Alphabetic Authors List
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Alphabetic search for authors: e

Found authors: 336
Kirsty Eagar
Eagar, Kirsty

Kirsty Eagar grew up on a cattle property in central Queensland. After studying economics, she worked on trading desks in Sydney and London before changing careers so she could surf every day. She travelled around Australia in a four-wheel drive, worked as a cook and personal trainer, and began writing fiction. Her first novel Raw Blue won the 2010 Victorian Premier's Literary Award for young adult fiction and her second novel, Saltwater Vampires, has been shortlisted for the Ethel Turner Prize in the 2011 New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards. Kirsty is married with two daughters and lives on Sydney's northern beaches.

Billy Eakin
Eakin, Billy

Billy Eakin is a pseudonym of William R. Eakin.

William R. Eakin
Eakin, William R.

William R. Eakin's stories have appeared in some 50 publications, including Amazing Stories, Science Fiction Age, and Fantasy & Science Fiction. He lives in Clarksville, Alabama.

Nicholas Eames
Eames, Nicholas

Nicholas Eames was born to parents of infinite patience and unstinting support in Wingham, Ontario. Though he attended college for theatre arts, he gave up acting to pursue the infinitely more attainable profession of “epic fantasy novelist.” Kings of the Wyld is his first novel. Nicholas loves black coffee, neat whiskey, the month of October, and video games. He currently lives in Ontario, Canada, and is very probably writing at this moment.

Brian Earnshaw
Earnshaw, Brian

Brian Earnshaw (born 1929) is a British author, known for his Dragonfall 5 series, illustrated by Simon Stern.

Earnshaw was born in Wrexham, Wales, and attended St John's College, Cambridge, where he studied history. He then spent a number of years as a secondary school teacher in different locations in the UK. He spent a long time as a lecturer in English Literature at St Paul's College, Cheltenham (a teacher training college with Bristol university qualifications). After retiring, he moved to Bristol, where he still lives, and worked with Timothy Mowl on a range of books on British architectural and garden history. These sometimes appear with Earnshaw as Mowl's co-author, and sometimes with him in Mowl's acknowledgement as a researcher. He has a great love of botany and travel, and has made extensive trips around Europe and elsewhere studying flowers, architecture, gardens and history.

Sean Easley
Easley, Sean

Sean Easley started writing in third grade because he was looking for adventure. He’s worked with kids and teens for well over a decade, listening to their stories, and somehow ended up with a Master’s degree in education along the way. Now he’s a full-time writer living with his wife and son in Texas, where he stubbornly refuses to wear cowboy boots.

Alethea Eason
Eason, Alethea

Alethea Eason lives in Cobb, California, and has taught in elementary schools for more than twenty years, as a third-grade teacher and reading specialist. Hungry is her first novel and grew out of the short story Deborah's Choice, published in Bruce Coville's Alien Visitors, and from a birthday request from her husband, Bill, to write more about "those flesh-eating aliens." Like Deborah, she has a good appetite, but her favorite course is dessert, not meat.

Jack Eason
Eason, Jack

Jack Eason lived in New Zealand for forty-two years until 2000 when he returned to his birthplace in England. As far as he is concerned he will always consider himself to be a Kiwi. After military service in the 1960's, he travelled the world, visiting exotic lands and making many friends. Now in his mid-sixties he is content to write and travel via the Internet. Besides writing novels and short stories, he contributes to his own blog "Have We Had Help?" Some of his short stories and numerous articles appear in the No: 1 online E-zine "Angie's Diary". His literary interests include science fiction, history, both ancient and modern, and humorous tales like those written by his fellow writer Derek Haines, such as "HAL". He lives in semi-retirement in his home town surrounded by his favourite books, ranging from historical fact to science fiction. His literary icons are J.R.R. Tolkien, George Orwell, Arthur C. Clarke and John Wyndham.

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K. Eason
Eason, K.

K. Eason started telling tales in her early childhood. After earning two degrees in English literature, she decided to stop writing about everyone else's stories and get back to writing her own. Now she teaches first-year college students about the zombie apocalypse, Aristotelian ethics, and Beowulf (not all at once). She lives in Southern California with her husband and two black cats, and she powers everything with coffee.

Shayne Easson
Easson, Shayne

Shayne Easson splits his time between Calgary, Alberta and Argenta, British Columbia. When not managing his electrical firm or writing speculative fiction, he is often somewhere else...

Daniel Easterman
Easterman, Daniel

Daniel Easterman is the pen name of Denis MacEoin.

Thomas A. Easton
Easton, Thomas A.

Thomas A. Easton is a professor at Thomas College of Maine and a well-known science fiction critic.

Thomas A. Easton has also written books under the pseudonym of Tom Easton.

Tom Easton
Easton, Tom

Tom Easton is a pseudonym of Thomas A. Easton.

Anthony Eaton
Eaton, Anthony

Born in Papua New Guinea in 1972, Anthony Eaton spent an idyllic childhood growing up in the Perth hills and the Cocos Keeling Islands. He worked as a literature and drama teacher for eight years, during which time his first novel, The Darkness, was awarded the 2001 Western Australian Premier's Book Award for Young Adult Literature. In 2005, his historical fiction novel Fireshadow also won the WA Premier's Book Award for Young Adult Literature and was named an Honour Book in the CBCA Book of the Year Awards. To assist in the research for Into White Silence, he spent Christmas of 2005 at Casey Station on the east coast of Antarctica as part of the Australian Antarctic Division's Arts Fellowships program. He lives in Canberra with his wife, Imogen, and a slightly deranged Kelpie named Chelsea.

Seamus Eaton
Eaton, Seamus

Seamus Eaton is a man who understands you don't want to know anything about his cats, his hobbies, his blood type, or his education. That said, he really enjoys memorizing lines for plays elderly people attend with the unabashed, sinister intention of falling asleep in plain sight, and he wants his readers to understand this.

David Ebenbach
Ebenbach, David

David Ebenbach writes. He’s been writing ever since he was a kid, when he kept his whole family awake by banging away on an enormous manual typewriter, and he’s never wanted to stop. He is the author of seven books of fiction, poetry, and non-fiction, and his work has picked up awards along the way: the Drue Heinz Literature Prize, the Juniper Prize, the Patricia Bibby Award, and more.

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Merab Eberle
Eberle, Merab

Merab Eberle, 1891 — 1959, was an American journalist and a writer in several genres, including science fiction and children's plays she was born in Mattoon, Illinois, the daughter of Homer J. Eberle, a railroad employee, and Olive Rossman Eberle.

Allan W. Eckert
Eckert, Allan W.

Allan W. Eckert (born 1931) is an American historical novelist and naturalist.

Julia Ecklar
Ecklar, Julia

Julia Ecklar is a John W. Campbell-award winning science fiction author. She's also a singer and writer of filk music (a musical culture, genre, and community tied to science fiction/fantasy fandom and a type of fan labor).

Umberto Eco
Eco, Umberto

Umberto Eco (born 1932) is an Italian medievalist, semiotician, philosopher, literary critic and novelist, best known for his novel The Name of the Rose (1980), an intellectual mystery combining semiotics in fiction, biblical analysis, medieval studies and literary theory. His 1988 novel Foucault's Pendulum is also famous.

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David Eddings
Eddings, David

David Eddings (1931–2009) was an American author. Eddings' first books were general fiction and sold moderately. He later switched to writing epic fantasy novels and achieved best-selling status. David Eddings' wife, Leigh Eddings (1937–2007), is uncredited as co-author on many of his early books, but he later acknowledged that she contributed to them all.

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Leigh Eddings
Eddings, Leigh

David Eddings' wife, Leigh Eddings (1937–2007), is uncredited as co-author on many of his early books, but he later acknowledged that she contributed to them all.

More info: David Eddings

E. R. Eddison
Eddison, E. R.

Eric Rucker Eddison (1882–1945) is ranked alongside J. R. R. Tolkien and Lord Dunsany as one of the greatest British fantasy writers of the twentieth century.

Peggy Eddleman
Eddleman, Peggy

Peggy Eddleman is the author of the middle grade post-apocalyptic adventure Sky Jumpers Book 1: Through The Bomb's Breath, to be published by Random House in Fall 2013. She lives at the foot of the Wasatch Mountains with her three hilarious and fun kids (two sons and a daughter), and her incredibly supportive husband. Besides writing, Peggy enjoys playing laser tag with her family, doing cartwheels in long hallways, trying new restaurants, and occasionally painting murals on walls.

