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Found authors: 736
Diana Gabaldon
Gabaldon, Diana

Diana Jean Gabaldon Watkins (born 1952) is an American author of Mexican-American and English ancestry. Diana Gabaldon is her maiden name, and the one she uses professionally.

Diana Gabaldon is the author of the best-selling Outlander series. Her books are difficult to classify by genre, since they contain elements of romantic fiction, historical fiction, and science fiction (in the form of time travel).

Camille Gabor
Gabor, Camille

Camille Gabor is an American writer with a diverse background in many fields. Her careers have included classical music and opera, composition, graphic design, research, and animal training. She enjoys horseback riding and good wine, especially California vintages as she is a long-time resident of Northern California. Much of the inspiration for The Vildecaz Talents books is Finnish myth and folklore and she reminds us that the Vikings feared nothing – except the Finns who they believed had powers of darkness and wizardry.

Leslie Gadallah
Gadallah, Leslie

Leslie Gadallah (born 1939) is a Canadian science fiction author.

 

Sam Gafford
Gafford, Sam

Sam Gafford is a leading authority on William Hope Hodgson and editor of Sargasso, an annual journal devoted to Hodgson. He is editor of Carnacki: The New Adventures (2013) and author of the Lovecraftian novel, The House of Nodens. He has also recently completed a supernatural novel featuring both Jack the Ripper and Arthur Machen.

Ofir Touché Gafla
Gafla, Ofir Touché

Ofir Touché Gafla was born in Israel. His first novel, The World of the End, was published in 2004 and became a bestseller and a cult book, winning the 2005 Geffen Award for the best fantasy/science fiction novel of the year and the 2006 Kugel Award for Hebrew literature. His later novels include The Cataract in the Mind’s Eye, Behind the Fog, and The Day the Music Died. He teaches creative writing in the Sam Spiegel School of TV and Cinema in Jerusalem.

Brian Gage
Gage, Brian

Brian Gage (born 1973) is an American author of satire, fairy tales, and fiction. He was born and raised in Youngstown, Ohio.

W. D. Gagliani
Gagliani, W. D.

William D. Gagliani is an American author.

Michelle Gagnon
Gagnon, Michelle

Michelle Gagnon (born 1971) is a an American author. To the delight of her parents, she gave up all these occupations for an infinitely more stable and lucrative career as a crime fiction writer.Michelle's novels have been published in North America, France, Spain, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Argentina, and Australia, and have been IMBA top 10 bestsellers.

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David Gaider
Gaider, David

David Gaider lives in Edmonton, Alberta, and has worked for video game developer BioWare since 1999. He is the lead writer on the upcoming Dragon Age: Origins role-playing game and has previously worked on such titles as Baldur's Gate 2: Shadows of Amn, Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic, and Neverwinter Nights.

Sarah Gailey
Gailey, Sarah

Hugo and Campbell award finalist Sarah Gailey is an internationally published writer of fiction and nonfiction. Their nonfiction has been published by Mashable and the Boston Globe, and they are a regular contributor for Tor.com and Barnes & Noble. Their most recent fiction credits include Mothership Zeta, Fireside Fiction, and the Speculative Bookshop Anthology. Their debut novella duology, River of Teeth, was published in 2017 via Tor.com. They have a novel forthcoming from Tor Books in Spring 2019. Gailey lives in beautiful Portland, Oregon, with their two scrappy dogs.

Neil Gaiman
Gaiman, Neil

Neil Richard MacKinnon Gaiman (born Neil Richard Gaiman, 10 November 1960) is an English author of short fiction, novels, comic books, graphic novels, nonfiction, audio theatre, and films. His works include the comic book series The Sandman and novels Stardust, American Gods, Coraline, and The Graveyard Book. He has won numerous awards, including the Hugo, Nebula, and Bram Stoker awards, as well as the Newbery and Carnegie medals.

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S.M. Gaither
Gaither, S.M.

As a kid, S.M. Gaither spent way too much time playing video games like Final Fantasy and reading every book she could get her hands on instead of doing silly things like her assigned homework. As an adult…Well, not much has changed. Her goal is to write books that distract others from their life’s obligations, too, thus creating an army of fellow procrastinators over which she can reign supreme. These days, her personal ​favorite places to procrastinate are in the mountains near her North Carolina home, in the company of her husband, their daughter, and their very spoiled dog.

Allison Galbraith
Galbraith, Allison

Allison Galbraith is an author, storyteller and narrator. She collects and re-tells traditional folktales. Her books include: Lanarkshire Folk Tales (2021, History Press) suitable for older children and adults, and co-author of: Dancing With Trees, Eco-Tales from the British Isles (2017, History Press) a collection of traditional wisdom stories from: England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales with environmental themes, and nature-activities for age five-adult.

Robert Galbraith
Galbraith, Robert

Robert Galbraith’s Cormoran Strike series is classic contemporary crime fiction from a master story-teller, rich in plot, characterisation and detail. Galbraith’s debut into crime fiction garnered acclaim amongst critics and crime fans alike. The first three novels The Cuckoo’s Calling (2013), The Silkworm (2014) and Career of Evil (2015) all topped the national and international bestseller lists and have been adapted for television, produced by Brontë Film and Television. The fourth in the series, Lethal White (2018), is out now.

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Eric Kahn Gale
Gale, Eric Kahn

Eric Kahn Gale is the author of The Bully Book, his first novel. He lives in Chicago.

Yasmine Galenorn
Galenorn, Yasmine

Yasmine Galenorn is an American novelist. She writes urban fantasy, paranormal romance, and paranormal mystery. She previously wrote under the pen name India Ink for her Bath and Body series.

Galenorn graduated from Evergreen State College, having majored in theater and creative writing. She is the author of over fifty novels and nonfiction books, including the Otherworld Series, the Fury Unbound Series, the Bewitching Bedlam Series, the Indigo Court Series, the Chintz 'n China Series, and the upcoming Wild Hunt Series. She also wrote nonfiction metaphysical books.

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Brad Gallagher
Gallagher, Brad

Brad Gallagher is the MEMSPA Children's Chapter Book Award winner and is a Hamtramck Public Schools data specialist and writer. Brad lives in Chesterfield, Michigan.

Diana G. Gallagher
Gallagher, Diana G.

Diana G. Gallagher is an American author who writes books for children and young adults based on television series. She has contributed to book series based on Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Sabrina the Teenage Witch and Charmed, among others.

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Stephen Gallagher
Gallagher, Stephen

Stephen Gallagher (born 1954) is an English writer.

He has written several novels and television scripts, including for the BBC television series Doctor Who – for which he wrote two serials, Warriors' Gate (1981) and Terminus (1983) – as well as for the series Rosemary & Thyme and Bugs, for two seasons of which he was script consultant along with Brian Clemens. He adapted his own novel Chimera for ITV and directed the adaptation of Oktober as well as writing the feature-length episode The Kingdom of Bones for the BBC series Murder Rooms.

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Steve Gallagher
Gallagher, Steve

Steven Gallagher is a pseudonym of Stephen Gallagher.

Nicole Galland
Galland, Nicole

Nicole Galland is the author of these novels: Stepdog, Godiva, I, Iago, Crossed, Revenge of the Rose, and The Fool’s Tale. She lives on Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts.

Matthew Gallaway
Gallaway, Matthew

Matthew Gallaway is the author of #gods and The Metropolis Case, which was praised by the New York Times for being “driven by exuberance and morbidity, fatalism and erotic energy.” He lives in the Washington Heights neighborhood of New York City with his partner and four cats. Previously he worked as a record-store clerk while earning a law degree from NYU and was a member of the indie rock band Saturnine.

Laura Gallego García
Gallego García, Laura

Laura Gallego García is a Spanish author. She lives in Alboraya, Valencia in Spain.

Barbara Galler-Smith
Galler-Smith, Barbara

Barb Galler-Smith resides in Edmonton with John, her fabulously supportive husband, and three incredibly cute Yorkshire terriers. After a hiatus from everything but working for money and writing romance or pet care brochures, she returned to the quirky world of writing science fiction and fantasy.

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Ben Galley
Galley, Ben

Ben Galley is a best-selling purveyor of tall tales and dark fantasy from the UK. He is the author behind the gritty and epic Emaneska Series, as well as his new western fantasy series, the Scarlet Star Trilogy.

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Paul Gallico
Gallico, Paul

Paul William Gallico (1897–1976) was a successful American novelist, short story and sports writer. Many of his works were adapted for motion pictures. He is perhaps best remembered for The Snow Goose, his only real critical success, and for the novel The Poseidon Adventure, primarily through the 1972 film adaptation.

Bea Gallo
Gallo, Bea

Bea Gallo is the centaur-curious author of steamy, small town monster romance. She is also the other half of contemporary romance author Rebecca Gallo. Bea Gallo lives in Charlotte, North Carolina with the monster of her dreams, their monster child, and four-legged monster pet. 

Raymond Z. Gallun
Gallun, Raymond Z.

Raymond Zinke Gallun (1911–1994) was an early science fiction writer.

Raymond Z. Gallun was among the stalwart group of early sci-fi pulp writers who popularized the genre. He sold many popular stories to pulp magazines in the 1930s. "Old Faithful" (1934) was his first noted story. "The Gentle Brain" was published in "Science Fiction Quarterly" under the pseudonym Arthur Allport.

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Daniel F. Galouye
Galouye, Daniel F.

Daniel Francis Galouye (1920–1976) was an American science fiction author.

Christopher Galt
Galt, Christopher

Christopher Galt is a pseudonym for a prize winning writer.

Louise Galveston
Galveston, Louise

Louise Galveston is the pseudonym of a writer of humorous middle-grade fiction.

Lindsay Galvin
Galvin, Lindsay

Lindsay was lucky enough to be raised in a house of stories, music, and love of the sea. She left part of her heart underwater after living and working in Thailand where she spent hundreds of blissful hours scuba diving. Forced now to surface for breath, she lives in sight of the chillier Sussex sea with her husband and two sons. When she is not writing, she can be found reading, running or practicing yoga. She has a degree in English language and literature, is fascinated by psychology and the natural world, and teaches science. Lindsay hadn’t written creatively since childhood until the idea for her debut novel The Secret Deep splashed into her mind, and now she’s hooked.

Thomas Galvin
Galvin, Thomas

Thomas Galvin is many things: an attention whore, an arrogant jerk, a jaded cynic. But he's also an author who spends far too much time thinking about vampires and the teenage girls that love them.

He may also be a were-corgi-pire. No one is really sure, but the way he avoids the subject makes us think he's hiding something.

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Livio Gambarini
Gambarini, Livio

Livio Gambarini was born in 1986. He grew up in the valleys between Bergamo and Iseo lake and he’s the youngest author published by Acheron Books.

Philologist and editor, he graduated with a dissertation about fantasy literature in Italy and he’s now part of the staff of the writing workshop at Milan’s Università Cattolica.

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Scott Gamboe
Gamboe, Scott

Scott Gamboe is the author of The Killing Frost and The Piaras Legacy. He has been a police officer since the mid 1990s, and he currently serves as a crime scene investigator. He lives in central Illinois.

Sean Gandert
Gandert, Sean

Sean Gandert was born and raised in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He received his undergraduate degree from Yale University and an MFA in creative writing from Bennington College. A freelance writer and college English instructor, Sean’s reviews and interviews have appeared in Paste magazine and other publications. An avid gamer, Sean currently resides in Florida with his partner and their three cats.

Shaylin Gandhi
Gandhi, Shaylin

Shaylin Gandhi first fell in love with love stories when she started stealing grown-up books off her mother’s bookshelf at the age of ten. By twelve, she’d perfected the art of reading under the covers by flashlight, and in high school, she attempted her first novel. She now writes from the mountains of Golden, Colorado, where she lives with her husband and identical twin daughters. When not finagling words onto paper, Shaylin can be found hiking, scheming up ways to earn another passport stamp, or ingesting enough coffee to power a small city.

Lewis Gannett
Gannett, Lewis

Lewis Gannett is an American writer.

Gannett is the author of the books The Living One, Magazine Beach, The Siege, as well as two Millennium novels: Gehenna and Force Majeure.

Ruth Stiles Gannett
Gannett, Ruth Stiles

Ruth Stiles Gannett Kahn (born 1923) is an American author.

Charles E. Gannon
Gannon, Charles E.

Charles E. Gannon is the author of Compton Crook Award-winning, Nebula-nominated Fire with Fire, Trial by Fire, and Raising Caine in the Caine Riordan series. He is the coauthor with Eric Flint of 1636: The Papal Stakes and 1636: Commander Cantrell in the West Indies in Eric Flint's best-selling Ring of Fire series. With best seller Steve White, Gannon is the coauthor of Starfire series entries Extremis, Imperative, and Oblivion. Gannon is also the author of multiple short stories. He is a member of SIGMA, the “SF think-tank,” which has advised various intelligence and defense agencies since the start of the millennium. A former professor, Gannon lives near Annapolis, Maryland, with his wife and children.

Alton Gansky
Gansky, Alton

Alton Gansky has written a number of other novels, including Zero-G, Finder's Fee, Director's Cut, Before Another Dies, The Prodigy, and the J. D. Stanton mystery series. He also writes nonfiction books that explore the mysteries of faith, the Bible, and God. He and his wife, Becky, have three adult children and live in Southern California.

Sever Gansovsky
Gansovsky, Sever

Sever Gansovsky (1918-1990) was a Russian writer. He was a dominant figure of the 1960s and 1970s, well known for his radio plays, some of them sf, and also well regarded for his Hard-SF short stories and novellas.

Jack Gantos
Gantos, Jack

John Byran Gantos, Jr., better known as Jack Gantos (born 1951) is an American author of children's books renowned for his fictional character Joey Pigza, a boy with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Gantos has won several literary awards, including the Newbery Honor, the Printz Honor, and the Sibert Honor from the American Library Association, and he has been a finalist for the National Book Award. His latest book, Dead End in Norvelt (2011) won the 2012 Newbery Medal.

Romina Garber
Garber, Romina

Romina Garber is a NYT/International Bestselling YA author who also writes under pen name Romina Russell. Born in Buenos Aires and raised in Miami, Romina currently resides in Los Angeles but would much rather be at Hogwarts. As a teen, Romina landed her first writing gig - “College She Wrote,” a weekly Sunday column for the Miami Herald that was later picked up for national syndication - and she hasn’t stopped writing since. She is a graduate of Harvard College and a Virgo to the core.

Stephanie Garber
Garber, Stephanie

Stephanie Garber is the #1 New York Times and International bestselling author of the Caraval series, Once Upon A Broken Heart and The Ballad of Never After. Her books have been published in thirty languages.

R. Garcí­a y Robertson
Garcí­a y Robertson, R.

Rodrigo García y Robertson is an American author of historical and fantasy fiction. He was born 1949.

Kami Garcia
Garcia, Kami

Kami Garcia is the #1 New York Times bestselling coauthor of Beautiful Creatures, which is now a major motion picture. The instant New York Times bestseller Unbreakable was her first solo novel and the first book in the Legion series. Kami lives in Maryland with her family and her dogs, Spike and Oz, named after characters from Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

R.S.A. Garcia
Garcia, R.S.A.

R.S.A. is a Nebula and Sturgeon Award winning writer of speculative fiction. She is also the winner of the Machine Intelligence Foundation for Rights and Ethics' 2023 Media Award, and a Locus, Ignyte and Eugie Foster Award finalist.

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Rudy Ch. Garcia
Garcia, Rudy Ch.

Rudy Ch. Garcia’s noir detective story, LAX Confidential (‘08) and his Southwest fantasy, Memorabilia (honorable mention in Writers Digest competition) appeared in anthologies. His SF-fantasy flash fiction, A Grain of Life is viewable at AntiqueChildren.com (‘09), and a humor-fantasy-horror, Weird Ronnie, took first place in an AlternateSpecies.com competition in Britain. The fantasy story, Mr. Sumac, published 2012. His SF short, Last Call for Ice Cream was published by Rudy Rucker, Sr., on his Flurb webzine #13, 3/12.

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Gabriel García Márquez
García Márquez, Gabriel

Gabriel José de la Concordia García Márquez (born 1927) is a Colombian novelist, short story writer, screenwriter and journalist. He is one of Latin America's most famous writers. He has achieved critical acclaim and commercial success, most notably for popularizing a literary style labeled as magical realism.

 

Craig Shaw Gardner
Gardner, Craig Shaw

Craig Shaw Gardner (born 1949) is an American author.

James Alan Gardner
Gardner, James Alan

James Alan Gardner (born 1955) is a Canadian science fiction author.

