Kenneth Schneyer

Last updated
Kenneth Schneyer
Born (1960-02-03) February 3, 1960 (age 60) [1]
Detroit, Michigan [2]
Occupationteacher, attorney, author
Alma mater University of Michigan
Genre Speculative fiction
Website
ken-schneyer.livejournal.com

Kenneth Schneyer is an American teacher, attorney and author of speculative fiction. [3] [1] [2]

Contents

Life

Schneyer was born in Detroit, Michigan. He graduated from the Cranbrook Schools in 1978 and received his B.A. from Wesleyan University in 1983. He received his J.D. from the University of Michigan Law School in 1986 and has worked as an attorney, judicial clerk, clerk-typist, dishwasher, computer programmer, project manager, actor/director and fiction writer. [1] [2] As an attorney he worked for Judge William R. Beasley of the Michigan Court of Appeals, and for the Boston corporate law firm of Bingham, Dana, & Gould. [2]

He is currently a college professor at Johnson & Wales University in Providence, Rhode Island, where he has been Practicum Director and Assistant Dean of the School of Technology (now the College of Engineering & Design) and served on the Faculty Council and the University Curriculum Committee. He chaired the Cultural Life series for the College of Arts & Sciences. [2] [1]

He is a member of the American Bar Association, the Academy of Legal Studies in Business, the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America, the North Atlantic Regional Business Law Association, and the Cambridge Science Fiction Workshop. [2] He also served as book review editor American Business Law Journal. [2]

Schneyer lives in the East Bay of Rhode Island with his wife Janice Okoomian, an Assistant Professor of Gender & Women’s Studies and English at Rhode Island College. [2] [1] His interests include astronomy, feminist theory, formal logic, presidential history, bicycling, and weight training. [2]

Writing career

Schneyer attended the 2009 Clarion Writers Workshop, where his teachers included Holly Black, Robert Crais, and Kim Stanley Robinson. In the same year he joined the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America. [2] [1] He currently participates in the Cambridge Science Fiction Workshop and Codex Writers. [1]

Schneyer's work has appeared in various periodicals, webzines, podcasts and anthologies, including A is for Apocalypse, Analog Science Fiction and Fact , Abyss & Apex Magazine , Beneath Ceaseless Skies , Bull Spec, Clockwork Phoenix 3, Clockwork Phoenix 4, Daily Science Fiction , Drabblecast, Escape Pod , First Contact, Greatest Uncommon Denominator , Humanity 2.0, Lightspeed , Mad Scientist Journal, Mysterion, Mythic Delirium, Nebula Awards Showcase 2015 , Nature Physics , Perihelion, PodCastle , Pseudopod , Rocket Dragons Ignite, SQ Mag, Strange Horizons , Toasted Cake, and Uncanny Magazine . [3] [1]

Recognition

Schneyer won the Sixty Word Sagas competition at EarlyWorks Press. [1] His short story "Selected Program Notes from the Retrospective Exhibition of Theresa Rosenberg Latimer" was nominated for the 2014 Nebula Award for Best Short Story [4] [1] and was a finalist for the 2014 Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award. [5]

Bibliography

Fiction

Collections

Short stories

  • "Calibration" (2008)
  • "Too Much Sense" (2008)
  • "Imagination's Curse" (2008)
  • "No One's Safe" (2008)
  • "Lineage" (2010)
  • "And What Remains" (2010)
  • "Next Year's Bulbs" (2010)
  • "Recaptured Territory" (2010)
  • "The Whole Truth Witness" (2010)
  • "Tenure Track" (2010)
  • "Six Drabbles of Separation" (2010)
  • "The Tortoise Parliament" (2011)
  • "Less Than Absent" (2011)
  • "Keeping Tabs" (2011)
  • "The Mannequin's Itch" (2011)
  • "The Age of Three Stars" (2012)
  • "Confinement" (2012)
  • "Serkers and Sleep" (2012)
  • "Financial Strategies for Innovative Researchers" (2013)
  • "Hear the Enemy, My Daughter" (2013)
  • "Selected Program Notes from the Retrospective Exhibition of Theresa Rosenberg Latimer" (2013)
  • "Life of the Author Plus Seventy" (2013)
  • "I Have Read the Terms of Use" (2013)
  • "Levels of Observation" (2014)
  • "I" (2014)
  • "I Wrung It in a Weary Land" (2014)
  • "Living in the Niche" (2014)
  • "Trusting What I Smell" (2015)
  • "The Sisters' Line" (with Liz Argall) (2015)
  • "The Last Bombardment" (2015)
  • "The Plausibility of Dragons" (2015)
  • "Some Pebbles in the Palm" (2016)
  • "A Lack of Congenial Solutions" (2016)
  • "You in the United States!" (2016)
  • "Keepsakes" (2017)
  • "Foursomes" (2019)
  • "Who Embodied What We Are" (2020)
  • "Dispersion" (2020)

Related Research Articles

Ted Chiang American science-fiction writer

Ted Chiang is an American science fiction writer. His work has won four Nebula awards, four Hugo awards, the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer, and four Locus awards. His short story "Story of Your Life" was the basis of the film Arrival (2016). He is also artist in residence at the University of Notre Dame.

Nancy Kress American science fiction writer

Nancy Anne Kress is an American science fiction writer. She began writing in 1976 but has achieved her greatest notice since the publication of her Hugo- and Nebula-winning 1991 novella Beggars in Spain, which became a novel in 1993. She also won the Nebula Award for Best Novella in 2013 for After the Fall, Before the Fall, During the Fall, and in 2015 for Yesterday's Kin.

