Marissa Lingen
Marissa Lingen | |
---|---|
Born | July 26, 1978 |
Occupation | Author |
Years active | 2000–present |
Website | marissalingen |
Marissa Kristine Lingen (born July 26, 1978) is an American science fiction and fantasy author who writes short stories.
Life
[edit]Lingen was born in Libertyville, Illinois, to a family of Norwegian[1] and Swedish[2] descent. She studied physics and mathematics at Gustavus Adolphus College[3] and worked at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.[4] She now lives in Minnesota.[5]
Lingen has published more than 150[6][7][8] pieces of short fiction. In 1999, her story "In the Gardens and the Graves" won the Isaac Asimov Award, now known as the Dell Magazines Award, for short fiction.[9] Her fiction has appeared in multiple anthologies, as well as in Nature, Tor, Ideomancer, Analog and Clarkesworld.[10] Her story "The Ministry of Changes" has been translated into Italian[11] and her stories have been reprinted in The Year's Best Science Fiction & Fantasy, 2013 Edition, Year's Best Young Adult Speculative Fiction 2015, Year's Best Young Adult Speculative Fiction 2014, The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twenty-Ninth Annual Collection, The Best of Beneath Ceaseless Skies Online Magazine, Year Two, Year's Best SF 15, and The Best of Jim Baen's Universe.
Lingen has a vestibular disorder that has influenced some of her stories, especially in understanding the impact of zero gravity and three-dimensional spaces.[12]
Bibliography
[edit]Short fiction
[edit]- Collections
- Dragon Brother and other stories. Tired Tapir Press. 2014.
- Stories[13]
Title | Year | First published | Reprinted/collected | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Potential side effects may include | 2015 | Lingen, Marissa & Alec Austin (July–August 2015). "Potential side effects may include". Analog Science Fiction and Fact. 135 (7&8): 76–81. |
- "In the Gardens and the Graves" – Asimov's Science Fiction (1999). Won the Isaac Asimov Award (now Dell Magazines Award).
- "Cornflake Girl" – Speculon (August 2000).
- "Butterhead" – Speculon (June 2001). Reprinted in Twin Cities Magazine of Science Fiction and Fantasy (September 2002).
- "The Handmade's Tale" – Future Orbits (December 2001). Received an Honorable Mention in The Year's Best Science Fiction: Nineteenth Annual Collection (ed. Gardner Dozois. St. Martin's Griffin, July 2002. ISBN 978-0-312-28879-2).
- "Irena's Roses" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (June 2002).
- "Cassie's Deal" – Paradox12 (January 2002).
- "Grandma Disappears" – Spellbound (Spring 2002).
- "Instead of Glass Slippers" – Rogue Worlds (July 2002).
- "Bright Red -- Aim Here" – Short Stuff (August 2002).
- "Natural Limitations" – Ideomancer (April 2003).
- "Making It Home" – This Way Up (April 2003).
- "Goats' Gold" – Spellbound (Spring 2003).
- "Glass Wind" – Twin Cities Magazine of Science Fiction and Fantasy (January 2003).
- "Portrait of the Artist as a Young Boy (With Aliens)" – Would That It Were (January 2003). Co-written with Tim Cooper.
- "Prototype" – Far Sector SFFH (May 2003).
- "Drops of Yesterday" – SF-F.org (April 2003).
- "Wishing on Airplanes" – Oceans of the Mind (Summer 2003).
- "Dark Thread" – Challenging Destiny, Issue 17 (December 2003).
- "MacArthur Station" – Fortean Bureau (September 2003).
- "The Grumpiest Place on Earth" – Flash Me Magazine (July 2003).
- "Taste of Blood and Bubble-Gum" – Alien Skin (November 2003).
- "Rock, Paper, Scissors" – Zahir (February 2004).
- "Shylock's Pound" – Penumbric (October 2004).
- "Bestseller" – Continuum SF (December 2003).
- "Seven Minutes In Heaven" – Fortean Bureau (March 2004).
- "Fair Use" – Fables (Spring 2004).
- "Speed Dating" – EOTU E-Zine (February 2004).
- "Trail's End" – Alien Skin (March 2004).
- "Endgene" – Quantum Muse (March 2004).
- "Take Back the Night" – Kenoma (April 2004).
- "Under the Masks" – Monthly Short Stories (October 2004).
- "She Transcends" – Raven Electrick (November 2004).
