Lilith Saintcrow: Difference between revisions
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*''The Demon's Librarian'' (2009) |
*''The Demon's Librarian'' (2009) |
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*''The Damnation Affair'' (2012) |
*''The Damnation Affair'' (2012) |
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⚫ | *''Afterwar'' (May 2018) Afterwar is described in a [[Los Angeles Times]] review as "incredibly timely, well written and important."<ref name=krishna>{{cite news |last=Krishna| first=Swapna | url=https://www.latimes.com/books/la-ca-jc-science-fiction-20180531-story.html | title=Revenge is a dish best served with AI and unicorns: 3 sci-fi reads | newspaper=[[Los_Angeles_Times]] |date=May 31, 2018 | accessdate=June 25, 2019}}</ref> |
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*''Afterwar'' (May 2018) |
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⚫ | Afterwar is described in a Los Angeles Times review as "incredibly timely, well written and important."<ref name=krishna>{{cite news |last=Krishna| first=Swapna | url=https://www.latimes.com/books/la-ca-jc-science-fiction-20180531-story.html | title=Revenge is a dish best served with AI and unicorns: 3 sci-fi reads | newspaper=[[Los_Angeles_Times]] |date=May 31, 2018 | accessdate=June 25, 2019}}</ref> |
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===Steelflower Chronicles=== |
===Steelflower Chronicles=== |
Revision as of 20:42, 25 June 2019
Lilith Saintcrow | |
---|---|
Born | 1976 (age 48–49) New Mexico |
Pen name | Anna Beguine, Lili St. Crow |
Occupation | Novelist |
Genre | Paranormal romance, urban fantasy, young adult |
Children | 2 |
Website | |
lilithsaintcrow |
Lilith Saintcrow is an American author of urban fantasy, historical fantasy, paranormal romance and steampunk novels.[1] Saintcrow was born in New Mexico. She currently resides in Vancouver, WA.
Saintcrow uses the nom de plume Lili St. Crow when writing for the teenage market.[2]
Her local newspaper, The Columbian describes her novels as, "atmospheric and stylish."[2]
Works (as Lilith Saintcrow)
The Watcher Series
- Dark Watcher (2004)
- Storm Watcher (2005)
- Fire Watcher (2006)
- Cloud Watcher (2006)
- Mindhealer (2008)
The Society Series
- The Society (2005)
- Hunter, Healer (2005)
Novels not in series
- The Demon's Librarian (2009)
- The Damnation Affair (2012)
- Afterwar (May 2018) Afterwar is described in a Los Angeles Times review as "incredibly timely, well written and important."[3]
Steelflower Chronicles
- Steelflower (2008)
- Steelflower at Sea (2017)
- Steelflower in Snow (2018)
Dante Valentine
Dante Valentine series.[4] One reviewer describes the series as depicting, "a world controlled by magic rather than psychic powers."[5]
- Working for the Devil (2005) Set 600 years in the future, Working for the Devil, was described by one reviewer as a book that "mixes cyberpunk and schlock science, involving a missing map of the devil's DNA, with endless set-piece fights, all-round mayhem and vivid sex, and does it well enough to be forgiven. "[6]
- Dead Man Rising (2006)
- The Devil's Right Hand (2007)
- Saint City Sinners (2007)
- To Hell and Back (2008)
Jill Kismet
- Night Shift (2008)
- Hunter's Prayer (2008)
- Redemption Alley (2009)
- Flesh Circus (2009)
- Heaven's Spite (2010)
- Angel Town (1 November 2011)
The Bannon and Clare series (Steampunk)
- The Iron Wyrm Affair (2012)
- The Red Plague Affair (2013)
- The Ripper Affair (August 2014)
Romance of the Arquitaine (Historical Fantasy)
- The Hedgewitch Queen (2011)
- The Bandit King (2012)
Works (under pseudonym)
Strange Angels
- (under the name Lili St. Crow)
- Strange Angels (2009)
- Betrayals (2009)
- Jealousy (2010)
- Defiance (2011)
- Reckoning (1 November 2011)
The Keeper Books
- (under the pseudonym Anna Beguine)
- Smoke (2007)
- Mirror (2007)
Short stories
She has also published several short stories [1] and the free online serial Selene[2] (with characters from her Dante Valentine series).
- Half of Being Married in My Big Fat Supernatural Honeymoon (2007)
- Ambition in The Eternal Kiss (2009) as Lili St. Crow
- Rockwood & Mrs. King in Dark and Stormy Knights (2010)
- The Heart Is Always Right (Aug 2010) in Death's Excellent Vacation[7]
References
- ^ Albright, Mary Ann (30 July 2010). "Vampire romance novels suck in readers". The Columbian. Retrieved 10 August 2010.
- ^ a b Hewitt, Scott (26 May 2013). "Women Who Write". The Columbian. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
- ^ Krishna, Swapna (31 May 2018). "Revenge is a dish best served with AI and unicorns: 3 sci-fi reads". Los_Angeles_Times. Retrieved 25 June 2019.
- ^ Davidson, Dan (28 March 2008). "Mysteries with the spice of the unknown". Whitehorse Star. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
- ^ Davidson, Dan (10 August 2012). "Superpowers lurk between the covers". Whitehorse Star. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
- ^ Grimwood, Jon Courtnay (10 June 2006). "Working for the Devil (brief review)". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
- ^ Harris, Charlaine; Kelner, Toni L. P., eds. (August 2010). Death's Excellent Adventure.
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