Draft:Rebecca Fraimow

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Rebecca Fraimow is an Boston-based author of science fiction and fantasy literature. Fraimow has published short fiction in a variety of outlets, as well as one novella and a novel with Solaris Books.

Biography[edit]

Fraimow graduated from the New York University program in Moving Image Archiving and Preservation in 2013[1] and subsequently has worked as an archivist for the WGBH and the American Archive of Public Broadcasting.[2]

Awards[edit]

Year Title Award Category Result Ref
2021 "This is New Gehesran Calling" Hugo Award Hugo–Short Story Nominated Below Cutoff [3]

Bibliography[edit]

Novels and long fiction[edit]

  • —— (2016). Suradanna and the Sea. The Fantasist.[4]
  • —— (2023). The Iron Children. Solaris Books. ISBN 9781786189875.[5]
  • —— (2024). Lady Eve’s Last Con. Solaris Books. ISBN 978-1837861590.

Short fiction[edit]

Fraimow has published short fiction in a number of locales, including podcast-only release. This list provides the first publication date and location of each piece.

  • Vanderhooft, JoSelle, ed. (2011). “Granada’s Library.” Steam-Powered II: More Lesbian Steampunk Stories. Torquere Press.[6]
  • Farrell, Scott, ed. (2012). “Measure For Steel-Sprung Measure.” The Omnibus of Doctor Bill Shakes and the Magnificent Ionic Pentatetrameter: A Steampunk's Shakespeare Anthology. Doctor Fantastique Books.[7]
  • (January 2015). “Crowned.” Daily Science Fiction.[8]
  • (August 2015). “There Are No Eaters of Souls in America.” Daily Science Fiction.[9]
  • (May 2016). “Further Arguments in Support of Yudah Cohen’s Proposal to Bluma Zilberman.” Diabolical Plots.[10]
  • (December 2016). “Shaina Rubin Keeps Her Head Under Circumstances Nobody Could Have Expected.” PodCastle.[11]
  • (2017). “Romeo, Revisited.” aliterate.[12]
  • Datt Sharma, Iona, ed. (2020). “This is New Gehesran Calling.” Consolation Song: Optimistic Speculative Fiction For a Time of Pandemic.[13]
  • (July 2021). “Gitl Schneiderman Learns to Live With Her In-Laws.” PodCastle.[14]
  • (April 2022). “Fearfully and Wonderfully Made.” Kaleidotrope.[15]
  • (July 2022). “A Farce to Suit the New Girl.” The Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast.[16]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Alumni of NDSR Boston: 2014/15 Residents". Retrieved 1 February 2024.
  2. ^ "WGBH bio". Retrieved 1 February 2024.
  3. ^ "2021 Hugo Awards Longlist" (PDF).
  4. ^ Fraimow, Rebecca (December 2016). Suradanna and the Sea. The Fantasist.
  5. ^ Fraimow, Rebecca (April 2023). The Iron Children. Solaris Books. ISBN 9781786189875.
  6. ^ Vanderhooft, JoSelle (2011-10-25). Steam-Powered II: More Lesbian Steampunk Stories. Torquere Press. ISBN 978-1-61040-546-1.
  7. ^ Farrell, Scott (January 1, 2012). The Omnibus of Doctor Bill Shakes and the Magnificent Ionic Pentatetrameter. Doctor Fantastique Books. ISBN 0985385707.
  8. ^ Fraimow, Rebecca. "Crowned". dailysciencefiction.com. Daily Science Fiction. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
  9. ^ Fraimow, Rebecca. "There Are No Eaters of Souls in America". dailysciencefiction.com. Daily Science Fiction. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
  10. ^ Fraimow, Rebecca. "Further Arguments in Support of Yudah Cohen's Proposal to Bluma Zilberman". diabolical plots.com. Diabolical Plots. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
  11. ^ Fraimow, Rebecca. "Shaina Rubin Keeps Her Head Under Circumstances Nobody Could Have Expected". PodCastle.org. PodCastle.
  12. ^ Fraimow, Rebecca. "Romeo, Revisited". aliterate.
  13. ^ Datt Sharma, Iona (January 28, 2020). Consolation Song.
  14. ^ Fraimow, Rebecca. ""Gitl Schneiderman Learns to Live With Her In-Laws"". Podcastle.org. PodCastle. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
  15. ^ Fraimow, Rebecca. "Fearfully and Wonderfully Made". kaleidotrope.net. Kaleidotrope. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
  16. ^ Fraimow, Rebecca. "A Farce to Suit the New Girl". Alpennia.com. Lesbian Historic Motif Podcast. Retrieved 1 February 2024.

External links[edit]

Rebecca Fraimow at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database

RebeccaFraimow.com (personal website)