C. M. Eddy, Jr.
Eddy, Jr., C. M.

Clifford Martin Eddy, Jr. (1896–1967) was an American author best known for his horror and sci-fi short stories.

He was a friend and confidant to both H. P. Lovecraft and Harry Houdini. He was a member of Lovecraft's inner circle of friends and authors, and he and Lovecraft edited each others works. Both authors were also investigators for Houdini, and served the magician as ghostwriters.

David Louis Edelman
Edelman, David Louis

David Louis Edelman is the author of the highly acclaimed Infoquake: Volume I of the Jump 225 Trilogy.

A Web designer, programmer, and journalist, Mr. Edelman has programmed Web sites for the U.S. Army and the FBI, taught software to the U.S. Congress and the World Bank, written articles for the Washington Post and Baltimore Sun, and directed the marketing departments of biometric and e-commerce companies.

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Scott Edelman
Edelman, Scott

Scott Edelman (born 1955) is an American science fiction, fantasy and horror writer and editor.

Cynthia Eden
Eden, Cynthia

Cynthia Eden is a national best-selling author of paranormal romance and romantic suspense novels. Her books have received starred reviews from Publishers Weekly, and her novel, Deadly Fear, was named a RITA finalist for best romantic suspense.

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Paul J. C. Edge
Edge, Paul J. C.

Paul Edge is an English author living in Cheshire. He has spent his entire career working in Science & Technology, specialising in change management. Having a keen interest in science fiction literature for much of his life, he felt it was time to pen his first novel.

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Teresa Edgerton
Edgerton, Teresa

Teresa Edgerton (born 1949) is an American fantasy author.

Rosemary Edghill
Edghill, Rosemary

Rosemary Edghill (born 1956) is an American writer and editor, who has often used that pseudonym in place of her legal name, Eluki bes Shahar. Her primary genres are science fiction and fantasy, but she began by writing Regency romances.

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H. E. Edgmon
Edgmon, H. E.

H.E. Edgmon (he/they) is a questionable influence, a dog person, and an author of books both irreverent and radicalizing. Born and raised in the rural south, he currently lives in the Pacific Northwest with his eccentric little family. His stories imagine Indigenous worlds and center queer kids saving each other. H.E. has never once gotten enough sleep and probably isn’t going to anytime soon.

David Edison
Edison, David

David Edison was born in Saint Louis, Missouri. In other lives, he has worked in many flavors of journalism and is editor of the LGBTQ video game news site GayGamer.net. He currently divides his time between New York City and San Francisco. The Waking Engine is his first novel.

G. C. Edmondson
Edmondson, G. C.

G. C. Edmondson was the working name of science fiction author Garry Edmonson (full name: José Mario Garry Ordoñez Edmondson y Cotton) (1922–1995). During World War II he served in the U. S. Marines.

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Melissa Edmundson
Edmundson, Melissa

Melissa Edmundson is a literary historian, interested in 19th and 20th-century British women writers, ghost stories, the supernatural, the Gothic, and Anglo-Indian popular fiction (not always in that order!).

 

 

Robert Edric
Edric, Robert

Robert Edric (born 1956) is the pseudonym of Gary Edric Armitage, a British novelist born in Sheffield.

His trilogy of detective novels, Cradle Song, Siren Song, and Swan Song, also known as the "Song Cycle," are set in the city of Hull.

J. T. Edson
Edson, J. T.

John Thomas Edson (1928-2002) was an English writer. He wrote almost exclusively Westerns.

Amelia B. Edwards
Edwards, Amelia B.

Amelia Ann Blanford Edwards (1831–1892) was an English novelist, journalist, traveller and Egyptologist.

Anne Edwards
Edwards, Anne

Anne Edwards (born 1927) is an author best known for her biographies of celebrities that include Princess Diana, Maria Callas, Judy Garland, Katharine Hepburn, Vivien Leigh, Margaret Mitchell, Ronald Reagan, Barbra Streisand, Shirley Temple and Countess Sonya Tolstoy.

Debra J. Edwards
Edwards, Debra J.

Debra J. Edwards is a full time writer living in Surrey. She lives in a rambling Victorian house with husband and pyscho staffy, Buster.

Debra currently has four books published. A trilogy about stroppy teenage tooth fairies; Aggie Lichen; Pilp Collector, the sequel, Aggie Lichen; Pilp Collector - Arty's Revenge with Hero Required, the third book in the series.

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Gawain Edwards
Edwards, Gawain

Gawain Edwards is a pseudonym of George Edward Pendray.

Graham Edwards
Edwards, Graham

Graham Edwards (born 1965) is a British author.

Graham Edwards also writes under the pseudonym of J. D. Rinehart.

Hailey Edwards
Edwards, Hailey

Hailey Edwards writes about questionable applications of otherwise perfectly good magic, the transformative power of love, the family you choose for yourself, and blowing stuff up. Not necessarily all at once. That could get messy. She lives in Alabama with her husband, their daughter, and a herd of dachshunds.

Jan Edwards
Edwards, Jan

Jan has many short stories published and was short-listed for a British Fantasy Award for Best Short Story. She has won a Winchester Writers Festival ‘Slim Volume’ prize. She is an editor with the award-winning Alchemy Press.

Winner with Alchemy Press (Co owner/editor with Peter Coleborn) of the British Fantasy Award for Best Independent Press 2014.

Janet Edwards
Edwards, Janet

Janet Edwards lives in England. As a child, she read everything she could get her hands on, including a huge amount of science fiction and fantasy. She studied Maths at Oxford, and went on to suffer years of writing unbearably complicated technical documents before deciding to write something that was fun for a change. She has a husband, a son, a lot of books, and an aversion to housework.

K. D. Edwards
Edwards, K. D.

K. D. Edwards lives and writes in North Carolina, but has spent time in Massachusetts, Maine, Colorado, New Hampshire, Montana, and Washington State. He is currently a senior HR consultant at the University of North Carolina General Administration. He formerly worked in the marketing department for Beacon Press.

Kayla Edwards
Edwards, Kayla

Kayla is the author of the House of Devils series and the Ice and Iron series. She started writing City of Gods and Monsters when she was in high school, so the characters and the world they live in are very close to her heart. When she isn't writing, she can be found reading, spending time in nature, or fighting her husband for the Nintendo controller.

Norman Edwards
Edwards, Norman

Norman Edwards is a joint pseudonym of Terry Carr and Ted White.

Patrick Edwards
Edwards, Patrick

Patrick Edwards lives in Bristol and has never grown out of his fascination with science and the future. In 2014, he decided to give writing a go and graduated from the Bath Spa Creative Writing MA with distinction. His first novel, Ruin's Wake, was inspired by the works of Iain M. Banks and modern-day North Korea.

Simon P. Edwards
Edwards, Simon P.

Simon read his first fantasy novel when he was "just knee high", courtesy of his beloved father, Michael. Since those youthful years he's devoured endless quantities of Feist, Eddings, Tolkien and more recently Erikson, to name but a few. His bookcase burgeons.

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Imogen Edwards-Jones
Edwards-Jones, Imogen

Imogen Edwards-Jones is an award-winning journalist, novelist, and screenwriter. She is the author of the bestselling Babylon series of industry exposés, which sold over a million copies worldwide. The first book in the series, Hotel Babylon, was adapted into the returning prime time BBC1 TV series. Author of over twenty other books, she is the editorial consultant on Julian Fellowes’ Belgravia. She read Russian at Bristol University and has traveled extensively in the old Soviet Union, writing the travel book, The Taming of Eagles: Exploring New Russia. She lives in London, is member of the London College of Psychic Studies and an honorary Cossack.

Susan Ee
Ee, Susan

Susan Ee has eaten meze in the old city of Jerusalem, surfed the warm waters of Costa Rica, and played her short film at a major festival. She has a life-long love of science fiction, fantasy and horror, especially of there's a touch of romance. She used to be a lawyer but now loves being a writer because it allows her souped-up imagination to bust out and go feral.

George Alec Effinger
Effinger, George Alec

George Alec Effinger (1947–2002) was an American science fiction author, born in 1947 in Cleveland, Ohio.

