Cherie Priest
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Cherie Priest (born July 30, 1975) is an American novelist and blogger living in Seattle, Washington.
Biography
Priest is a Florida native, born in Tampa in 1975.[1] She graduated from Forest Lake Academy, a Seventh-day Adventist boarding school in Apopka, Florida in 1993. She moved around quite a bit as a child of an Army father, living in many places such as Florida, Texas, Kentucky, and Tennessee. She moved around regularly until college. In 1998 she graduated with a B.A. from Southern Adventist University in Collegedale, Tennessee, and in 2001 she left the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga with an M.A. in Rhetoric/Professional writing.[1]
Priest lived in Chattanooga for twelve years and it is there she both set her Eden Moore series and wrote the first two books.[2] In May 2012, she and her husband Aric Annear[1] moved back to Tennessee from Seattle, Washington. In 2017, she returned to live in Seattle.
Although Priest was baptized into the Seventh-day Adventist Church, she has no further contact with the church and claims no religious affiliation.[3][4]
In addition to her novels, Priest was a reviewer for the Bram Stoker Award-winning website Chiaroscuro and currently is a staff member of Subterranean Press. She is a regular attendee and panelist at DragonCon and several other genre conventions around the country such as Penguicon and Steamcon. She is also known for giving talks and writing articles about the hobby of urban exploration.[5]
Awards
- In March 2006, she won the Lulu Blooker Prize for Fiction for Four and Twenty Blackbirds (Tor Books, 2005), becoming the first ever winner in that category.[6]
- Her 2006 short story "Wishbones" was part of the Aegri Somnia anthology by Apex Digest, which was nominated for a Bram Stoker Award.[7]
- Her 2009 novel Boneshaker won a Pacific Northwest Booksellers Association Award[8]
- The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America announced that Boneshaker made the final ballot for the 2009 Nebula Award for Best Novel.[9]
- Boneshaker was a 2010 Hugo Award nominee in the Best Novel category.[10]
- Boneshaker won the 2010 Locus Award in the Best Science Fiction Novel category.[11]
Bibliography
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Novels
Booking Agent Series
- Grave Reservations, 2021, Atria Books. Template:ISBN.[12]
- Flight Risk, 2022, Atria Books. Template:ISBN.[13]
The Borden Dispatches
- Maplecroft, 2014, Roc Books. Template:ISBN.
- Chapelwood, 2015, Roc Books. Template:ISBN.
Eden Moore series
- Four and Twenty Blackbirds,
- Original edition, 2003, Marietta Publishing. Template:ISBN.
- Re-released in a revised, much expanded, edition, 2005, Tor Books. Template:ISBN.
- Issued in the United Kingdom, February 2012, Titan Books. Template:ISBN
- Wings to the Kingdom, October 2006, Tor Books. Template:ISBN.
- Issued in the United Kingdom, May 2012, Titan Books. Template:ISBN
- Not Flesh Nor Feathers, 2007, Tor Books. Template:ISBN.
- Publishers Weekly described this book as "a bit talky" but also as Cherie Priest's "most assured outing yet."[14]
Clockwork Century Universe
- Boneshaker, October 2009, Tor Books. Template:ISBN.
- Clementine, July 2010, Subterranean Press. Template:ISBN.
- Dreadnought, September 2010, Tor Books. Template:ISBN.
- Ganymede, September 2011, Tor Books. Template:ISBN.
- The Inexplicables, November 2012, Tor Books. Template:ISBN.
- Fiddlehead, November 2013, Tor Books. Template:ISBN[15]
- Jacaranda, January 2015, Subterranean Press.[16]
Cheshire Red Reports series
- Bloodshot, January 2011,[17] Bantam Spectra. Template:ISBN.
- Issued in the United Kingdom, July 2011, Titan Books. Template:ISBN.
- Hellbent, September 6, 2011, Bantam Spectra. Template:ISBN.
- Issued in the United Kingdom, September 2011, Titan Books. Template:ISBN.
The Cheshire Red Reports concern a vampire thief called Raylene Pendle. Although she prefers to work alone, she acquires a group of misfits who join her in her adventures. These are two young children, a blind vampire and an ex-Navy Seal/Drag Queen. Bloodshot also features the world of urban exploration. The Cheshire Red reports were originally only commissioned as a two book series. There is the possibility of a third book in this series provisionally entitled Sawbones if sufficient interest is expressed.[18]
Other novels
- Dreadful Skin, March 2007, Subterranean Press. Template:ISBN.
- Fathom, December 2008, Tor Books. Template:ISBN.
- Those Who Went Remain There Still, December 2008, Subterranean Press. Template:ISBN.
- I Am Princess X, May 2015, Arthur A. Levine Books. Template:ISBN.
- The Family Plot, September 2016, Tor Books. Template:ISBN
- Brimstone, April 2017, Ace. Template:ISBN.
- The Agony House, September 2018, Arthur A. Levine Books/Scholastic. Template:ISBN.[19]
- The Toll, July 2019, Tor Books. Template:ISBN
Short stories and other work
- 'The Heavy', a short story. Published in Apex Digest Issue #12, March 2008.
- 'The Target Audience', a short story. Published in Noctem Aeternus January, 2008.
- 'Following Piper', a short story. Published in Subterranean Digest issue #6.
- 'Little Wards', a short story. Published in The Edge of Propinquity. June 2006
- 'The Immigrant', a short story, part of Mythic #2, October 2006 Mythic Delirium Books. Template:ISBN
- 'Bad Sushi', a short story. Published in Apex Digest, Issue #10. Republished in "New Cthulhu", ed. Paula Guran, November 2011.
- 'Wishbones', a short story, part of Aegri Somnia. December 2006 Apex Digest. Template:ISBN (paperback), Template:ISBN (hardback)
- 'Tanglefoot', a short story, published online by Subterranean Press, 2009. First release of the Clockwork Century universe.[20][21]
- 'Hell's Bells,' Grant’s Pass, Morrigan Books 2009
- 'The Catastrophe Box', a short story Son of Retro Pulp Tales, Subterranean Press 2010
- 'Reluctance', a short story, part of "The Mammoth Book of Steampunk", first published in the UK by Robinson, an imprint of Constable & Robinson Ltd, 2012
Articles (non-fiction)
- 'Steampunk Wardrobe Customizations for the Lazy, the Poor, or the Crafty,' Tor, October 2009
- 'Steampunk for Beginners,' BookBrowse, October 2009
- 'Growing up Poe,' Weird Tales, January 2009
Video games
- Dead Space 3 (2013)[22]
References
External links
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- Cherie Priest's Official Site
- Editorial Reviews on Amazon.com
- Reviews at Barnes & Noble
- Interview at Clarkesworld Magazine (11/10)
- Template:Trim Cherie Priest at the Internet Speculative Fiction DatabaseTemplate:EditAtWikidata
Template:Locus Award Best SF NovelTemplate:Authority control
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- ↑ Lulu Blooker Blog: And the Winners are Template:Webarchive
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- ↑ Kirkus Reviews, June 24, 2018, https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/cherie-priest/the-agony-house/ Template:Webarchive
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- Pages with script errors
- 1975 births
- Living people
- Writers from Tampa, Florida
- 21st-century American novelists
- 21st-century American women writers
- American horror writers
- American women novelists
- American women short story writers
- American science fiction writers
- American women science fiction and fantasy writers
- University of Tennessee at Chattanooga alumni
- Southern Adventist University alumni
- Steampunk writers
- American women horror writers
- 21st-century American short story writers
- Novelists from Florida
- Former Seventh-day Adventists