Terry Dowling

Born in Sydney in 1947, Terry Dowling is one of Australiaโ€™s most awarded, versatile and internationally acclaimed writers of science fiction, fantasy, dark fantasy and horror. He is author of Rynosseros (1990), Blue Tyson (1992), Twilight Beach (1993) and Rynemonn (2007) (the Ditmar award-winning Tom Rynosseros saga, which, in his 2002 Fantastic Fictions Symposium keynote speech, US Professor Brian Attebery called โ€œnot only intricate and engaging, but important as wellโ€), Wormwood (1991), The Man Who Lost Red (1994), An Intimate Knowledge of the Night (1995), Antique Futures: The Best of Terry Dowling (1999), Blackwater Days (2000), Basic Black: Tales of Appropriate Fear (2006, Ticonderoga edition 2009) (which earned a starred review in Publishersโ€™ Weekly in May 2006 and won the 2007 International Horror Guild Award for Best Collection) and Make Believe. He is editor of the World Fantasy Award-winning The Essential Ellison (1987/ revised 2001), Mortal Fire: Best Australian SF (1993) and The Jack Vance Treasury (2007).

Dowling has outstanding publishing credentials. As well as appearances in The Yearโ€™s Best Science Fiction, The Yearโ€™s Best SF, The Mammoth Book of Best New SF, The Yearโ€™s Best Fantasy, The Best New Horror and The Yearโ€™s Best Fantasy and Horror (a record eight times; he is the only author to have had two stories in the 2001 volume, one chosen by each editor), his work has appeared in such major anthologies as Centaurus: The Best of Australian Science Fiction, The Dark, Dreaming Down Under, Gathering the Bones and The Oxford Book of Australian Ghost Stories and in such diverse publications as SciFiction, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Interzone, Oceans of the Mind, Tรฉnรจbres, Ikarie, Japanโ€™s SF and Russiaโ€™s Game.Exe. His fiction has been translated into many languages and has been used in a course in forensic psychology in the US.

Terry has also written and co-designed three best-selling computer adventures: Schizm: Mysterious Journey (2001) (aka US Mysterious Journey: Schizm) (www.schizm.com/schizm1/), Schizm II: Chameleon (2003) (aka US Mysterious Journey II: Chameleon) (www.schizm2.info) and Sentinel: Descendants in Time (2004) (aka Realms of Illusion) (www.dormeuse.info) (based on his 1996 short story, โ€œThe Ichneumon and the Dormeuseโ€), which have been published in many foreign language editions. He has reviewed for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Bulletin, and was the science fiction, fantasy and horror reviewer for The Weekend Australian for nineteen years under four different literary editors: Barry Oakley, James Hall, Murray Waldren and Deborah Hope.

Terry holds a PhD in Creative Writing from the University of Western Australia (the first such degree to be granted and completed at that university), an MA (Hons) in English Literature and a BA (Hons) in English Literature, Archaeology and Ancient History, both from the University of Sydney. He has won many Ditmar and Aurealis Awards for his fiction, as well as the William Atheling Jr Award for his critical work. His first computer adventure won the Grand Prix at Utopiales in France in 2001 and he has been nominated for the World Fantasy Award twice.

The multi award-winning US magazine Locus regarded Terryโ€™s first book Rynosseros as placing him โ€œamong the masters of the fieldโ€ (August 1990). In The Yearโ€™s Best Science Fiction 21 (reprinting Terryโ€™s story โ€œFlashmenโ€), twelve-time Hugo Award winning US editor Gardner Dozois called him: โ€œOne of the best-known and most celebrated of Australian writers in any genreโ€, while in the Yearโ€™s Best Fantasy 4 (reprinting โ€œOne Thing About the Nightโ€), editors David G. Hartwell and Kathryn Cramer described him as a โ€œmaster craftsmanโ€ and โ€œone of the best prose stylists in science fiction and fantasy.โ€ Terry has also been called โ€œAustraliaโ€™s finest writer of horrorโ€ by Locus magazine, and โ€œAustraliaโ€™s premier writer of dark fantasyโ€ by All Hallows (February 2004). The late leading Australian SF personality Peter McNamara (on his SF Review radio show on Adelaideโ€™s 5EBI-FM, 23 June 2000) called him โ€œAustraliaโ€™s premier fantasist.โ€

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