 

John Gardner
Gardner, John

John Champlin Gardner, Jr. (1933–1982) was a well-known and controversial American novelist and university professor, best known for his novel Grendel, a retelling of the Beowulf myth.

John Gardner's best known novels include: The Sunlight Dialogues, a novel about a brooding, disenchanted policeman who is asked to engage a madman fluent in classical mythology; Grendel, a retelling of the Beowulf legend from the monster's point of view; and October Light, a novel about an aging and embittered brother and sister living and feuding together in rural Vermont. This last novel won the National Book Critics' Circle Award in 1976. Each book features brutish, isolated figures struggling for integrity and understanding in an unforgiving society.

Lisa Gardner
Gardner, Lisa

A self-described research junkie, #1 New York Times bestselling author Lisa Gardner has parlayed her interest in police procedure, criminal minds and twisted plots into a streak of internationally recognized novels. Her 2010 novel, THE NEIGHBOR, won Best Thriller from the International Thriller Writers. Most recently, she was honored with the Silver Bullet Award for her work with at-risk kids and rescue animals. 

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Lyn Gardner
Gardner, Lyn

Lyn Gardner was born in London. A theatre critic on The Guardian, she goes to the theatre five or six nights a week, which should leave no time for writing books at all. Prior to joining The Guardian she was a tea lady, a waitress, sold (or failed to sell) advertising space for a magazine called Sludge, wrote for The Independent and helped found the London listings magazine, City Limits, the largest publishing co-op in Europe. She and her two daughters have one venerable goldfish (there were two, but one came to a tragic end) and a horse – who is the most demanding, temperamental and expensive member of the family.

Sally Gardner
Gardner, Sally

Sally Gardner is an English children's writer and illustrator. She lives in London.

Her award-winning book, I, Coriander, is set in 17th-century London. It tells the story of Coriander, the unhappy daughter of a silk merchant.

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Richard Garfinkle
Garfinkle, Richard

Richard Garfinkle is an American writer of science fiction. He is best known as the author of Celestial Matters, a novel published by Tor Books, which was nominated for the Hugo Award and Nebula Award and won the Compton Crook Award in 1997.

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Bonnie Garmus
Garmus, Bonnie

Bonnie Garmus is a copywriter and creative director who has worked for a wide range of clients, in the US and abroad, focusing primarily on technology, medicine, and education. She’s an open water swimmer, a rower, and mother to two pretty amazing daughters. Most recently from Seattle, she currently lives in London with her husband and her dog, 99.

Alan Garner
Garner, Alan

Alan Garner (born 1934) is a British author, who was born in Congleton, Cheshire. He is the father of Elizabeth Garner.

Elizabeth Garner
Garner, Elizabeth

Elizabeth Garner was born in Cheshire, England, and now lives in Oxford. She is the daughter of Alan Garner.

David S. Garnett
Garnett, David S.

David S. Garnett (born 1947) is a British science fiction author and editor whose novels include Cosmic Carousel, Stargonauts and Bikini Planet. He edited a paperback anthology revival of Michael Moorcock's New Worlds magazine, two Zenith anthologies of original British SF stories, and three Orbit Science Fiction Yearbooks.

Wade Garret
Garret, Wade

Born in NY, but raised in the Southern United States, Wade is married to a wonderful woman and lucky to have his first beautiful daughter. When not reading, writing or occasionally drinking at the pub, he can be found researching the latest comics or in the chair of his favorite tattoo shop. Genesis is only the beginning of Mr. Garret’s epic Kingdom Come series.

Randall Garrett
Garrett, Randall

Randall Garrett (1927–1987) was an American science fiction and fantasy author.

Terrell Garrett
Garrett, Terrell

Terrell Garrett is an author and screenwriter from rural Georgia recently transplanted to Long Beach, California. His screenplays have been included on The Hit List and The Young & Hungry List, and in 2016 he was invited to Sundance Film Festival as a Black List Cassian Elwes fellow. He was also hired by Elwes to adapt the Alistair MacLean novel, "Fear is the Key". His short fiction has appeared in The Georgia State Review and the anthology, The Ankeny Briefcase. He also co-wrote the indie comic, Wolverton: Thief of Impossible Objects. 

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Richard Garriott
Garriott, Richard

Richard Garriott de Cayeux is a video game designer, collector, and private astronaut. In 2006 Richard was awarded with two industry honors for his work in the games business: selection into The Academy of Interactive Arts and Sciences Hall of Fame and the Lifetime Achievement Award at the Game Developers Choice Awards.

Mick Garris
Garris, Mick

Mick Garris (born 1951) is an American filmmaker and screenwriter born in Santa Monica, California.

Peter Garrison
Garrison, Peter

Peter Garrison is a pseudonym of Craig Shaw Gardner.

Jeannine Garsee
Garsee, Jeannine

Jeannine Garsee is the author of Before, After, and Somebody In Between and Say the Word. She never wanted to be anything except a writer - until she fell under a strange, insidious spell and found herself in the nursing profession instead. Now in addition to writing, she works as a psychiatric nurse in an inner-city hospital.

John Garth
Garth, John

John Garth is winner of the Mythopoeic Scholarship Award for Tolkien and the Great War, acclaimed as ‘very much the best book on Tolkien’. He studied English at Oxford, worked for many years for the London Evening Standard, and is now a freelance writer, editor and researcher.

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Ray Garton
Garton, Ray

Ray Garton (born 1962) is an American author, well known for his work in horror fiction. He has written over fifty books, and in 2006 was presented with the World Horror Convention Grand Master Award.

Ray Garton has written several books under the pseudonyms of Joseph Locke and Arthur Darknell.

Michael W. Garza
Garza, Michael W.

Michael W. Garza often finds himself wondering where his inspiration will come from next and in what form his imagination will bring it to life. The outcomes regularly surprise him and it's always his ambition to amaze those curious enough to follow him and take in those results. He encourages readers to peek at his latest work as well as the material he's published in the past. He sincerely hopes that everyone will find something that astonishes, surprises, or simply scares the heck out of you.

Elizabeth Gaskell
Gaskell, Elizabeth

Elizabeth Cleghorn Gaskell, née Stevenson (1810-1865), often referred to simply as Mrs Gaskell, was a British novelist and short story writer during the Victorian era. Her novels offer a detailed portrait of the lives of many strata of society, including the very poor, and are of interest to social historians as well as lovers of literature. Gaskell was also the first to write a biography of Charlotte Bronte, The Life of Charlotte Bronte, which was published in 1857.

Jane Gaskell
Gaskell, Jane

Jane Gaskell (born 1941) is a British fantasy writer. She wrote her first novel Strange Evil, when she was 14. It was published two years later. In 1970 she received the Somerset Maugham Award for her novel A Sweet Sweet Summer (jointly with Piers Paul Read who received it for his Monk Dawson).

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Karin Rita Gastreich
Gastreich, Karin Rita

 

Karin Rita Gastreich's publications include the epic fantasy Eolyn as well as short stories in Zahir, Adventures for the Average Woman, 69 Flavors of Paranoia and A Visitor to Sandahl. She is a recipient of the Spring 2011 Andrews Forest Writer's Residency. Together with authors Terri-Lynne DeFino and Kim Vandervort, Karin runs the blog Heroines of Fantasy, dedicated to lively discussion of fantasy fiction, and especially women in fantasy fiction.

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Samuel Gately
Gately, Samuel

Samuel Gately is a writer of novels and short stories in the fantasy genre. Most have spies in them. Samuel lives in Oak Park, just outside Chicago, with his wife, daughters, and two terrifyingly fluffy dogs.

Stephen Gately
Gately, Stephen

Stephen Gately was born in 1976 in Dublin. He enjoyed phenomenal success with Boyzone in their first seven years together with over 40 million copies of their albums sold worldwide. During a break from the band, Stephen enjoyed his own solo top ten hits and starred in Joseph and The Child Catcher in London's West End. Boyzone were reunited in 2007. Stephen died at his home in Majorca in October 2010.

David Gatward
Gatward, David

David Gatward trained as a teacher and outdoor pursuits instructor before working in a number of editorial roles in publishing. His first book was published when he was just eighteen, and he is now writing a number of children's and YA fiction series to commission as well as developing his own projects. David lives in Somerset with his wife and two young sons.

A. C. Gaughen
Gaughen, A. C.

A. C. Gaughen is the author of the Scarlet novels. She serves as the Director of Girls’ Leadership for Boston GLOW, a nonprofit organization that mentors teen girls. She holds a master’s degree in creative writing from the University of St. Andrews in Scotland and is currently pursuing her master’s in education from Harvard University.

Jamila Gavin
Gavin, Jamila

Jamila Gavin (born 1941) is a British writer born in Mussoorie, India in the foothills of the Himalayas.

Her father was Indian and her mother English. She learned to describe herself as "half and half." On her website she says that from her mixed background "I inherited two rich cultures which ran side by side throughout my life, and which always made me feel I belonged to both countries".

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Richard Gavin
Gavin, Richard

Richard Gavin's work explores the realm where fear and the sacred converge. His eerie, cryptic stories have garnered high critical praise, been chosen for several volumes of Best New Horror and Year's Best Horror, and have been collected in five books, including Sylvan Dread: Tales of Pastoral Darkness and At Fear's Altar. In 2015 Richard co-edited (with Patricia Cram and Daniel A. Schulke) Penumbrae: An Occult Fiction Anthology. He has also published numerous works of esotericism and meditations on the macabre, such as The Benighted Path: Primeval Gnosis and the Monstrous Soul and The Moribund Portal: Spectral Resonance and the Numen of the Gallows. Richard dwells in the North.

Kelly Gay
Gay, Kelly

Kelly Gay is an urban fantasy author.

Kelly Gay writes urban fantasy books for young adults as Kelly Keaton.

Joshua Gaylord
Gaylord, Joshua

Joshua Gaylord grew up in Anaheim, California, and currently resides in New York City. He's the author of one previous novel, and under the pen name Alden Bell, two horror novels, including The Reapers are the Angels. He received his Ph.D. in 20th century American and British literature from NYU, and has taught both at NYU and the New School.

William Clark Gayton
Gayton, William Clark

William Clark Gayton was born in the Philippines on August 6, 1994. He is the son of William Anthony and Hildegarde Gayton. Since 1995, he was raised and is currently residing in Jacksonville, North Carolina. Other than writing his hobbies include Piano, Chess, Video Games, listening to Music, Tennis, watching movies and reading books, and hanging out with his friends. Star Wars is the most influential story to his work. He has recently graduated from Northside High School, and is currently attending college to get a Creative Writing degree.

Kathleen O'Neal Gear
Gear, Kathleen O'Neal

Kathleen O'Neal Gear (born 1954) is an American writer. Gear is a former state historian and archaeologist for Wyoming, Kansas, and Nebraska for the U.S. Department of the Interior. She has twice received the federal government's Special Advancement Award for "outstanding management" of our nation's cultural heritage. She is perhaps best known for her First North Americans series, co-authored with husband W. Michael Gear.

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W. Michael Gear
Gear, W. Michael

W. Michael Gear is an American writer, and archaeologist born in Colorado Springs, Colorado in 1955. He is perhaps best known for his First North Americans series, co-authored with wife Kathleen O'Neal Gear.

Sally Miller Gearhart
Gearhart, Sally Miller

Sally Miller Gearhart grew up in Virginia and found her first love at a women's college. After inhabiting a dark closet for twenty years, she burst onto the political scene of the San Francisco Bay Area in 1970. San Francisco State University hired her as an open lesbian and tenured her in 1974. She taught there for two decades, helping to found the school's radical Women's Studies Program and publishing three books. Scores of her articles and stories have been anthologized in feminist publications.

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Pauline Gedge
Gedge, Pauline

Pauline Gedge (born 1945) is an award-winning and bestselling Canadian novelist.

Pauline Gedge's novels are mostly historical novels, set in Ancient Egypt. Stargate is a science fiction novel, The Covenant is a contemporary horror novel, and Scroll of Saqqara incorporates some fantasy elements.

Emily Gee
Gee, Emily

Emily Gee is the daughter of famous New Zealand novelist Maurice Gee. She loves to travel and has recently visited China, North Africa and the Middle East. Thief With No Shadow is her debut novel.

Harrison Geillor
Geillor, Harrison

Harrison Geillor was born in a small three-room farm house in central MN, sometime in the middle of the twentieth century. He attended one of Minnesota's prestigious institutions of higher learning, were he obtained a degree in English. Like English majors everywhere, he want on to work in a variety of jobs that had nothing to do with books or literature. At some point in his life he decided that the best way to appreciate Minnesota was to appreciate it from afar. He splits his time between Santa Cruz and San Francisco, only returning to Minnesota for smelt fishing, and the occasional family reunion.

Roberta Gellis
Gellis, Roberta

Roberta Gellis (born 1927) is an American writer of historical fiction, historical romance, and fantasy works. She holds masters degrees in both biochemistry and medieval literature.

Many major writer of historical romance cite her as an important influence. She has collaborated with Mercedes Lackey on historical fiction.

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David Gemmell
Gemmell, David

David A. Gemmell’s first novel, Legend, was first published in 1984 and went on to become a classic. Widely regarded as the finest writer of heroic fantasy, David Gemmell lived in Sussex until his tragic death in July 2006.

Stella Gemmell
Gemmell, Stella

Stella Gemmell has a degree in politics and is a journalist. She was married to the internationally acclaimed and bestselling fantasy novelist David Gemmell and worked with him on his three 'Troy' novels, completing the final book, Troy: Fall of Kings, following his death in 2006. She lives in East Sussex and writes in what was once the dairy of 15th-century farmhouse. The City is her first solo novel.

Paul Genesse
Genesse, Paul

Paul Genesse (born 1973) is an American author.

Sonia Gensler
Gensler, Sonia

Sonia Gensler grew up in a small Tennessee town and spent her early adulthood collecting impractical degrees from various Midwestern universities. A former high school English teacher, she now writes full-time in Oklahoma. The Revenant is her first novel.

Gary Gentile
Gentile, Gary

Gary Gentile is an American author and pioneering technical diver.

Mary Gentle
Gentle, Mary

Mary Gentle is one of the world's most acclaimed writers of fantasy and science fiction; ASH, the largest single fantasy work ever – longer even than THE LORD OF THE RINGS – combines the authentic details of Bernard Cornwell and the magical storytelling of Terry Goodkind.

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Elizabeth George
George, Elizabeth

Elizabeth George is the author of more than twenty books for adults. She lives in Seattle, Washington.

J. Frederick George
George, J. Frederick

J. Frederick George is a pseudonym for George F. Jewsbury. He is a historian and writer living in France. He is the uncle of the author Neal Stephenson.

Jon George
George, Jon

Jon George is a British author.

Stephen R. George
George, Stephen R.

Stephen R. George is a Canadian author of horror fiction, suspense and dark fantasy. He writes under his own name and the pseudonyms Jack Ellis and Valerie Stephens. He has published 14 novels. His novels have been translated into Italian, Polish, Russian, and Norwegian. His short stories have appeared in a number of publications and anthologies including Cemetery Dance and the Hot Blood series. He was born in Scotland in 1959. He lives and works in Canada.

Brittany Geragotelis
Geragotelis, Brittany

Brittany Geragotelis, a former Olympic-bound gymnast and magazine editor, is a self-professed pop culture junkie turned author. Her paranormal action book Life’s a Witch received 18 million reads on the writing site Wattpad.com. What the Spell is the first published book in the series, followed by Life's a Witch and The Witch Is Back. Brittany lives in New York City with her husband, Matt, and two cats, Murray and Cohen.

Michael Gerber
Gerber, Michael

Michael Gerber (born 1969) is the author of the Barry Trotter series.

Pat Gerber
Gerber, Pat

Pat Gerber (1934–2006) was a Scottish writer and author mainly known for her children's books.

She wrote several children books, including: Volume of Clowns: Children's Poems on the Circus (1990), The Ghost of Glenmellish (2001), Stranger on the River (2002), and To Catch a Thief (2003).

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Steve Gerlach
Gerlach, Steve

Steve Gerlach (born 1971) is an Australian thriller writer. He currently lives in Melbourne, Victoria.

Shanna Germain
Germain, Shanna

Shanna Germain claims the titles of writer, editor, leximaven, girl geek, she-devil, vorpal blonde and Schrodinger’s brat. Her short stories, essays, poems, novellas and more have appeared in hundreds of books and publications, including Women Destroy Fantasy, Best American Erotica, Best Bondage Erotica, Best Erotic Romance, Best Gay Romance, Triangulation, Salon, Storyglossia and more.