Alexa Egan
Egan, Alexa

A member of Romance Writers of America and a Golden Heart finalist, Alexa Egan lives in Maryland with her family.

Catherine Egan
Egan, Catherine

Catherine Egan grew up in Vancouver, Canada. Since then, she has lived on a volcanic island in Japan (which erupted while she was there and sent her hurtling straight into the arms of her now husband), in Tokyo, Kyoto, and Beijing, on an oil rig in the middle of Bohai Bay, then in New Jersey, and now in New Haven, Connecticut.

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Doris Egan
Egan, Doris

Doris Egan (born 1955) is an American author, screenwriter and producer.

Greg Egan
Egan, Greg

Greg Egan (born 1961) is an Australian computer programmer and science fiction author.

Jennifer Egan
Egan, Jennifer

Jennifer Egan (born 1962) is an American novelist and short story writer who lives in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. Egan's novel A Visit From the Goon Squad won the 2011 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction.

H. M. Egbert
Egbert, H. M.

H. M. Egbert is a pseudonym of Victor Rousseau.

Dave Eggers
Eggers, Dave

Dave Eggers (born 1970) is an American writer, editor, and publisher. He is known for the best-selling novel, A Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius, and his more recent work as a screenwriter. He is also the co-founder of the literacy project, 826 Valencia.

Robert Eggleton
Eggleton, Robert

Robert Eggleton is best known for his investigative reports about children’s programs. Today, he is a therapist at the Prestera Mental Health Center in Charleston, West Virginia. Rarity from the Hollow is his debut novel. Author proceeds are donated to a child abuse prevention program operated by Children’s Home Society of West Virginia.

Max Ehrmann
Ehrmann, Max

Max Ehrmann (1872-1945) was an American writer, poet, and attorney from Terre Haute, Indiana, widely known for his 1927 prose poem "Desiderata" (Latin: "things desired"). He often wrote on spiritual themes.

Kimi Eisele
Eisele, Kimi

Kimi Eisele is the author of The Lightest Object in the Universe. Her work has appeared in Longreads, Guernica, Terrain.org, High Country News, Orion, Fourth Genre, and other publications. She holds a master’s degree in geography from the University of Arizona, where in 1998 she founded You Are Here: The Journal of Creative Geography. Also a performing and visual artist, her work has been funded by the Arts Foundation of Southern Arizona, the Arizona Commission on the Arts, the Kresge Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts. She lives in Tucson and works for the Southwest Folklife Alliance.

Phyllis Eisenstein
Eisenstein, Phyllis

Phyllis Eisenstein (1946–2020) was an American author of science fiction and fantasy short stories and novels whose work was nominated for both the Hugo Award and Nebula Award.

Gordon Eklund
Eklund, Gordon

Gordon Eklund (born 1945) is a Nebula Award-winning, American science fiction author whose works include the "Lord Tedric" series and two of the earliest original novels based on the 1960s Star Trek TV series. He has written under the pen name Wendell Stewart, and in one instance under the name of the late E. E. Smith (1890–1965).

Kerstin Ekman
Ekman, Kerstin

Kerstin Lillemor Ekman (born 1933) is a Swedish novelist.

Kerstin Ekman wrote a string of successful detective novels (among others De tre små mästarna and Dödsklockan) but later went on to psychological and social themes. Among her later works is Mörker och blåbärsris (1972) (set in northern Sweden) and Händelser vid vatten (1993), in which she returned to the form of the detective novel.

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Omar El Akkad
El Akkad, Omar

Omar El Akkad was born in Cairo, Egypt and grew up in Doha, Qatar until he moved to Canada with his family. He is an award-winning journalist and author who has traveled around the world to cover many of the most important news stories of the last decade. His reporting includes dispatches from the NATO-led war in Afghanistan, the military trials at Guantànamo Bay, the Arab Spring revolution in Egypt and the Black Lives Matter movement in Ferguson, Missouri. He is a recipient of Canada’s National Newspaper Award for investigative reporting and the Goff Penny Memorial Prize for Young Canadian Journalists, as well as three National Magazine Award honorable mentions. He lives in Portland, Oregon.

Saara El-Arifi
El-Arifi, Saara

Saara El-Arifi is the Sunday Times bestselling author of The Final Strife, the first part of a trilogy inspired by her Ghanaian and Sudanese heritage. She has lived in many countries, had many jobs and owned many more cats. El-Arifi knew she was a storyteller from the moment she told her first lie. Over the years she has perfected her tall tales into epic ones. She currently resides in London, UK, as a full-time procrastinator.

Nadia El-Fassi
El-Fassi, Nadia

Nadia El-Fassi is the pen name of Nadia Saward, who is a Commissioning editor at Orbit. She lives in London with her husband and perfectly round cat and can be found impulse-buying new dice sets for D&D or watching horror movies. BEST HEX EVER is her debut romance novel.

Amal El-Mohtar
El-Mohtar, Amal

Amal El-Mohtar is an award-winning author, editor, and critic. Her short story “Seasons of Glass and Iron” won the Hugo, Nebula, and Locus awards and was a finalist for the World Fantasy, Sturgeon, Aurora, and Eugie Foster awards. She is the author of The Honey Month, a collection of poetry and prose written to the taste of twenty-eight different kinds of honey, and contributes criticism to NPR Books and The New York Times. Her fiction has most recently appeared on Tor.com and Uncanny Magazine, and in anthologies such as The Djinn Falls in Love & Other Stories and The Starlit Wood: New Fairy Tales. She is presently pursuing a PhD at Carleton University and teaches creative writing at the University of Ottawa.

Monika Elbert
Elbert, Monika

Monika Elbert is a Professor of English in the College of Humanities and Social Sciences at Montclair State University

Dan Elconin
Elconin, Dan

Dan Elconin is nineteen years old. Never After is his first novel. He is originally from San Diego, California and is currently a freshman at UCLA.

Jim Eldridge
Eldridge, Jim

Jim Eldridge is a radio, TV and movie scriptwriter with hundreds of radio and TV scripts broadcast in the UK and across the world in a career spanning over 30 years.

Eldridge is the creator and writer of radio shows including Parsley Sidings, King Street Junior, Crosswords, Albert and Me and The Demon Headmaster. On TV, he has created children's science fiction drama Powers and Time of My Life, and written for The Ghost Hunter, Julia Jekyll and Harriet Hyde and Up the Elephant and Round the Castle, in addition to other TV and radio series.

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Sara B. Elfgren
Elfgren, Sara B.

Sara Bergmark Elfgren (born 1980) is Swedish young adult fantasy writer. She has previously worked as a screenwriter for film and television. Her first novel, Cirkeln, was written together with Mats Strandberg and published in 2011. Cirkeln was an August Prize nominee in the youth literature category.

Galad Elflandsson
Elflandsson, Galad

Galad Elflandsson (born 1951) is an Canadian fantasy writer.

Suzette Haden Elgin
Elgin, Suzette Haden

Suzette Haden Elgin is an American science fiction author. She founded the Science Fiction Poetry Association, and is considered an important figure in the field of science fiction constructed languages. Elgin is also a linguist; she publishes non-fiction, of which the best-known is the Gentle Art of Verbal Self-Defense series.

Mircea Eliade
Eliade, Mircea

Mircea Eliade (1907–1986) was a Romanian historian of religion, fiction writer, philosopher, and professor at the University of Chicago.

Andrew Eliopulos
Eliopulos, Andrew

Andrew Eliopulos is a children’s book writer and editor. Originally from Georgia, Andrew graduated from the University of Chicago and now lives with his husband in Brooklyn, New York. His debut novel, The Spider Ring (written as by Andrew Harwell), was a CBC Children’s Choices Reading List Pick and a Grand Canyon Reader Award nominee. Andrew may or may not believe in magic.

E. C. Eliott
Eliott, E. C.

E C Eliott is a pen name of Reginald Alec Martin

Meg Elison
Elison, Meg

Meg Elison is an author and columnist living in the Bay Area.

Sara Ella
Ella, Sara

Sara Ella is the award-winning author of the Unblemished series and Coral, the upcoming reimagining of The Little Mermaid. She spends her days throwing living room dance parties for her two princesses, raising her little prince to be a king, and conquering realms of her own imaginings with her swoony husband by her side. She may or may not be obsessed with #Bookstagram, which feeds her current addiction to bookish tea and candles. A lover of fairy tales, she believes “Happily Ever After is Never Far Away.”

