Michael Swanwick


Michael Swanwick is an American fantasy and science fiction author who began publishing in the early 1980s.

Writing career

Swanwick's fiction writing began with short stories, starting in 1980 when he published "Ginungagap" in TriQuarterly and "The Feast of St. Janis" in New Dimensions 11. Both stories were nominees for the Nebula Award for Best Short Story in 1981.
His first novel was In the Drift, a look at the results of a more catastrophic Three Mile Island incident, which expands on his earlier short story "Mummer's Kiss". This was followed in 1987 by Vacuum Flowers, an adventurous tour of an inhabited Solar System, where the people of Earth have been subsumed by a cybernetic mass-mind. Some characters’ bodies contain multiple personalities, which can be recorded and edited as if they were wetware.
In the 1990s, Swanwick moved towards the intersection between science fiction, fantasy, and magical realism. Stations of the Tide is the story of a bureaucrat's pursuit of a magician on a world soon to be altered by its 50-year tide swell; it is set far in the future, blurring the line between magic and technology. The Iron Dragon's Daughter is a fantasy set in a Fairyland based on modern America, with elves wearing Armani suits and dragons serving as jet fighters. The main character, a changeling stolen from the real world, struggles to survive a factory, a high school, and a university, all the while being manipulated by a dragon. In Jack Faust, a retelling of the Faust legend, the scholar does not gain magical power but modern scientific knowledge with which he begins the Industrial Revolution centuries early.
In the 2000s, Swanwick wrote several series of flash fictions, beginning with Puck Aleshire's Abecedary, a collection of 26 stories, each titled for a different letter of the alphabet. Other series included The Periodic Table of Science Fiction, 118 stories each themed about a different chemical element. These were originally published in Sci Fiction. Later, The Infinite Matrix published The Sleep of Reason, in which each story was based on one of Goya’s caprichos. In this period, he won several awards for short fiction; between 1999 and 2003, he had nine stories shortlisted for the Hugo Award for Best Short Story, and won in 1999, 2000, and 2002.
He also continued to write novels. Bones of the Earth is a time travel story involving dinosaurs. The Dragons of Babel is set in the same world as The Iron Dragon's Daughter, although the setting and characters are different; The Iron Dragon's Mother was a third volume in the series. He has written two novels featuring the posthuman rogues Darger and Surplus, who had already appeared in short stories: Dancing with Bears concerns their adventures in post-Utopian Russia, and in “Chasing the Phoenix” they travel to China. After Gardner Dozois's death, Swanwick completed his unfinished novel City Under the Stars.
His many works of short fiction have been collected in Gravity's Angels, Moon Dogs, Tales of Old Earth, and others. A novella, Griffin's Egg, was published in book form in 1991 and is also collected in Moon Dogs. He has collaborated with other authors on several short works, including Gardner Dozois and William Gibson.
Stations of the Tide won the Nebula for best novel in 1991, and several of his shorter works have won awards as well: the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award for "The Edge of the World" in 1989, the World Fantasy Award for "Radio Waves" in 1996, and Hugos for "The Very Pulse of the Machine" in 1999, "Scherzo with Tyrannosaur" in 2000, "The Dog Said Bow-Wow" in 2002, "Slow Life" in 2003, and "Legions in Time" in 2004.

Nonfiction writing

Swanwick has written about the field as well. He published two long essays on the state of the science fiction and fantasy, the former of which was controversial for its categorization of new SF writers into "cyberpunk" and "literary humanist" camps. Both essays were collected together in The Postmodern Archipelago 1997. A book-length interview with Gardner Dozois, Being Gardner Dozois, was published in 2001. He is a prolific contributor to the New York Review of Science Fiction. Swanwick wrote a monograph on James Branch Cabell, What Can Be Saved From the Wreckage?, which was published in 2007 with a preface by Barry Humphries, and a short literary biography of Hope Mirrlees, Hope-in-the-Mist, which was published in 2009.

Television and film

Swanwick's short stories "Ice Age" and "The Very Pulse of the Machine" from Tales of Old Earth were adapted for the Netflix series Love, Death + Robots for its first and third seasons respectively.

Personal life

Swanwick thanks his wife, Marianne C. Porter, in all his books, referring to her as "the M. C. Porter Endowment for the Arts".
He was a friend of Gardner Dozois and Susan Caspar for many years. From this friendship grew Being Gardner Dozois and several collaborations, including the novel City Under the Stars.

Awards

Novels

  • In the Drift
  • Vacuum Flowers
  • Stations of the Tide
  • Jack Faust
  • Bones of the Earth
  • City Under the Stars, with Gardner Dozois
; Iron Dragon's Daughter series
  • The Iron Dragon's Daughter
  • The Dragons of Babel
  • The Iron Dragon's Mother
; Darger and Surplus series
  • Dancing With Bears
  • ''Chasing the Phoenix''

