Author Connie Willis has been winning science fiction awards since the late 1980s, including Hugo Awards for the novels
The Doomsday Book (1992) and
To Say Nothing of the Dog (1998). Influenced by novels of Victorian England and the science fiction of
Robert A. Heinlein, Willis began writing full-time in the early 1980s, starting with short stories published in sci-fi magazines. She won the Hugo and the Nebula in 1983 for the novelette
Fire Watch, and since then has been a regular winner of the Hugo, Nebula and Locus awards. Although her books involve some sci-fi elements (especially time travel), she is more known for psychological dramas that mix farce with fantasy. Her short stories include "Even the Queen' and "Close Encounter"; her novels include the John W. Campbell Memorial Award winner
Lincoln's Dreams (1987), the tongue-in-cheek fantasy
Bellwether (1996), the life-after-death drama
Passage (2001) and the aliens-have-landed comic adventure
All Seated on the Ground (2007)
Copyright © 1998-2006 by Who2?, LLC. All rights reserved.
Information Please® Database, © 2007 Pearson
Education, Inc. All rights reserved.