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Welcome to the most comprehensive directory of science fiction, fantasy and horror writers on the Web. We are constantly updating this site as new authors appear, and as fans post informative sites devoted to their favorite writers. Authors are listed alphabetically by last name. If you know of any sites which should be included, be sure to let us know.

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Author Pages
Frank Macchia
David Mace
DB Macks
Ian R. MacLeod
Ken MacLeod
Russell Madden
Angus MacDonald
Hector Macdonald
James D. Macdonald
C.R. MacPhadrick
Joe Mahoney
Derwin Mak
Nick Mamatas
Michael Marano
John Marco
Daniel Marcus
Juliet Marillier
Chris Marker
Laurie J. Marks
Louise Marley
Paul Marlowe
Jeff Marriote
Ann Marston
George R.R. Martin
Thomas K. Martin
Lee Martindale
L.S. Martine
David Marusek
Lisa Mason
Brandon Massey
David I. Masson
Sophie Masson
Susan Matthews
Bob Mayer
Ardath Mayhar
Len Maynard
Susan Mayse
Beth Meacham
John Meaney
William Meikle
Beverley J. Meincke
Paul Melko
Carlton Mellick III
Mark Mellon
Ray Melnik
Henry Melton
Michael Menion
Bonnie Mercure
Elizabeth A Merz
Jon F. Merz
Robert A. Metzger
Yves Meynard
China Miéville
Karen Michalson
Jared Michaud
Christine Michels
Melisa Michaels
Beverly J. Miencke
Larisa Mihaylova
Lynda S. Mikulski
Victor Milán
Corey Miller
G. Wayne Miller
Ron Miller
Sasha Miller
Steve Miller
Tom W. Miller
Craig Mills
Steven Mills
Catherine Mintz
Eugene Mirabelli
Mary Ann Mitchell
Regina Mitchell
Syne Mitchell
Laura J. Mixon
L.E. Modesitt, Jr
Rebecca Moesta
Mia Molvray
Catherine Montrose
Elizabeth Moon
Modean Moon
Christopher Moore
John Moore
Leslie Ann Moore
Michael J. Moore
Nancy Moore
T.M. Moore
Paul Morabito
Daniel Keys Moran
Lyda Morehouse
K.L.Morgan
Stanley Morganstein
Chris Moriarty
James Morrow
David Morse
Lisa Morton
Peter Morwood
Caiseal Mór
Mike Moscoe
Billie Sue Mosiman
Darryl Moss
H.W. Moss
Edward Muller
Jim Munroe
W.R.R. Munro
Haruki Murakami
Christine Murphy
Hilary Moon Murphy
Kevin Andrew Murphy
Derryl Murphy
Joe Murphy
Pat Murphy
Shirley Rousseau Murphy

Tribute Pages
R.A. MacAvoy
John D. MacDonald
  John D. MacDonald
Arthur Machen
F. Gwynpaine MacIntyre
Scott Mackay
Katherine MacLean
Ian MacLeod
Ken MacLeod
  Ken MacLeod
  Ken MacLeod
Charles Eric Maine
Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Barry Malzberg
  Barry Malzberg
Louise Marley
George R.R. Martin
  George R.R. Martin
  George R.R. Martin
Mark O. Martin
David Marusek
Douglas R. Mason/John Rankine
Adrian Mathews
Julian May
Julian May
  Julian May
Shirley Meier
Richard C. Meredith
Judith Merril
  Judith Merril
A. Merritt
Sam Merwin Jr.
China Miéville
  China Miéville
  China Miéville
  China Miéville
P. Schuyler Miller
Walter M. Miller, Jr.
A.A. Milne
Marvin Minsky
Eugene Mirabelli
Hope Mirrlees
  Hope Mirrlees
Naomi Mitchison
L. E. Modesitt, Jr.
Judith Moffett
Donald Moffitt
Devon Monk
  Elizabeth Moon
Elizabeth Moon
Michael Moorcock
  Michael Moorcock
  Michael Moorcock
  Michael Moorcock
  Michael Moorcock
Alan Moore
  Alan Moore
  Alan Moore
C.L. Moore
John Moore
Ward Moore
Daniel Keys Moran
Caiseal Mór
Christopher Morley
John Morressy
Mark Morris
Walter Mosley
lSam Moscowitz
Baron Munchausen
Talbot Mundy
H. Warner Munn
Haruki Murakami
John Myers Myers
  John Myers Myers

Ian R. MacLeod
Ian R. MacLeod was born in Solihull, near Birmingham, in the West Midlands in 1956. He decided to study law and to attend Birmingham Polytechnic. After various jobs, he ended up working in the Civil Service. When his wife Gillian became pregnant in 1990, he thought the idea of being a full-time house-husband and writer was a worthy one. His first sale, "1/72nd Scale," was nominated for the Nebula Award for the year's best novella. Other stories have appeared in the Year's Best SF and Year's Best Fantasy and Horror. His first novel, The Great Wheel, won the Locus Award for the Year's Best First novel and his second, an alternative history story titled The Summer Isles, won the World Fantasy Award as a novella. He now teaches English and creative writing part-time.


James D. Macdonald
He is one half of the team behind the five Mageworlds books (with wife and co-author Debra Doyle).


John Marco
John Marco was born and raised on Long Island, NY, and grew up reading and enjoying fantasy adventure stories. The Tyrants and Kings series is an expression of his passion for epic literature and military history. He is currently working on the next installment of the Tyrants and Kings saga.


