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Tesseracts 8 book cover
Tesseracts 8
2002
First Published
3.50
Average Rating
312
Number of Pages

Part of Series

Tesseracts brings together twenty of the best pieces of Canadian speculative fiction, selected from both established and new, English and French writers by award-winning editors John Clute and Canada's Jane Dorsey. Readers of all types of speculative fiction - science fiction, fantasy, magic realism and horror - will find their flavor in the eighth anthology in the renowned Tesseracts series.

Avg Rating
3.50
Number of Ratings
6
5 STARS
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4 STARS
50%
3 STARS
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2 STARS
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Authors

David Nickle
David Nickle
Author · 12 books
David Nickle is the author of several novels and numerous short stories. His latest novel is VOLK: A Novel of Radiant Abomination. His novel Eutopia: A Novel of Terrible Optimism (to which VOLK is a sequel) was a finalist for the Aurora Award, the Sunburst Award and the Compton Crook Award. His story collection Monstrous Affections won the 2009 Black Quill Reader's Choice Award. He's a past winner of the Bram Stoker Award and Aurora Award. He lives and works in Toronto.
Ursula Pflug
Ursula Pflug
Author · 6 books

Born in Tunis to German parents, Ursula Pflug grew up in Toronto and attended the University of Toronto and The Ontario College of Art and Design. She travelled widely, living on her own in Hawai'i and in New York City as a teen in the late seventies. Formerly a graphic artist, Pflug began concentrating on her writing after moving to the rural Kawarthas to raise a family with the internationally known new media sculptor Doug Back. Her first novel, the critically acclaimed magic realist/fantasy Green Music was published by Tesseract Books in 2002. Her long awaited story collection After the Fires was published by Tightrope Books in 2008. ATF received advance praise from Matthew Cheney and Jeff VanderMeer and an Honourable Mention from the Sunburst Award jury. It was short-listed for the Aurora Award. Her second novel, the YA/Adult crossover The Alphabet Stones (Blue Denim, 2013) received advance praise from Charles DeLint, Tim Wynne-Jones, Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, Candas Jane Dorsey, Jan Thornill and more. The Alphabet Stones was a finalist for the ReLit. In 2014 a YA/Adult flash novel, Motion Sickness (illustrated by SK Dyment) appeared from Inanna, and was also a finalist for the ReLit Award. Motion Sickness received advance praise from Heather Spears. In addition, a new story collection, Harvesting The Moon, was published by PS in Great Britain, with advance praise from Jeff VanderMeer and an introduction by Candas Jane Dorsey. Also in 2014, Pflug`s first edited book, the fundraiser anthology They Have To Take You In, appeared from Hidden Brook Press. The beneficiary was The Dana Fund, administered by the CMHA, a no-overhead fund to benefit women and families in transition. THTTYI includes stories from Michelle Berry, Jan Thornhill, Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, Silvia Moreno-Garcia and more. 2015 saw the publication of Playground of Lost Toys (Exile) co-edited with Colleen Anderson. Playground was shortlisted for the Aurora Award. 2017 and 2018 saw the publication of two novellas, Mountain and Down From (Snuggly). Mountain (Inanna) was a finalist for The Sunburst Award, and received advance praise from Heather Spears and Candas Jane Dorsey. In 2020 her third story collection, Seeds, appeared from Inanna. 2021 will see the release of a new edited anthology, Food of My people, co-edited with Candas Jane Dorsey. A writer of both genre and literary short fiction, Pflug has published over ninety stories in award winning publications in Canada, the United States and the UK, including Strange Horizons, Fantasy, Lightspeed, Now Magazine, The Nine Muses, Quarry, Tesseracts, Leviathan, Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet, Nemonymous, Back Brain Recluse, Transversions, Bamboo Ridge, Bandersnatch, Postscripts, Herizons, Chizine and many others. She has had several solo or co-authored plays produced by professional companies, and was a contributing editor at The Peterborough Review for three years. Pflug’s first published short story, “Memory Lapse at The Waterfront” has been reprinted in After The Fires. Pflug wrote the script and storyboard for the short film version, directed by Carol McBride. “Waterfont” toured festivals and was purchased by WTN. Pflug has received numerous Canada Council, Ontario Arts Council and Laidlaw Foundation grants in support of her novels, short fiction, criticism and plays. She has previously been a finalist for the KM Hunter Award, the Descant Novella Contest, the Three Day Novel Contest, the Aurora Award and others. She is a Pushcart Prize nominee. Pflug mentors private clients in creative writing and has taught short fiction writing at Loyalist College, The Campbellford Resource Centre, and Trent University (with Derek Newman-Stille.) For several years she was artistic director at Cat Sass Reading Series, in Norwood, Ontario, showcasing local, national, and internationally touring authors. The series received funding from The Writers Union of Canad

A.M. Dellamonica
A.M. Dellamonica
Author · 15 books
I live in Toronto, Ontario and make my living writing science fiction and fantasy; I also review books and teach writing online at UCLA. I'm a legally married lesbian and in my spare time I take pictures with Toronto Photo. My wife's name is Kelly and we have two cats, Lorenzo and Chinchilla, born in spring of 2014.
Yves Meynard
Yves Meynard
Author · 4 books
Yves Meynard est né le 13 juin 1964 à Québec, mais la ville de Longueuil est son lieu de résidence depuis de nombreuses années. Auteur de plusieurs livres, dont neuf romans pour la jeunesse, tant sous son nom que, en collaboration avec Jean-Louis Trudel, sous celui de Laurent McAllister, Yves Meynard a publié depuis 1986 une cinquantaine de nouvelles tant en anglais qu'en français puisqu'il maîtrise parfaitement les deux langues. La qualité de sa production lui a mérité quatre prix Aurora, trois prix Boréal et le Grand Prix 1994 de la science-fiction et du fantastique québécois. Directeur littéraire de la revue Solaris de 1994 à 2002, il a été co-anthologiste du cinquième volume de la série Tesseracts. Yves Meynard détient un doctorat en informatique de l'Université de Montréal.
Cory Doctorow
Cory Doctorow
Author · 63 books

Cory Doctorow is a science fiction author, activist, journalist and blogger—the co-editor of Boing Boing and the author of the YA graphic novel In Real Life, the nonfiction business book Information Doesn’t Want To Be Free, and young adult novels like Homeland, Pirate Cinema, and Little Brother and novels for adults like Rapture Of The Nerds and Makers. He is a Fellow for the Electronic Frontier Foundation and co-founded the UK Open Rights Group. Born in Toronto, Canada, he now lives in Los Angeles.

Daniel Sernine
Daniel Sernine
Author · 8 books
Daniel Sernine est né à Montréal en 1955. Après un baccalauréat en histoire et une maîtrise en bibliothéconomie, il publie en 1978 un premier recueil de nouvelles fantastiques, Les Contes de l'ombre. Il récidivera plus de trente fois au cours des deux décennies qui suivront, proposant une œuvre riche et diversifiée qui s'adresse tant au public jeunesse qu'au public adulte. Appréciant également le fantastique et la science-fiction, il a respectivement inscrit dans ces genres deux cycles monumentaux : celui de « Neubourg et Granverger » et celui d'« Érymède ». Au fil des ans, Daniel Sernine a remporté de nombreux prix, dont le Prix de littérature jeunesse 1984 du Conseil des Arts du Canada et les Grands Prix 1992 et 1996 de la science-fiction et du fantastique québécois. Daniel Sernine est directeur littéraire de la collection « Jeunesse-Pop » chez Médiaspaul depuis 1983 et directeur de la revue Lurelu depuis 1991.
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