Lee Harris | |
---|---|
Born | Cardiff, Wales | 17 April 1968
Occupation | Editor |
Language | English |
Genre | Science fiction, fantasy, horror |
Years active | 2009–present |
Notable awards | Nominations: Hugo Award for Best Editor (Long Form) 2014, 2022, 2023; Best Editor (Short Form) 2018 and 2019 |
Children | 2 |
Lee Harris (born 1968) is a British editor of science fiction, fantasy and horror. He is the only British editor ever to have been nominated in the Hugo Awards "short form" editing category (with two nominations), and the first British editor ever to have been nominated in the editing "long form" category.
His early jobs included actor and bartender (where he was a finalist in the Bols / Exchange Bar and Grill Cocktail Bartender of the Year competition in 1993).[ citation needed ]
He was also a director (both company director and stage director) for The Dreaming Production Company from 2003 to 2005 (now no longer operating), [1] a professional theatre group that staged fantasy and horror-themed plays across the UK. He co-wrote and directed the first professional adaptation of a Terry Pratchett book, Eric, [2] among others.
He was the publisher of Hub Magazine [3] from 2007 until 2013. Hub Magazine was a short fiction magazine, which lasted for just two issues in print, before becoming a semi-weekly magazine. The magazine folded with issue 147. The print editions were supported by advertising, and when the magazine moved to online-only, they were sponsored by Orbit (part of Hachette), Solaris and Abaddon (part of Rebellion Publishing) and finally by HarperCollins, where Harris worked as part of the editorial staff at Angry Robot Books. [4]
Harris joined Angry Robot Books when they formed as part of HarperCollins UK in January 2009, [5] during which time he discovered and published authors such as Wesley Chu, Adam Christopher, Cassandra Rose Clarke and Maurice Broaddus. He started as an assistant editor, and was gradually promoted until he reached the role of senior editor in 2013. [6] He was instrumental in devising and implementing a new ebook subscription service in 2011. [7] He left Angry Robot to head up the editorial division of Macmillan's newly formed Tor.com Publishing imprint. [8]
He joined the newly created Tor.com Publishing (part of Macmillan Publishing, and a sister imprint to Tor Books, since rebranded to Tordotcom Publishing) in August 2014, [9] specialising in publishing novellas, [10] though he also edits and publishes full-length novels. His authors' books have won or been nominated for the Nebula and Hugo Awards every year since the imprint's inception, and he regularly edits such authors as Martha Wells, Seanan McGuire, Nnedi Okorafor and Paul Cornell. Seanan McGuire describes him as "Amazing... he makes me better. He forces me to be better. That's a rare and precious thing." [11] In 2020 he was promoted from senior editor to executive editor. [12]
Harris travels extensively between his home in the UK and Tordotcom Publishing's Head Office on Broadway in New York. He is also a regular at several British and international conventions, including FantasyCon (UK), the World Fantasy Convention, WorldCon and CONvergence (Minneapolis), where he has been a Guest of Honor [13] on two occasions. On February 8, 2019, he was named as the Guest of Honour for the Canadian science fiction convention, Can*Con. [14]
Harris has been interviewed for various literary and genre publications on a number of occasions, including audio interviews with The Creative Writer's Toolbelt and The Archivos Round Table Podcast. [15] [16] Life in Sci-Fi reported on a kaffeeklatsch Harris hosted at the British science fiction convention, EasterCon. [17] Tor.com interviewed him [18] and the author Seanan McGuire about the multi award-winning book Every Heart a Doorway . He was also interviewed by Ron Charles in the Washington Post], talking about the newly formed Tor.com Publishing imprint. [19]
He is a former Chair [20] of the British Fantasy Society, and has chaired two FantasyCon conventions for the society - the first in York in 2014, the second in Nottingham in 2015.
He has co-written several plays and short stories, including one story published in Snowbooks' Beside the Seaside anthology [21]
Harris has been nominated for a Hugo Award multiple times for his editing. [23] He is the first British editor of science fiction, fantasy or horror ever to have been nominated for these awards. [24]
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