Hugo Gernsback
Gernsback, Hugo

Hugo Gernsback (1884–1967), born Hugo Gernsbacher, was a Luxembourg American inventor, writer and magazine publisher, best remembered for publications that included the first science fiction magazine. His contributions to the genre as publisher were so significant that, along with H. G. Wells and Jules Verne, he is sometimes popularly called "The Father of Science Fiction"; in his honor, the annual Science Fiction Achievement awards are named the "Hugos."

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Rob Gerrand
Gerrand, Rob

Rob Gerrand runs the communications consultancy Gerrand & Associates. He is one of Australia's leading marketing and communications strategists, working in finance, telecommunications, the arts and government. His focus is on change management and repositioning organisations. Rob is Adjunct Professor of Arts at Deakin University and has won the prestigious Golden World and Golden Quill international public relations awards. He edited Transmutations, a collection of short stories, and wrote the novel Fortress.

Tess Gerritsen
Gerritsen, Tess

Internationally bestselling author Tess Gerritsen took an unusual route to a writing career. A graduate of Stanford University, Tess went on to medical school at the University of California, San Francisco, where she was awarded her M.D.

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David Gerrold
Gerrold, David

David Gerrold, born Jerrold David Friedman in 1944, is an American science fiction author.

Alison Gervais
Gervais, Alison

Alison Gervais began writing at the age of five and gained recognition by posting her work on Wattpad in 2011. She graduated from Colorado State University - Pueblo with a degree in English and published her first novel, In 27 Days, in 2017. Alison is still figuring out what else she’d like to do in life, but as for now, she plans to keep rereading Harry Potter, watching Supernatural and Law and Order: SVU, and enjoying life with her husband, their two cats Jane and Smoke, and their German Shepherd, Luna.

Simon Gervais
Gervais, Simon

Simon Gervais is a former federal agent specializing in protective operations and counterterrorism. He spent nearly twenty years in the military and in law enforcement. His assignments took him all over Europe and the Middle East. He's the New York Times and #1 Amazon bestselling author of 12 exciting thriller, one of these titles—Robert Ludlum's The Blackbriar Genesis—was written for the Robert Ludlum estate. Simon's Clayton White series is presently being adapted for TV by CBS Studios with Jerry Bruckheimer TV attached to produce. 

Richard Gessner
Gessner, Richard

Richard Gessner's fiction has been published in Air Fish: an anthology of speculative work, Rampike, Ice River, Coe Review, Another Chicago Magazine, Happy, The Act, Sein und Werden, Skidrow Penthouse, The Pannus Index, Fiction International and many other magazines. A collection, Excerpts from the Diary of a Neanderthal Dilettante & The Man in the Couch was published by Bomb Shelter Props. Gessner's drawings and paintings have appeared in Raw Vision, Courier News, Asbury Park Press, Rampike, Skidrow Penthouse, and exhibited at Pleiades Gallery, Hamilton Street Gallery, Cry Baby Gallery, The Court Gallery and the Donald B. Palmer Museum. He lives in Montclair, New Jersey.

Mark S. Geston
Geston, Mark S.

Mark Symington Geston (born 1946) is an American author of science fiction and fantasy.

Nick Gevers
Gevers, Nick

Nick Gevers is a South African science fiction editor and critic, whose work has appeared in The Washington Post Book World, Interzone,Scifi.com, SF Site, The New York Review of Science Fiction and Nova Express. He writes two monthly review columns for Locus magazine, and is editor at the British independent press, PS Publishing; he also edits the quarterly genre fiction magazine, Postscripts.

J. S. Gholson
Gholson, J. S.

J. S. Gholson is a world class seasoned traveler and writer. He graduated from George Mason University with a major in Russian & Eurasian Studies and a minor in Criminology. He’s experienced most things on this planet already, even though he’s only 24. Josh has written three fantasy novels so far with a fourth coming out later this month. He’s now with his wife Yulia, and their dog Benny, in Russia teaching English and working on novels. Mr. Gholson is blessed to write and raise awareness about Multiple Sclerosis as he has that himself. His interests include history, reading, and video games.

Amitav Ghosh
Ghosh, Amitav

Amitav Ghosh (born 1956), is an Indian-Bengali author known for his work in the English language.

Maria Giakaniki
Giakaniki, Maria

Maria Giakaniki is an independent scholar and editor-in-chief of Ars Nocturna, a small publishing house in Athens that focuses on Gothic fiction. She has compiled and co-translated Gothic Tales by Victorian Women Writers and Gothic Tales by Modern Women Writers.

Denise Giardina
Giardina, Denise

Denise Giardina is the author of Storming Heaven, Emily's Ghost, and Saints and Villains, which won the Boston Book Review Prize. She is an ordained deacon in the Episcopal Church and lives in Charleston, West Virginia.

Alan Gibbons
Gibbons, Alan

Alan Gibbons is a full-time writer and a visiting speaker and lecturer at schools, colleges and literary events nationwide, including the major book festivals. Alan has recently embarked on a high-profile, nationwide campaign to champion libraries and librarianship and to re-evaluate government commitment to educational spending. He lives in Liverpool with his wife and four children.

Dave Gibbons
Gibbons, Dave

Dave Gibbons (born 1949) is an English comic book artist, writer and sometime letterer. He is best known for his collaborations with writer Alan Moore, which include the miniseries Watchmen and the Superman story "For the Man Who Has Everything". He also was an artist for the UK anthology 2000 AD, for which he contributed a large body of work from its first issue in 1977.

Abigail Gibbs
Gibbs, Abigail

Abigail Gibbs was born and raised in deepest, darkest Devon. She is currently studying for a BA in English at the University of Oxford and considers herself a professional student, as the real world is yet to catch up with her. Her greatest fear is blood and she is a great advocate of vegetarianism, which logically led to the writing of her first novel, Dinner With A Vampire. At age fifteen, she began posting serially online under the pseudonym Canse12, and after three years in the internet limelight, set her sights towards total world domination. She splits her time between her studies, stories and family, and uses coffee to survive all three.

Stuart Gibbs
Gibbs, Stuart

A few interesting things that Stuart Gibbs has done:

Worked at a zoo

Researched capybaras (the world's largest rodents)

Climbed Mount Kilimanjaro

Cage dived with great white sharks

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Gary Gibson
Gibson, Gary

Gary Gibson is one of the UK's leading authors of hard science fiction, space opera and post-apocalyptic fiction with a career stretching over fifteen years and twelve books, including Stealing Light, Final Days and most recently Extinction Game, which received the coveted "starred review" from Publisher's Weekly.

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Julia Gibson
Gibson, Julia

Julia Mary Gibson was born the child of radical activist poets in the time of the Freedom Rides and the Vietnam War. She grew up to be a communard, welfare mother, waitress, secretary, visual effects producer, and mentor to unwed teens. She lives in sight of the Hollywood sign in California. Copper Magic is her first novel.

Marley Gibson
Gibson, Marley

Marley Gibson grew up in a southern town very much like her fictional Radisson. She never saw any ghosts growing up – that she knows of – although she has been on a few ghost hunts recently with the famed New England Ghost Project and has gotten some verrrrrry interesting pictures. Marley is a member of the New England Romance Writers of America (RWA) and the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators. She is the creator and founder of Chick Lit Writers RWA. She lives in the Boston area with her best friend, personal webmaster, and hubby, Mike.

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S.T. Gibson
Gibson, S.T.

S.T. Gibson is a poet, author, and village wise woman in training.

She holds a Bachelors degree in Creative Writing from the University of North Carolina at Asheville, and a Masters of Theological Studies from Princeton Theological Seminary.

Sean Gibson
Gibson, Sean

Sean Gibson is not a professional mini biography writer (if he were, this would be much more compelling). Instead, he’s a marketing professional by day, hangs out with his amazing wife, son, and daughter by night, and writes somewhere in between. He holds a BA in English Literature from Ohio Wesleyan University and an MBA from the Kelley School of Business at Indiana University, but he really wishes he had been able to matriculate at Hogwarts (he would have been in Hufflepuff for sure). Sean is a fan of sports teams from Detroit, a distressingly large number of bands that rose to prominence in the 1980s, and writing in the third person. He currently resides in Northern Virginia, and, given how much he hates moving, and given that his house has an awesome library, is likely to remain there for some time.

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William Gibson
Gibson, William

William Gibson (born 1948) is an American-Canadian writer who has been called the ”noir prophet” of the cyberpunk subgenre of science fiction. Gibson coined the term ”cyberspace” in his short story ”Burning Chrome” and later popularized the concept in his debut novel, Neuromancer (1984). In envisaging cyberspace, Gibson created an iconography for the information age before the ubiquity of the Internet in the 1990s.

Melanie Gideon
Gideon, Melanie

Melanie Gideon was born and raised in Rhode Island. She now lives in the Bay Area with her husband and son.

Martin J. Gidron
Gidron, Martin J.

Martin J. Gidron grew up in the Philadelphia area and graduated from the University of Chicago in 1991 with a B.A. in English Language and Literature. He lived in Israel for six years, returning to the United States in 1997. He is married with two children and lives in Maryland, where he works as a journalist. Gidron's poetry has appeared in Voices Israel, Jewish Currents, and Dragonfly: East-West Haiku Quarterly. A short story, The Tallis, has been published in Jewish Currents.

Adam Gidwitz
Gidwitz, Adam

Adam Gidwitz grew up in Baltimore. Now he lives in Brooklyn and teaches kids large and slightly less large at Saint Ann's School. Adam only writes about what he's experienced personally. So, while all of the strange, hilarious, and frightening things in A Tale Dark and Grimm really did happen to Hansel and Gretel, they also happened to Adam. Of course, if you've ever had a childhood, they've probably happened to you, too.

Kerstin Gier
Gier, Kerstin

Kerstin Gier (born 1966) is a German author of novels for adults and young adults.

Jennifer Giesbrecht
Giesbrecht, Jennifer

Jennifer Giesbrecht is a native of Halifax, Nova Scotia where she earned an undergraduate degree in History, spent her formative years a professional street performer, and developed a deep and reverent respect for the ocean. She currently works as a game writer for What Pumpkin Studios. In 2013 she attended the Clarion West Writers Workshop. Her work has appeared in Nightmare MagazineXIII: 'Stories of Resurrection'Apex, and Imaginarium: The Best of Canadian Speculative Fiction. She lives in a quaint, historic neighbourhood with two of her best friends and five cats. The Monster of Elendhaven is her first book.

Nick Gifford
Gifford, Nick

Nick Gifford is a pseudonym of Keith Brooke.

Greg F. Gifune
Gifune, Greg F.

Greg F. Gifune (born 1963) is a critically acclaimed American horror author, the recipient of multiple Bram Stoker Award and International Horror Guild Award nominations in addition to one for the British Fantasy Award.

Colin Gigl
Gigl, Colin

Colin Gigl is a graduate of Trinity College with degrees in creative writing and computer science (no, he’s not quite sure how that happened, either). He currently works at a start-up in New York and lives with his wife in New Jersey.

Peter Giglio
Giglio, Peter

An active member of the Horror Writers Association and the International Thriller Writers, Peter Giglio is the author of five novels, four novellas, and his short fiction can be found in several books, including two comprehensive genre anthologies edited by New York Times Bestselling author John Skipp. With co-writer Scott Bradley, Peter is actively shopping a feature-length screen adaptation of Joe R. Lansdale's "The Night They Missed the Horror Show," and Sunfall Manor, one of Giglio's novellas, is currently under option with a screenwriting team based in Los Angeles. Giglio lives on the Georgia coast with his fiancé and frequent collaborator, Shannon Michaels, and he always has time for readers at www.petergiglio.com.

Zoe Gilbert
Gilbert, Zoe

Zoe Gilbert is a fiction writer based in London, UK. Folk (Bloomsbury, February 2018) is her first novel. Her short stories have been published in anthologies and journals around the world, and have won prizes including the Costa Short Story Award 2014. She teaches creative writing at London Lit Lab and for other organisations including the British Library, Arvon Foundation and Mslexia, and is an associate editor at The Word Factory. She is completing a PhD on folk tales in contemporary fiction, and working on her next novel, all about woods.

R. Murray Gilchrist
Gilchrist, R. Murray

Robert Murray Gilchrist (1867 – 1917) was an English novelist and author of regional interest books about the Peak District of north central England. He is best known today for his decadent and Gothic short fiction.

During his lifetime he published some 100 short stories, 22 novels, six-story collections, and four non-fiction books.

Jeff Giles
Giles, Jeff

Jeff Giles grew up in Cohasset, Massachusetts. Most recently, he was Deputy Managing Editor of Entertainment Weekly, where he oversaw all coverage of movies and books, including the magazine’s championing of YA fiction. Jeff has written for Rolling Stone and The New York Times Books Review. He also co-authored The Terrorist's Son, a nonfiction book that won an Alex award from the American Library Association. While reporting on the Lord of the Rings movies for Newsweek, Jeff was invited to be an extra in “The Return of the King.” He played a Rohan soldier, and — because he didn’t have a beard or mustache — they glued yak hair to his face. Jeff lives with his family in Montana.

Roy Gill
Gill, Roy

Roy’s first novel, Daemon Parallel, was shortlisted for both the Kelpies and the Sceptre prize. A sequel, Werewolf Parallel, completes a duology that’s been praised as “a Scottish Neverwhere“.

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Marc D. Giller
Giller, Marc D.

Marc D. Giller lives in Florida with his wife and two children. A graduate of Texas A&M University, he has worked as a computer trainer, a television producer, and for the past four years as an information systems manager for a Florida law firm.

Jonathan C. Gillespie
Gillespie, Jonathan C.

Jonathan C. Gillespie has been writing genre fiction for over a decade. His stories have been published in a variety of outlets on three continents, including “The Drabblecast”, “Spinetingler Magazine”, and “Murky Depths”, and have been nominated for a number of awards.

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Rachel Gillig
Gillig, Rachel

Rachel Gillig was born and raised on the California coast. She is a writer and a teacher, with a B.A. in Literary Theory and Criticism from UC Davis. If she is not ensconced in fleece blankets dreaming up her next novel, Rachel is out walking with her husband and their poodle, Wally, in whimsical San Luis Obispo County, where she lives.

ElizaBeth Gilligan
Gilligan, ElizaBeth

ElizaBeth Gilligan is an American fantasy author.

 

Alexis A. Gilliland
Gilliland, Alexis A.

Alexis Arnaldus Gilliland (born 1931) is an American science fiction and fantasy author. He's also a cartoonist.

 

Raquel Vasquez Gilliland
Gilliland, Raquel Vasquez

Raquel Vasquez Gilliland is a Mexican American poet, novelist, and painter. She received an MFA in poetry from the University of Alaska, Anchorage in 2017. She’s most inspired by fog and seeds and the lineages of all things. When not writing, Raquel tells stories to her plants and they tell her stories back. She lives in Tennessee with her beloved family and mountains. Raquel has published two books of poetry. Sia Martinez and the Moonlit Beginning of Everything is her first novel.

Anthony Gillis
Gillis, Anthony

The child of hippie adventurer parents, Anthony Gillis lived on his father's sailboat, an island off the coast of Costa Rica, a converted school bus, and a ramshackle house in Ft. Lauderdale with a leaky roof and a sand yard, before settling down to something resembling a normal childhood. Something in all that made him decide to enlist and serve in the United States Air Force, and then earn a bachelor's degree in history and an MBA. He has worked in accounting and finance since the early 1990s, though that may soon change as his writing takes off.

Inez Haynes Gillmore
Gillmore, Inez Haynes

Inez Haynes Irwin (1873–1970) was an American feminist author, journalist, member of the National Women's Party, and president of the Authors Guild. Many of her works were published under her former name Inez Haynes Gillmore. She wrote over 40 books and was active in the suffragist movement in the early 1900s. Irwin was a "rebellious and daring woman", but referred to herself as "the most timid of created beings". She died at the age of 97.

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Carolyn Ives Gilman
Gilman, Carolyn Ives

Carolyn Ives Gilman is a Nebula and Hugo Award-nominated writer of science fiction and fantasy. Her novels include Halfway Human and the two-volume novel Isles of the Forsaken and Ison of the Isles. Her short fiction appears in many Best of the Year collections and has been translated into seven languages. She lives in Washington, D.C. and works for the National Museum of the American Indian.

Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Gilman, Charlotte Perkins

Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860–1935) was a prominent American sociologist, novelist, writer of short stories, poetry, and nonfiction, and a lecturer for social reform. She was a utopian feminist during a time when her accomplishments were exceptional for women, and she served as a role model for future generations of feminists because of her unorthodox concepts and lifestyle. Her best remembered work today is her semi-autobiographical short story The Yellow Wallpaper which she wrote after a severe bout of postpartum psychosis.

