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. | ||
==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 07:22, 8 February 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.
- Harrell Funeral Homes obituary and guestbook at http://obit.harrellfuneralhomes.com/wrapper_gb.php?id=364199&clientid=harrellfuneralhomes&listing=Found
Bibliography
Novels
- Leviathan's Deep (1979) (transl. into French by Élisabeth Vonarburg, as L'Abîme de Léviathan) (first novel)
- Rabelais series
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)