Jayge Carr: Difference between revisions

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'''Jayge Carr''', sometimes spelled "Jaygee", pseudonym of Margery Ruth Morgenstern Krueger (born in [[1940]], died in [[2006]]), American science fiction writer and former [[List of female scientists involved in SF|nuclear physicist]] at NASA.
'''Jayge Carr''', sometimes spelled "Jaygee", pseudonym of Margery Ruth Morgenstern Krueger (born in [[1940]], died in [[2006]]), American science fiction writer and former [[List of female scientists involved in SF|nuclear physicist]] at NASA.


MvYamc  <a href="http://lawdpabpdqoj.com/">lawdpabpdqoj</a>, [url=http://xzoteqhcpkwu.com/]xzoteqhcpkwu[/url], [link=http://lxqsvkqdehru.com/]lxqsvkqdehru[/link], http://ezidgbnoeema.com/
==Biography==
* SFWA obituary: Born & raised in Houston, Texas. Died from cancer, Dec. 20, 2006. One spouse, two daughters and two grandchildren.
 
* Harrell Funeral Homes obituary and guestbook at http://obit.harrellfuneralhomes.com/wrapper_gb.php?id=364199&clientid=harrellfuneralhomes&listing=Found


== Bibliography ==
== Bibliography ==

Revision as of 21:09, 15 January 2010

Jayge Carr, sometimes spelled "Jaygee", pseudonym of Margery Ruth Morgenstern Krueger (born in 1940, died in 2006), American science fiction writer and former nuclear physicist at NASA.

Biography

  • SFWA obituary: Born & raised in Houston, Texas. Died from cancer, Dec. 20, 2006. One spouse, two daughters and two grandchildren.

Bibliography

Novels

  1. Navigator's Sindrome (1983)
  2. The Treasure in the Heart of the Maze (1985)
  3. Rabelaisian Reprise (1988)

Short Fiction

(Over 40 stories (1976- ? ) to be added here.)

  • "Malthus’s Day", Omni Nov 1979
    • The Best of Omni Science Fiction, No. 5, ed. Don Myrus, Omni 1983
  • "The Pavilion Where All Times Meet", Other Worlds #1, ed. Roy Torgeson, Zebra 1979
    • The Year’s Best Fantasy Stories #6, ed. Lin Carter, DAW 1980
  • "The King Is Dead! Long Live—", Chrysalis 8, ed. Roy Torgeson, Doubleday 1980
  • "Reunion", Hecate’s Cauldron, ed. Susan M. Shwartz, DAW 1982
  • "The Wondrous Works of His Hands", Alien Encounters, ed. Jan Howard Finder, Taplinger 1982
  • "Blind Spot", Omni Jul 1981
    • The 1982 Annual World’s Best SF, ed. Donald A. Wollheim & Arthur W. Saha, DAW 1982
    • The Omni Book of Science Fiction #2, ed. Ellen Datlow, Zebra 1983
  • "The Hitchhiker" (Fall 1988, in Marion Zimmer Bradley's Fantasy Magazine)
  • "Chimera" (1989, in Synergy 4 edited by George Zebrowski)