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Felix Gilman
Gilman, Felix

Felix Gilman (born 1974) is an American author. Thunderer is his first novel.

Greer Gilman
Gilman, Greer

Greer Gilman is the author of the novel Moonwise, which won the Crawford Award and was shortlisted for the James Tiptree, Jr. and Mythopoeic awards, as well as of the World Fantasy Award-winning "A Crowd of Bone." She lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where she works as a librarian in the Harvard University library.

Laura Anne Gilman
Gilman, Laura Anne

Laura Anne Gilman (born 1967) is an American author.

Sarah Gilman
Gilman, Sarah

Sarah Gilman started her first novel in third grade. She never finished that story, but never gave up the dream. Her fascination with wings also began at that age, when images of the ancient Egyptian goddess Isis captured her imagination and never let go. Now a paranormal romance writer, she employs her love of writing to bring the allure of winged creatures to the pages of her novels. Sarah lives in Vermont with her supportive husband and two spoiled cats.

Jane Gilmartin
Gilmartin, Jane

Jane Gilmartin has been a news reporter and editor for several small-town weekly papers and enjoyed a brief but exciting stint as a rock music journalist. A bucket list review just before she turned 50 set her on the path to fiction writing. Also checked off that list: an accidental singing career, attending a Star Trek convention, and getting a hug from David Bowie. She lives in her hometown of Hingham, Massachusetts, with a human family, an elderly cat, and the best dog ever.

Anthony Gilmore
Gilmore, Anthony

Anthony Gilmore is a pen name of Harry Bates.

Maeve Gilmore
Gilmore, Maeve

Maeve Gilmore (1917-83) was a writer and painter. She married Mervyn Peake in 1937. She is the author of A World Away: Memoir of Mervyn Peake.

Michael Gilwood
Gilwood, Michael

Photo used by permission from the author.

Victor Gischler
Gischler, Victor

Victor Gischler is an American author of hard-boiled crime fiction.

Jennifer Givhan
Givhan, Jennifer

Jenn Givhan, a National Endowment for the Arts and PEN/Rosenthal Emerging Voices fellow, is a Mexican-American writer and activist from the Southwestern desert.

She is the author of four full-length collections: Landscape with Headless Mama (2015 Pleiades Editors’ Prize), Protection Spell (2016 Miller Williams Poetry Prize Series edited by Billy Collins), Girl with Death Mask (2017 Blue Light Books Prize chosen by Ross Gay), and Rosa’s Einstein (Camino Del Sol Poetry Series, forthcoming 2019), and the chapbooks: Lifeline (Glass Poetry Press) and The Daughter’s Curse (Yellow Flag Press).

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Max Gladstone
Gladstone, Max

Max Gladstone went to Yale, where he wrote a short story that became a finalist in the Writers of the Future competition. He lives in Boston, Massachusetts.

Edmund Glasby
Glasby, Edmund

As penance for past deeds, Edmund Glasby grew up in Morecambe and studied Egyptian Archaeology at University College London and Archaeology and Anthropology at Oxford - Morecambe, which has more than its share of the strange and unsavoury, provided him with a better education. After turning his back on academia, he now writes in the genres of dark fantasy and supernatural thriller, having been brought up on horror; his father was John S. Glasby the prolific supernatural fiction writer.

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Mechthild Gläser
Gläser, Mechthild

Mechthild Gläser is an award-winning author in her native Germany. The Book Jumper was her first book to be translated into English.

Ellen Glasgow
Glasgow, Ellen

Ellen Anderson Gholson Glasgow (1873–1945) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning American novelist who portrayed the changing world of the contemporary South.

Cate Glass
Glass, Cate

Cate Glass is the pseudonym of Carol Berg.

Cate Glass was born and raised in Texas, and now resides in the foothills of the Colorado Rockies with her husband and three sons.

Isabel Glass
Glass, Isabel

Isabel Glass is a pseudonym of Lisa Goldstein.

Jenna Glass
Glass, Jenna

Jenna Glass wrote her first book - an "autobiography" - when she was in the fifth grade. She began writing in earnest while in college and proceeded to collect a dizzying array of rejections for her first seventeen novels. Nevertheless, she persisted, and her eighteenth novel became her first commercial sale. Within a few years, Glass became a full-time writer and has never looked back. She has published more than twenty novels under various names. The Women's War marks her first foray into epic fantasy.

Lola Glass
Glass, Lola

Hi, I’m Lola! I’m a book lover with a *slight* romance obsession. My books are always steamy, new-adult male/female reads, with everything from romantasy standalones to werewolf romance trilogies. And there is ALWAYS a happily ever after.

Peter Glassborow
Glassborow, Peter

Born in London Peter wrote his first short story when he was thirteen. His father told him it was rubbish, which it was. However the writing bug had seized him and he wanted to be a published writer. Roll on fifty years or so and now he is living in New Zealand after his family emigrated there. He has had many jobs including twenty years in the NZ army, and writing stories is his main hobby.

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Shira Glassman
Glassman, Shira

Shira Glassman is a bisexual Jewish violinist passionately inspired by German and French opera and Agatha Christie novels.

She and her agender same-sex spouse live in north central Florida, where the alligators are mostly harmless because they're too lazy to be bothered.

Thomas Glavinic
Glavinic, Thomas

Thomas Glavinic (born 1972) is an Austrian writer. With Kathrin Röggla and Daniel Kehlmann, he is among other young Austrian authors being perceived as significantly shaping the literary discussion in Austria.

Colleen Gleason
Gleason, Colleen

Colleen Gleason is an American writer. She lives near Ann Arbor, Michigan with her husband and children. She has a degree in English and a MBA from the University of Michigan. She started writing in primary school and wrote nine complete stories before selling the first book of her The Gardella Vampire Chronicles series to a division of Penguin Books, which published it in January 2007.

Eleanor Glewwe
Glewwe, Eleanor

Eleanor Glewwe is a lover of languages, an avid cellist, and a recent graduate of Swarthmore College. Sparkers is her first novel, a project she began when she was in high school. She lives in Minneapolis.

Debi Gliori
Gliori, Debi

Debi Gliori (born 1959) is a Scottish author and illustrator of children's books.

Xeno Glitz
Glitz, Xeno

Allegedly born, Xeno Glitz was the blighted spawn of Toil and Want. Emerging from the ravaged wasteland of scornful disregard with none but tenacious conviction and gritty determination as his closest allies, this scarred by-product has travelled from afar to show the uninitiated that there are diamonds in this dirt.

Molly Gloss
Gloss, Molly

Molly Gloss is a fourth-generation Oregonian who lives in Portland.

Her novel The Jump-Off Creek was a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award for American Fiction, and a winner of both the Pacific Northwest Booksellers Award and the Oregon Book Award. In 1996 Molly was a recipient of a Whiting Writers Award.

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Nicole Glover
Glover, Nicole

Nicole Glover works as a UX Researcher. A bike commuter and running enthusiast, she enjoys baking and figuring out what book to read next. The Conductors is her debut novel.

Dmitry Glukhovsky
Glukhovsky, Dmitry

Dmitry Glukhovsky is a Journalism and Foreign Relations graduate of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem. He won the Encouragement Award of the European Science Fiction Society in 2007. In addition to his native Russian, he speaks English, French, German, Hebrew and Spanish.

Donald F. Glut
Glut, Donald F.

Donald F. Glut (born 1944) is an American writer, motion picture director, screenwriter, amateur paleontologist, musician and actor. He is perhaps best known for writing the novelization of the second Star Wars film, The Empire Strikes Back.

A. A. Glynn
Glynn, A. A.

A. A. Glynn has used these pseudonyms: Tony Glynn and John E. Muller.

Connie Glynn
Glynn, Connie

Connie Glynn has always loved writing, and wrote her first story when she was six with her mum at a typewriter acting as the scribe. She also discovered a love of performing from a young age and attended Guildhall drama classes as a teenager. This passion for stories led Connie to a degree in film theory, and it was at university that Connie started her hugely successful YouTube channel, where she vlogs about her passions, including comics, cartoons, impressions, video games, cosplay, and all things cute.

Rumer Godden
Godden, Rumer

Margaret Rumer Godden OBE (1907–1998) was an English author of over 60 fiction and nonfiction books written under the name of Rumer Godden. A few of her works were co-written by her sister, Jon Godden, who wrote several novels on her own. These include Two Under the Indian Sun, a memoir of the Goddens' childhood in a region of India that is now part of Bangladesh.

Daniel Godfrey
Godfrey, Daniel

Daniel Godfrey has had several short stories published, including in My Weekly and Writers’ Forum, and is a dedicated reader of SF and historical fiction. He studied geography at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and gained an MSc from Leeds in transport planning. He lives in Derbyshire.

Shea Godfrey
Godfrey, Shea

Shea Godfrey is an artist and writer working and living in the Midwest. While her formal education is in journalism and photography, she has spent most of her career thus far in 3D Animation and Design.

D. A. Godwin
Godwin, D. A.

David A. Godwin was born in Tennessee, during a simpler era when daydreaming was still allowed. Though successful in a number of more practical pursuits he prefers to spend his time exploring made-up worlds filled with magical creatures and endless possibilities, and is often observed in deep conversation with his imaginary friends.

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Francis Godwin
Godwin, Francis

Francis Godwin (1562–1633) was an English divine, Bishop of Llandaff and of Hereford.

Parke Godwin
Godwin, Parke

Parke Godwin (born 1929) is an American author.

Eric Goebelbecker
Goebelbecker, Eric

Eric is the author of *Shadows of the Past*, the first book in an ongoing series about the aftermath of the Martin invasion in the War of the Worlds. He's currently working on the next book, *Clouds in the Future*, as well as a few fantasy stories that he won't talk about yet.

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Tara Goedjen
Goedjen, Tara

Tara Goedjen grew up in the South and has a Master of Fine Arts from the University of Alabama. She's lived on the island of Guam, the coast of Australia, and all across the US, and she's currently based in a rainy corner of Washington, where she loves writing about anything mysterious.

T. M. Goeglein
Goeglein, T. M.

Ted (T.M.) Goeglein is the author of the Young Adult Cold Fury series from G.P. Putnam’s Sons/Penguin. Cold Fury was published in July ‘12 and the second installment, Flicker & Burn, was published in August ‘13. The final book in the series, Embers & Ash, was published on July 10, 2014. He began his career as a writer of print and television ads for a host of advertising and media companies. As a screenwriter, he produced original film and television scripts and worked as a script doctor for several L.A. production companies. He was an original contributor to the Huffington Post 'Living' section, as well. He earned degrees in Journalism and World History and has published numerous short stories. He lives in Chicago with wife and two children.

Ari Goelman
Goelman, Ari

Ari Goelman is the author of the middle-grade novel The Path of Names. He lives in Vancouver, British Columbia, with his family.

K. L. Going
Going, K. L.

Kelly Louise Going (born 1973), known by her byline KL Going, is an American author most widely known for her Michael L. Printz Award Honor winning Young Adult novel Fat Kid Rules the World.

Namita Gokhale
Gokhale, Namita

Namita Gokhale (born 1956) is an Indian writer.

H. L. Gold
Gold, H. L.

Horace Leonard Gold (1914–1996) was a science fiction writer and editor. Born in Canada, Gold moved to the United States at the age of two. He was most noted for bringing an innovative and fresh approach to science fiction while he was the editor of Galaxy Science Fiction, and also wrote briefly for DC Comics.

Lee Goldberg
Goldberg, Lee

Lee Goldberg is a TV writer and producer with a wide-ranging career that spans genres from sci-fi (SeaQuest) to comedy (Monk) to whodunits (Diagnosis Murder). He’s written for shows like Baywatch, The Glades, Martial Law, and She-Wolf of London, earning two Edgar Award nominations for his work.

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Che Golden
Golden, Che

Che Golden spent her childhood between Blarney, Co Cork and London. She is a graduate of the Bath Spa Creative Writing course and worked for a number of years as a journalist and senior reporter in Dublin before running her own Irish ezine. Aside from writing, Che is absolutely passionate about horses and has recently bought a Highland Pony for her two children.

Christie Golden
Golden, Christie

Christie Golden (born 1963) is an award winning author who lives in Denver, Colorado, United States.

She also writes under the pseudonym of Jadrien Bell.

Christopher Golden
Golden, Christopher

Christopher Golden is the New York Times bestselling, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of such novels as Road of Bones, Ararat, Snowblind, and Red Hands. With Mike Mignola, he is the co-creator of the Outerverse comic book universe, including such series as Baltimore, Joe Golem: Occult Detective, and Lady Baltimore. As an editor, he has worked on the short story anthologies Seize the Night, Dark Cities, and The New Dead, among others, and he has also written and co-written comic books, video games, screenplays, and a network television pilot. In 2015 he founded the popular Merrimack Valley Halloween Book Festival.

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Kate Golden
Golden, Kate

Kate Golden is the author of upcoming debut novel, A DAWN OF ONYX. She lives in Los Angeles and is an avid book reader, movie fanatic, and functioning puzzle addict. An embarrassing LA cliché, she likes to hike, brunch, and go to the flea market with her partner and puppy.

Raya Golden
Golden, Raya

Raya Golden was born in New York City, and has slowly made her way westward across the United States. She graduated from the Academy of Art University in San Francisco, focusing on traditional and digital illustration. Her first graphic novel, Meathouse Man - an adaptation of George R. R. Martin's short story of the same name - was nominated for a Hugo Award for Best Graphic Novel in 2014. She currently lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico

Dave Golder
Golder, Dave

Dave Golder (chapter 5) is a former editor of SFX magazine (which he helped to launch), SFX.co.uk and Comic Heroes magazine, but he first began writing professionally about science fiction with a regular feature in Your Sinclair called The Killer Kolumn From Outer Space. He has also written for various gaming magazines despite only ever having finished two games completely. And one of those was Kung Fu Panda. He now works freelance and is pretending to write a novel.

Stephen Goldin
Goldin, Stephen

Stephen Charles Goldin (born 1947) is an American science fiction and fantasy author.

William Golding
Golding, William

Sir William Gerald Golding (1911–1993) was a British novelist, poet, playwright and Nobel Prize for Literature laureate, best known for his novel Lord of the Flies. He was also awarded the Booker Prize for literature in 1980 for his novel Rites of Passage, the first book of the trilogy To the Ends of the Earth.

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William Goldman
Goldman, William

William Goldman (1931-2018) was an American novelist, playwright, and screenwriter. He first came to prominence in the 1950s as a novelist, before turning to screenwriting. He won two Academy Awards for his screenplays, first for the western Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969) and again for All the President's Men (1976). Both films starred Robert Redford.

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Arlene Golds
Golds, Arlene

Arlene Golds is a resident of Riverside, California, where she has lived with her husband and two children since 1985. She was first introduced to fantasy and science fiction when she was completing her MA at UCLA, and has enjoyed losing herself in other worlds ever since. Ms. Golds presently teaches high school English with an emphasis on American Literature. From Dream to Dream is her first novel.

Alan Goldsher
Goldsher, Alan

Alan Goldsher is an author and a musician.

Abby Goldsmith
Goldsmith, Abby

Abby Goldsmith is the author of the Torth series, which starts with MAJORITY. Published by Podium and performed by George Newbern, the epic sci-fi series was originally serialized on Wattpad and Royal Road with over 750,000 views.

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Lisa Goldstein
Goldstein, Lisa

Lisa Goldstein is a Nebula, Hugo, and World Fantasy Award nominated fantasy and science fiction writer. Her 1982 novel The Red Magician won the American Book Award for best paperback novel. Her work is regarded as an example of literary fantasy. Lisa Goldstein lives in a 90-year-old house in Oakland with her husband Doug and her dog Spark.

Lori Goldstein
Goldstein, Lori

Lori Goldstein was born into an Italian-Irish family and raised in a small town on the New Jersey shore. A former journalist, she currently lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts, with her husband. Becoming Jinn is her first novel. Follow @loriagoldstein on Twitter.

David L. Golemon
Golemon, David L.

David L. Golemon makes his home in New York.

Agnes Gomillion
Gomillion, Agnes

Agnes is a speaker and writer based in Atlanta, Georgia, where she lives with her husband and son. Homegrown in the Sunshine State, Agnes studied English Literature at the University of Florida before transitioning to Levin College of Law, where she earned both a Juris Doctorate and Legal Master degree. She's a voracious reader of the African-American literary canon and a dedicated advocate for marginalized people everywhere.

