Karen Haber (born January 7,[1] 1955) is an American science fiction and non-fiction author and editor, as well as an art critic and historian. She is the author of nine novels including Star Trek Voyager: Bless the Beasts, and co-author of Science of the X-Men. Other publications include Exploring the Matrix: Visions of the Cyber Present, a collection of essays by leading science fiction writers and artists, and Transitions with Todd Lockwood, a retrospective of the artist's work. In 2001, she edited a Hugo-nominated essay collection celebrating J. R. R. Tolkien, Meditations on Middle-Earth. Her short fiction has appeared in Asimov's Science Fiction magazine,[2] the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, and many anthologies. She reviews art books for Locus magazine and profiles artists for various publications including Realms of Fantasy. With her husband, Robert Silverberg, she co-edited Best Science Fiction of 2001, 2002, and the Best Fantasy of 2001 and 2002 for ibooks and later, co-edited the continuation with Jonathan Strahan.[3]

Karen Haber
Born (1955-01-09) January 9, 1955 (age 69)
Occupation
  • Author
  • editor
  • art critic
  • historian
NationalityAmerican
Genres
SpouseRobert Silverberg
Website
karenhaber.com

Bibliography edit

Short stories edit

  • Madre De Dios (1988)
  • Batman in Nighttown (1989) (with Robert Silverberg)
  • A Plague of Strangers (1989)
  • Inside Out (1992)
  • Red Angels (1993)
  • The Shores of Morning (1993, in The Further Adventures of Wonder Woman)
  • My Husband Became a Zombie and it Saved Our Marriage (1994)
  • On the Tip of a Cat's Tongue (1994)
  • Doing the Angry Centipede (1995)
  • First Contact, Sort of (1995) (with Carol Carr)
  • The King Who Would Fly (1995)
  • A Round of Cards with the General (1995)
  • The Spell Between Worlds (1995)
  • The Vampire of the Opera (1995)
  • A Bone Dry Place (1996)
  • Cézanne Was a Capricorn (1997)
  • The Glyptodon's Quadrille (1997)
  • Dog Is My Copilot (1998)
  • A Killing Light (1999) (with Robert Silverberg)
  • The Federal Spy And Miz Julia (2000)

Novels edit

  • Thieves' Carnival (1990)
  • Bless the Beasts (Star Trek: Voyager series, 1996)
  • Crossing Infinity (2005)

Series edit

Fire in Winter edit

  1. The Mutant Season (1989) (with Robert Silverberg)
  2. The Mutant Prime (1990)
  3. Mutant Star (1992)
  4. Mutant Legacy (1992)

War Minstrels edit

  1. Woman without a Shadow (1995)
  2. The War Minstrels (1995)
  3. Sister Blood (1996)

Non-fiction edit

  • Science of the X-Men (2000) (with Link Yaco)
  • The Art of Todd Lockwood: Transitions (2003)
  • Kong Unbound (2005)

Editing edit

  • Universe 1 (1990) (with Robert Silverberg)
  • Universe 2 (1992) (with Robert Silverberg)
  • Universe 3 (1994) (with Robert Silverberg)
  • Meditations on Middle-earth, essay collection celebrating J.R.R. Tolkien (Earthlight, 2001)
  • Fantasy: The Best of 2001 (2002) (with Robert Silverberg)
  • Scientific American's Secrets of the Periodic Table (2002)
  • Science Fiction: The Best of 2003 (2003) (with Jonathan Strahan)
  • Fantasy: The Best of 2002 (2003) (with Robert Silverberg)
  • Exploring the Matrix: Visions of the Cyber Present, a collection of essays by leading sf authors (St. Martin's Press, 2003)
  • Fantasy: The Best of 2004 (2005) (with Jonathan Strahan)
  • Science Fiction: The Best of 2004 (2005) (with Jonathan Strahan)
  • Science Fiction: The Best of 2005 (2006)
  • Fantasy: The Best of 2005 (2006) (with Jonathan Strahan)

Awards edit

Meditations on Middle Earth was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Related Book in 2002.

References edit

  1. ^ "She came upon the story somehow, was startled and amused to find that she shared a birthday with its protagonist (...) Her name was Karen Haber (...) Today was her birthday, the seventh of January": introduction to "Capricorn Games", by Robert Silverberg, reprinted in On Spec #117 (vol. 31 no. 3), p.24-25
  2. ^ "ReAnimus Press - Breathing Life Into Great Books". reanimus.com. Retrieved 2018-09-30.
  3. ^ Denvention 3 Bio of Karen Haber[permanent dead link] accessed October 2, 2009

External links edit