Jane Lindskold
Author of Through Wolf's Eyes
About the Author
Jane Lindskold received a B.A., M.A. and Ph.D. in English from Fordham University. She was an adjunct professor at Fordham, before becoming an Assistant Professor of English at Lynchburg College in Virginia. While there, she became friends with Roger Zelazny. She completed his two unfinished novels show more Donnerjack and Lord Demon after his death. Her first novel, Brother to Dragons, Companion to Owls was published in 1994. Her other works include Changer, Legends Walking, Through Wolf's Eyes, and Fire Season written with David Weber. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Photo by Pati Nagle
Series
Works by Jane Lindskold
Wolf Hunting, Through Wolf's Eyes, Wolf's Head Wolf's Heart, The Dragon of Despair, Wolf Captured (Firekeeper Series, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5) (2006) 3 copies
Ruthless 2 copies
Christmas Seal [Short Story] 2 copies
Endpoint Insurance 2 copies
Pakeha 1 copy
Fever Waking 1 copy
A Block of Time 1 copy
Ruins of the Past 1 copy
The Lady in Grey 1 copy
The Seventh Martial Art 1 copy
The Drifter [Short Story] 1 copy
Unexpected Flowers 1 copy
Associated Works
Lightspeed Magazine, Issue 49 • June 2014 (Women Destroy Science Fiction! special issue) (2014) — Contributor — 174 copies, 11 reviews
Lord of the Fantastic: Stories in Honor of Roger Zelazny (1998) — Contributor — 174 copies, 1 review
Worlds of Light & Darkness (The Best of DreamForge and Space & Time Book 1) (2021) — Foreword; Contributor — 14 copies, 2 reviews
Asimov's Science Fiction: Vol. 42, No. 5 & 6 [May/June 2018] (2018) — Contributor — 12 copies, 1 review
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Legal name
- Lindskold, Jane M.
- Other names
- Lindskold, C. J.
- Birthdate
- 1962
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Fordham University (PhD ∙ English)
Holy Trinity Elementary School, Georgetown, Washington, D.C.
Immaculata Preparatory School - Occupations
- novelist
short story writer - Organizations
- Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America
- Nationality
- USA
- Places of residence
- Washington, D.C., USA
Albuquerque, New Mexico, USA
Chesapeake Bay, Maryland, USA - Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
Most excellent. I hadn't heard of this novel of Lindskold's, but glad it came up in the fantasy book group I follow.
Coming out in 2022, this is essentially a portal fantasy, starring three older ladies (a librarian, aged hippy, and an archaeologist) who are summoned to a world populated by therionthropes and no full humans. As they are a bit bored from retirement, they decide to help and mentor the three youngsters with their quests.
The high magic world is beautifully realized and inventive, show more with a variety of non-Earth animals, an interesting culture, and the mystery involving the Library of the Sapphire Wind.
Highly recommend. I will be ordering the sequel asap. The author mentions that books one and two are the same story, and had to be split for publishing reasons. show less
Coming out in 2022, this is essentially a portal fantasy, starring three older ladies (a librarian, aged hippy, and an archaeologist) who are summoned to a world populated by therionthropes and no full humans. As they are a bit bored from retirement, they decide to help and mentor the three youngsters with their quests.
The high magic world is beautifully realized and inventive, show more with a variety of non-Earth animals, an interesting culture, and the mystery involving the Library of the Sapphire Wind.
Highly recommend. I will be ordering the sequel asap. The author mentions that books one and two are the same story, and had to be split for publishing reasons. show less
This is the second adventure featuring Stephanie Harrington and the treecat she calls Lionheart but who calls himself Climbs Quickly. This time a study team has come to the planet Sphinx to study the treecats to determine their intelligence. Along with the team comes the son of the team leader - Anders Whittaker. Stephanie develops her first crush on him which the team leader wants to encourage in the hopes that she will share more with the team than she has shared in the past.