Chloe Gong
Gong, Chloe

Chloe Gong is a student at the University of Pennsylvania, studying English and international relations. During her breaks, she’s either at home in New Zealand or visiting her many relatives in Shanghai. Chloe has been known to mysteriously appear when “Romeo and Juliet is one of Shakespeare’s best plays and doesn’t deserve its slander in pop culture” is chanted into a mirror three times.

Nicoli Gonnella
Gonnella, Nicoli

Nicoli Gonnella spent his formative years atop a mountain, breathing deep of the world energy and expelling impurities from his soul. Also he went to school and stuff. He always wrote but now he's abandoned everything to do it full time. Readers give him strength, spirit bomb style, and there's no telling how strong he will become. This isn't even his final form.

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J. F. Gonzalez
Gonzalez, J. F.

Jesus F. Gonzalez is best known as an author, primarily of horror fiction (writing under the pseudonym J. F. Gonzalez). He has written many notable novels and has done collaborations with Bram Stoker Award winners Mike Oliveri and Brian Keene. His novel Survivor has been optioned to be filmed by Chesapeake Films, and Clickers has been optioned by Cooked Goose Productions.

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Michael Paul Gonzalez
Gonzalez, Michael Paul

Michael Paul Gonzalez lives and writes in Los Angeles. He is the editor at ThunderDomeMag.com, an online lit zine and small press. He is at work on his next novel as you read this. Seriously. He probably just rattled off a really amazing chapter, and someday you'll read it and think back to this moment, and exhale.

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Cody Goodfellow
Goodfellow, Cody

Cody Goodfellow has written five novels and three collections. He wrote, co-produced, and scored the short Lovecraftian hygiene film Stay at Home Dad, which can be viewed on YouTube. He is also director of the H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival–San Pedro, and co-founder of Perilous Press, an occasional micropublisher of modern cosmic horror.

Terry Goodkind
Goodkind, Terry

Terry Goodkind (1948–2020) was an American writer. He was known for the epic fantasy series The Sword of Truth as well as the contemporary suspense novel The Law of Nines (2009), which has ties to his fantasy series. The Sword of Truth series sold 25 million copies worldwide and was translated into more than 20 languages. Additionally, it was adapted into a television series called Legend of the Seeker, which premiered on November 1, 2008, and ran for two seasons, ending in May 2010.

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Ellen Goodlett
Goodlett, Ellen
 

Ellen Goodlett is the author of several science fiction short stories, a comic book collaborator, and young adult novelist. A former New Yorker, she is currently traveling the world with 79 other digital nomads, living in a different country every month. Traveling provides a lot of inspiration for her fantasy worlds.

Alison Goodman
Goodman, Alison

Alison Goodman (born 1966) is an Australian author.

 

Carol Goodman
Goodman, Carol

Carol Goodman is the author of The Lake of Dead Languages, The Seduction of Water, The Drowning Tree, The Ghost Orchid, The Sonnet Lover, and The Night Villa. The Seduction of Water won the Hammett Prize, and others of her novels have been nominated for the Dublin/IMPAC Award and the Mary Higgins Clark Award. Her fiction has been translated into eight languages. She lives in New York State with her family.

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David A. Goodman
Goodman, David A.

David A. Goodman has spent the last 26 years writing for television. His credits include The Golden Girls, Star Trek: Enterprise, Futurama (where he wrote the Nebula Award nominated Star Trek homage "Where No Fan Has Gone Before"), and Family Guy where he was head writer for six years. He is the author of Star Trek Federation: The First 150 Years. He lives in Pacific Palisades, CA with his family.

W. L. Goodwater
Goodwater, W. L.

W. L. Goodwater lives with his wife and son on the coast. He designs software, teaches fencing, and writes novels - though not necessarily in that order. Breach is his debut novel.

Harriet Goodwin
Goodwin, Harriet

Harriet Goodwin read medieval English at Oxford University before training as a professional singer. She sang and toured with a number of acclaimed ensembles, and after the birth of her fourth child she had a vivid dream about a boy who fell through the surface of the Earth into the Underworld – thus the novel (The Boy Who Fell Down Exit 43) was born. Harriet lives in Staffordshire with her family.

Kathleen Ann Goonan
Goonan, Kathleen Ann

Kathleen Ann Goonan (born 1952) is an American science fiction writer. Several of her books have been nominated for the Nebula Award. Her debut novel Queen City Jazz was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year, and her most recent novel In War Times was chosen by the American Library Association as Best Science Fiction Novel for their 2008 reading list. In July of 2008, In War Times won the John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Science Fiction Novel.

Adam Gopnik
Gopnik, Adam

Adam Gopnik (born 1956) is an American writer, essayist and commentator. He is best known as a staff writer for The New Yorker – to which he has contributed non-fiction, fiction, memoir and criticism – and as the author of the essay collection Paris to the Moon, an account of five years that Gopnik, his wife Martha, and son Luke, spent in the French capital.

Alex Gordon
Gordon, Alex

Alex Gordon, author of the supernatural thriller Gideon, was born in the Northeast, grew up in the South, and now resides in the Midwest. She is currently developing another thriller, and is having too much fun doing research. When she isn’t working, she enjoys watching sports and old movies, running, and the company of dogs. She dreams of someday adding the Pacific Northwest to the list of regions where she has lived. And maybe the south of France.

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Frances Gordon
Gordon, Frances

Frances Gordon is a pseudonym of Bridget Wood.

Jay Gordon
Gordon, Jay

Jay Gordon was born in New York. He worked as a business programmer before becoming a network management specialist. In New Jersey he founded an independent consulting firm building corporate network and technology systems. The Hickory Staff was Jay Gordon's first work of fiction.

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John Gordon
Gordon, John

John (Jack) William Gordon (19 November 1925 – 20 November 2017) was an English writer of young-adult supernatural fiction. He wrote sixteen fantasy novels including The Giant Under the Snow, four short story collections, over fifty short stories, and a teenage memoir.

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Stuart Gordon
Gordon, Stuart

Richard Alexander Steuart Gordon (1947–2009) was a Scottish author born in Banff, Scotland who wrote numerous science fiction novels, encyclopedias, and travel guides. Gordon's novels are noted for their mix of historical fact and creative fictionalized events.

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Ed Gorman
Gorman, Ed

Ed Gorman (born 1941) is an award winning American author best known for his crime and mystery fiction.

He has written under several pseudonyms including E. J. Gorman and Daniel Ransom. He won a Spur Award for Best Short Fiction for his short story "The Face" in 1992. His fiction collection Cages was nominated for the 1995 Bram Stoker Award for Best Fiction Collection. His collection The Dark Fantastic was nominated for the same award in 2001.

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Genevieve Gornichec
Gornichec, Genevieve

Genevieve Gornichec earned her degree in history from The Ohio State University, but she got as close to majoring in Vikings as she possibly could, and her study of the Norse myths and Icelandic sagas became her writing inspiration. She lives in Cleveland, Ohio. The Witch's Heart is her debut novel.

Angélica Gorodischer
Gorodischer, Angélica

Angélica Gorodischer (born 1928) is an Argentine author.

Gary Goshgarian
Goshgarian, Gary

Gary Goshgarian is a pseudonym of Gary Braver.

James Goss
Goss, James

James Goss has written three Torchwood novels, a Doctor Who novel and two radio plays. He won Best Audiobook 2010 and his books Dead of Winter and First Born were both nominated for the 2012 British Fantasy Awards. He is currently novelising Douglas Adams' City of Death, originally a Doctor Who script written by Douglas Adams. Haterz will be his independent debut.

Theodora Goss
Goss, Theodora

Theodora Goss is a Hungarian American writer of fantasy short stories. Her stories have been nominated for major awards: "Pip and the Fairies" for the Nebula Award in 2007, and "The Wings of Meister Wilhelm" was nominated for the 2005 World Fantasy Award for Best Short Fiction. She won the 2004 Rhysling Award for Best Long Poem for "Octavia is Lost in the Hall of Masks." Her collection In the Forest of Forgetting was published in 2006 by Prime Books.

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Phyllis Gotlieb
Gotlieb, Phyllis

Phyllis Fay Gotlieb (1926–2009) was a Canadian science fiction novelist and poet.

The Sunburst Award is named for Phyllis Gotlieb's first novel, Sunburst.

Phyllis Gotlieb won the Aurora Award for Best Novel in 1982 for her novel A Judgement of Dragons.

Hiromi Goto
Goto, Hiromi

Hiromi Goto (born 1966) is a Canadian novelist.

Born in Chiba Prefecture, Japan, her family emigrated to Canada in 1969, settling in British Columbia. She studied at the University of Calgary and now lives in Burnaby, British Columbia.

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Felix C. Gotschalk
Gotschalk, Felix C.

Felix C. Gotschalk (1929-2002) was an American science fiction writer with a distinct, idiosyncratic style, his work marked by energetic exploration of social and sexual taboos. He was also known as Jacques Goudchaux.

Scott T. Goudsward
Goudsward, Scott T.

Scott T. Goudsward is the author of numerous short stories, screen plays and novels. He has had an avid interest in the horror genre since seeing the horror classic, Friday the 13th, when he was only 13. By total accident he hails from the same odd New England town – Haverhill, MA – that produced Puritan axe murderess, Hannah Dustin, beloved Abolitionist poet, John Greenleaf Whitter, and TV host, Tom Bergeron, and heavy metal rocker/movie director, Rob Zombie.

Julian Gough
Gough, Julian

Julian Gough is the author of Juno & Juliet, Jude: Level 1, and Jude in London, as well as of the end poem for the hugely popular game Minecraft. He lives in Berlin.

Ron Goulart
Goulart, Ron

Ron Goulart (born 1933) is an American popular culture historian and mystery, fantasy and science fiction author.

The prolific Goulart wrote many novelizations and other routine work under various pseudonyms: Kenneth Robeson (house name), Con Steffanson (house name), Chad Calhoun, R. T. Edwards, Ian R. Jamieson, Josephine Kains, Jillian Kearny, Howard Lee, Zeke Masters, Frank S. Shawn, Joseph Silva.

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Courtney Gould
Gould, Courtney

Courtney Gould writes books about queer girls, ghosts, and things that go bump in the night. She graduated from Pacific Lutheran University in 2016 with a Bachelor’s degree in Creative Writing and Publishing. Born and raised in Salem, OR, she now lives and writes in Tacoma, WA where she continues to write love letters to the haunted girls and rural, empty spaces.

Steven Gould
Gould, Steven

Steven Charles Gould (born 1955) is a science fiction author. He is married to science fiction author Laura J. Mixon.

 

Laurie Goulding
Goulding, Laurie

Laurie Goulding was born in London, grew up in Burton-upon-Trent, and then experienced a slight regression in Winchester before finally settling in Nottingham. As the original director of Black Library TV, he would regularly make the authors uncomfortable by sticking a camera in their faces – now he achieves the same effect by wielding a red pen as a member of the editorial team.

Susan Gourley
Gourley, Susan

Susan Gourley writes romance books as Susan Kelley.

Leopoldo Gout
Gout, Leopoldo

Leopoldo Gout is a producer, director, graphic novelist, writer, and composer. He is currently producing an animated film with NBC and Curious Pictures. He lives in New York City. Ghost Radio is his first novel.

Kailin Gow
Gow, Kailin

Kailin Gow is the author of over 40 books. She is also an adventurer, having traveled all over the world, conducting research, and collecting stories. Some of the more interesting places she's been to are: Dracula's Castle in Transylvania where she was presented with a sketch of Dracula, The Stanley Hotel in Colorado where she saw something quite odd, the lost city of Pompeii where both her cameras were drained of battery, St. Petersburg where she held an hour-long conversation with a Russian soldier who didn't speak English and she didn't speak Russian, and the orphanages of Thailand where Kailin distributed toys and books to and hugged hundreds of disabled orphans.

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Imogen Hermes Gowar
Gowar, Imogen Hermes

Imogen studied Archaeology, Anthropology and Art History at UEA’s Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts before going on to work in museums. She began to write small pieces of fiction inspired by the artefacts she worked with and around, and in 2013 won the Malcolm Bradbury Memorial Scholarship to study for an MA in Creative Writing at UEA.

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Barbara Gowdy
Gowdy, Barbara

Barbara Gowdy, CM (born 1950) is a Canadian novelist and short story writer. Born in Windsor, Ontario, she is the long-time partner of poet Christopher Dewdney and resides in Toronto.

Jasmine Gower
Gower, Jasmine

Jasmine Gower is from Portland, Oregon, where she studied English literature at Portland State University. Since then, she has balanced writing with various office jobs which served as inspiration for Daisy’s story in Moonshine. Jasmine was drawn toward writing years before amidst a childhood of fantasy novels and 90s video games and has a passion for exploring themes of gender, sexuality, and disability through the conventions of speculative fiction and fantasy worldbuilding.

David S. Goyer
Goyer, David S.

David S. Goyer is a screenwriter, film director and comic book writer. His screenplays include: Doctor Strange, Ghost Rider,The Flash, and the recent Batman films. Michael Cassutt is a TV producer, screenwriter and author. TV work includes producing, writing or both for: The Outer Limits, Beverly Hills 90210 and The Twilight Zone. Cassutt has also written over 30 short stories, mostly in the SF/F genre.

Guido Gozzano
Gozzano, Guido

Guido Gustavo Gozzano (1883-1916) was an Italian poet and writer.

Deborah Grabien
Grabien, Deborah

Deborah Grabien is a musician and the author of many adult novels. She has written several mystery novels. She lives in San Francisco, California, with her husband, a fellow musician. The pair rescues stray cats and finds homes for them and is active in local feral cat rescue organizations. Dark's Tale, her first novel for young readers, was inspired by this work and the recent encroachment of coyotes on Golden Gate Park.

Stefan Grabinski
Grabinski, Stefan

Stefan Grabinski (1887–1936) was a Polish writer of horror fiction, sometimes called "the Polish Poe".

Grabinski worked as teacher in Lwów and Przemysl and is famous for his train stories collected in Demon ruchu (The Motion Demon). A number of stories were translated by Miroslaw Lipinski into English and published as The Dark Domain. In addition, some of his work has been adapted to film, such as Szamota's Mistress.

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Adalyn Grace
Grace, Adalyn

Adalyn Grace graduated Summa Cum Laude when she was 19-years-old. She spent four years working in live theater, and acted as the managing editor of a nonprofit newspaper. During and after college, she studied storytelling as an intern on Nickelodeon Animation’s popular animated show, The Legend of Korra (sequel to Avatar: The Last Airbender). She was a participant in Pitch Wars 2016, and is a former literary agent intern for an established agency.

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Hannah Grace
Grace, Hannah

Hannah Grace is an English self-labeled “fluffy comfort book” author, writing predominantly new adult and contemporary romance from her home in Manchester, England. When she’s not describing everyone’s eyes ten-thousand times a chapter, accidentally giving multiple characters the same name, or using English sayings that no one understands in her American books, you can find her hanging out with her husband and two dogs, Pig and Bear.

Jeyna Grace
Grace, Jeyna

An author with a love for fantasy and a heart to inspire others to chase their dreams.

Currently, Jeyna is a content strategist in a digital agency. Prior to this move, she spent over four years in a publishing house as both a writer and editor for children magazines, books, and pre-school materials.

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Maria Grace
Grace, Maria

Six time BRAG Medallion Honoree, #1 Best-selling Historical Fantasy author Maria Grace has her PhD in Educational Psychology and is a 16-year veteran of the university classroom where she taught courses in human growth and development, learning, test development and counseling. None of which have anything to do with her undergraduate studies in economics/sociology/managerial studies/behavior sciences. She pretends to be a mild-mannered writer/cat-lady, but most of her vacations require helmets and waivers or historical costumes, usually not at the same time.

She stumbled into Jane Austen fan-dom in the mid '90s with Emma Thompson's Sense and Sensibility film, having somehow graduated HS without ever having read Austen. It was only a short leap then to consume all of Austen's works, in all their various media forms. In the hopes of discovering more works by Austen, she stumbled into the fan fiction forums, which naturally led to asking 'What if...' herself. Twenty nine books later, she still asks that question.

She writes gaslamp fantasy, historical romance and non-fiction to help justify her research addiction.

Sable Grace
Grace, Sable

Sable Grace is the writing team of Heather Waters and Laura Barone, long-time critique partners and friends who came together by fluke to discover their voices fit together quite nicely during a writing experiment. The story became far too interesting to put down and Sable Grace was born.