J. Elle
Elle, J.

J. Elle was born in Houston, Texas, and is a first-generation college student with a bachelor's in journalism and MA in educational administration and human development. An advocate for marginalized voices in both publishing and her community, J. Elle's passion for empowering youth dates back to her first career in education. She's worked as a preschool director, middle school teacher, and high school creative writing mentor. In her spare time, she volunteers at an alternative school, provides feedback for aspiring writers, loves on her three littles, and cooks up dishes true to her Texas and Louisiana roots. Wings of Ebony is her first novel.

Brandi Elledge
Elledge, Brandi

Brandi Elledge lives in the South, where even the simplest words are at least four syllables. She has a husband that she refuses to upgrade... because lets face it he is pretty awesome and two beautiful children that are the light of her life.

Berit Ellingsen
Ellingsen, Berit

Berit Ellingsen’s novel Not Dark Yet was published by Two Dollar Radio in November 2015.  She is the author of the short story collections Beneath the Liquid Skin and Vessel & Solsvart, and the novel Une Ville Vide (PublieMonde). Her work has appeared in W.W. Norton’s Flash Fiction International, SmokeLong Quarterly, Unstuck, Litro, Up Here – The North at the Center of the World, and other places, and been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, Best of the Net, and the British Science Fiction Award. Berit divides her time between Norway and Svalbard in the Arctic.

Coco Elliot
Elliot, Coco

Coco Elliot writes short contemporary romances featuring strong, eclectic heroines and heroes. Extraordinary and oddball, she loves them all. Originally from Los Angeles, she now lives in the heart of England and periodically confuses her US/UK phrases and spellings. She's thrilled to be using her Masters of Arts in English to create worlds and tell stories that warm her heart and hopefully those of her readers.

John Elliot
Elliot, John

John Herbert Elliot (1918–1997) was a British novelist, screenwriter and television producer. Between 1954 and 1960 he scripted a succession of one-off television plays including War in the Air and A Man from the Sun. In 1961 he joined with astronomer Fred Hoyle (to ensure scientific authenticity) to write the ground-breaking science fiction serial A for Andromeda which set the tone for all which was to follow in its stead. The success of A For Andromeda prompted a sequel, The Andromeda Breakthrough, in 1962.

Kendra Elliot
Elliot, Kendra

Kendra Elliot has sold eleven million books, hit the Wall Street Journal top ten bestseller list more than a dozen times, and is a three time winner of the Daphne du Maurier award. 

She is an International Thriller Writers' finalist and a Romantic Times finalist. She grew up in the lush Pacific Northwest but now spends most of her time on a warm beach wearing flip flops.

Anna Elliott
Elliott, Anna

A longtime devotee of historical fiction and Arthurian legend, Anna Elliott was expecting her first child when she woke up from a very vivid dream of telling her mother that she was going to write a book about Modred's daughter, Isolde. She was very grateful to her daughter for being an excellent sleeper even as a newborn and allowing her the time to turn her dream into a finished book! She now lives in New Jersey with her husband and baby girl. Twilight of Avalon is her first published work.

Bruce Elliott
Elliott, Bruce

Bruce Elliott (1917-1973) was an American writer who wrote mystery fiction, science fiction, and also worked as a television screenwriter. He was also a magician.

Elliott was the writer of 15 Shadow stories that appeared in "The Shadow Magazine" between 1946 and 1948. These stories are held in low regard by Shadow fans because of Elliott's atypical handling of the character, best exemplified by the 3 stories in which the Shadow does not appear in his costumed identity.

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David Elliott
Elliott, David

David Elliott is a NY Times bestselling children's author. His many titles include: And Here's to You!, The Transmogrification of Roscoe Wizzle, The Evangeline Mudd books, Finn Throws a Fit!, Jeremy Cabbage and the Living Museum, and In the Wild. His most recent titles include On the Wing, This Orq. books, and Nobody's Perfect.  Born in Ohio, David has worked as a singer, a cucumber washer, and a popsicle stick maker. Currently, he lives in New Hampshire with his wife and a three-footed dog.

Elissa Elliott
Elliott, Elissa

Elissa Elliott is a former high school teacher. She is a contributing writer to Books & Culture and has optioned her first screenplay. She and her husband, Daniel Elliott, live in Minnesota. Eve: A Novel of the First Woman is her first novel.

Jenny Elliott
Elliott, Jenny

Jenny Elliott is a lifelong resident of Washington State and lives in Spokane with her husband and four kids. Writing fiction is her favorite method for avoiding insanity. Other avoidance techniques include reading, playing Scrabble, and browsing social media sites. Save Me is her first novel.

Joseph Elliott
Elliott, Joseph

Joseph Elliott is a writer, teacher, and actor known for his work in children’s television. The Good Hawk is his first book. He lives in London.

Julia Elliott
Elliott, Julia

Julia Elliott’s fiction has appeared in Tin House, the Georgia Review, Conjunctions, Fence, and other publications. She has won a Rona Jaffe Writer’s Award, and her stories have been anthologized in Pushcart Prize: Best of the Small PressesBest American Fantasy, and Best American Short Stories. Her debut story collec­tion, The Wilds, was chosen by Kirkus, BuzzFeed, Book Riot, and Electric Literature as one of the Best Books of 2014 and was a New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice. She is currently working on a novel about hamadryas ba­boons, a species she has studied as an amateur primatolo­gist. She teaches English and Women’s and Gender Studies at the University of South Carolina in Columbia, where she lives with her daughter and husband. She and her spouse, John Dennis, are founding members of the music collective Grey Egg.

Kate Elliott
Elliott, Kate

Kate Elliott has been writing stories since she was nine years old, which has led her to believe that writing, like breathing, keeps her alive. As a child in rural Oregon, she made up stories because she longed to escape to a world of lurid adventure fiction.

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Nathan Elliott
Elliott, Nathan

Nathan Elliott is a pseudonym of Christopher Evans.

Okla Elliott
Elliott, Okla

Okla Elliott is currently an Illinois Distinguished Fellow at the University of Illinois, where he works in the fields of comparative literature and trauma studies. He also holds an MFA in creative writing from Ohio State University. His work has appeared in Another Chicago Magazine, Harvard Review, Indiana Review, The Literary Review, New Letters, A Public Space, The Southeast Review, and Subtropics, among others. He is the author of a collection of short fiction, From the Crooked Timber, and a collection of poetry, The Cartographer’s Ink.

Patricia Elliott
Elliott, Patricia

Patricia Elliott is a British author.

Will Elliott
Elliott, Will

Will Elliott (born 1979) is an Australian fiction writer who lives in Brisbane, Queensland.

Alice Thomas Ellis
Ellis, Alice Thomas

Anna Haycraft (1932–2005) was an English writer and essayist who wrote under the nom de plume Alice Thomas Ellis. She was the author of numerous novels, and also of some non-fiction, including cookery books.

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Bret Easton Ellis
Ellis, Bret Easton

Bret Easton Ellis (born 1964) is an American novelist and short story writer. He was regarded as one of the so-called literary Brat Pack, which also included Tama Janowitz and Jay McInerney. He is a self-proclaimed "moralist." Ellis employs a technique of linking novels with common, recurring characters. His most controversial work is American Psycho, which has achieved considerable cult status.

Carson Ellis
Ellis, Carson

 

As a child, Carson Ellis loved exploring the woods, drawing and nursing wounded animals back to health. As an adult, little has changed - except she is now the acclaimed illustrator of several books for children, including Lemony Snicket's The Composer is Dead, Dillweed's Revenge by Florence Parry Heide, and The Mysterious Benedict Society by Trenton Lee Stewart. Colin and Carson live with their sons, Hank and Milo, in Portland, Oregon, quite near the Impassable Wilderness.

Jack Ellis
Ellis, Jack

Jack Ellis is a pseudonym of Stephen R. George.

Kat Ellis
Ellis, Kat

Kat Ellis grew up immersed in ancient myths about dragons and giants, and spending most of her time getting into trouble while exploring the local cemetery. Blackfin Sky is her debut novel. Ellis lives in Denbighshire, North Wales.