- "From the Hip Flask" – SDO Fantasy (July 2004).
- "An Attack of Conscience" – Neo-opsis Science Fiction Magazine, Issue 3 (July 2004).
- "Big Sister" – Story Station (Summer 2004).
- "Anna's Implants" – Challenging Destiny, Issue 19 (November 2004).
- "Another Hollywood Miracle" – Fortean Bureau (November 2004).
- "Five Brothers Underground" – Kenoma (June 2005).
- "The Flask of Today" – Story Station (December 2005).
- "Even Without Deceit" – Fictitious Force, Issue 2 (May 2006).
- "The Beast's Apprentice" – Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine, Issue 24 (July 2006).
- "Things We Sell to Tourists" – Aeon, Issue 6 (February 2006).
- "Heart-Shaped Hole" – Challenging Destiny, Issue 22 (May 2006).
- "The Opposite of Pomegranates" – Jim Baen's Universe, Issue 1 (June 2006). Reprinted in The Best of Jim Baen's Universe (ed. Eric Flint. Baen Books, July 2007. ISBN 978-1-4165-2136-5).
- "Silent Teraphim" – Aberrant Dreams, Issue 8 (Summer 2006).
- "Moth Kin" – Between Kisses Magazine (October 2006).
- "Michael Banks, Home from the War" – Aeon, Issue 9 (November 2006).
- "Singing Them Back" – Jim Baen's Universe, Issue 4 (December 2006).
- "A Six-Letter Word for Mom" – Fictitious Force, Issue 4 (2007).
- "Rest Stop" – Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine, Issue 28 (2007).
- "Water, Flesh, and Stone" – Aberrant Dreams (January 2008).
- "Scribing a Line" – Fictitious Force, Issue 4 (2007).
- "Pirates by Adeline Thromb Age 8" – Shimmer Magazine, October 2007.
- "Alloy" – Nature Futures (September 2007). An audio version is available (Escape Pod, Issue 232, December 2009).
- "Väinämöinen and the Singing Fish" – Abyss & Apex Magazine Issue 27 (July 2008). An audio version is available (PodCastle, Issue 113, July 2010).
- "Making Alex Frey" – Jim Baen's Universe (June 2008).
- "Loki's Net" – Jim Baen's Universe (December 2008).
- "Search Strings" – Nature Physics Futures (February 2008).
- "Swimming Back from Hell by Moonlight" – Aeon, Issue 13 (February 2008).
- "In the Velvet Swamp" – Coyote Wild Magazine.
- "Gilding the Dandelion" – Aberrant Dreams Magazine (April 2009).
- "The Calculus Plague" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (July 2009). Reprinted in Year's Best SF 15 (eds. David G. Hartwell, Kathryn Cramer. HarperCollins, May 2010. ISBN 978-0-06-172175-5) and Twenty-First Century Science Fiction: An Anthology (eds. David G. Hartwell, Patrick Nielsen Hayden. Tor Books, November 2013. ISBN 978-0-7653-2600-3).
- "Kay's Box" – Shimmer Magazine, Issue 11 (December 2009).
- "Erasing the Map" – Futurismic (February 2009).
- "Why I Live in the Silver Mine" – Jim Baen's Universe (August 2009).
- "Five Ways to Ruin a First Date" – Not One of Us (October 2009).
- "Quality Control" – Nature (October 2009).
- "The Grandmother-Granddaughter Conspiracy" – Clarkesworld Magazine (December 2009). Reprinted in Clarkesworld: Year Four (eds. Neil Clarke, Sean Wallace. Wyrm Publishing, June 2013. ISBN 978-1-890464-22-6).
- "The Six Skills of Madame Lumiere" – Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Issue 46 (July 2010). Reprinted in The Best of Beneath Ceaseless Skies Online Magazine, Year Two (ed. Scott H. Andrews. Firkin Press, July 2011. ASIN B005QBG96W).
- "The Witch's Second Daughter" – Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine, Issue 49 (December 2010). An audio version is available (PodCastle Miniature 66, October 2011).
- "Some of Them Closer" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (January 2011). Reprinted in The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twenty-Ninth Annual Collection (ed. Gardner Dozois. St. Martin's Griffin, July 2012. ISBN 978-1-250-00354-6). Reprinted in Forever Magazine, Issue 60 (January 2020). An audio version is available (Escape Pod, Issue 366, October 2012).
