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Books Sci-Fi

Fantasy and Sci-Fi Author Debra Doyle, 1952-2020 (locusmag.com) 24

Long-time Slashdot reader serviscope_minor wanted to remind us that 2020 also saw the death of science fiction/fantasy author Debra Doyle at the age of 67 from a sudden cardiac event. "Her works were co-written with her husband, James D. Macdonald," notes her entry on Wikipedia: Her first work written with Macdonald was "Bad Blood" in 1988. Their novel Knight's Wyrd was awarded the Mythopoeic Fantasy Award for Children's Literature in 1992 and appeared on the New York Public Library Books for the Teen Age list in 1993. They published two series, Mageworlds (7 novels) and The Wizard Apprentice (8 novels), and two alternate history novels, Land of Mist and Snow and Lincoln's Sword.

Doyle and Macdonald also published together under other names. They published their first novel, Night of Ghosts and Lightning, in 1989 under the house name Robyn Tallis; two Tom Swift novels under the house name Victor Appleton; Pep Rally, Blood Brothers, and Vampire's Kiss under the house name Nicholas Adams; and two Spider-Man novels as Martin Delrio.

Together Doyle and Macdonald made up part of the core membership of the sff.net website and rec.arts.sff newsgroup. Doyle also taught at the Viable Paradise genre writer's workshop on Martha's Vineyard.

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Fantasy and Sci-Fi Author Debra Doyle, 1952-2020

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  • by greytree ( 7124971 ) on Sunday January 03, 2021 @11:37AM (#60890818)

    Disclaimer: I am not a big sci-fi fan, and have not heard of Debra Doyle before.

    If I was writing a summary of someone's obiutary that I wanted people to read further, I would not start with the fact that they won the "Mythopoeic Fantasy Award for Children's Literature" 28 years ago or the fact that they were on the New York Public Library Books for the Teen Age list 27 years ago.

    • by Entrope ( 68843 )

      Ditto. I read Dozois's Best Science Fiction of the Year anthology religiously (and RIP Gardner Dozois), and follow the major SF awards, yet Doyle's name rang no bells. Also, she died two months ago, so this is hardly news any more. This co-author's death made the front page, but not Terry Goodkind or Neal Peart? Or even Mike Resnick, who is relatively little-known but still had five Hugo awards and a Nebula award to his name?

      • RIP Gardner Dozois. I have also never heard of Debra Doyle.

        Tough couple of years for Science Fiction and Fantasy authors. Ben Bova passed just last month. Over the last few years Harlan Ellison, Christopher Tolkien, Gene Wolfe, etc. Or for that matter, Joanna Cole, the author of the Magic School Bus kids, really could have used a mention on Slashdot. I'm sure plenty of people here either read those books, watched the TV show, or shared them with their children.

        The age of the "classic," speculative hard scie

    • She was one of the first authors I read as a child and is how I got started in science fiction/fantasy lit. She is not well known because it has always been hard to get her books. I remember waiting 3-4 years before we were able to get all of the books for the Wizards Apprentice (originally called Circle of Magic, no idea why they changed it) series. They were variously out of print for a long time. I have them all now and we have held onto them over the years because, even now as an adult, I still enjoy pi

      • So you are telling us why she is a special author, not giving us a list of ancient, minor, irrelevant prizes she once won.

        You should have written this story.

  • So, whom will Trump nominate to replace her — and will the Senate approve?

  • OOPS! That's my own age! I am 67 years old! That's too early to die!
  • Crap. I haven't seen the two of them at a con in a long, long time, but they were friends of mine.

    Oh, and all the over/undereducated spammers on slashdot, let's see if *you* can, for example, read ancient Icelandic as Debra could.

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