Daughters of Earth
Winner of the Susan Koppelman Award
and the William Atheling Jr Award
shortlisted for a British Science Fiction Award
Women’s contributions to science fiction over the past century have been lasting and important, but critical work in the field has only just begun to explore its full range. I collected 11 key stories—many of them not easily found, and all of them powerful and provocative—and set them alongside 11 new essays, written by top scholars and critics, that explore the stories’ contexts, meanings, and theoretical implications. The resulting dialogue is one of enormous significance to critical scholarship in science fiction, and to understanding the role of feminism in its development. Organized chronologically, this anthology creates a new canon of feminist science fiction and examines the theory that addresses it. Daughters of Earth is an ideal overview for students and general readers.
- How to Ditch Your Fairy
- Magic or Madness Trilogy
- Daughters of Earth
- The Battle of the Sexes in Science Fiction
Blog
- Famous in their own country
The responses to my post about gender-directed1 reading reminded me that I’ve been meaning to post about authors who are famous in their own country but not that well known outside it. Specifically, a bunch of you were aghast that anyone could dismiss Flannery O’Connor as “lightweight”. I suspect the reason that lecturer …
- Blog Overlord: What a pretty neologism, Justine.
JL: Why thank you!
BO: Um, Justine, I was being sarcastic. Really sarcastic.
JL: Well, you can rack off then, can’t you?
BO: Not really. I’m Blog Overlord.
JL: I hired you. I can also fire you.
BO: Whatever. That “word” still sucks. [↩]
- Blog Overlord: What a pretty neologism, Justine.
- FAQ updated + good news
- Not liking a good book
- Tallying Olympic Medals
- Answering questions
- more...
Archives
Newsletter
Appearances
17 September 2008
Kepler’s Books & Music
1010 El Camino Real
Menlo Park, CA
18 September 2008, 7PM
Not Your Mother’s Bookclub
Books Inc.
San Francisco, CA
Interviews
I am interviewed with Scott Westerfeld on Detroit’s Cult-Pop TV. Click on no. 13 to watch it (February 2008).
Me and Ekaterina Sedia are interviewed by K. Tempest Bradford about being foreigners writing and living in the USA (30 January 2008).
Mini Bio
I’m a Sydney girl what writes novels, is obsessed with cricket, and travels way too much.
My next novel, How To Ditch Your Fairy, will be out from Bloomsbury Books in September 2008.
For more info about me there’s a whole bunch of interviews here plus my FAQ.
