Zoë Ann Fairbairns: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(→Edited collections: links) |
(cats) |
||
| (One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
| Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
[[Category:1948 births]] | [[Category:1948 births]] | ||
[[ | [[category:Women writers by name]] | ||
[[category:Writers by name]] | |||
[[Category:Living people]] | [[Category:Living people]] | ||
[[Category:Activists]] | [[Category:Activists]] | ||
[[category:Women by name]] | |||
[[category:People by name]] | |||
Latest revision as of 19:22, 29 November 2010
Zoë Ann Fairbairns is an English writer, teacher, and activist in the women's movement.
Works
- Benefits (1979 novel) (1983 Philip K. Dick Award Best Novel nominee)
- Cinderella on the Ball: Fairytales for Feminists (Attic Press, 1991; ISBN 1855940272) (Feminist Fairytales series) (1991 collection)
Non-SFnal fiction
- Down (1969 novel)
- No Place to Grow Up (1977 novel)
- Stand We at Last (1983 novel) (historical fiction spanning the suffragette movement to the modern women's movement)
- Here Today (1984 novel)
- "Relics" (1985 short story)
- Closing (1987 novel) (a novel about four women taking a sales training course & getting involved in a selling organization)
- Daddy's Girls (1991 novel)
- Other Names (1998 novel)
- Stories (1999 novel)
- How Do You Pronounce Nulliparous? (2004 collection)
Edited collections
- Editor, Tales I Tell My Mother (1978)
- Editor, More Tales I Tell My Mother: Feminist Short Stories (1987 collection) (with Sara Maitland and Valerie Miner)
Nonfiction
- Study War No More: Military Involvement in British Universities and Colleges (1974 nonfiction)
- Peace Moves: Nuclear Protest in the 1980's with James Cameron and Ed Barber (1984 photography and essays)