Rachael K. Jones | |
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![]() Jones in 2020 | |
Occupation | Writer/Speech language pathologist |
Nationality | American |
Period | 2013-present |
Genre | Speculative fiction |
Website | |
www |
Rachael K. Jones is an American writer and editor of speculative fiction. Several of her stories have been nominated for the genre's highest awards.
Jones currently works as a speech-language pathologist, working with special education children with communication disorders. [1] She has degrees in English and Speech-Language Pathology. A former resident of Athens, Georgia, along with her husband Jason, [2] she currently lives in Beaverton, Oregon. [1]
First published in 2013, Jones has written dozens of speculative fiction short stories. [3] In one of her 2015 short stories, "Traveling Mercies", a traveler is invited into the homes of his friends while on a journey from home. The traveler is left ambiguous but is inspired by themes from folktales. [4] Another 2015 short story, "The Law of the Conservation of Hair", was written as a series of resolutions and told of First Contact and partnership in relationship. [5]
Jones edited (with Graeme Dunlop) PodCastle - The Fantasy Fiction Podcast from April 2015 to April 2016. [3] She was also the submissions editor for Escape Pod. [2]
In 2018, Jones released her debut novella, Every River Runs to Salt. [6] It follows Quietly, a college student in Athens, Georgia, after her roommate and crush, Imani, has stolen the Pacific Ocean and hidden it belowground in the Under-Ath. Visited and cursed by the personifications of Washington, Oregon, and California, Imani eventually collapses. Quietly journeys to help her. [7] Amal El-Mohtar, reviewing for The New York Times , praised it as "a beautiful story of friendship, love and katabasis" noting its sense of place, quality of prose, strong characterization, and busy ending. [6] Molly Katz, for Strange Horizons , called it a "uniquely and beautifully told story" and appreciated its dry humor, attention to place, and themes while wishing for a fuller characterization of the world. [7]
Jones' Eugie Award-winning story, "The Sound of Children Screaming", published in the October 2023 issue of Nightmare, drew inspiration from a lockdown event that happened after hours at her school. The title is derived from a caption accompanying a news video of the Uvalde school shooting reading, "the sound of children screaming has been removed." [1] The story follows a group of children escaping a school shooting via a magical exit that contains its own dangers. Paula Guran, reviewing for Locus , said that the story was thought-provoking: the topic was difficult and "Jones uses considerable imagination" in tackling it. [8]
In another 2023 short story, "Seven Ways to Find Yourself at the Transdimensional Multifandom Convention", Chris-P and You meet at an annual convention and trade stories of how the other might have lived. Charles Payseur, reviewing for Locus, labeled it a "moving and bittersweet" story about alternate versions of a life. [9] In another short story, "How My Sister Talked Me Into Necromancy During Quarantine", Becca and Lila tackle pandemic-induced boredom by summoning the undead for chores. Reactor recommended the piece as a funny work of speculative fiction. [10]
In January 2024, Jones published "Five Views of the Planet Tartarus" in Lightspeed. According to Jones, it began as a piece she wrote years earlier as part of a flash fiction challenge. Upon rediscovering the draft, she was able to reformat the story and compose an ending. [11] "Five Views of the Planet Tartarus" was nominated for the Hugo, Nebula, and Locus awards for short story. [12] [13] [14]
Year | Title | Award | Category | Result | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | "Dinosaur Dreams in Infinite Measure" | Writers Of The Future | 1st Quarter | 2nd place | [15] |
2017 | "The Fall Shall Further the Flight in Me" | World Fantasy Award | World Fantasy Award—Short Fiction | Shortlisted | [16] |
"The Night Bazaar for Women Becoming Reptiles" | Otherwise Award | Honor list | Nominated | [15] | |
2019 | Sword and Sonnet (with Aidan Doyle and E. Catherine Tobler) | World Fantasy Award | World Fantasy Award—Anthology | Nominated | [15] |
2023 | "The Sound of Children Screaming" | Bram Stoker Award | Best Short Fiction | Shortlisted | [17] |
Eugie Award | Won | [18] | |||
Hugo Award | Best Short Story | Shortlisted | [19] | ||
Nebula Award | Best Short Story | Shortlisted | [20] | ||
2024 | Locus Award | Best Short Story | Shortlisted | [21] | |
"Five Views of the Planet Tartarus" | Hugo Award | Best Short Story | Shortlisted | [12] | |
Nebula Award | Best Short Story | Shortlisted | [13] | ||
2025 | Locus Award | Best Short Story | Shortlisted | [14] |