James Alan Gardner (born January 10, 1955)[1] is a Canadian science fiction author.
James Alan Gardner | |
|---|---|
| Born | January 10, 1955 |
| Occupation | Science fiction writer |
Early life and education
editBorn in Simcoe, Ontario,[1][2] he attended the University of Waterloo, where he published his first story, "The Phantom of the Operator", in 1984.[2]
Career
editGardner has published science fiction short stories in a range of periodicals, including The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Asimov's Science Fiction, and Amazing Stories.
He has published seven novels in his "League of Peoples" universe, in which humans encounter highly advanced aliens that define murderers as "dangerous non-sentients" and kill them if they try to leave their solar system.[2]
He has also explored themes of gender in novels including Commitment Hour, in which people reaching adulthood must choose their gender,[2] and Vigilant, in which group marriages are traditional.
Gardner is also an educator and technical writer, and published the textbook Learning UNIX in 1991.[3]
Awards
editIn 1989, Gardner's short story "The Children of Creche" won the Grand Prize in the Writers of the Future contest. Two years later his story "Muffin Explains Teleology to the World at Large" won a Prix Aurora Award. His "Three Hearings on the Existence of Snakes in the Human Bloodstream" also won an Aurora and was nominated for both the Nebula and Hugo Awards. In 2009 his novelette "The Ray-Gun: A Love Story" won the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award and the Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine Readers' Award and was nominated for the Nebula Award. In 2022, his "The One with the Interstellar Group Consciousnesses" won Japan's Seiun Award for best translated story of the year (and he had previous Seiun nominations for both "The Ray-Gun: A Love Story" and "Three Hearings on the Existence of Snakes in the Human Bloodstream").[4]
Science fiction publications
editLara Croft, Tomb Raider series
edit- No. 3 Lara Croft and the Man of Bronze
League of Peoples universe
edit- Commitment Hour (1998)
- Trapped (2002)
- Festina Ramos series:
- Expendable (1997)
- Vigilant (1999)
- Hunted (2000)
- Ascending (2001)
- Radiant (2004)
Short story collections
edit- Gravity Wells (2005)
- Organisms (2018)
The Dark vs. Spark
edit- All Those Explosions Were Someone Else's Fault (2017)
- They Promised Me the Gun Wasn't Loaded (2018)
Anthology
edit- Tesseracts Twenty: Compostela with Spider Robinson (2017)
See also
editReferences
edit- 1 2 3 James Alan Gardner at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Gardner, James Alan". The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction. September 12, 2022. Retrieved November 4, 2024.
- ↑ James Gardner (1994) [1991]. Learning UNIX. Indianapolis, Indiana: Sams. ISBN 9780672304576.
- ↑ "Science Fiction Awards Database: James Alan Gardner". Retrieved April 9, 2026.