- "Entanglement" – Nature (March 2011).
- "Tusk and Skin" – Bewere the Night (ed. Ekaterina Sedia. Prime Books, April 2011. ISBN 978-1-60701-252-8)
- "Blood Man Calls the Whale" – Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine, Issue 53, March 2012.
- "The Witch's Second" – Beneath Ceaseless Skies (August 2011).
- "Modification or Mutation: 8 Ways a Parent Can Be Sure" – Daily Science Fiction, September 7, 2011.
- "On the Acquisition of Phoenix Eggs (Variant)" – Lightspeed (January 2012). An audio version is available (PodCastle 245, February 2013).
- "Calibrated Allies" – Beneath Ceaseless Skies (January 2012). Reprinted in Ceaseless Steam: Steampunk Stories from Beneath Ceaseless Skies (ed. Scott H. Andrews. Firkin Press, July 2012. ASIN B002FZISIO).
- "Brief Interviews With Therianthropes" – Daily Science Fiction (June 2012). Co-written with Alec Austin.
- "Dinosaurs of the Southern Dust Bowl" – White Cat Magazine (Spring 2012).
- "Cursed Motives" – Beneath Ceaseless Skies (October 2012). An audio version is available.
- "The Radioactive Etiquette Book" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (March 2013). An audio version is available (StarShipSofa 316, December 2013).
- "The Young Necromancer's Guide to Re-Capitation" – On Spec (Winter 2014). Co-written with Alec Austin.
- "The Un-Wisher" – Spellbound Magazine (Winter 2012).
- "Armistice Day" – Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Issue 117 (March 2013). An audio version is available.
- "Milk Run" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact July 2013. Co-written with Alec Austin.
- "The Troll (A Tale Told Collectively)" – Daily Science Fiction (May 2013).
- "On the Weaponization of Flora and Fauna" – Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Issue 129 (September 2013). Co-written with Alec Austin.
- "Ask Citizen Etiquette" – Asimov's Science Fiction (February 2014).
- "Things We Have in This House for No Reason" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (October 2013).
- "Unsolved Logistical Problems in Time Travel (Spring Semester)" – Nature Futures (November 2013).
- "The Suitcase Aria" – Strange Horizons (February 2014). An audio version is available.
- "The Stuff We Don't Do" – Nature Physics Futures (April 2014). Reprinted in Nature Futures 2: Science Fiction from the Leading Science Journal (eds. Henry Gee, Colin Sullivan. Tor Books, September 2014. ISBN 978-1-4668-7998-0). Reprinted in Year's Best Young Adult Speculative Fiction 2014 (eds. Julia Rios, Alisa Krasnostein. Twelfth Planet Press, January 2016. ISBN 978-1-922101-35-8).
- "Calm" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (September 2014). Co-written with Alec Austin.
- "Maxwell's Demon Went Down to Georgia" – Nature Futures (June 2014).
- "A House of Gold and Steel" – Beneath Ceaseless Skies (December 2014).
- "Emma Goldman: A Biography for Space Aliens" – Daily Science Fiction (October 2014).
- "Empty Monuments" – Insert Title Here (ed. Tehani Wessely. Fablecroft Publishing, April 2015. ISBN 978-0-9925534-1-8). Co-written with Alec Austin.
- "Boundary Waters" – Nature Futures (November 2014).
- "The Hanged Woman's Portion" – Not Our Kind (ed. Nayad Monroe. Alliteration Ink Publishing, October 2019. ISBN 978-1-939840-25-7).
- "Human Trials" – Abyss & Apex Magazine, Issue 56 (October 2015). Co-written with Alec Austin.
- "Out of the Rose Hills" – Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Issue 173 (May 2015).
- "It Brought Us All Together" – Strange Horizons (July 2015).
- "Ten Stamps Viewed Under Water" – The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (September 2015).
- "Draft Letter on Research Potential Suggested by Recent Findings in Gnome Genomics" – Evil Girlfriend Media (July 2015).
- "The Many Media Hypothesis" – Nature Futures (October 2015).
- "Upside the Head" – Science Fiction by Scientists: An Anthology of Short Stories (ed. Mike Brotherton. Springer Publishing, November 2016. ISBN 978-3-319-41101-9).
- "How to Wrap a Roc's Egg" – self-published online, marissalingen.com (December 2015).
- "The Most Important Thing" – Nature Futures (October 2016).