Lindsay Ellis
Ellis, Lindsay

Lindsay Ellis is an author and video essayist who creates humorous educational online content about media, narrative, and film theory, and also co-writes and co-hosts the fiction-focused web series "It's Lit!" for PBS Digital Studios. After earning her bachelor's in Cinema Studies from NYU's Tisch School of the Arts, she earned her MFA in Film and Television Production from USC's School of Cinematic Arts with a focus in documentary and screenwriting. She lives in Long Beach, CA.

Peter R. Ellis
Ellis, Peter R.

Peter would like to say he’s been a writer all his life but it is only since retiring as a teacher in 2010 that he has been able to devote enough time to writing to call it a career. Brought up in Cardiff, he studied Chemical Physics at the University of Kent at Canterbury, then taught chemistry (and a bit of physics) in Norwich, the Isle of Wight and Thames Valley. His first experience of publishing was in writing educational materials which he has continued to do since retiring. Of his fictional writing, Seventh Child is his first published speculative fiction novel.

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Warren Ellis
Ellis, Warren

Warren Ellis (born 1968) is an English author of comics and novels.

Harlan Ellison
Ellison, Harlan

Harlan Jay Ellison (1934-2018) was an American writer, known for his prolific and influential work in New Wave speculative fiction, and for his outspoken, combative personality.

His published works include more than 1,700 short stories, novellas, screenplays, comic book scripts, teleplays, essays, and a wide range of criticism covering literature, film, television, and print media. Some of his best-known work includes the Star Trek episode "The City on the Edge of Forever", A Boy and His Dog, "I Have No Mouth, and I Must Scream", and " 'Repent, Harlequin!' Said the Ticktockman", and as editor and anthologist for Dangerous Visions (1967) and Again, Dangerous Visions (1972). Ellison won numerous awards, including multiple Hugos, Nebulas, and Edgars.

Spencer Ellsworth
Ellsworth, Spencer

Spencer Ellsworth's short fiction has previously appeared in Lightspeed Magazine, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, and Tor.com. He is the author of the Starfire trilogy, which begins with Starfire: A Red Peace. He lives in the Pacific Northwest with his wife and three children, works as a teacher/administrator at a small tribal college on a Native American reservation, and blogs at spencerellsworth.com.

Billy Elm
Elm, Billy

Billy Elm has lived and worked in Jamaica since graduating from Oxford University in the UK. Having taught in the small town of Lucea for several years, Billy established a preparatory school before moving to Montego Bay to take up a teaching post at the Community College. Now retired, Billy now devotes much of her time to writing and teaching reading to children. She has completed a UCLA course in Writing for Children. Delroy in the Marog Kingdom is Billy's first published novel.

Larry Elmore
Elmore, Larry

Larry Elmore (born 1948) is an American fantasy artist whose work includes creating illustrations for video games, comics, magazines and fantasy books. His list of work includes illustrations for Dungeons & Dragons, Dragonlance, and the comic strip series SnarfQuest. He is author of the book Reflections of Myth.

P. N. Elrod
Elrod, P. N.

Patricia Nead Elrod is an American author.

Ben Elton
Elton, Ben

Benjamin Charles "Ben" Elton (born 1959) is an English comedian, author, playwright, actor and director. He was a part of London's alternative comedy movement of the 1980s and became a writer on such cult series as The Young Ones and Blackadder, as well as continuing as a stand-up comedian on stage and TV. His performing style in the 1980s was left-wing political satire. Since then he has published thirteen novels and more lately become known for writing the musical We Will Rock You (2002) and Love Never Dies (2010), the sequel to The Phantom of the Opera.

Eden Ember
Ember, Eden

Eden loves watching, reading, and writing about sci-fi. Her true love is sci-fi romances with a steamy twist. She's just starting on the journey, so stay tuned, there's more to come!

Julia Ember
Ember, Julia

Born in Chicago, Julia Ember now lives in Edinburgh, Scotland, with her growing menagerie of pets with Harry Potter-themed names. She is an avid traveler and has visited more than sixty countries. The places she visits inspire the worlds she creates in fiction, and she populates these worlds with monsters and magic.

Fox Emerson
Emerson, Fox

Fox Emerson is an author, ghostwriter, blogger and former technology professional who hopes that one day, we'll all live in a fair society.

As a young, impressionable child, his Mother told him that moths were sent by God to spy on humanity and that they reported back on everyone's behavior.

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Jane Emerson
Emerson, Jane

Jane Emerson is a pseudonym of Doris Egan.

 

Kevin Emerson
Emerson, Kevin

Kevin Emerson is the author of eleven books, including The Lost Code and The Dark Shore, the first two books in the Atlanteans series. Kevin is also a singer, drummer, and guitarist and has played in bands since high school. A former science teacher, Kevin lives in Seattle and teaches writing to teens through Writers in the Schools, Richard Hugo House, and 826 Seattle.

Ru Emerson
Emerson, Ru

Ru Emerson (born 1944) is an American author. She has written one book under the pseudonym of Roberta Cray.

J. S. Emery
Emery, J. S.

J.S. Emery is a brother-sister writing team, born in North Idaho into a homeschooling family of seven children, each of whom received an air rifle and a copy of The Odyssey by way of a fifth birthday present. This background prepared them wonderfully for writing fantasy novels but very poorly for formal education. After dropping out of secondary school, they worked jobs including ballet dancer, emergency room janitor, and map librarian in various parts of Europe and North America. They now live in the United States, where they are godparents (and, increasingly, dungeon masters) to one another's children.

Phil Emery
Emery, Phil

Phil Emery lives just outside one of the Hundred-Towns, otherwise known as Newcastle-under-Lyme, on the outskirts of several others known as the Potteries. He works as a freelance writer/lecturer, teaching creative writing for various universities, colleges, and educational organisations, and is an associate lecturer with Keele University. His stories, verse, and articles have appeared in the UK, USA and Canada. A radio play, "Virtual Grafix", has been produced by Minute Radio Drama.

Akwaeke Emezi
Emezi, Akwaeke

Akwaeke Emezi makes their young adult debut with Pet on the inaugural Make Me a World list. An honoree on the National Book Foundation’s “5 Under 35” list, a long-list nominee for the Carnegie Medal for Excellence, and a short-list nominee for the Center for Fiction’s First Novel Prize, Akwaeke continues to receive accolades for their adult debut, Freshwater. The autobiographical novel also received rave reviews from the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the New Yorker, and the Los Angeles Times, among others, as well as starred reviews from Library Journal and Booklist. Their sophomore adult novel, The Death of Vivek Oji, is forthcoming in 2020 from Riverhead.

S. C. Emmett
Emmett, S. C.

S. C. Emmett is a pseudonym for bestselling author Lilith Saintcrow. She lives in Vancouver, WA.

D. E. M. Emrys
Emrys, D. E. M.

D. E. M. Emrys. Author. Soldier by day, Soldier by night - Writer in between. Knows war to write war.

David Emrys, known as D to his friends, is a serving soldier and author. He has clearance to know more than he should, but not the sense to know better. Leaving education with no more than a fifteen year olds understanding of English Literature, D's storytelling craft is self-taught.

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Ruthanna Emrys
Emrys, Ruthanna

Ruthanna Emrys lives in a mysterious manor house on the outskirts of Washington, DC with her wife and their large, strange family. Her stories have appeared in a number of venues, including Strange Horizons, Analog, and Tor.com. She is the author of the Innsmouth Legacy series, which began with Winter Tide. She makes home-made vanilla, obsesses about game design, gives unsolicited advice, and occasionally attempts to save the world.

Carol Emshwiller
Emshwiller, Carol

Carol Emshwiller (1921-2019) was an American writer of avant garde short stories and science fiction who has won prizes ranging from the Nebula Award to the Philip K. Dick Award. Ursula K. Le Guin has called her "a major fabulist, a marvelous magical realist, one of the strongest, most complex, most consistently feminist voices in fiction." Among her novels are Carmen Dog and The Mount. She has also written two cowboy novels called Ledoyt and Leaping Man Hill. Her most recent novel, The Secret City, was published in April 2007.

Thomas Emson
Emson, Thomas

Thomas Emson is a writer who lives under another name. Born and raised in North Wales, he has been a singer-songwriter, an author, and a journalist. He has published fiction in the Welsh language, butManeater is his first English-language novel. He lives in Kent with a wonderful woman, an elderly cat, and two house rabbits.