Juliet Marillier
Juliet Marillier was born in Dunedin, New Zealand, and puts her lifelong passion for Celtic folklore and music down to her Scottish and Irish immigrant ancestry. She now lives on the outskirts of Perth, Western Australia, and divides her time between working for a large government agency and writing fantasy fiction.


Louise Marley
Louise Marley has been a classical concert and opera singer for 15 years. She sings with the Seattle Symphony, has concertized in Russia and Italy, and is alto soloist at St. James Cathedral in Seattle. She holds a Master's Degree in Voice. Her novels include the trilogy The Singers of Nevya and The Terrorists of Irustan.


George R.R. Martin
George R.R. Martin was born in 1948 in Bayonne, New Jersey. He attended Northwestern University, graduating with degrees in journalism. Martin refused active service instead he served with VISTA, in Cook County, Illinois. In addition to his writing credits, Martin has served as Story Editor for Twilight Zone, Executive Story Consultant, Producer and Co-Supervising Producer for Beauty and the Beast both on CBS. He was Executive Producer for Doorways on CBS At 21, he made his first pro sale to the magazine, Galaxy. He lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico.


Susan Matthews
Susan Matthews grew up across the US and in Europe and India. While in the US Army, she served as the operations and security officer of a combat support hospital. She works as an auditor for The Boeing Company and recently graduated from Seattle University with an MBA in accounting. She lives in Seattle.

Copyright © Ronan Nagle
David Marusek David Marusek
David Marusek was born in Buffalo, New York but has lived in Alaska since 1973. He worked as a graphic designer for about twenty years and, for eleven years, he also taught graphic design at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. In 1999, his novella "The Wedding Album" won the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award and was nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Novella. He is currently divorced and has a grown daughter.

China Miéville
China Miéville was born in London in 1972. When he was eighteen, he lived and taught English in Egypt, where he developed an interest in Arab culture and Middle Eastern politics. Miéville has a B.A. in social anthropology from Cambridge and a master's with distinction from the London School of Economics. His first novel, King Rat, was nominated for both an International Horror Guild Award and the Bram Stoker Prize. Perdido Street Station won the Arthur C. Clarke Award and was nominated for a British Science Fiction Association Award. He lives in London, England.

Laura J. Mixon
Trained as a chemical engineer, Laura Mixon found her way into environmental engineering and consulting after a two year stint in the Peace Corps. A devoted writer of science fiction since she was a child, in 1995 she quit to pursue her writing full-time. She has written four books -- Astropilots, Glass Houses, Greenwar (which she cowrote with Stephen Gould), and most recently, Proxies. She lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico, with her husband (Stephen Gould).


L.E. Modesitt, Jr
Modesitt is the author of the Recluce fantasy series and a string of science fiction novels, notably The Parafaith War, Of Tangible Ghosts, and Adiamante (Tor 1996).


Elizabeth Moon
Elizabeth Moon grew up in south Texas, 250 miles south of San Antonio and eight miles from the Mexican border. She attended Rice University and joined the US Marines in 1968. With a second degree in biology, she entertained thoughts about going to med school after her husband, but circumstances intervened.

Michael Moorcock Michael Moorcock
Michael Moorcock has published over 70 novels in all genres. These include several series that share, to different extents, a common multiverse: the Cornelius Chronicles, The Dancers at the End of Time, Erekose, The Books of Corum, Hawkmoon: The Chronicles of Castle Brass, Hawkmoon: The History of the Runestaff and the classic Elric of Melnibone Saga. He has also edited an anthology of late Victorian science fiction, Before Armageddon. Under the pen name E.P. Bradbury, he published a series of novel-length pastiches of Edgar Rice Burroughs' Barsoom novels.

Moorcock was born in London in 1939 and began writing, illustrating, editing and printing fanzines under the MJM Publications imprint at a young age. He became the editor of Tarzan Adventures at 16 (some sources say 17), and later the Sexton Blake Library. In 1964 he became the radical editor of the experimental and frequently controversial British SF magazine New Worlds.

A multiple winner of the British Fantasy Award, Moorcock is also a World Fantasy Award and John W. Campbell Memorial Award winner for his novel Gloriana. He won the 1967 Nebula Award for his novella "Behold the Man." He has twice won the Derleth Award for Fantasy (for The Sword and the Stallion, and The Hollow Lands), and the Guardian Fiction Prize (1977) for The Condition of Muzak. He has been shortlisted for both the Booker and Whitbread prizes, Britain's most prestigious literary awards. Moorcock currently lives in London, Spain and Texas. Moorcock has also recorded music, both solo and with the progressive rock group, Hawkwind.


Christopher Moore
Born in Toledo, Ohio in 1957, Christopher Moore has worked as a roofer, a photographer, a disk jockey, a journalist, a motel clerk and a waiter. At 32, he wrote Practical Demonkeeping (optioned by Disney) followed by Coyote Blue, Bloodsucking Fiends, a love story and Island of the Sequined Love Nun.


James Morrow
James Morrow has been called "The most provocative satiric voice in science fiction" by the Washington Post. It may be true. Morrow won an World Fantasy Award for his novel, Towing Jehovah and has been nominated for his collection, Bible Stories for Adults.


Peter Morwood Peter Morwood
Peter Morwood is a the author of a number of fantasy novels. This site features biographies of Morwood (and Diane Duane), bibliographies, excerpts from their works, some short fiction and some news. As a bonus, there you will find a missing DC comics introduction. Low on graphics and simple HTML design, the use of large single page can make it slow.



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