downer: Biography". Simon and Schuster. Archived from the original on 23 December 2009. Retrieved 3 March 2010.
- ↑ "Ann Downer-Hazell". The Somerville Journal.
External links
- Author blog
- Bibliography on fantasticfiction.co.uk
- Ann Downer at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database