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Ian McDonald
British science fiction novelist

Ian McDonald

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
British science fiction novelist
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Manchester, United Kingdom
Age
64 years
Awards
Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire
(2010)
Bob Morane Prize
 
Locus Award for Best First Novel
(1989)
Philip K. Dick Award
(1991)
Theodore Sturgeon Award
(2001)
BSFA Award for Best Novel
(2004)
BSFA Award for Best Novel
(2007)
Hugo Award for Best Novelette
(2007)
John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Science Fiction Novel
(2011)
BSFA Award for Best Novel
(2011)
Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire
(2011)
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

For several other people called Ian McDonald or a similar spelling, see Ian McDonald.

Ian McDonald (born 1960) is a British science fiction novelist, living in Belfast. His themes include nanotechnology, postcyberpunk settings, and the impact of rapid social and technological change on non-Western societies.

Early life

Ian McDonald was born in 1960, in Manchester, to a Scottish father and Irish mother. He moved to Belfast when he was five and has lived there ever since. He lived through the whole of the 'Troubles' (1968–1999), and his sensibility has been permanently shaped by coming to understand Northern Ireland as a post-colonial society imposed on an older culture. He became a fan of SF from childhood TV, and began writing when he was 9.

Career

McDonald sold his first story to a local Belfast magazine when he was 22, and in 1987 became a full-time writer. He has also worked in TV consultancy within Northern Ireland, contributing scripts to the Northern Irish Sesame Workshop production of Sesame Tree.

McDonald's debut novel was Desolation Road (1988), which takes place on a far future Mars in a town that develops around an oasis in the terraformed Martian desert. He published a sequel, Ares Express, in 2001.

Published between 1995 and 2000, the novels Chaga (US title Evolution's Shore) and Kirinya, with the novella Tendeléo's Story, form the 'Chaga Saga', which chronicles the effects of an alien flora introduced to Earth, and also analyses the AIDS crisis in Africa. The protagonist is Ulster journalist Gaby McAslin, whose outsider's eye both observes the African landscape and sees what the "UN quarantine zone" is doing to Kenya and Kenyans. Gaby's story, with that of her daughter, continues in Kirinya. Tendeléo's Story is seen through the eyes of a young Kenyan girl who escapes to the UK, only to be deported back to Kenya as an unwanted alien.

The image of the unstoppable wave of transformation was nicked from [1982 Star Trek movie] The Wrath of Khan: it's the Genesis device, slowed down, and once I had that, it became a rich source of metaphors: for colonialism, new technology, globalisation, change, death. If the Chaga is colonialism, it's a unique kind that allows the people of the poor South to use and transform it to meet their needs and empower themselves: it's a symbiosis.

McDonald'sRiver of Gods (2004) is set in mid-21st-century India; it won the BSFA award, and was nominated for a Hugo Award and a Clarke Award. Brasyl (2007) is set in the 18th and 21st centuries in Lusophone South America; it won the BSFA award, and was nominated for a Hugo Award and the Warwick Prize for Writing. McDonald began his Everness series of young adult fiction novels in 2011 with Planesrunner. He said in a 2014 interview, "I didn't want to get stuck doing the same SF books over and over, successful though they may be. I didn't want to keep writing books about the developing economy of the year—India, Brazil. I could feel myself getting trapped in that." He has written two Everness sequels, Be My Enemy (2012), and Empress of the Sun (2014).

McDonald published Luna: New Moon, the first volume of a proposed science fiction duology, in 2015. It explores the dangerous intrigue that surrounds the five powerful families who control industry on the Moon. McDonald said of the novel in August 2014, "I’m still writing about developing economies, it’s just that this one happens to be on the Moon." Before critics called the novel "Game of Thrones in space", McDonald himself dubbed it "Game of Domes" and "Dallas in space". Luna was optioned for development as a television series before its release. The sequel, Luna: Wolf Moon, was released in March 2017. A third novel, Luna: Moon Rising, is due for publication in March 2019. McDonald previously published the novelette "The Fifth Dragon", a prequel to Luna in the same setting, in the 2014 anthology Reach for Infinity.