Stephanie is show more also concerned about getting her provisional air-car license and her role as a junior ranger in the Sphinx Forest Service. Her parents are concerned about her lack of friends her own age but Stephanie is slowly learning that all the kids her age are not "blackholes." She has always been friends with fellow junior SFS ranger Karl Zivonik but now she is getting to know some other kids - Toby, Jessica, Christine and Chet.
When the expedition including Anders goes missing (because of the arrogance of his father Dr. Whittaker), Stephanie is very concerned about locating them. The concern gets even higher when lightning-strike fires occur. Stephanie and Karl and their friends have to rescue a clan of treecats that are in the way of the fires and stumble on and rescue the scientists at the same time.
The story was entertainingly told both from Stephanie's and Climbs Quickly's points of view. We could see Climbs Quickly's frustration that the two-legs just didn't understand what the treecats were trying to tell them. He also had to try to understand the volatile emotions of Stephanie as she grows from child to woman.
I recommend this book and the first book in the series - A Beautiful Friendship - to all young science fiction fans. show less
Stephanie is show more also concerned about getting her provisional air-car license and her role as a junior ranger in the Sphinx Forest Service. Her parents are concerned about her lack of friends her own age but Stephanie is slowly learning that all the kids her age are not "blackholes." She has always been friends with fellow junior SFS ranger Karl Zivonik but now she is getting to know some other kids - Toby, Jessica, Christine and Chet.
When the expedition including Anders goes missing (because of the arrogance of his father Dr. Whittaker), Stephanie is very concerned about locating them. The concern gets even higher when lightning-strike fires occur. Stephanie and Karl and their friends have to rescue a clan of treecats that are in the way of the fires and stumble on and rescue the scientists at the same time.
The story was entertainingly told both from Stephanie's and Climbs Quickly's points of view. We could see Climbs Quickly's frustration that the two-legs just didn't understand what the treecats were trying to tell them. He also had to try to understand the volatile emotions of Stephanie as she grows from child to woman.
I recommend this book and the first book in the series - A Beautiful Friendship - to all young science fiction fans. show less
What a nice book! It's clearly urban fantasy, but not of the kick-ass kind. Although there is enough ass-kicking going on, it is not of the Harry Dresden kind. Which is all to the good, as far as I am concerned. The magic is nicely original with its oriental shape. I'll admit some of the mahjong details went over my head, but fortunately it was not really important to be able to follow it. I liked very much that the crew was so mixed. Both in race, in gender, and in age. And they were show more properly mixed: not only young women and old men, or the other way around. Also, each of the characters was treated with respect: the young woman stood her own and did not act rashly when she had the opportunity; the old one was formidable and flexible.
The pacing was very much to my liking: stately in the beginning, with time for explanations and relationships to form; faster towards the end, when the conflict comes to a head. I liked that the villains were human as well, and I liked the ending, wherethe enemies become allies all of a sudden. This is an unusual turn of events and not often seen in fantasy. I'm quite curious to see where this will go, and will definitely buy the sequel. show less
The pacing was very much to my liking: stately in the beginning, with time for explanations and relationships to form; faster towards the end, when the conflict comes to a head. I liked that the villains were human as well, and I liked the ending, where
Cute. Three intertwining plotlines, as usual - interpersonal relationships between the kids (and they are all kids), the bonds between humans and treecats, and a mystery. The mystery is weird and highly nebulous, and helps fix a lot of broken relationships. The treecat part is lovely as usual, but even more confusing - there's _three_ sets of names for people now, and for some of the secondary characters I wasn't able to figure out who was meant some of the time. It didn't seriously detract show more from the story, but it did distract me at times. It was interesting seeing this right after reading the Stephanie story in the latest anthology - much less settled into her relationships. There was one big logic hole. I know Stephanie has never been one for nightclubs - but _because_ of that, someone (her parents, Anders, someone) should have thought to review basic safety precautions. And she mentions roofies earlier, so she is marginally aware (and that's still a problem then, ugh). She should have known better than to drink that. I winced when she did and knew what would happen (and BTW, they've figured out how to extract the pertinent stuff - lumps in the drink would have been noticeable). Fun story, I'll likely read it again sometime. show less
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