Will Shetterly

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Will Shetterly is a writer, and has also run for governor of Minnesota. He is married to Emma Bull. His work features strong women characters and people of color; at the same time, he has drawn significant criticism for his public statements on anti-racism, which he describes as "openly critical of the narrow agenda of capitalist antiracists".[1]

Works

Novels

  • Cats Have No Lord (1985) Ace Books
  • Witch Blood (1986) Ace Books
  • The Tangled Lands (1989) Ace Books
  • Dogland (1997) Tor Books.
  • Chimera (2000) Tor Books.
  • Thor’s Hammer (2000) Random House. Valley of the Basset series
  • The Gospel of the Knife (2007) Tor Books. Sequel to Dogland, nominated for the World Fantasy Award

Borderlands series novels

  • Elsewhere (1991) Harcourt Brace, Tor Books. Winner of the Minnesota Book Award for Fantasy and Science Fiction.
  • Nevernever (1993) Harcourt Brace, Tor Books. One of the International Reading Association’s 20 favorite books of US teenagers.

Collection

  • Double Feature (with Emma Bull). (1994) NESFA Press.

Short Stories

  • “Bound Things” (1985) in Liavek, edited by Shetterly and Bull, Ace Books.
  • "A Happy Birthday" (1986) in Liavek: The Players of Luck, edited by Shetterly and Bull, Ace Books.
  • “Danceland” (with Emma Bull) (1986) in Bordertown, edited by Terri Windling and Mark Alan Arnold, Signet and Tor Books.
  • “Six Days Outside the Year” (1990) in Liavek: Festival Week," edited by Shetterly and Bull, Ace Books.
  • “Nevernever” (1991) in Life on the Border, edited by Terri Windling, Tor Books.
  • “Time Travel, the Artifact, and a Significant Historical Personage” (1992) in Xanadu, edited by Jane Yolen and Martin H. Greenberg, Tor Books.
  • “Oldthings” (1993) in Xanadu 2, edited by Jane Yolen and Martin H. Greenberg, Tor Books.
  • “The Princess Who Kicked Butt” (1993) in A Wizard’s Dozen, edited by Michael Stearns, Harcourt Brace. Also in Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror, Seventh Annual Edition, edited by Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling, St. Martin’s Press.
  • “Brian and the Aliens” (1994) in Bruce Coville’s Book of Aliens: Tales to Warp Your Mind, edited by Bruce Coville, Scholastic.
  • “Dream Catcher” (1995) in The Armless Maiden: and Other Tales for Childhood's Survivors, edited by Terri Windling, Tor Books.
  • “Taken He Cannot Be” (1998) in Peter Beagle’s Immortal Unicorn, edited by Peter Beagle and Janet , HarperPrism.
  • “Secret Identity” (1995) in Starfarer’s Dozen, edited by Michael Stearns, Harcourt Brace.
  • “Splatter” (2002) in The Sandman Book of Dreams, edited by Neil Gaiman and Ed Kramer., Harper Prism.
  • “Little Red and the Big Bad” (2003) in Swan Sister, edited by Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling, Simon & Schuster.
  • “Black Rock Blues,” (2007) in The Coyote Road, edited by Ellen Datlow and Terri Windling, Viking.

Edited Anthologies

(all edited in collaboration with Emma Bull.

  • Liavek (1985), Ace Books.
  • Liavek: The Players of Luck (1986), Ace Books.
  • Liavek: Wizard’s Row (1987), Ace Books.
  • Liavek: Spells of Binding (1988), Ace Books.
  • Liavek: Festival Week (1990), Ace Books.

Nonfiction

  • “My Life, So Far,” Something About the Author Vol. 106, edited by Alan Hedblad, Gale Group.

Comic Books and Graphic Albums

  • “In Charge” (1987) Grimjack #39, First Comics.
  • Captain Confederacy with Vince Stone (1986) #1 - #12, SteelDragon Press. (White male Captain Confederacy)
  • Captain Confederacy #1 - #4 (1991-1992) Epic/Marvel Comics. (Black female Captain Confederacy)
  • “Home is a Hard Place” (1989) Open Space #3, Marvel Comics.

Miscellaneous

  • Nightspeeder. A feature-length science fiction script (written with Emma Bull). Commissioned by Perfect World Entertainment.
  • William Tell, a feature-length historical adventure script (written with Emma Bull and Don Helverson).
  • Masters of Earth, a TV series bible (written with Emma Bull). Commissioned by SciFi Channel.
  • Shadow Unit, an online fiction site created by Emma Bull and written by Bull, Shetterly, Elizabeth Bear, and Sarah Monette. The site is designed as the fan site for a fictional television show. The "show" Shadow Unit features a wide variety of strong women, including one Asian and one African-American woman.


External links

References