“Family
legends confirm that I've been a storyteller pretty much from the moment I
learned to talk. I quickly learned that character, pacing and plot were
important to any work of fiction, but that nothing was more important than
believability.” – Lynn Abbey
Abbey,
born on this date in 1948 in Upstate New York, brings a unique combination to
her writing – being first a computer programmer and then a writer. Another interesting part of her background
is that she has a master’s degree in European history and a B.A. in
astrophysics – one of the first to earn that degree in the 1960s. But with her background in history, she
said, “I love to curl up with a book about some dusty corner of history.”
But,
in spite of that, her own writing began and mostly remains in science
fiction. She broke into the field in
1979 with her novel Daughter of the Bright Moon and the short story
"The Face of Chaos," part of a Thieves World shared world
anthology. She said she’s a big fan of
anthologies because editors are interested in all comers, and you have a great
chance to be included even if you’re a beginning writer.
Thus,
In 2002, she not only returned to Thieves
World with the novel Sanctuary, but she also began editing new
anthologies, beginning with Turning Points. And, she said, she’s a big fan of short
stories and writers of short stories.
“For
me,” she said, “writing a short story is much, much harder than writing a
novel. Short-story writing requires an
exquisite sense of balance. Novelists, frankly, can get away with more. A novel
can have a dull spot or two, because the reader has made a different
commitment.”
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