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Joey Graceffa
Graceffa, Joey

Joey Graceffa is one of the leading content creators and actors on YouTube. His memoir, In Real Life: My Journey to a Pixelated World, was published in 2015 and became an instant New York Times bestseller. Joey ranked third on Variety’s 2015 #Famechangers lists and has been featured in numerous publications such asPeople, Forbes, Entertainment Weekly, and The Hollywood Reporter. In 2013, between his daily vlogs and gameplay videos, Joey produced and starred in his own Kickstarter-funded supernatural series, “Storytellers,” for which he won a Streamy Award, and was recently announced for a season 2 in 2016 in partnership with Legendary and Style Haul. In 2016, he debuted Escape the Night, a surreality competition series for YouTube Red. Joey is a passionate storyteller and carries that sentiment into all of his projects, now with his latest fictional narrative, Children of Eden.

Julien Gracq
Gracq, Julien

Julien Gracq (1910–2007), born Louis Poirier in Saint-Florent-le-Vieil, in the French département of Maine-et-Loire, was a French writer. He wrote novels, critiques, a play, and poetry. His literary works were noted for their surrealism.

L. A. Graf
Graf, L. A.

L. A. Graf is a pseudonym used by Julia Ecklar and Melissa Crandall.

Lisa Graff
Graff, Lisa

Lisa Graff is an award-winning novelist. She has an MFA from The New School in writing for children and is an adjunct professor at McDaniel College. She lives in New York City.

Evan Graham
Graham, Evan

Evan Graham has a Bachelor's degree in Education Studies from Kent State University, where he triple-minored in English, Writing, and Theatre. He currently lives in rural Middlefield, Ohio and is extensively involved in local community theatre, both on the stage and behind the scenes.

Heather Graham
Graham, Heather

New York Times and USA Today best-selling author Heather Graham majored in theater arts at the University of South Florida. After a stint of several years in dinner theater, back-up vocals, and bartending, she stayed home after the birth of her third child and began to write, working on short horror stories and romances. After some trial and error, she sold her first book, WHEN NEXT WE LOVE, in 1982 and since then, she has written over one hundred novels and novellas including category, romantic suspense, historical romance, vampire fiction, time travel, occult, and Christmas holiday fare. She wrote the launch books for the Dell's Ecstasy Supreme line, Silhouette's Shadows, and for Harlequin's mainstream fiction imprint, Mira Books.

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Ian Graham
Graham, Ian

Ian Graham lives in Bury, Lancashire, where he works as a bookseller.

Jo Graham
Graham, Jo

Jo Graham lives in Maryland with her family, and has worked in politics for many years. Black Ships is her debut novel.

Mitchell Graham
Graham, Mitchell

Mitchell Graham in an American fantasy and mystery author.

Robert Graham
Graham, Robert

Robert Graham is a pseudonym of Joe Haldeman.

Kenneth Grahame
Grahame, Kenneth

Kenneth Grahame was born 1859 and died 1932. He was a Scottish author. His best known book is The Wind in the Willows.

Seth Grahame-Smith
Grahame-Smith, Seth

Seth Grahame-Smith is a film and television writer/producer, semi-frequent blogger, and bestselling author. His first novel, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, debuted at #3 on the New York Times bestseller list. Since its release in April 2009, it's sold over a million copies and been translated into 20 languages. Seth is also the Co-Creator/Executive Producer of the upcoming MTV comedy series, "The Hard Times of RJ Berger." He lives in Los Angeles with his wife and son.

Charles Gramlich
Gramlich, Charles

Charles A. Gramlich (born 1958), is an American writer best known for combining science fiction and horror in his works.

David Grann
Grann, David

DAVID GRANN is a #1 New York Times bestselling author and a staff writer at The New Yorker magazine. He is the author of the critically acclaimed books "The Wager," "The Lost City of Z," and "Killers of the Flower Moon," which was a finalist for the National Book Award. He is also the author of "The White Darkness" and the collection "The Devil and Sherlock Holmes: Tales of Murder, Madness, and Obsession." His book "Killers of the Flower Moon" was recently adapted into a film directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Lily Gladstone, and Robert De Niro. Several of his other stories, including "The Lost City of Z" and "Old Man and the Gun," have also been adapted into major motion pictures. His investigative reporting and storytelling have garnered several honors, including a George Polk Award and an Edgar Allan Poe Award.

Charles L. Grant
Grant, Charles L.

Charles Lewis Grant (1942–2006) was an American author, who specialized in what he called "dark fantasy" and "quiet horror". He also wrote under the pseudonyms of Geoffrey Marsh, Lionel Fenn, Simon Lake, Felicia Andrews and Deborah Lewis.

Donald M. Grant
Grant, Donald M.

Donald Metcalf Grant (1927–2009) was an American publisher.

Helen Grant
Grant, Helen

>Helen Grant was born in London, but has lived in Spain, Germany and Belgium. Her first novel, The Vanishing of Katharina Linden, won an ALA Alex Award in the US and was shortlisted for both the CILIP Carnegie Medal and the Booktrust Teenage Prize. Since then she has produced two other novels, The Glass Demon and Wish Me Dead, and is currently working on a trilogy set in Flanders. The first book, Silent Saturday, will be published by Bodley Head in 2013. Helen now lives in Scotland with her husband, two children and two cats.

Kathryn Grant
Grant, Kathryn

Kathryn Grant is a pseudonym of Kathryn Ptacek.

Kelley Grant
Grant, Kelley

Kelley Grant grew up in the hills of Ohio’s Amish country. Her best friends were the books she read, stories she created and the forest and fields that inspired her. She and her husband live on a wooded hilltop and are owned by five cats, a dog and numerous uninvited critters. Besides writing, Kelley teaches yoga and meditation, sings kirtan with her husband, and designs brochures and media.

Kester Grant
Grant, Kester

Kester (Kit) Grant is a British-Mauritian writer of color who has lived all over the world: Mauritius, Democratic Republic of the Congo, England, USA, and France. She has worked as a copywriter and a volunteer writing mentor for the Ministry of Stories, a UK nonprofit based on Dave Eggers's 826 National.

Mark Grant
Grant, Mark

Mark Grant is a pseudonym of David Bischoff.

 

Michael Grant
Grant, Michael

Michael Grant is the cocreator and coauthor of the series of books and publishing phenomenon Animorphs and the Everworld series. He lives in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, with his wife, K. A. Applegate, and their two children.

Mira Grant
Grant, Mira

A pseudonym of Seanan McGuire.

 

Sara Grant
Grant, Sara

Sara Grant was born and raised in Washington, Indiana, a small town in the Midwestern United States. She graduated from Indiana University in Bloomington, Indiana, with degrees in journalism and psychology, and later she earned a master’s degree in creative and life writing Goldsmiths College, University of London.

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Steve S. Grant
Grant, Steve S.

Steve's love story with fantasy and Sci Fi goes way back to childhood, where his passion for comic books eventually evolved to novels. After being chief editor of a high school newspaper, he graduated from University with a deep knowledge of the used book stores in the Montreal area.

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Taylor Grant
Grant, Taylor

Taylor Grant is a Bram Stoker Award Nominated Author, professional screenwriter, award-winning filmmaker and multiple award-winning copywriter. His work has been seen on network television, the big screen, the stage, the web, newspapers, comic books, national magazines, anthologies, and heard on the radio.

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Wayne Grant
Grant, Wayne

Wayne Grant grew up in a tiny cotton town in rural Louisiana where hunting, fishing and farming were a way of life. Between chopping cotton, dove hunting and Little League ball he developed a love of great adventure stories like Call It Courage and Kidnapped.

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Tessa Gratton
Gratton, Tessa

Tessa Gratton has wanted to be a paleontologist or a wizard since she was seven. She was too impatient to hunt dinosaurs, but is still searching for someone to teach her magic. After traveling the world with her military family, she acquired a BA (and the important parts of an MA) in Gender Studies, then settled down in Kansas with her partner, her cats, and her mutant dog.

Ryan Graudin
Graudin, Ryan

Ryan Graudin was born in Charleston, SC with a severe case of wanderlust. When she's not traveling, she's busy photographing weddings, writing, and spending time with her husband and wolf-dog.

Chloe Graves
Graves, Chloe

Chloe Graves writes stories that sizzle with bossy heroes, feisty heroines, and the fated mates who take wrecking balls to their lives. Constantly harassed by two cats and two creatures of the clucky kind, Chloe tries to add a little sparkle to each day in her quiet town.

Judith Graves
Graves, Judith

Judith Graves reads as much as she writes, devouring at least two books a week. She loves heated debates over character motives... she's been kicked out of several book clubs for just this reason. With her faithful sidekick at her feet - Willow, a yellow lab - Judith remains unfazed by book club drama and is furiously writing more paranormal stories.

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Keith Graves
Graves, Keith

Keith Graves is the author and/or illustrator of many picture books. His own children, thirteen-year-old twins (a boy and a girl) inspired him to write The Orphan of Awkward Falls.

Rain Graves
Graves, Rain

Rain Graves is a Bram Stoker Award (2002) winning poet and writer currently living in San Francisco with one large black cat, and one small white cat. She has been published in the horror fiction and poetry genre since 1997, in various magazines, books, and webzines. She is a retired dance instructor, and former musician.

Amanda Gray
Gray, Amanda

Amanda Gray is a team of two bestselling authors who live only miles apart but have never met in person. Between them, they have written more than a dozen novels and novellas and have had their work appear on television. They live in New York City.

Amy Gray
Gray, Amy

Amy Gray is a writer, photographer, and amateur vampirologist who has been fascinated with vampires, spooky art and literature, and the supernatural since early childhood. She lives in Melbourne, Australia with her daughter, and can be counted on to be on the scene if anything goes bump in the night or sparkles mysteriously.

Ava Gray
Gray, Ava

Ava Gray is a pseudonym of Ann Aguirre.

Claudia Gray
Gray, Claudia

Claudia Gray is the pseudonym of Amy Vincent. She is the author of Star Wars: Lost Stars, as well as A Thousand Pieces of You and the Evernight and Spellcaster series. She has worked as a lawyer, a journalist, a disc jockey, and a particularly ineffective waitress. Her lifelong interests include old houses, classic movies, vintage style, and history. She lives in New Orleans.

Elle Gray
Gray, Elle

Elle Gray lives in a small town with her 2 cats, and her handsome husky.

As a girl, she was obsessed with crime novels and thrillers.

Today, she loves writing and creating thrilling novels with courageous, strong heroes/heroines and dangerous psychopaths. She invites you to join her exciting world of detectives and FBI agents that take down killers and kick butt.

Julia Gray
Gray, Julia

Julia Gray is a pseudonym used by the husband and wife writing team of Mark and Julia Smith, who have also written books under the pseudonym of Jonathan Wylie.

Julia Gray
Gray, Julia

Julia Gray is a writer and singer-songwriter. She studied Classics at UCL and has a diploma in Children's Literature and an MA in Creative Writing from Birkbeck, for which she received the Sophie Warne Fellowship. She has released three albums with the trip-hop/jazz collective Second Person, and more recently two solo albums, I Am Not The Night and Robber Bride.

Muriel Gray
Gray, Muriel

Muriel Gray (born 1958) is a Scottish journalist and broadcaster.

R. Garland Gray
Gray, R. Garland

A gifted storyteller, R. Garland Gray beckons readers into her unique worlds, weaving passionate, compelling tales that entertain and escape the ordinary.

Born and raised in a closely-knit family in the Bronx, she went on to study literature and received a Bachelor of Arts degree in Literature and Communications. She lives with her husband in a small country home and enjoys the simple things, like visiting with friends and family, morning walks in a meadow, and riding on the back of her husband's motorcycle.

T. M. Gray
Gray, T. M.

T. M. Gray (born 1963) is an American horror author of many short stories, several novels and a nonfiction book on ghost hunting. Gray lives in Birch Harbor, Maine and is a member of the Horror Writers Association.

Tara Grayce
Grayce, Tara

I write humorous fantasy with a side dish of romance.

When I'm not writing, I'm renovating my hundred-year-old farmhouse and playing with my chocolate lab Miss Kisses.

Mark Greaney
Greaney, Mark

Mark Greaney is the #1 NYT bestselling author of GRAY MAN series. The Netflix production of THE GRAY MAN, starring Ryan Gosling and Chris Evans, was the #1 most popular movie on the streaming service in 2022. Mark has written or co-written seven Tom Clancy novels and is also the co-author of the 2019 military thriller, RED METAL, and the 2022 release, Armored.

Thomas Greanias
Greanias, Thomas

Thomas Greanias is the New York Times bestselling author of the Raising Atlantis, Dominium Dei and The Alignment series of international conspiracy thrillers.

He is also the founder of @lantis Media, a widely recognized transmedia leader in original digital literature with multiple No. 1 bestselling ebooks, audiobooks and other digital entertainment. His bestselling books in print from Simon & Schuster have been translated into a dozen languages and sold in 75 countries worldwide.

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J. T. Greathouse
Greathouse, J. T.

J.T. Greathouse has been writing fantasy and science fiction since he was eleven years old. He holds a BA in history and philosophy with a minor in Asian studies as well as a Master's in Teaching from Whitworth University, and spent four months of intensive study in Chinese language and culture at Minzu University of China in Beijing. His short fiction has appeared, often as Jeremy A. TeGrotenhuis, in Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Writers of the Future 34, Deep Magic, Orson Scott Card's Intergalactic Medicine Show, and elsewhere. In addition to writing, he has worked as an ESL teacher in Taipei, as a bookseller at Auntie's Bookstore in Spokane, and as a high school teacher. He currently lives in Spokane, Washington with his wife Hannah and several overflowing bookshelves.

Paul Greci
Greci, Paul

Paul Greci has lived and worked in Alaska for over twenty-five years as a field biology technician in remote wilderness areas, a teacher and backpacking trip leader for teens, and a naturalist for several outdoor education programs. His middle grade adventure novel, Surviving Bear Island, was a Junior Library Guild Selection and a Scholastic Reading Club Pick.

Chris Marie Green
Green, Chris Marie

Chris Marie Green is a former schoolteacher turned fulltime writer. She enjoys yoga and fangirl movies and TV program analysis, and also writes under the name Crystal Green.

Emma Green
Green, Emma

Emma Geen’s fiction draws on her background in psychology and philosophy. She is studying for a Ph.D. in creative writing at Bath Spa University, where she won the 2012 Janklow & Nesbit Bath Spa Prize. The Many Selves of Katherine North is her first novel. She lives in Somerset, England.

Evie Green
Green, Evie

Evie Green is a pseudonym for a British author who has written professionally for her entire adult life. She lives by the sea in England with her husband, children, and guinea pigs, and loves writing in the very early morning, fueled by coffee.

Hank Green
Green, Hank

Hank Green Hank Green is the CEO of Complexly, a production company that creates educational content, including Crash Course and SciShow, prompting The Washington Post to name him "one of America's most popular science teachers." Complexly's videos have been viewed more than two billion times on YouTube. Green cofounded a number of other small businesses, including DFTBA.com, which helps online creators make money by selling cool stuff to their communities; and VidCon, the world's largest conference for the online video community. In 2017, VidCon drew more than forty thousand attendees across three events in Anaheim, Amsterdam, and Australia. Hank and his brother, John, also started the Project for Awesome, which last year raised more than two million dollars for charities, including Save the Children and Partners in Health. Hank lives in Montana with his wife, son, and cat.

Ian Green
Green, Ian

Ian Green is a fantasy writer born in Aberdeen, Scotland, currently based out of Algiers. He has a PhD in clinical epigenetics from Imperial College London. His short fiction has been widely broadcast and performed, including winning the BBC Radio 4 Opening Lines competition and winning the Futurebook Future Fiction prize. He is the author of an upcoming epic fantasy trilogy.

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Jonathan Green
Green, Jonathan

Jonathan Green is a writer of speculative fiction with more than sixty books to his name. He has written everything from Fighting Fantasy gamebooks to Doctor Who novels, by way of Sonic the Hedgehog, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, and Judge Dredd.  He is the creator of the Pax Britannia steampunk series for Abaddon Books, and the author of the award-winning, and critically-acclaimed, YOU ARE THE HERO – A History of Fighting Fantasy Gamebooks.

Joseph E. Green
Green, Joseph E.

Joseph Green is a young Yorkshireman from a small, ex-mining town called Thorne, located in Doncaster. After graduating university in 2016 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Film & Television Production, he went on to win a Royal Television Society award in the Yorkshire region for "Best Camerawork", as well as student Audience Awards and Best Choice Awards.

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Joseph L. Green
Green, Joseph L.