Michael Ende
Ende, Michael

Michael Andreas Helmuth Ende (1929-1995) was a German writer of fantasy novels and children's books. Die unendliche Geschichte (The Neverending Story) is Ende's best known book.

Guy Endore
Endore, Guy

Guy Endore (1900–1970) was a novelist and screenwriter. He his best known for his cult classic, The Werewolf of Paris, but also wrote other novels and screenplays.

Sylvia Engdahl
Engdahl, Sylvia

Sylvia Louise Engdahl (born 1933) is an American writer, known best for science fiction. Her debut novel Enchantress of the Stars, published by Atheneum Books in 1970, was a runner-up for annual Newbery Medal and she won the Phoenix Award for that work twenty years later.

James Enge
Enge, James

James Enge's fiction has appeared in Black Gate, Flashing Swords, and everydayfiction.com. He is an instructor of classical languages at a Midwestern university.

Amy Engel
Engel, Amy

Amy Engel was born in Kansas and after a childhood spent bouncing among countries (Iran, Taiwan) and states (Kansas; California; Missouri; Washington, D.C.), she settled in Kansas City, Missouri, where she lives with her husband and two children.  Before devoting herself full-time to motherhood and writing, she worked as a criminal defense attorney, which is not quite as exciting as it looks on television.

George Allan England
England, George Allan

George Allan England (1877–1937) was an American writer and explorer, best known for his speculative and science fiction. He attended Harvard University and later in life unsuccessfully ran for Governor of Maine. England was a socialist and many of his works have socialist themes.

M. K. England
England, M. K.

M. K. England is a youth services librarian who grew up in Florida and is now based in the mountains of central Virginia. Before becoming a librarian, Megan was a bookstore clerk, a teaching assistant, and an experimental music composer. She is an active presenter at local and national conferences.

Steve Englehart
Englehart, Steve

Steve Englehart is best known writing for such series as Captain America (for Marvel), Batman: The Dark Detective and The Justice League of America (for DC), and for his novel The Point Man, the first Max August novel. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Charles English
English, Charles

Charles English is a pseudonym of Charles Nuetzel.

Doug Engstrom
Engstrom, Doug

Doug Engstrom is a farmer’s son who has worked as a US Air Force officer, a technical writer, a computer support specialist and a business analyst. He lives near Des Moines, Iowa with his wife, Catherine Engstrom.

Elizabeth Engstrom
Engstrom, Elizabeth

Elizabeth Engstrom is best known as a speculative fiction writer. She was born Bette Lynn (Betsy) Gutzmer, but she legally changed her name to Elizabeth Engstom a few years after publishing her first novel under that pseudonym. She is married to Al Cratty, and sometimes writes under the name Liz Cratty as well. She was nominated for a 1992 Bram Stoker Award for Best Fiction Collection fo her book Nightmare Flower. Her anthology Dead on Demand: The Best of Ghost Story Weekend spent six months on the Library Journal "Best Seller List." Her short story, "Crosley", was picked to be included in The Thirteenth Annual Year's Best Fantasy and Horror, edited by Ellen Datlow. Her work has been published in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Horror Show, American Fantasy Magazine, and Cemetery Dance.

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Toh EnJoe
EnJoe, Toh

Toh EnJoe was born in Hokkaido in 1972. After completing a PhD at the University of Tokyo, he became a researcher in theoretical physics. In 2007 he won the Bungakukai Shinjinsho (Literary World Newcomer’s) Prize with “Of the Baseball.” That same year brought the publication of his book Self-Reference ENGINE, which caused a sensation in SF circles and which was ranked No. 2 on SF Magazine’s list of the best science fiction of the year. Since then, EnJoe has been one of those rare writers comfortable working in both “pure literature” and science fiction. In 2010 his novel U Yu Shi Tan won the Noma Prize for new authors. In 2011 his “This Is a Pen” was nominated for the Akutagawa Prize, and he won Waseda University’s Tsubouchi Shouyou Prize. In January 2012, he won the Akutagawa Prize with “Doukeshi no Cyo” (Harlequin's Butterflies). His other works include Boy’s Surface and About Goto.

Hiron Ennes
Ennes, Hiron

Hiron Ennes is a writer, musician, and student of medicine based in the Pacific Northwest. Their areas of interest include infectious disease, pathology, and anticapitalist healthcare reform. When they’re not hunched over a microscope or word document they can be found playing in the snow or playing the harp (though usually not at the same time). They’re queer in every sense of the word, and they really want to pet your dog. Leech is their first novel.

Mariana Enríquez
Enríquez, Mariana

Mariana Enríquez (Buenos Aires, 1973) is an Argentine journalist, novelist, and short story writer.

Mariana Enríquez holds a degree in Journalism and Social Communication from the National University of La Plata. She works as a journalist and is the deputy editor of the arts and culture section of the newspaper Página/12 an she dictates literature workshops. She has published the novels: Bajar es lo peor (Espasa Calpe, 1995), Cómo desaparecer completamente (Emecé, 2004) and Nuestra parte de noche (Anagrama, 2019). She has also written the short story books: Los peligros de fumar en la cama (Emecé, 2009), Las cosas que perdimos en el fuego (Editorial Anagrama, 2016) and the novelette Chicos que vuelven (Eduvim, 2010). Her stories have appeared in anthologies of Spain, Mexico, Chile, Bolivia and Germany.

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Kat Ensmore
Ensmore, Kat

Kat Ensmore is an independent Canadian author who writes steamy stories about life, love and all the messy bits in between. She recently relocated to her creative beginnings in rural Saskatchewan alongside her beloved writing companion, an imposing yet affectionate Great Dane named Khaos.

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Vaughn Entwistle
Entwistle, Vaughn

Vaughn Entwistle is a British author who grew up in Northern England. After the family moved to the United States, he attended Oakland University in Michigan where he earned a Master’s Degree in English.

In the early nineties he moved to Seattle to work as a writer/editor. In his spare time he ran a successful gargoyle-sculpting company for ten years (yes, really!). Entwistle has published poetry and fiction in a number of small literary journals and won awards for screenplays and novels.

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Amy Ephron
Ephron, Amy

Amy Ephron is the author of several adult books, including A Cup of Tea, which won the 2005 Southern California Booksellers Association award for fiction, received the Booklist Best Fiction of the Year 2005 Award, and was a Barnes and Noble Book Club selection. She is also a contributor to a number of magazines, a film producer, and the owner of a food website called One for the Table, which publishes articles and recipes about food, love, and politics. The Castle in the Mist is her first book for children. Amy lives in Los Angeles with her husband.

Robin Epstein
Epstein, Robin

Robin Epstein teaches sitcom writing at NYU. Lead writer on several video games, Robin has also written for The New York Times and is a contributor to This American Life. Her previous young adult novel, God Is in the Pancakes, was selected for the New York State Reading Association Charlotte Award Master List. She lives in New York City.

Edward M. Erdelac
Erdelac, Edward M.

Edward M. Erdelac is the author of several novels (including the acclaimed weird western series Merkabah Rider) and dozens of short stories. He is an independent filmmaker, award winning screenwriter, and sometime Star Wars contributor.

Born in Indiana, educated in Chicago, he resides in the Los Angeles area with his wife and a bona fide slew of children and cats.

Paul E. Erdman
Erdman, Paul E.

Paul Emil Erdman (1932-2007) was one of the leading business and financial writers in the United States who became known for writing novels based on monetary trends and historical facts concerning complex matters of international finance.

James Erich
Erich, James

James Erich has had a passion for young adult fiction since he himself was a teenager. His first published story was in his middle school literary magazine and it still occupies a place of honor on his bookshelves. In his high school and college years, he was saddened to see how few positive stories with gay protagonists there were, but is delighted to see that changing. James recently joined the ranks of YA novelists, and his first YA novel received two honorable mentions from the Rainbow Awards - for Best LGBT young adult/coming of age and Best gay debut novel/book. He is openly gay and lives with his husband in the small town of Raymond, New Hampshire.

Steven Erikson
Erikson, Steven

Steven Erikson is a pseudonym of Steve Rune Lundin. He was born in Canada and recently returned there to live after spending several years in the UK. He is a qualified archaeologist and anthropologist and a graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop.