- "The Elf Who Thought He Was Teddy Roosevelt" – self-published online, marissalingen.com (December 2016).
- "In the Ancestor's New House" – Spirits Unwrapped (ed. Daniel Braum. Lethe Press, October 2019. ISBN 978-1-59021-695-8).
- "A Lab of One's Own" – On Spec, Issue #106, Volume 28, No 3 (Winter 2017). Co-written with Alec Austin.
- "Out of the Woods" – Beneath Ceaseless Skies (February 2017). An audio version is available.
- "The Psittaculturist's Lesson" – Daily Science Fiction (January 2017).
- "Running Safety Tips for Humans" – Nature (April 2017). Translated into Spanish: "Consejos de seguridad para corredores humanos" – Cuentos para Algernon, Especial ultracortos XVII (May 2019).
- "An Unearned Death" – The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction (July/August 2017).
- "Across Pack Ice, a Fire" – Beneath Ceaseless Skies (August 2017).
- "Vervain, Grasshopper, Sun" – Daily Science Fiction (April 2017).
- "Two Point Three Children" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (January 2018).
- "The Hand of Loki" – New Myths Magazine, Issue 38 (March 2017).
- "The Influence of the Iron Range" – Beneath Ceaseless Skies (October 2017).
- "Flow" – Fireside Magazine (March 2018).
- "I Won at NaSuHeMo!" – Daily Science Fiction (November 2017).
- "Planet of the Five Rings" – Nature Futures (September 2017).
- "Lines of Growth, Lines of Passage" – Uncanny Magazine, Issue 20 (January 2018). An audio version with interview is available (Uncanny Magazine Podcast 20B, February 2018).
- "The Shale Giants" – Reckoning (December 2017).
- "The Jagged Bones of Sea Saw Town" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (November 2018).
- "Seven Point Two" – Nature (January 2018).
- "The Deepest Notes of the Harp and Drum" – Beneath Ceaseless Skies (January 2019).
- "My Favorite Sentience" – Nature Futures (April 2018).
- "This Will Not Happen to You" – Uncanny Magazine, Issue 24, Disabled People Destroy Science Fiction special issue (September 2018).
- "Painting the Massive Planet" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (May 2019).
- "Say It With Mastodons" – Nature (November 2018).
- "Objects in the Nobel Museum, 2075" – Daily Science Fiction (December 2018).
- "The Thing, With Feathers" – Uncanny Magazine (January 2019).
- "Filaments of Hope" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (November 2019).
- "How We Know They Have Faces" – Nature (July 2019).
- "Wrap Me In Oceans Wide" – Strange Horizons (July 2019).
- "Purposeful" – Daily Science Fiction (October 2019).
- "Family Album" – Nature (November 2019).
- Carter Hall Stories
- "Carter Hall Recovers the Puck" – On Spec Issue 64, Vol 18, No 1 (Spring 2006).
- "Carter Hall Sweeps a Path" – On Spec Issue 72, Vol 20, No 1 (Spring 2008).
- "Carter Hall Judges the Lines" – On Spec Issue 79, Vol 21, No 4 (Winter 2009).
- "Carter Hall and the Motley Lions" – On Spec Issue 88, Vol 24, No 1 (Spring 2012).
- Post-Nuclear Fantasies (Shared Universe)
- "Uncle Flower's Homecoming Waltz" – Tor.com (February 2012). Reprinted in The Year's Best Science Fiction & Fantasy, 2013 Edition (ed. Rich Horton. Prime Books, July 2013. ISBN 978-1-60701-392-1).
- "The Ministry of Changes" – Tor.com (July 2013). Translated into Italian: "Il Ministero del Cambiamento" – Vapori D'Arsenico Sabato 17 (August 2013).
- "The Salt Path" – Apex Magazine Issue 61 (June 2014).
- "The New Girl" – Apex Magazine Issue 66 (November 2014).
- "Surfacing" – Lightspeed (March 2015).
- "The Dust Gate" – The Sockdolager (Fall 2016).
- "Drifting Like Leaves, Falling Like Acorns" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (January 2017).
- Oort-Cloud Stories
- "Blue Ribbon" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (March 2015). Reprinted in Year's Best Young Adult Speculative Fiction 2015 (eds. Julia Rios, Alisa Krasnostein. Kaleidoscope, August 2016. ISBN 978-1-922101-50-1). Reprinted in Lightspeed Issue 88 (September 2017).