Joseph L. Green (born 1931) is an American science fiction author and a charter member of the Science Fiction Writers of America. He is a prolific short story author best known for his novel Gold the Man. His work has been translated into German, Italian, Spanish, French, Polish and Dutch.

Lark Green
Green, Lark

Hi, my name is Lark! I work as a nurse during the day and write steamy monster romance at night. I used to be an avid reader in high school but thanks to life, fell out of it while going to college. To deal with the stress of the pandemic, I not only started reading for fun again, but I started writing my own stories as well.

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Nick Green
Green, Nick

Nick Green grew up in the south east of England, but eventually escaped to study in Edinburgh, where he spent more time writing than studying.

He now lives in Hertford, where he spends more time writing than living.His other talents include sword fighting and being able to miaow like a cat.

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Paul Green
Green, Paul

Paul Green is a freelance writer, author, and has been an independent computer consultant for more than 30 years.

After having spent a lifetime imagining wondrous and fantastical stories and adventures, he has finally found the time to begin creating the wonderful worlds from his imaginings.

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Risa Green
Green, Risa

Risa Green is the author of the YA series The Secret Society of the Pink Crystal Ball, as well as the critically acclaimed adult novels, Notes from the Underbelly and Tales from the Crib, which were the basis of an ABC television series. Prior to becoming a writer, Risa worked as a high school college counselor, and also spent two years doing hard time as a corporate attorney. Born in the Philadelphia area, Risa now lives in Los Angeles with her husband and two children.

Roger Lancelyn Green
Green, Roger Lancelyn

Roger Lancelyn Green (19181987) was a British biographer and children's writer. He was an Oxford academic who formed part of the Inklings literary discussion group along with C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien.

Roland J. Green
Green, Roland J.

Roland James Green (born 1944) in Bradford, Pennsylvania, is an American science fiction and fantasy writer and editor. He has written books as Roland Green and Roland J. Green, and is one of the writers who has written as Jeffrey Lord.

Sally Green
Green, Sally

Sally Green lives in northwest England. She has had various jobs and even a profession, but in 2010 she discovered a love of writing and now just can’t stop. She used to keep chickens, makes decent jam, doesn’t mind ironing, loves to walk in Wales even when it’s raining, and will probably never jog again. She really ought to drink less coffee. She is the author of Half Bad and Half Wild.

Simon R. Green
Green, Simon R.

Simon Richard Green (born 1955) is a British science fiction and fantasy author. He holds a degree in Modern English and American Literature from the University of Leicester. He began his writing career in 1973, sold his first story Manslayer in 1976, and had his first publication, Awake, Awake, Ye Northern Winds in 1979.

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Louis Greenberg
Greenberg, Louis

Louis Greenberg is a renowned writer in his own right, having been shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers Prize for his debut novel The Beggars' Signwriters (Umuzi, 2007), but is perhaps more known for his work with Sarah Lotz as one half of internationally bestselling S.L. Grey. Green Valley is his first solo novel to be published outside his native South Africa. He is currently based in England.

Kris Greene
Greene, Kris

In the 3rd grade a teacher once asked Kris what she wanted to be when she grew up, to which she responded "A witch." Growing up under not so pleasant conditions she often depended on her imagination to escape her day to day hardships and dreamt of a way to make her fictional escapes real and when she stumbled across a tattered copy of Interview with the Vampire she knew just how she would go about it, which led her to start keeping journals full of short stories which would eventually grow into action packed tales of sex, power and magic set in the New York City underworld.

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R. W. W. Greene
Greene, R. W. W.

R.W.W. Greene is a New Hampshire USA writer with an MA in Fine Arts, which he exorcises in dive bars and coffee shops. He is a frequent panelist at the Boskone Science Fiction and Fantasy Convention in Boston, and his work has been in Stupefying Stories, Daily Science Fiction, New Myths, and Jersey Devil Press, among others. Greene is a past board member of the New Hampshire Writers' Project. He keeps bees, collects typewriters, and lives with writer/artist spouse Brenda and two cats.

Amy Butler Greenfield
Greenfield, Amy Butler

Amy Butler Greenfield made her YA debut with Chantress, followed by Chantress Alchemy and Chantress Fury. Originally from the Adirondacks, Amy lives with her husband and daughter in England.

Terry Greenhough
Greenhough, Terry

Terry Greenhough (19442002) was a British author. He also wrote under the pseudonym of Andrew Lester.

Colin Greenland
Greenland, Colin

Colin Greenland (born 1954) is a British science fiction writer. His partner is writer Susanna Clarke, with whom he has lived since 1996.

William Greenleaf
Greenleaf, William

William Greenleaf (born 1948) is an American author.

Gayle Greeno
Greeno, Gayle

Gayle Greeno (born 1949) is an American science fiction and fantasy author. She is best known for her science fantasy series The Ghatti's Tale.

Arin Greenwood
Greenwood, Arin

Arin Greenwood is an animal writer and former lawyer living in St. Petersburg, Florida, with her husband, Ray; their dog, Murray; and their cats, Elf and Jack. Arin was animal welfare editor for The Huffington Post, and now writes about dogs, cats, and other critters for The Today Show, The Washington Post, Slate, Creative Loafing, The Dodo, American Bar Association Journal, and other publications. She is also the author of Save the Enemy.

Ed Greenwood
Greenwood, Ed

Ed Greenwood is known for his role in creating the Forgotten Realms setting, part of the world-famous Dungeons and Dragons franchise. His writings have sold millions of copies worldwide, in more than a dozen languages. Greenwood resides in the Canadian province of Ontario.

Kerry Greenwood
Greenwood, Kerry

Kerry Greenwood (born 1954) is a solicitor from Melbourne, Australia. She is also the author of many plays and books, most notably a string of historical detective novels centred on the character of Phryne Fisher. She writes mysteries, science-fiction, historical fiction, and children's stories, as well as plays. She is unmarried but lives with a "registered wizard".

Laura Greenwood
Greenwood, Laura

Laura is a USA Today Bestselling Author of paranormal romance, urban fantasy, and fantasy romance. When she's not writing, she drinks a lot of tea, tries to resist French macarons, and works towards a diploma in Egyptology. She lives in the UK, where most of her books are set. Laura specialises in quick reads, with healthy relationships and consent positive moments regardless of if she's writing light-hearted romance, mythology-heavy urban fantasy, or anything in between.

Percy Greg
Greg, Percy

Percy Greg (1836–1889), son of William Rathbone Greg, was an English writer.

Percy Greg, like his father, wrote about politics, but his views were violently reactionary: his History of the United States to the Reconstruction of the Union (1887) can be said to be more of a polemic, rather than a history.

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Joyce Ballou Gregorian
Gregorian, Joyce Ballou

Joyce Ballou Gregorian Hampshire (1946–1991) was an author, expert on Oriental rugs, and lover of Arabian horses.

Daryl Gregory
Gregory, Daryl

Daryl Gregory's first novel, Pandemonium, was published in 2008 and won the 2009 Crawford Award, given each year by critics and scholars of the fantasy field to "an oustanding new fantasy writer whose first book was published the previous year." The book was also a finalist for The Shirley Jackson Award, the Locus Award, and the Mythopoeic Award for best fantasy novel.

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Stephen Gregory
Gregory, Stephen

Stephen Gregory is a former Hollywood screenwriter who has worked with director William Freidkin, among others. A Welsh writer, he was born in Derby, England and gained a law degree from the University of London. As a teacher he travelled the world for work, moving from Bangor in Wales to Algiers and the Sudan. His novel The Cormorant was made into a BBC film starring Ralph Fiennes. Wakening the Crow is his second novel for Solaris.

Tracy Gregory
Gregory, Tracy

Living in South Wales, Tracy Gregory is an author of Gamelit and LitRPG novels. A huge fan of video games, Tracy likes to put his own spin on his favourite genres.

Lois H. Gresh
Gresh, Lois H.

Lois H. Gresh is author of 15 pop science/culture books and 4 science fiction novels from John Wiley & Sons, Random House, and St. Martin's Press. Gresh has also written dozens of short stories, and her work spans genres such as mysteries, thriller, suspense, dark fantasy, horror, and science fiction. She is probably best known for her early weird science fiction stories, which blend computer technology with biology, botany, and post-cyberpunk. She was a staff book reviewer for Science Fiction Weekly from November 2004 through December 2008.

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William Lindsay Gresham
Gresham, William Lindsay

William Lindsay Gresham (1909-1962) was an American novelist and non-fiction author particularly regarded among readers of noir. His best-known work is Nightmare Alley (1946), which was adapted into a 1947 film starring Tyrone Power.

Audrey Grey
Grey, Audrey

Audrey Grey lives in the charming state of Oklahoma, with her husband, two little people, and four mischievous dogs. You can usually find her hiding out in her office from said little people and dogs, surrounded by books and sipping kombucha while dreaming up wondrous worlds for her characters to live in.

C. R. Grey
Grey, C. R.

C. R. Grey was born in a house on a pier in Maine - literally on the ocean. She grew up in Memphis, Tennessee, then received her BA in Theater from SUNY New Paltz and her MFA in Fiction from Ohio State University. Grey lives in a sunny apartment in Poughkeepsie, New York, with one black cat, one white cat, and a Boston Terrier named Trudy. She can often be found weeding through ephemera in antique shops and walking over the bridges that span the Hudson River.

Charles Grey
Grey, Charles

Charles Grey is a pseudonym of E. C. Tubb.

Jacob Grey
Grey, Jacob

Little is known of the mysterious Jacob Grey. He is said to live in a big city in the USA, where he wanders the streets at night dreaming up his dark and twisted tales. He has a deep love of animals and even talks to crows himself... although no one knows if he understands their replies.

Jen L. Grey
Grey, Jen L.

Jen L. Grey is an USA Today Bestselling Author of urban fantasy and paranormal romance. In her stories, you'll find angsty fated mate stories with tons of action. 

Jen lives in Tennessee with her husband, two daughters, and two Australian Shepherds. When she isn't writing, you'll find her with a nitro cold brew in hand while chauffeuring her children around town or watching television.

Melissa Grey
Grey, Melissa

Melissa Grey penned her first short story at the age of twelve and hasn't stopped writing since. As an undergrad at Yale, she learned how to ride a horse and shoot a bow and arrow at the same time, but hasn't had much use for that skill since graduating in 2008.

Orrin Grey
Grey, Orrin

Orrin Grey is a writer, editor, amateur film scholar, and monster expert who was born on the night before Halloween. His stories of monsters, ghosts, and sometimes the ghosts of monsters have appeared in dozens of anthologies, including Ellen Datlow’s Best Horror of the Year, and been gathered into two volumes, Never Bet the Devil & Other Warnings and Painted Monsters & Other Strange Beasts. He also writes licensed fiction and other odds-and-ends for Privateer Press, and he likes to play Hordes whenever he gets the chance, where he is utterly devoted to his beloved Gatormen. His writing about film has appeared in places like Strange Horizons and Clarkesworld, and he writes a regular column on vintage horror cinema at Innsmouth Free Press. John Langan once referred to him as “the monster guy,” and he never lets anyone forget it.

S. L. Grey
Grey, S. L.

Sarah Lotz and Louis Greenberg met in a pub while bunking a crime seminar and, as one does at pubs, discovered a mutual interest in horror. Sarah, a crime novelist and screenwriter, was a die-hard zombie fanatic; Louis, a literary writer, editor and recovering bookseller, had studied vampire and apocalyptic fiction. Rejecting their initial plans for a vampire-vs-zombie faceoff, they decided to write the first mainstream South African horror novel together and S. L. Grey was born.

 T. L. Greylock
Greylock , T. L.

T. L. Greylock is the author of The Song of the Ash Tree trilogy, consisting of The Blood-Tainted Winter, The Hills of Home, and Already Comes Darkness.

She can only wink her left eye, jumped out of an airplane at 13,000 feet while strapped to a Navy SEAL, had a dog named Agamemnon and a cat named Odysseus, and has been swimming with stingrays in the Caribbean.

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John Gribbin
Gribbin, John

John R. Gribbin (born 1946) is a British science writer and a visiting Fellow in astronomy at the University of Sussex.

 

Volsted Gridban
Gridban, Volsted

Volsted Gridban is a pseudonym of E. C. Tubb (along with John Russell Fearn).

A.M. Griffin
Griffin, A.M.

A. M. Griffin is a mother of three, dog owner (and sometimes dog owned), a daughter, sister, aunt and friend. She’s a hard worker whose two favorite outlets are reading and writing. She enjoys reading everything from mystery novels to historical romances and of course fantasy romance. She is a believer in the unbelievable, open to all possibilities from mermaids in our oceans and seas, angels in the skies and intelligent life forms in distant galaxies.

Adele Griffin
Griffin, Adele

Adele Griffen is the acclaimed author of many books for young readers, including Sons of Liberty and Where I Want to Be, both National Book Award finalists. She is also the author of Picture the Dead, The Julian Game, and the Witch Twins and Vampire Island middle-grade series. Adele lives with her husband and young daughter in Brooklyn, New York.

Alexander Griffin
Griffin, Alexander

Alexander Griffin is the author of numerous short stories nd fiction novels of supernatural, science fiction, and horror.

Bethany Griffin
Griffin, Bethany

Bethany Griffin is an American author. She has been an avid reader since her childhood and wrote her first book in first grade. Her debut novel, Handcuffs, was published in 2008.

Kate Griffin
Griffin, Kate

Kate Griffin is the name under which Carnegie Medal-nominated author, Catherine Webb, writes fantasy novels for adults. An acclaimed author of young adult books under her own name, Catherine's amazing debut, Mirror Dreams, was written when she was only 14 years old, and garnered comparisons with Terry Pratchett and Philip Pullman.

Michael Griffin
Griffin, Michael

Michael Griffin has lived in Portland almost his entire life, even before it was the coolest American city. He’s worked over 23 years in a factory that cuts huge chunks of steel into smaller ones, and spends as much time as possible running, mountain biking, roving on beaches, and skiing, snowshoeing and hiking on Mt. Hood. He’s also an electronic ambient musician (as M. Griffin, and half of Viridian Sun) and founder of Hypnos Recordings, the ambient music record label his wife helps run.

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Rachel Griffin
Griffin, Rachel

Rachel Griffin lives just outside of Seattle with her husband and dog, Doppler. She was fortunate enough to witness the 2017 total solar eclipse and became a certified weather spotter for the National Weather Service while doing research for this project. The Nature of Witches is her debut.

Sarah Maria Griffin
Griffin, Sarah Maria

Sarah Maria Griffin lives in Dublin, Ireland, in a small red brick house by the sea, with her husband and cat. She writes about monsters, growing up, and everything those two things have in common.

Clay Griffith
Griffith, Clay

Susan and Clay Griffith are a husband and wife team who have written the original Vampire Empire fantasy series for Pyr Books, as well as the tie-in Crown & Key series for Random House. They've written numerous short stories for anthologies, some featuring noted genre characters such as Kolchak the Night Stalker and The Phantom, and have scripted comics including The Tick, The Simpsons, and Vincent Price Presents.

George Griffith
Griffith, George

George Griffith (1857–1906), full name George Chetwyn Griffith-Jones, was a prolific British science fiction writer and noted explorer who wrote during the late Victorian and Edwardian age. Many of his visionary tales appeared in magazines such as Pearson's Magazine and Pearson's Weekly before being published as novels.

Nicola Griffith
Griffith, Nicola

Nicola Griffith is the author of the novels Ammonite, Slow River, The Blue Place, Stay, Always, So Lucky, and Hild as well as the multimedia memoir And Now We Are Going to Have a Party. Her books have won two Washington State Book Awards, the Nebula, Otherwise/Tiptree, and World Fantasy Awards, and six Lambda Literary Awards. She is the founder and co-host of #CripLit and co-edited of the Bending the Landscape series of original queer fantasy/science fiction/historical stories. A wheelchair boxer, Griffith holds a Ph.D. from Anglia Ruskin University and is married to writer Kelley Eskridge. She is a native of Yorkshire, England, and now lives in Seattle.

S.R. Griffith
Griffith, S.R.

S.R. Griffith lives in the south with four feral minions. S.R. Griffith loves reading and writing about all sorts of magic, monsters and aliens. Plus the occasional billionaire romances because that's the modern day prince. She likes to write whatever shiny thing hits her heart.

Susan Griffith
Griffith, Susan

Susan and Clay Griffith are a husband and wife team who have written the original Vampire Empire fantasy series for Pyr Books, as well as the tie-in Crown & Key series for Random House. They've written numerous short stories for anthologies, some featuring noted genre characters such as Kolchak the Night Stalker and The Phantom, and have scripted comics including The Tick, The Simpsons, and Vincent Price Presents.

