s born July 9, 1952,
in Pittsburgh PA, and lived there until she moved to Massachusetts to attend Smith College at 18, where she studied physics and math before switching to theater. She did graduate work at Brown, and has taught theater in the US and Germany. She is currently the Louise Wolff Kahn 1931 Professor of Theatre and Africana Studies at Smith College, and the Artistic Director of Chrysalis Theatre.
Her debut novel
Redwood and Wildfire (2011) won Tiptree and Carl Brandon Awards, and
Will Do Magic For Small Change (2016) was a finalist for Mythopoeic, Lambda, and Tiptree Awards, a Massachusetts Must Read, and a New York Times Editor’s pick. Her latest novel is
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You are a young farmers Son/Daughter in a world where peace and prosperity has been unbroken for decades, you awake one day to learn the five sages of the united lands have called upon you, they tell of a mysterious decay slowly scouring the land, conjuring fiends from the shadow dimension long thought to be locked away by a hero of time.
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The Association of Authors’ Representatives (the professional organization for literary agents) has changed its name to the Association of American Literary Agents. They say the new name “better reflects the membership and aligns the organization with its core mission of empowering and educating literary agents.” They’re updating their website to reflect the new branding and to “offer deeper resources for members and writers.” They’ve added a non-profit division, Literary Agents of Change, devoted to charitable work and building “a more equitable publishing industry.” It will “provide stipends for interns and a mentorship program to historically underrepresented groups, to help increase recruitment, retention and promotion in the profession.”