Aileen Erin
Erin, Aileen

Aileen Erin is half-Irish, half-Mexican and 100% nerd-from Star Wars (prequels don’t count) to Star Trek (TNG FTW), she reads Quenya and some Sindarin, and has a severe fascination with the supernatural. Aileen has a BS in Radio-TV-Film from the University of Texas at Austin, and an MFA in Writing Popular Fiction from Seton Hill University. She lives with her husband in Los Angeles, and spends her days doing her favorite things: reading books, creating worlds, and kicking ass.

Lance Erlick
Erlick, Lance

Lance Erlick writes science fiction thrillers for adult and young adult readers that often include strong female protagonists. He hopes readers will enjoy his writing as they follow these people overcoming hurdles for those they love.

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Nikki Erlick
Erlick, Nikki

Nikki Erlick is the New York Times-bestselling author of The Measure. Her work has also appeared online with New York Magazine, Newsweek, Cosmopolitan, Harper’s Bazaar, The Huffington Post, Indagare Travel, BookTrib, and Vox Media. She graduated Harvard University summa cum laude and was an editor of The Harvard Crimson. She earned her master's degree in Global Thought from Columbia University.

Shea Ernshaw
Ernshaw, Shea

Shea Ernshaw is the author of New York Times bestseller The Wicked Deep and Winterwood. She is the winner of the 2019 Oregon Book Award, and both The Wicked Deep and Winterwood were Indie Next Picks. She lives in a small mountain town in Oregon and is happiest when lost in a good book, lost in the woods, or writing her next novel.

Jenny Erpenbeck
Erpenbeck, Jenny

Jenny Erpenbeck (born 1967) is a German writer and opera director, recipient of the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize.

Barbara Erskine
Erskine, Barbara

An historian by training, Barbara Erskine is the author of six bestselling novels that demonstrate her interest in both history and the supernatural, plus two collections of short stories. Her books have appeared in at least twenty different languages. She lives with her family in an ancient manor house near Colchester, and in a cottage near Hay-on-Wye.

Terry W. Ervin II
Ervin II, Terry W.

Terry W. Ervin II is an English teacher who enjoys writing Fantasy and Science Fiction. He is an editor for MindFlights, a guest columnist for Fiction Factor and is the author of over two dozen short stories and articles. Flank Hawk is his debut novel. When Terry isn't writing or enjoying time with his wife and daughters, he can be found in his basement raising turtles.

V. M. Escalada
Escalada, V. M.

V. M. Escalada lives in a nineteenth-century limestone farmhouse in southeastern Ontario with her husband. Born in Canada, her cultural background is half Spanish and half Polish, which makes it interesting at meal times. Her most unusual job was translating letters between lovers, one of whom spoke only English, the other only Spanish.

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Francis Escayg
Escayg, Francis

Francis Escayg is a songwriter, composer, music producer, screenwriter, filmmaker and now novelist. He has four #1 hits in to his credit: "Sweetest Thing" (Denyse Plummer), "Mornin' Lovin'" and "White Horse" (Fireflight), and "Meet Me On Level 2" (RF-JAM).  His first feature film, "The Ghost of Hing King Estate", inspired by events in Trinidad in 1971, was released in Trinidad in 2007. Francis writes from a desire to enrich lives; to right the world and make it better for other children than it was for him growing up in the Oilfields of Fyzabad in the South of Trinidad.

Andreas Eschbach
Eschbach, Andreas

Andreas Eschbach was born 1959 in Ulm, Germany. In 1996, his first novel, Die Haarteppichknüpfer ("The Hair Carpet Makers"), won one of the highest awards of German science fiction, the SFCD-Literaturpreis. His second novel, Solarstation, won the other great German science fiction award, the Kurd Laßwitz Preis. His third novel, Jesus Video, won both of them, became a nationwide bestseller in 2000, and was turned into a movie in 2002.

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Lloyd Arthur Eshbach
Eshbach, Lloyd Arthur

Lloyd Arthur Eshbach (1910–2003) was an American science fiction fan and writer, secular and religious publisher, and minister.

Julie Eshbaugh
Eshbaugh, Julie

 

Julie Eshbaugh is a YA writer and former filmmaker. She made two short films and then spent several years producing an online video series for teens, which received several honors from the Webby Awards.

Kayla Eshbaugh
Eshbaugh, Kayla

Kayla Eshbaugh has often been told that her own real-life love story sounds a lot like a romance novel. At the age of sixteen, her brother's best friend told her that they would get married someday, and–spoiler alert–they did! Because of her personal experience, she is a firm believer that you can find true and lasting love while still in your teens, which is why she loves writing in the young adult genre.

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Lauren Esker
Esker, Lauren

Lauren Esker writes SHIFTER AGENTS (paranormal romance) and WARRIORS OF GALATEA (sci-fi romance). If you like strong but sweet heroes and assertive heroines, you've come to the right place!

Lauren also writes and makes comics as Layla Lawlor, and writes the BODYGUARD SHIFTERS and BEARS OF PINEROCK COUNTY series as Zoe Chant. She writes full time and lives in Alaska.

Kelley Eskridge
Eskridge, Kelley

Kelley Eskridge (born 1960) is an American author.

Laura Esquivel
Esquivel, Laura

Laura Esquivel (born 1950) is a Mexican author making a noted contribution to Latin-American literature. She was born the third of four children of Julio César Esquivel, a telegraph operator, and Josefa Valdés.

Sophie Essex
Essex, Sophie

Sophie Essex is a softcore bunny and sexual synesthete living in Norwich where she promotes her adoration of poetry through micro-publisher Salò Press, lit-mag Fur-Lined Ghettos, and monthly open-mic night Volta. Her work has previously appeared in Leste, Lighthouse, The Belleville Park Pages, HVTN, and others. Her first pamphlet 'Objects of Desire' was published by Pyramid Editions in 2015.

William Essex
Essex, William

William Essex is a pseudonym of John Tigges.

Ian C. Esslemont
Esslemont, Ian C.

Ian Cameron Esslemont (born 1962) is a Canadian writer. He was trained and has worked as an archaeologist. He is best known for his series Novels of the Malazan Empire, which is set in the same world as the Malazan Book of the Fallen epic fantasy series popularised by his friend and collaborator, Steven Erikson. Esslemont is the co-creator of the Malazan world.

Jennifer Estep
Estep, Jennifer

Jennifer Estep is a New York Times, USA Today, and internationally bestselling author who prowls the streets of her imagination in search of her next fantasy idea.

Jennifer is the author of the Elemental Assassin, Section 47, Galactic Bonds, Crown of Shards, Gargoyle Queen, and other fantasy series. She has written more than 40 books, along with numerous novellas and stories.

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Loren D. Estleman
Estleman, Loren D.

Loren D. Estleman (born 1952) is an American writer of detective and Western fiction. He writes with a manual typewriter.

Estleman graduated from Eastern Michigan University in 1974 with a BA degree in English and Journalism. In 2002, Eastern Michigan University presented him with an honorary doctorate in humane letters. He married the mystery writer Deborah Morgan in 1993.

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Nancy Etchemendy
Etchemendy, Nancy

Nancy Etchemendy (born 1952) is a writer of science fiction, fantasy, and horror.

Dennis Etchison
Etchison, Dennis

Dennis William Etchison (born 1943) is an American writer and editor of fantasy and horror fiction. While he has achieved some acclaim as a novelist, it is his work in the short story format that is especially well-regarded by critics and genre fans.

Dennis Etchison has also written books under the pseudonym of Jack Martin.

Benjamin Kane Ethridge
Ethridge, Benjamin Kane

Benjamin Kane Ethridge is the Bram Stoker Award winning author of the occult fantasy novel Black & Orange. He also wrote a master's thesis entitled, "CAUSES OF UNEASE: The Rhetoric of Horror Fiction and Film." Available in an ivory tower near you. Ben lives in Southern California with his wife and children. When he isn't writing, reading, videogaming, he's defending California's waterways and sewers from pollution.

Ken Eulo
Eulo, Ken

Ken Eulo is the bestselling author of The Brownstone, The Bloodstone, The Deathstone, and The House of Caine. He lives in Orlando, Florida.