Michael Griffo
Griffo, Michael

After years of writing plays, doing some acting and singing, graduating from NYU with honors, moving from one small apartment to another in New York, Michael Griffo finally found his niche.  Author. 

Sean Grigsby
Grigsby, Sean

Sean Grigsby is a professional firefighter in central Arkansas, where he writes about lasers, aliens, and guitar battles with the Devil when he’s not fighting dragons.

Pierre Grimbert
Grimbert, Pierre

A native of France and a lifelong fantasy enthusiast who numbers Jack Vance, Fritz Leiber, and Michael Moorcock among his heroes, Pierre Grimbert has been awarded the Prix Ozone, for best French language fantasy novel, and the Prix Julia Verlanger, for best science fiction novel in any language. He is the author of thirteen much beloved novels of the Ji mythos, including the series the Secret of Ji, the Children of Ji, and the Guardians of Ji. He lives in northern France with his wife, Audrey Françaix (also writer), and four children.

Linda Grimes
Grimes, Linda

Linda Grimes is a former English teacher and ex-actress now channeling her love of words and drama into writing. She grew up in Texas and currently resides in northern Virginia with her husband.

Shaunta Grimes
Grimes, Shaunta

Shaunta Grimes has worked as a substitute teacher, a newspaper reporter, a drug court counselor, and a vintage clothing seller. No matter which direction she strays, however, she always comes back to storytelling. She lives in Reno, NV, with her family, where she writes, teaches, and perpetually studies at the University of Nevada.

Gris Grimly
Grimly, Gris

Gris Grimly is a filmmaker, fine artist, and children's book illustrator. Some of his titles include Edgar Allan Poe's Tales of Mystery and Madness and Edgar Allan Poe's Tales of Death and Dementia, both of which were adapted from Poe’s original text, as well as Neil Gaiman’s bestselling picture book The Dangerous Alphabet. He is also one of the key production designers on director Guillermo del Toro's upcoming animated adaptation of Pinocchio. He lives in Los Angeles.

Jacob & Wilhelm Grimm
Grimm, Jacob & Wilhelm

The Brothers Grimm (German: Brüder Grimm), Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, were German brothers, who collected folk tales and fairy tales.

Jonathan Grimm
Grimm, Jonathan

Jonathan Grimm is an author and award winning portrait artist who has lived in Sacramento, California for most of his life. He enjoys reading and his home is filled to the brim with books. His work contains elements of science-fiction, the paranormal and fantasy and defies strict inclusion in any specific genre.

Jim Grimsley
Grimsley, Jim

Jim Grimsley (born 1955) is an American novelist and playwright.

David Grimstone
Grimstone, David

David Grimstone is a pseudonym of David Lee Stone.

Jon Courtenay Grimwood
Grimwood, Jon Courtenay

Jon Courtenay Grimwood is a British science fiction author.

Ken Grimwood
Grimwood, Ken

Kenneth Milton Grimwood (1944–2003) was an American author.

Terry Grimwood
Grimwood, Terry

Suffolk-born Terry Grimwood started his working life as an electrician and is now a college lecturer, having travelled full-circle from doing the job to teaching it (which he prefers). Along the way he has been a quality assurance manager, project manager and technical author. He is the author of numerous short stories and reviews which have appeared in Midnight Street, Bare Bone, Murky Depths, All Hallows, FutureFire and Eibonvale Press's own Blind Swimmer anthology among others. He has written and directed three plays and runs the Exaggerated Press which started when he published his first collection, The Exaggerated Man. His novella, The Places Between is available from Pendragon Press and his novel Axe will be published by Bad Moon Press in late 2011.

Kit Grindstaff
Grindstaff, Kit

Kit Grindstaff was born near London, England. She now lives with her husband in Pennsylvania.

David Grinnell
Grinnell, David

David Grinnell is a pseudonym of Donald A. Wollheim.

James Grippando
Grippando, James

James Grippando (born 1958) is an American novelist and lawyer.

Ben Grippin
Grippin, Ben

Ben Gribbin first fell in love with the sea when he was born in Brighton in 1976. Fascinated by fantasy and still in love with the sea, he uses these as major themes in his writing, particularly his poetry. He took his love for the sea with him when he studied at Trinity College, Dublin, for an MPhil in Creative Writing and Publishing, and spent any time not writing, or drinking Guinness, gazing wistfully at the beautiful Eastern Irish Coast.

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John Grisham
Grisham, John

John Grisham is the author of forty-seven consecutive #1 bestsellers, which have been translated into nearly fifty languages. His recent books include The Boys From Biloxi, The Judge's List, Sooley, and his third Jake Brigance novel, A Time for Mercy, which is being developed by HBO as a limited series.

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Lauren Groff
Groff, Lauren

Lauren Groff (born 1978) is an American novelist and short story writer.

Steve Groll
Groll, Steve

Steve Groll has written and published his first novel, Beyond the Dead Forest. Groll has worked with children and families for over 40 years. Steve's goal is to write suspenseful adventures that take place in strange worlds and that are both intriguing and profound. Though his novel is geared to older children and younger youth, many adults enjoy the excitement, and wonder at the wisdom found in his uniquely dark, tense, and personally challenging novel.

Dave Gross
Gross, Dave

Dave Gross is the author of the Radovan & the count novels for Pathfinder Tales, including Prince of Wolves, Master of Devils, Queen of Thorns, King of Chaos, and Lord of Runes. After teaching English and working as a technical writer, Dave joined TSR, Inc. as editor for Polyhedron Newszine. He moved successively from Dungeon Adventures to Dragon Magazine, then to Star Wars Insider and Gamer, and finally to Amazing Stories. He has dabbled in writing for computer games and still contributes to a roleplaying book now and then.

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Austin Grossman
Grossman, Austin

Austin Grossman (born 1969) is a video game design consultant and the author of You and Soon I Will Be Invincible, which was nominated for the Center for Fiction First Novel Prize. His writing has appeared in Granta, the Wall Street Journal, and the New York Times.

Dave Grossman
Grossman, Dave

Lieutenant Colonel Dave Grossman is an author who has specialized in the study of the psychology of killing, which has been termed "killology".

David Grossman
Grossman, David

David Grossman (born 1954) is an Israeli author of fiction, nonfiction, and youth and children's literature. His books have been translated into numerous languages. Grossman has been presented with numerous awards including Chevalier de l’Ordre des Artes et des Lettres (France). He lives with his wife and children in a suburb of Jerusalem.

Lev Grossman
Grossman, Lev

Leb Grossman is a senior writer and book critic for Time magazine and author of the international bestselling novel Codex. Grossman holds degrees in comparative literature from Harvard and Yale. He lives in Brooklyn, NY.

S. E. Grove
Grove, S. E.

In her own words:

"My first book was a work of unapologetic plagiarism. I must have been about six, and I loved a children’s book (which I still have) about a mouse named Molly who prowled around a department store when all the people had gone home.

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Vicki Grove
Grove, Vicki

Vicki Grove lives in a 100-year-old farmhouse on a few acres of land outside of Ionia, Missouri (pop. 118). Her son and daughter, Michael and J.D., attend college, and her husband Mike is a music teacher and directs a bell choir. They have lots of cats and a goldfish pond teeming with bossy, headstrong goldfish. Sharing the pond with that rambunctious crew is one gentle red-eared turtle, Yertle. Behind the house grow three cherry trees, three apple trees, a corn patch, grape vines, and, on a good year, enough strawberries for Vicki to make a dozen jars of jam.

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Jeff Grubb
Grubb, Jeff

Jeff Grubb (born 1957) is an author and game designer. He has worked on a number of computer and role-playing games and has written a number of successful novels, short stories and comics. His credits include Forgotten Realms: The Finder's Stone Trilogy with his wife, Kate Novak, the Spelljammer and the Jakandor campaign settings, and, more recently, the computer games Guild Wars Nightfall.

Camilla Grudova
Grudova, Camilla

Camilla Grudova lives in Toronto. She holds a degree in Art History and German from McGill University, Montreal. Her fiction has appeared in The White Review and Granta.

Stephan Grundy
Grundy, Stephan

Stephan Grundy (born 1967) is an American author. Being versed in particularly the Germanic mythology and cultural history, Grundy is known best for his modern adaptations of legendary sagas. Some of his work is published under the pseudonym Kveldulf Gundarsson.

Rick Gualtieri
Gualtieri, Rick

Rick Gualtieri lives alone in central New Jersey with only his wife, three kids, and countless pets to both keep him company and constantly plot against him. When he’s not busy monkey-clicking out words, he can typically be found jealously guarding his collection of vintage Transformers from all who would seek to defile them.

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Thea Guanzon
Guanzon, Thea

Thea was born and raised amidst the colorful small towns and sprawling sugarcane fields of the Visayas, in the Philippines. Aside from being a writer, she is an avid traveler, an enthusiastic fangirl, a Dungeon Master, and an iced coffee junkie. Villains have her whole heart, as do messy romances with happy endings. She currently resides in Metro Manila with two turtles named Dumpling and Potato Chip, a cat named Darth Pancakes, and an alarming amount of succulents.

Geoffrey Gudgion
Gudgion, Geoffrey

Geoffrey Gudgion lives with his wife in the Chiltern Hills between London and Oxford.  When not writing or consulting, he’s also a keen horseman and a very bad pianist.  Both of these passions have been known to creep into his writing.

Aaron Gudmunson
Gudmunson, Aaron

Aaron Gudmunson lives and writes in the Chicagoland area. He has worked as a contributing writer and columnist for several newspapers and magazines. His fiction and essays have been published in numerous magazines and anthologies, including Apex, Dark Moon Digest, and Dead Harvest: 50 Terrifying Tales. From the Dusklands, his first collection, debuted in May 2013. His first novel, Snow Globe, was released in March 2014 followed in April by Emma Tremendous, a YA novel written under pseudonym A. D. Goodman.

Paul Guernsey
Guernsey, Paul

Paul Guernsey is an author, editor, and college instructor. His first novel, Unhallowed Ground, was a finalist for the PEN Nelson Algren Fiction Award. When not writing, Guernsey teaches writing and communication at Unity College in Maine and runs the popular website The Ghost Story, home of The Ghost Story Supernatural Fiction Award, a highly regarded international short story competition. American Ghost is his third novel.

Diane Guest
Guest, Diane

Diane Guest (born 1939) is an American author.

Elizabeth Guest
Guest, Elizabeth

Elizabeth Guest is a pseudonym of the romance author Suzanne Simmons.

Maurissa Guibord
Guibord, Maurissa

Maurissa Guibord is an American author.

Eric J. Guignard
Guignard, Eric J.

Eric J. Guignard is a writer and editor of dark and speculative fiction, operating from the shadowy outskirts of Los Angeles. He's won the Bram Stoker Award, been a finalist for the International Thriller Writers Award, and a multi-nominee of the Pushcart Prize. His stories and non-fiction have appeared in over one hundred genre and literary publications such as "Nightmare Magazine," "Black Static," "Shock Totem," "Buzzy Magazine," and "Dark Discoveries Magazine." Outside the glamorous and jet-setting world of indie fiction, Eric's a technical writer and college professor, and he stumbles home each day to a wife, children, cats, and a terrarium filled with mischievous beetles.

Kevin Guilfoile
Guilfoile, Kevin

Kevin Guilfoile (born 1968) is an American novelist, essayist and humorist.

Wyman Guin
Guin, Wyman

Wyman Woods Guin (1915–1989) was an American pharmacologist and advertising executive. He wrote several short stories, but only one novel.

David Gullen
Gullen, David

David Gullen was born in South Africa. Three years later King Neptune baptised him at the equator when his parents returned to England.

His novel, Shopocalypse, a near-future story of talking cars, shopping and nuclear war, is available from Clarion Publishing (2013). His short fiction has appeared in various magazines and anthologies, one being shortlisted for the James White Award, another, an Aeon Award winner. His collection, Open Waters (theEXAGGERATEDpress), appeared in early 2014. He recently co-edited the charity SF anthology Mind Seed.

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Addison Gunn
Gunn, Addison

Extinction Biome: Invasion is the creation of jungle warrior, revolutionary, counter-revolutionary and outdoorsperson Addison Gunn. But who is Addison Gunn? Addison’s too damn busy to answer that. Instead Gunn’s wrangled some of the best new talents in the genre to pen this exciting new series...

Eileen Gunn
Gunn, Eileen

Eileen Gunn (born 1945) is a science fiction author and editor based in Seattle, Washington, who began publishing in 1978.

Her story "Coming to Terms", inspired, in part, by a friendship with Avram Davidson, won the Nebula Award for Best Short Story in 2004. Two other stories were nominated for the Hugo Award: "Stable Strategies for Middle Management" (in 1989) and "Computer Friendly" (1990).

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James Gunn
Gunn, James

James Edwin Gunn (born 1923) is the author of 38 books, including The Joy Makers, Kampus, The Dreamers, and The Immortals.

James Gunn has served as the president of the Science Fiction Writers of America and the Science Fiction Research Association. He has won Hugo, Pilgrim, and Eaton awards and has been a professor at the University of Kansas for 40 years. He lives in Lawrence, Kansas.

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Val Gunn
Gunn, Val

Val Gunn is the author of A Resonance of Shadows and Six Months to Live. He lives in Rosemary Beach, Florida.

Mark Allan Gunnells
Gunnells, Mark Allan

Mark Allan Gunnells is thirty-six years old and holds a degree in English and Psychology. He is the author of the chapbook A Laymon Kind of Night and the upcoming Whisonant and Tales from the Midnight Shift, Vol. I, all from Sideshow Press. His short story "Dancing in the Dark" was recently released through Darkside Digital. A small-town boy at heart, he still lives in his hometown of Gaffney, South Carolina with his partner of nine years.

Paula Guran
Guran, Paula

Paula Guran is senior editor for Prime Books. She edited the Juno fantasy imprint from its small press inception through its incarnation as an imprint of Pocket Books. Guran edits the annual Year’s Best Dark Fantasy and Horror series as well as a growing number of other anthologies. In an earlier life she produced weekly email newsletter DarkEcho (winning two Stokers, an IHG award, and a World Fantasy Award nomination), edited Horror Garage (earning another IHG and a second World Fantasy nomination), and has contributed reviews, interviews, and articles to numerous professional publications.

Jason Gurley
Gurley, Jason

Jason Gurley is the author of Greatfall, The Man Who Ended the World, and other novels and stories. His bestselling self-published novel Eleanor is forthcoming from Crown Publishing in 2016. His work has appeared in Lightspeed Magazine and numerous anthologies. He lives and writes in Oregon.

Scott Gustafson
Gustafson, Scott

Scott Gustafson is an illustrator whose most recent book is Favorite Nursery Rhymes from Mother Goose. He has also illustrated Classic Fairy Tales, Alphabet Soup and Peter Pan. Eddie is his first novel. He lives in Chicago.

Justin Gustainis
Gustainis, Justin

Justin Gustainis is a college professor living in upstate New York. He is the author of the novel The Hades Project (2003), as well as a number of short stories. In his misspent youth, Mr. Gustainis was, at various times, a busboy, soldier, speechwriter and professional bodyguard. To balance his karma, he collects teddy bears.

Ben Guterson
Guterson, Ben

Ben Guterson was born and raised in Seattle. Before working at Microsoft as a program manager, Ben spent a decade teaching public school on the Navajo Reservation in New Mexico and in rural Colorado. He has written features and book reviews for newspapers, magazines, and websites, as well as a nature-travel guide to the Southwest. Ben and his family live in the foothills of the Cascades east of Seattle. Winterhouse is his first book.

Dan Gutman
Gutman, Dan

Dan Gutman, the acclaimed children's book author, has a prolific career spanning numerous captivating works. Unlike the legendary Abraham Lincoln, Dan Gutman's origins did not involve a log cabin in Illinois. However, his literary achievements are certainly noteworthy.

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John Gwynne
Gwynne, John

John Gwynne is the author of the renowned epic fantasy series, which includes "The Faithful and the Fallen," "Of Blood and Bone," and "The Bloodsworn Saga." Beyond his impressive literary works, Gwynne also has a fascinating and hands-on hobby as a Viking re-enactor. He finds great joy in joining the shield wall alongside his three sons, all of whom share his passionate enthusiasm for swords and axes, while occasionally grappling with the challenges of donning his coat of mail.

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Gary Gygax
Gygax, Gary

Ernest Gary Gygax (1938–2008) was an American writer and game designer, best known for co-creating the pioneering role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) with Dave Arneson. Gygax is generally acknowledged as one of the fathers of the tabletop role-playing game.

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