    Short fiction

; Collections
  • Gravity's Angels
  • A Geography of Unknown Lands
  • Moon Dogs
  • Puck Aleshire's Abecedary
  • Tales of Old Earth
  • Cigar-Box Faust and Other Miniatures
  • Michael Swanwick's Field Guide to the Mesozoic Megafauna
  • The Periodic Table of Science Fiction
  • The Dog Said Bow-Wow
  • The Best of Michael Swanwick
  • It Came Upon a Midnight: Three Brief Midwinter Tales
  • Midwinter Elves: Three Brief Midwinter Tales
  • Solstice Fire
  • Season's Greetings
  • Not So Much, Said the Cat
  • The Best of Michael Swanwick: Volume Two
;Stories
  • The Feast of Saint Janis '
  • Ginungagap '
  • Walden Three '
  • Touring
  • Til Human Voices Wake Us '
  • Mummer's Kiss '
  • The Man Who Met Picasso
  • Golden Apples of the Sun '
  • Ice Age
  • Afternoon at Schrafft's
  • Virgin Territory '
  • When the Music's Over...
  • Trojan Horse '
  • Marrow Death '
  • The Transmigration of Philip K.
  • The Gods of Mars
  • Dogfight '
  • The Blind Minotaur
  • Anyone Here From Utah?
  • Snow Job
  • Covenant of Souls
  • Foresight
  • The Overcoat
  • The Dragon Line
  • A Midwinter's Tale
  • Snow Angels '
  • The Edge of the World
  • U.F.O.
  • Griffen's Egg '
  • Fantasies
  • The Wireless Folly
  • In Concert
  • Picasso Deconstructed: Eleven Still-Lifes
  • Cold Iron '
  • The Changeling's Tale
  • The Mask
  • Walking Out
  • North of Diddy-Wah-Diddy '
  • Radio Waves '
  • The City of God '
  • Ships '
  • An Abecedary of the Imagination
  • Mother Grasshopper
  • The Wisdom of Old Earth
  • Midnight Express
  • Wild Minds
  • 120 is for Issues
  • Ancestral Voices '
  • Microcosmic Dog
  • Archaic Planets: Nine Excerpts from the Encyclopedia Galactica
  • The Dead
  • The Very Pulse of the Machine
  • Radiant Doors
  • Ancient Engines
  • Scherzo with Tyrannosaur
  • Green Fire '
  • Riding the Giganotosaur
  • Mickelrede; or, The Slayer and the Staff: A Ghost-Novel
  • The Madness of Gordon Van Gelder
  • Letter to the Editor
  • The Dog Said Bow-Wow
  • Five British Dinosaurs
  • A Great Day for Brontosaurs
  • 'Hello,' Said the Stick
  • Dirty Little War
  • Slow Life '
  • King Dragon '
  • Legions in Time '
  • Smoke and Mirrors: Four Scenes from the Post-Utopian Future
  • A Bicentinial Minute
  • Bastards
  • Ether
  • Glass Soul
  • Stage Direction
  • Xeroxing
  • Coyote at the end of History
  • Deep in the Woods of Grammarie
  • The Last Geek
  • The Word that Sings the Scythe '
  • Triceritops Summer
  • The Bordello in Faerie
  • An Episode of Stardust
  • Lord Weary's Empire '
  • Tin Marsh '
  • Urdumheim '
  • A Small Room in Koboldtown
  • Congratulations from the Future!
  • The End of All Things
  • The Mental Dagueereotype
  • The Skysailor's Tale '
  • The Little Cat Laughed to See Such Sport - a Darger and Surplus tale
  • From Babel's Fall'n Glory We Fled...
  • Shed that Guilt! Double Your Productivity Overnight!
  • The Scarecrow's Boy
  • Hush and Hark
  • Metasciencefiction
  • The Armies of Elfland '
  • The Magaracs: A Family Saga, in Fragments
  • Zeppelin City '
  • Last Drink Bird Head
  • Invisibility for Beginners
  • Goblin Lake
  • Steadfast Castle
  • Spirits in the Night
  • Libertarian Russia
  • The Trains that Climb the Winter Tree '
  • Manger Animals
  • Mrs. Claus
  • Snowflake People
  • The Brain Baron
  • Cold Reading
  • An Empty House with Many Doors
  • The Man in Grey
  • For I Have Lain Me Down on the Stone of Loneliness and I'll Not Be Back Again
  • "The Dala Horse" ', 3 "Best of" reprints
  • Adam's Third Wife
  • Cookie Elves
  • Meryons
  • Pushkin the American
  • The Woman Who Shook the World-Tree
  • The Year of the Three Monarchs
  • Tumbling
  • Bone-Fire Time
  • Interview with a Salamander
  • Mice Discover Fire
  • Ministering Angels
  • One Mile Below
  • Santas of All Nations
  • Straws
  • Of Finest Scarlett Was Her Gown '
  • Passage of Earth
  • Six Untitled Tales Written in Mark Twain's Library
  • 3 A.M. in the Mesozoic Bar
  • Lock Up Your Chickens and Daughters - H'ard and Andy Are Come to Town '
  • Universe Box '
  • Starlight Express
  • Eighteen Songs by Debussy
  • Ghost Ships
  • Cloud
  • Dragon Slayer
  • Artificial People
  • The Last Days of Old Night
  • Dream Atlas
  • Dreadnought
  • Huginn and Muninn - and What Came After
  • The Beast of Tara
  • The White Leopard
  • Nirvana or Bust
  • Reservoir Ice
  • The Star-Bear
  • Timothy: An Oral History
  • Unquiet Graves
  • The Mongolian Wizard series
  • *"The Mongolian Wizard"
  • *"The Fire Gown"
  • *"Day of the Kraken"
  • *"House of Dreams"
  • *"The Night of the Salamander"
  • *"The Pyramid of Krakow"
  • *"The Phantom in the Maze"
  • *"Murder in the Spook House"
  • *"The New Prometheus"
  • *"Halcyon Afternoon"
  • *"Dragons of Paris"
;Poems
  • Hooray for Eileen!
  • ''Cigar-Box Faust''