Janet Evanovich
Evanovich, Janet

Janet Evanovich is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of the Stephanie Plum series, the co-authored Fox and O’Hare series, the Knight and Moon series, and the Lizzy and Diesel series as well as twelve romance novels, the Alexandra Barnaby novels, Troublemaker graphic novel, and How I Write: Secrets of a Bestselling Author.

Chris Evans
Evans, Chris

Chris Evans was born in Canada and now lives in New York City. He's a historian as well as an editor of military history and current affairs books. A Darkness Forged in Fire is his first novel.

Christopher Evans
Evans, Christopher

Christopher Evans (born 1951) is a British science fiction writer and children's author.

Christopher Evans has also written books under the pseudonym of Nathan Elliott.

Erin Evans
Evans, Erin

Erin Evans is a stay-at-home mom of six, wonderful, little children. She based her character Piper Cavanaugh on her own life, but decided to have pity on Piper and only gave her two kids to start off with.

Erin loves to write and to have other people read what she writes! She also loves reading, and would probably rather read than do just about anything else. Her six kids keep her rather busy and active and so she doesn’t get to sit on the couch and read all day. In urban fantasy, she loves Charlaine Harris, Patricia Briggs, and Kim Harrison. All time favorite authors would be Robin Hobb and Jasper Fforde. Jim Butcher’s Codex Alera has quickly become one of her favorite series.

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Erin M. Evans
Evans, Erin M.

Erin M. Evans grew up in St. Louis, Missouri. After graduating from Washington University with a degree in Anthropology, she and her now-husband drove around the country in a 1983 Winnebago. They settled in Seattle, WA where she works as a writer and editor.

Georgia Evans
Evans, Georgia

Georgia Evans is a pseudonym of Rosemary Laurey.

Ian Evans
Evans, Ian

Ian Evans is a pseudonym of Angus Wells.

Laura Findley Evans
Evans, Laura Findley

Laura Findley Evans is the author of True North, Book 1 of The Dragon and the Girl series. It all started when her grandchildren said one night (when they were supposed to be sleeping), “Tell us a story.” And so the adventures of a feisty young girl and an impossible dragon began. Laura would like you to know that whatever she writes must be true, whether it is real or not. She hopes you will discover the truth in whatever she writes. When she’s not writing, Laura reads (a lot), cooks (mostly) healthy dinners, and spends time with people she loves.

Lucy Evans
Evans, Lucy

Dr Lucy Evans is an Associate Professor in Postcolonial Literature at the University of Leicester

Richard Paul Evans
Evans, Richard Paul

Richard Paul Evans is the #1 bestselling author of The Christmas Box. Each of his more than twenty novels has been a New York Times bestseller. There are more than 17 million copies of his books in print worldwide, translated into more than twenty-four languages. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including the American Mothers Book Award, the Romantic Times Best Women’s Novel of the Year Award, the German Audience Gold Award for Romance, three Religion Communicators Council Wilbur Awards, the Washington Times Humanitarian of the Century Award, and the Volunteers of America National Empathy Award. He lives in Salt Lake City, Utah, with his wife, Keri, and their five children.

Robert Mitchell Evans
Evans, Robert Mitchell

Robert Mitchell Evans was born in North Carolina but split his early life between that state and sunny Florida before brief and ultimately unsuccessful tour in the United States Navy.

A life-long enthusiastic fan of film and genre fiction Robert's interests include all form of science, history, and politics. He has played role-playing games since the early 80s and enjoys a wide array of board and card games as well. He haunts local conventions and his favorite Shakespearean play is Macbeth. Like so many ex-sailors he lives in San Diego with his sweetie-wife and an ever-growing film library.

Jaymin Eve
Eve, Jaymin

Jaymin Eve is the Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Amazon Charts, and Amazon #1 Bestselling author of paranormal romance, urban fantasy, and contemporary romance novels filled with steamy love stories, adventure, and humor. HEA guaranteed. She lives in Australia with her husband, two beautiful daughters, and a couple of crazy pets. Her books have sold millions worldwide and have been translated into multiple languages. 

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Laure Eve
Eve, Laure

Laure Eve was born in Paris and currently lives in London, where she works in book publishing. She is also the author of Fearsome Dreamer and The Illusionists. You can find her ultra-witty, real-life musings on Twitter @LaureEve and on her website, http://www.laureeve.co.uk/.

B. K. Evenson
Evenson, B. K.

B. K. Evenson is a pseudonym of Brian Evenson.

Brian Evenson
Evenson, Brian

Brian Evenson (born 1966) is an American academic and writer of both literary fiction and popular fiction. He has received degrees from Brigham Young University (BA) and the University of Washington (MA and PhD). After leaving a teaching position at BYU, he held positions at Oklahoma State University, Syracuse University and University of Denver. He is currently the Chair of the Literary Arts Program at Brown University. He is also a senior editor of the Conjunctions literary journal published by Bard College and has participated in Naropa University's Summer Writing Program and The Juniper Summer Writing Institute at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst's MFA Program for Poets & Writers.

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Ashley Evercott
Evercott, Ashley

Ashley Evercott was born and raised where it’s mostly sunny all the time and there’s always traffic on the 91. From a young age, she has dreamed of far-off worlds and star-crossed lovers. She is proud to pen these stories to life and combine fantasy and tension-filled, clean romance. When she is not writing, she is consuming as many books as she can and daydreaming at home with her cat and supportive husband.

D. D. Everest
Everest, D. D.

D. D. Everest is a successful journalist and author. He thought he knew how to write books until he started Archie Greene and the Magician's Secret. It is his first book for children and nearly killed him, which serves him right. He lives in a rambling Victorian house on the Ashdown Forest, in England, with his partner, Sara, their son and daughter, and two cats.

E.V. Everest
Everest, E.V.

Evelina Everest is a tween to teen fantasy author. Ever since she discovered the summer reading program, she's been unstoppable. After all, if books contain worlds, she's pretty much an intergalactic traveler, right?

When she's not visiting other worlds or inventing her own, Evelina enjoys drinking too much coffee, playing her trombone, and petting her four fur babies. You can learn more about her work at www.evelinaeverest.com.

John Everson
Everson, John

John Everson is the Bram Stoker Award-winning author of the novels Covenant (Leisure Books, 2008) and Sacrifice (Leisure Books, 2009). Both novels were originally issued as limited edition hardcovers by Delirium Books. A Polish translation of Covenant was also issued by Poland's Red Horse Books as Demoniczne Przymierze in late summer 2007.

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Rosalyn Eves
Eves, Rosalyn

Rosalyn Eves is a professor of English living in southern Utah and is involved in the YA community there and across the country. Blood Rose Rebellion is her debut novel.

Ivan Ewert
Ewert, Ivan

Ivan Ewert was born in Chicago, Illinois, and has never wandered far afield. He has deep roots in the American Midwest, finding a sense of both belonging and terror within the endless surburban labyrinths, deep north woods, tangled city streets and boundless prairie skies. The land and the cycles of the year both speak to him and inform his writing; which revolves around the strange, the beautiful, the delicious and the unseen.

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Al Ewing
Ewing, Al

Al Ewing is a major new writer whose work in US and UK comics has seen him hailed as the most exciting new voice in the field.

Amy Ewing
Ewing, Amy

Amy Ewing is the young adult author of The Jewel, the first in a trilogy from HarperTeen, coming out September 2014.

She grew up in a small town outside Boston, where her librarian mother instilled a deep love of reading at a young age. Amy moved to New York City in 2000 to study theater at New York University. Unfortunately, her acting career didn’t quite pan out. She worked in restaurants, as an administrative assistant, a nanny, and a sales representative for a wine distributor before the lack of creativity in her life drove her to begin writing.

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Kacey Ezell
Ezell, Kacey

Kacey Ezell was born in South Dakota in 1977. Her parents joined the US Air Force in 1984, and she grew up around the world on various military bases. When she was seven, her mother gave her a copy of Anne McCaffrey's Dragondrums, and shortly thereafter, Kacey decided that she wanted to be a dragonrider when she grew up. In 1999, she followed her parents into the "family business" and graduated from the United States Air Force Academy before going to pilot training. As dragons were in short supply at the time, she reasoned that flying aircraft was the next best thing. She earned her wings in 2001, and has over 2500 hours in the UH-1N and Mi-17 helicopters.

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