Michael A. Burstein is an American writer of science fiction.

Kelly Link American writer

Kelly Link is an American editor and author of short stories. While some of her fiction falls more clearly within genre categories, many of her stories might be described as slipstream or magic realism: a combination of science fiction, fantasy, horror, mystery, and realism. Among other honors, she has won a Hugo award, three Nebula awards, and a World Fantasy Award for her fiction, and she was one of the recipients of the 2018 MacArthur "Genius" Grant.

Tim Pratt is an American science fiction and fantasy writer and poet. He won a Hugo Award in 2007 for his short story "Impossible Dreams". He's written over 20 books, including the Marla Mason series and several Pathfinder Tales novels. His writing has earned him nominations for Nebula, Mythopoeic, World Fantasy, and Bram Stoker awards and been published in numerous markets, including Asimov's Science Fiction, Realms of Fantasy, Orson Scott Card's InterGalactic Medicine Show, and Strange Horizons.

Andy Duncan (writer) American writer

Andy Duncan is an American science fiction and fantasy writer whose work frequently deals with Southern U.S. themes.

Vylar Kaftan is an American science fiction and fantasy writer. A Clarion West Workshop graduate, she lives on the U.S. West Coast.

Nisi Shawl American writer

Nisi Shawl is an African-American writer, editor, and journalist. They are best known as an author of science fiction and fantasy short stories who writes and teaches about how fantastic fiction might reflect real-world diversity of gender, sexual orientation, race, colonialism, physical ability, age, and other sociocultural factors.

Mary Robinette Kowal American writer and puppeteer

Mary Robinette Kowal is an American author and puppeteer.

Mike Allen is an American editor and writer of speculative fiction and poetry. He currently lives in Roanoke, Virginia.

Saladin Ahmed is an Eisner Award winning American comic book and science fiction and fantasy writer. His 2012 book Throne of the Crescent Moon was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Novel and won the Locus Award for Best First Novel. He has also been a finalist for the John W. Campbell Award, the Nebula Award for Best Novel and the Nebula Award for Best Short Story. Ahmed's fiction has been published in anthologies and magazines including Strange Horizons, Orson Scott Card's InterGalactic Medicine Show, Clockwork Phoenix 2 and Beneath Ceaseless Skies. He is also the author of Black Bolt, Exiles and Miles Morales: Spider-Man from Marvel Comics.

Rachel Swirsky is an American literary, speculative fiction and fantasy writer, poet, and editor living in Oregon. She was the founding editor of the PodCastle podcast and served as editor from 2008 to 2010. She served as vice president of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America in 2013.

Ann Leckie American science-fiction author

Ann Leckie is an American author of science fiction and fantasy. Her 2013 debut novel Ancillary Justice, in part about artificial consciousness and gender-blindness, won the 2014 Hugo Award for "Best Novel", as well as the Nebula Award, the Arthur C. Clarke Award, and the BSFA Award. The sequels, Ancillary Sword and Ancillary Mercy, each won the Locus Award and were nominated for the Nebula Award. Provenance, published in 2017, is also set in the Imperial Radch universe. Leckie's first fantasy novel, The Raven Tower, was published in February 2019.

The Man Who Bridged the Mist is a science fiction/fantasy novella by Kij Johnson. It was first published in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine in October/November 2011, and subsequently republished in The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twenty-Ninth Annual Collection, in The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year: Volume 6, in The Year's Best Science Fiction & Fantasy 2012, in Nebula Awards Showcase 2013, in Johnson's collection At the Mouth of the River of Bees, and as a chapbook from Phoenix Pick. In 2013, a Persian version was published by Parian Publications.

"Selected Program Notes from the Retrospective Exhibition of Theresa Rosenberg Latimer" is a 2013 fantasy story by Kenneth Schneyer. It was first published in the Mythic Delirium Books anthology Clockwork Phoenix 4. An audio version was subsequently released on PodCastle, read by Peter Wood.

<i>Nebula Awards Showcase 2015</i>

Nebula Awards Showcase 2015 is an anthology of science fiction short works edited by American writer Greg Bear. It was first published in trade paperback by Pyr in December 2015.

Sarah Pinsker is an American science fiction and fantasy author. A nine-time finalist for the Nebula Award, Pinsker's debut novel A Song for a New Day won the 2019 Nebula for Best Novel while her story "Our Lady of the Open Road" won 2016 award for Best Novelette.. Her fiction has also won the Philip K. Dick Award, the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award and been a finalist for the Hugo, World Fantasy, and Tiptree Awards.

Kai Ashante Wilson is an author of speculative fiction active since 2013.

Kate Heartfield is a Canadian author of fantasy, science fiction, horror, as well as a non-fiction writer and editor.

<i>Anthems Outside Time</i>

Anthems Outside Time: and Other Strange Voices is a collection of science fiction, fantasy and horror short stories by American writer Kenneth Schneyer. It was first published by Fairwood Press in paperback and ebook in July 2020.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Schneyer, Kenneth. "Bio." Profile on livejournal page. Accessed Mar. 29, 2019.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Schneyer, Kenneth. Johnson & Wales University profile.
  3. 1 2 Kenneth Schneyer at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  4. 2013 Nebula Awards Winners Announced, at Science Fiction Writers of America; published May 18, 2014; retrieved December 19, 2016
  5. "Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award 2014". Science Fiction Awards Database. Locus. Archived from the original on 2015-09-28. Retrieved 2016-12-19.