McDonald's Time Was, a time travel romance novella about two men, was released in April 2018.

Awards

Won

  • Locus Award – First Novel (1989): Desolation Road
  • Philip K. Dick Award – Best Collection (1991): King of Morning, Queen of Day
  • Kurd-Laßwitz-Preis (1999): Sacrifice of Fools
  • Theodore Sturgeon Award (2001): Tendeléo's Story
  • British Science Fiction Association Award– Best Novel (2004): River of Gods
  • Hugo Award for Best Novelette (2007): The Djinn's Wife
  • British Science Fiction Association Award – Best Novel (2007): Brasyl
  • John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Science Fiction Novel (2011): The Dervish House
  • British Science Fiction Association Award – Best Novel (2011): The Dervish House
  • Gaylactic Spectrum Award – Best Novel (2016): Luna: New Moon

Nominations

  • Nebula Award for Best Novelette (1989): Unfinished Portrait of the King of Pain by Van Gogh
  • Arthur C. Clarke Award– Best Novel (1990): Desolation Road
  • Locus Fantasy Award (1992): King of Morning, Queen of Day
  • Arthur C. Clarke Award – Best Novel (1993): Hearts, Hands, and Voices
  • British Science Fiction Award (1992): Hearts, Hands, and Voices
  • World Fantasy Award for Best Short Fiction (1994) : Some Strange Desire
  • Philip K. Dick Award – Best Novel (1994) : Scissors Cut Paper Wrap Stone
  • British Science Fiction Association Award – Best Novel (1994) : Necroville
  • British Science Fiction Association Award – Best Novel (1995): Chaga
  • The John W. Campbell Memorial Award (1996): Chaga
  • Arthur C. Clarke Award – Best Novel (2005): River of Gods
  • Hugo Award – Best Novel (2005): River of Gods
  • Hugo Award – Best Novel (2008): Brasyl
  • Warwick Prize for Writing (2008/9) and reached prize longlist announced in November 2008: Brasyl
  • The John W. Campbell Memorial Award (2008): Brasyl
  • Locus SF Award (2008): Brasyl
  • Nebula Award (2008): Brasyl
  • Hugo Award – Best Novel (2011): The Dervish House
  • Locus Award – Best SF Novel (2011): The Dervish House
  • Arthur C. Clarke Award – Best Novel (2011): The Dervish House
  • British Science Fiction Association Award – Best Novel (2015): Luna: New Moon

Selected bibliography

Desolation Road series

  • Desolation Road (1988)
  • Ares Express (2001)

Chaga saga

  • Chaga (1995, US: Evolution's Shore)
  • Kirinya (1997)

India in 2047

  • River of Gods (2004) – Hugo Award nominee, Clarke Award nominee, winner of the BSFA award
  • Cyberabad Days (2009) (collection)

Everness series

  • Planesrunner (2011)
  • Be My Enemy (2012)
  • Empress of the Sun (2014)

Luna series

  • Luna: New Moon (2015) – BSFA award nominee, winner of the Gaylactic Spectrum Award
  • Luna: Wolf Moon (2017)
  • Luna: Moon Rising (2019)
  • The Menace from Farside (novella) (2019)

Other novels

  • Out on Blue Six (1989)
  • Queen of Morning, King of Day (1991)
  • Hearts, Hands and Voices (1992, US: The Broken Land)
  • Necroville (1994, US: Terminal Café)
  • Sacrifice of Fools (1996)
  • Brasyl (2007) – Hugo Award nominee, winner of the BSFA award, Nominated for the £50,000 Warwick Prize for Writing
  • The Dervish House (2010) – Hugo Award nominee, Clarke Award nominee, winner of the BSFA award
  • Time Was (2018)

Blog and online interviews

External resources

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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