About
the Author - Biographical Information
Diana Gabaldon
is the author of the award-winning, NYT-bestselling Outlander novels, described
by Salon magazine as "the smartest historical sci-fi adventure-romance story
ever written by a science Ph.D. with a background in scripting "Scrooge McDuck"
comics."
The adventure
began in 1991 with the classic Outlander ("historical fiction with
a Moebius twist"), continued through five more New York Times-bestselling
novels--Dragonfly in Amber, Voyager, Drums of Autumn, The
Fiery Cross, and A Breath of Snow and Ashes--and a nonfiction (well,
relatively) companion volume, The Outlandish Companion, which provides
copious details on the settings, background, characters, research, and writing
of the novels. Gabaldon (it's pronounced "GAH-bull-dohn"-rhymes with
"stone") has also written two historical mysteries, Lord John and
the Private Matter, and Lord John and the Brotherhood of the Blade,
as well as several novellas featuring Lord John Grey (which will appear in volume
form this November, as Lord John and the Hand of Devils).
In addition, she
is working on a contemporary mystery series, set in Phoenix, and has written Highly
Scholarly Introductions (with masses of footnotes) to recent Modern Library editions
of Sir Walter Scott's Invahoe, and Thomas Paine's Common Sense.
A Breath of
Snow and Ashes, the most recent novel in the main Outlander series,
opened simultaneously at #1 on the bestseller lists of four countries, and won
both a Quill Award and the Corine interntational literary prize for fiction.
Dr. Gabaldon holds
three degrees in science: Zoology, Marine Biology, and Quantitative Behavioral
Ecology, (plus an honorary degree as Doctor of Humane Letters (though no one has
yet explained to her just what a humane letter is) and spent a dozen years as
a university professor with an expertise in scientific computation before beginning
to write fiction. She has written scientific articles and textbooks, worked as
an editor on the MacMillan Encyclopedia of Computers, founded the scientific-computation
journal Science Software Quarterly, and has written numerous comic-book
scripts for Walt Disney. None of this has anything whatever to do with her novels,
but there it is
|