← Back

Teresa Nielsen Hayden

Nielsen Hayden, Teresa

March 21, 1956 (age 70)

Birth place: Chamberlain, South Dakota, USA

11 works in English-language magazines

Date Page Type Title Magazine
October 1987 9 Interior Art Cartoon: "The inhabitants, lacking reliable sources of information, became prey to chronic alarm and superstition." Matrix, #72
1988 43 Essay Cyberpunk Forum/Symposium: Life in Change Wartime Mississippi Review 47/48
September 1988 10 Review Eternity The New York Review of Science Fiction, September 1988
September 1988 Editor The New York Review of Science Fiction - 1988 The New York Review of Science Fiction, September 1988
October 1988 Editor The New York Review of Science Fiction, October 1988 The New York Review of Science Fiction, October 1988
November 1988 Editor The New York Review of Science Fiction - 1988 The New York Review of Science Fiction, November 1988
1994 28 Review Making Book Horizons Science Fiction, Winter 1994
October 1994 45|45.13 Review Making Book Science Fiction Chronicle, #177 October 1994
2006 38 Essay Remarks on Some Clichés I Have (by Definition) Known Too Well Subterranean, Issue #4
May 2013 66 Interview Patrick & Teresa Nielsen Hayden Locus, #628 May 2013
August 2020 Editor Tor.com - 2020 Tor.com, August 26 2020

3 English-language books

Year Type Title Author(s)
1994 Nonfiction Making Book Teresa Nielsen Hayden
2004 Anthology The Book of Ballads Teresa Nielsen Hayden & Charles Vess
2016 Nonfiction Making Conversation Teresa Nielsen Hayden

scifiinc.net nielsenhayden.com SF Encyclopedia Wikipedia fancyclopedia.org

Year Publication Title
January 1983 Izzard, #5, January 1983 Izzard, #5, January 1983
1994 Making Book Making Book

Year Publication Title
October 1982 Izzard, #2, October 1982 Izzard, #2, October 1982
November 1982 Izzard, #3, November 1982 Izzard, #3, November 1982
December 1982 Izzard, #4, December 1982 Izzard, #4, December 1982
February 1983 Izzard, #6, February 1983 Izzard, #6, February 1983
October 1987 Matrix, #72 Cartoon: "The inhabitants, lacking reliable sources of information, became prey to chronic alarm and superstition."