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Around this time, she became friends with [[Marion Zimmer Bradley]]. When Bradley was asked to edit the first [[Sword and Sorceress series|Sword and Sorceress]], Ross submitted a short story for the anthology, "Imperatrix" (1984). "Imperatrix" became her first published short story, under her married name of Deborah Wheeler. Deborah Wheeler continued to write for years, producing a number of short stories and two novels, ''[[Jaydium]]'' and ''[[Northlight (novel)|Northlight]]'', through [[DAW books]].
Around this time, she became friends with [[Marion Zimmer Bradley]]. When Bradley was asked to edit the first [[Sword and Sorceress series|Sword and Sorceress]], Ross submitted a short story for the anthology, "Imperatrix" (1984). "Imperatrix" became her first published short story, under her married name of Deborah Wheeler. Deborah Wheeler continued to write for years, producing a number of short stories and two novels, ''[[Jaydium]]'' and ''[[Northlight (novel)|Northlight]]'', through [[DAW books]].


Before Bradley's death in 1999, Ross was invited to work on a project with her set in Darkover.<ref name="sff.net">{{cite web|last=Ross |first=Deborah J. |title=Deborah J. Ross's personal website |publisher=Deborah J. Ross |url=http://www.sff.net/people/deborahjross |accessdate=August 2007 }}{{dead link|date=December 2016 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref>
Before Bradley's death in 1999, Ross was invited to work on a project with her set in Darkover.<ref name="sff.net">{{cite web|last=Ross |first=Deborah J. |title=Deborah J. Ross's personal website |publisher=Deborah J. Ross |url=http://www.sff.net/people/deborahjross |archive-url=http://wayback.archive-it.org/all/20161116025539/http://www.sff.net/people/deborahjross/ |dead-url=yes |archive-date=2016-11-16 |accessdate=August 2007 }}</ref>


== Bibliography ==
== Bibliography ==

Revision as of 13:24, 28 March 2017

Deborah J. Ross
BornApril 1947
NationalityUnited States
OccupationAuthor
Known forFantasy and science fiction, collaboration with Marion Zimmer Bradley

Deborah J. Ross (born April 1947), once Deborah Wheeler, is an American science fiction and fantasy author.

Biography

Ross was born in April 1947 and grew up in California. Ross attended Portland State University, graduating in 1973.[1]

Around this time, she became friends with Marion Zimmer Bradley. When Bradley was asked to edit the first Sword and Sorceress, Ross submitted a short story for the anthology, "Imperatrix" (1984). "Imperatrix" became her first published short story, under her married name of Deborah Wheeler. Deborah Wheeler continued to write for years, producing a number of short stories and two novels, Jaydium and Northlight, through DAW books.

Before Bradley's death in 1999, Ross was invited to work on a project with her set in Darkover.[2]

Bibliography

Novels as Deborah Wheeler

  • Jaydium (1993), DAW Books, ISBN 0-88677-556-6 (out of print)
  • Northlight (1995), DAW Books, ISBN 0-88677-639-2 (out of print)
  • Collaborators (2013), Dragon Moon Press, ISBN 9781897492635

Darkover

Ross worked with Marion Zimmer Bradley on several books in the Darkover series.

  • The Clingfire Trilogy:
    • The Fall of Neskaya (2001), DAW Books, hardback: ISBN 0-7564-0034-1 paperback: ISBN 0-7564-0053-8
    • Zandru's Forge (2003), DAW Books, hardback: ISBN 0-7564-0149-6 paperback: ISBN 0-7564-0184-4
    • A Flame in Hali (2004), DAW Books, hardback: ISBN 0-7564-0218-2 paperback: ISBN 0-7564-0267-0
  • The Modern Darkover series, which is a continuation of Zimmer Bradley's novel Traitor's Sun.
  • Hastur Lord (2010), DAW Books, hardback: ISBN 978-0-7564-0622-6

The Seven-Petaled Shield

An original fantasy series, intended to be a trilogy

  • The Seven-Petaled Shield (2013), DAW Books, ISBN 978-0756406219
  • Shannivar: Volume Two of The Seven-Petaled Shield (2013), DAW Books, ISBN 978-0756409203
  • The Heir of Khored: Book Three of The Seven-Petaled Shield (2014), DAW Books, ISBN 978-0756409210

Darkover anthologies

The publication of the anthologies of Darkover restarted in 2013.[4]

Anthologies

References

  1. ^ Kirkland, Kathryn (10 June 2010). "Portland State Portland State Magazine: News: Fanfare: Spring 2010". Retrieved 13 July 2010.
  2. ^ Ross, Deborah J. "Deborah J. Ross's personal website". Deborah J. Ross. Archived from the original on 2016-11-16. Retrieved August 2007. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help); Unknown parameter |dead-url= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  3. ^ Deborah J. Ross's Darkover website
  4. ^ [1]

External links