About Jeffrey Ford
Jeffrey Ford is a teacher and the author of The Physiognomy-winner of the 1998 World Fantasy Award and a New York Times notable book of the year-and Memoranda. He lives in Medford Lakes, New Jersey.
Novels
Vanitas (1988)
The Portrait of Mrs. Charbuque (2002)
The Girl in the Glass (2005)
The Shadow Year (2008)
The Portrait of Mrs. Charbuque (2002)
The Girl in the Glass (2005)
The Shadow Year (2008)
Collections
The Fantasy Writer's Assistant: And Other Stories (2002)
The Empire of Ice Cream (2005)
The Drowned Life (2008)
Crackpot Palace (2012)
The Empire of Ice Cream (2005)
The Drowned Life (2008)
Crackpot Palace (2012)
Novellas
Anthologies containing stories by Jeffrey Ford
Short stories
| At Reparata (1999) | |||
| The Fantasy Writer's Assistant [short story] (2000) | Nebula (nominee) | ||
| The Empire of Ice Cream [short story] (2003) |
Awards
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Links to other websites
| jeffreyford.com |
Jeffrey Ford recommends
Meet Me in the Moon Room (2001) Ray Vukcevich "The absurd and the profound are seamlessly joined through fine writing. Meet Me in the Moon Room is a first-rate collection." | The Devil in Brisbane (2005) Zoran ivković "The Devil in Brisbane is an anthology alive with all of the spontaneity, cunning, wild imagination, and artifice of its namesake. Zoran ivković has conjured thirty tales of sardonic splendor from Australian writers both new and more established. In this case, the Devil is most definitely in the details." | The Traitor (2007) Michael Cisco "Michael Cisco's The Traitor is a sinister, hilarious, and profound story, hallucinatory in its language magic... Lovers of dark fantasy will find something utterly unique and compelling here." |
Escape From Hell! (2007) Hal Duncan "Duncan's writing is fluent and powerful. He possesses an imagination capable of both conjuring words and capturing the intricacies of moments." | Shadowbridge (2008) (Shadowbridge, book 1) Gregory Frost "Beautifully written and realized." | The Enigmatic Pilot (2011) Kris Saknussemm "Kris Saknussemm's Enigmatic Pilot, with its shades of Twain and Melville's Confidence Man, its own unique style and vision, sense of humor and remarkable characters, is a balls out adventure story, a fascinating "historical" account of the Civil War era, a love story, and a mirror within which a reader might glimpse the current state of the union." |
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