Gardner Raymond Dozois (/doʊˈzwɑː/ doh-ZWAH; July 23, 1947 – May 27, 2018) was an American science fiction author and editor. He was the founding editor of The Year’s Best Science Fiction anthologies (1984–2018) and was editor of Asimov’s Science Fiction magazine (1984–2004), garnering multiple Hugo and Locus Awards for those works almost every year. He also won the Nebula Award for Best Short Story twice.[2] He was inducted to the Science Fiction Hall of Fame on June 25, 2011.
Books in order of publication:
Novels
- Nightmare Blue (with George Alec Effinger) (1975)
- Strangers (1978)
- Hunter’s Run (2008) (with George R. R. Martin and Daniel Abraham)
- City Under the Stars (2020) (with Michael Swanwick)
Collections
- The Visible Man (1977)
- Slow Dancing Through Time (1990)
- Geodesic Dreams (1992)
- Strange Days: Fabulous Journeys with Gardner Dozois (2001)
- Morning Child and Other Stories (2004)
- When the Great Days Come (2011)
Short stories
- “A Special Kind of Morning” (1971)
- “Chains of the Sea” (1971)
- “Machines of Loving Grace” (1972)
- “A Traveler in an Antique Land” (1983)
- “The Peacemaker” (1983) (Nebula Award winner)
- “Morning Child” (1984) (Nebula Award winner)
- “A Knight of Ghosts and Shadows” (1999)
- “The Hanging Curve” (The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, April 2002)
- “When the Great Days Came” (The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Dec 2005)
- “Shadow Twin” (2005) (with George R. R. Martin and Daniel Abraham)
- “Counterfactual” (The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 2006)
- “Neanderthals” (The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Jan/Feb 2018)
Nonfiction
- The Fiction of James Tiptree, Jr. (1977)
- Writing Science Fiction & Fantasy (1993) (co-edited with Stanley Schmidt and Sheila Williams)