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Trouble and Her Friends by Melissa Scott
Trouble and Her Friends by Melissa Scott










Trouble and Her Friends by Melissa Scott Trouble and Her Friends by Melissa Scott

Scott and Griswold also teamed up for fantasy novels Death By Silver and A Death at the Dionysus Club, which are gay Victorian murder mysteries with magic (or fantasies with murder). Scott and Graham also began a new series of adventure novels, The Order of the Air, set in the 1930s, featuring aviation, magic, and secrets hidden in plain sight.

Trouble and Her Friends by Melissa Scott

Scott was immediately hooked by the idea, and she, Graham, and Amy Griswold completed the project with the release of Stargate Atlantis: The Third Path. She returned to longer work in the summer of 2009, when good friend and fellow writer Jo Graham invited her to participate in a new project: Legacy, an eight-book series of tie-in novels for Stargate: Atlantis, to begin where the fifth season had ended.

Trouble and Her Friends by Melissa Scott

Scott has also been short-listed for the Tiptree Award, and won a Spectrum Award for Shadow Man.ĭuring Barnett’s struggle with breast cancer, and for several years after her death in 2006, Scott focused on short fiction. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in 1986, and won Lambda Literary Awards in 1994 for Trouble And Her Friends, 1995 for Shadow Man, and again in 2001 for Point of Dreams, the last written with long-time partner and collaborator, the late Lisa A. Over the next twenty years, she published eighteen original novels and a handful of short stories, as well as tie-in novels for both Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (Proud Helios) and Star Trek: Voyager (The Garden). She earned her PhD from Brandeis with a dissertation titled “The Victory of the Ancients: Tactics, Technology, and the Use of Classical Precedent.” After graduation, she was admitted to Brandeis University’s comparative history program, and also sold her first novel, The Game Beyond, quickly becaming a part-time graduate student and an - almost - full-time writer. Who - that had been unavailable in her home town. Scott studied history at Harvard College, where she was involved with the now-defunct college-sanctioned SF ‘zine that spawned the Harvard/Radcliffe Science Fiction Association, and was introduced to a new round of SF, particularly media SF - like Dr. She devoured everything available at school, and then discovered the collection created by the Little Rock Public Library’s À Son Goût Trust, which had been established to purchase “books people like to read” - SF, fantasy, and Westerns She was banished to the library, and there the assistant librarian suggested she might enjoy “what’s his name, Heinlein - or that Andre Norton guy.” He was right. Melissa Scott was born and raised in Little Rock, Arkansas, where she discovered science fiction as the direct result of breaking her arm during junior high gym class.












Trouble and Her Friends by Melissa Scott