- "Points of Origin" – Tor.com (November 2015). An audio version is available (Escape Pod 698, September 2019).
- "Vulture's Nest" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (May 2017).
- "Finding Their Footing" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (May 2018).
- "Left to Take the Lead" – Analog Science Fiction and Fact (July 2018). Reprinted in Clarkesworld Magazine (January 2019).
Non-fiction
[edit]- "What the Kelk is that Dwarf-Lover Doing?: Building a Better World Through Offensive Language" – Phantastes (Spring 2001)
- "The Suburbs of Amber" – Strange Horizons (May 2001)
- "Camp Sparta" – Skirt! (June 2001)
- "Diversity, Hold the Sugar" – Skirt! (November 2001)
- "Bose-Einstein Condensates" – Strange Horizons (December 2001)
- "Drawing the Line: What Makes YA Fiction?" – Speculon (February 2002)
- "A Perfect Fit" – Skirt! (July 2002)
- "Near Bliss" – Skirt! (June 2003)
- "Fresh-Baked Legacy" – Skirt! (November 2003)
- "The Apple and the Castle" – The Reader: War for the Oaks (Tired Tapir Press, 2014)
- "How Far Are We From Minneapolis?" – Reckoning Issue 1 (Winter 2016)
- "Hard Enough" – Uncanny Magazine Issue 21 (March 2018)
- "The Seduction of Numbers, the Measures of Progress" – Uncanny Magazine Issue 23 (July 2018)
- "Malfunctioning Space Stations – Uncanny Magazine Issue 24, Disabled People Destroy Science Fiction special issue (September 2018)
- "That Never Happened" – Uncanny Magazine Issue 27 (March 2019)
- "Beyond Cinderella: Exploring Agency Through Domestic Fantasy" – Tor.com (May 2019)
- "Beware the Lifeboat" – Uncanny Magazine Issue 29 (July 2019)
- "Save Me a Seat on the Couch: Spoiler Culture, Inclusion, and Disability" – Uncanny Magazine Issue 32 (January 2020)
Critical studies and reviews of Lingen's work
[edit]- Lovett, Richard A. (March 2015). "Marissa Lingen". Biolog. Analog Science Fiction and Fact. 135 (3): 61.
References
[edit]- ^ связи, ИноСМИ ru 2000–2019При полном или частичном использовании материалов ссылка на ИноСМИ Ru обязательна Сетевое издание — Интернет-проект ИноСМИ RU зарегистрировано в Федеральной службе по надзору в сфере (January 21, 2018). "Норвегия тоже была "дерьмовой страной" для американцев". ИноСМИ.Ru (in Russian).
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Lingen, Marissa (November 13, 2019). "Family album". Nature. doi:10.1038/d41586-019-03461-z. PMID 33177682. S2CID 226312346. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
Going to northern Sweden was like that (...) Those of you who live in your own 'old country' are used to that.
- ^ "Visiting the Alma Mater". marissalingen.com. April 21, 2005. Retrieved September 26, 2019.
- ^ "Marissa Lingen". US Macmillan. June 14, 2016. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
- ^ "Marissa K. Lingen". marissalingen.com. March 17, 2017. Retrieved September 26, 2019.
- ^ "Meet this year's judges". Tampa Bay Times NIE. 2019. Archived from the original on January 15, 2020. Retrieved January 15, 2020.
- ^ "Twitter / Marissa Lingen: ...so I know that this is #150". October 2018. Retrieved January 15, 2020 – via Twitter.
- ^ Chronological, Awards Alphabetical (July 26, 1978). "Summary Bibliography: Marissa Lingen". The Internet Speculative Fiction Database. Retrieved January 27, 2024.
- ^ "Past Winners of the Dell Award". International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts. Retrieved January 14, 2020.
- ^ Lingen, Marissa K. (July 26, 1978). "Marissa K. Lingen". Tor.com. Retrieved September 26, 2019.
- ^ "Marissa K. Lingen, Il Ministero del Cambiamento". Vapori D'Arsenico. August 17, 2013. Retrieved July 25, 2022.
- ^ "Interview: Marissa Lingen". Uncanny Magazine. October 2, 2018. Retrieved September 26, 2019.
- ^ Short stories unless otherwise noted.
External links
[edit]- Official website including a bibliography with links to online work
- Marissa Lingen at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Marissa Lingen Stories available online (partial list)