About Don Sakers
Don Sakers was launched the same month as Sputnik One, so it was perhaps inevitable that he should become a science fiction writer. A Navy brat by birth, he spent his childhood in such far-off lands as Japan, Scotland, Hawaii, and California. In California, rather like a latter-day Mowgli, he was raised by dogs.
As a writer and editor, he has explored the thoughts of sapient trees (The Leaves of October, Baen 1988), brought ghosts to life (Carmen Miranda's Ghost is Haunting Space Station Three, Baen 1989), and beaten the "Cold Equations" scenario ("The Cold Solution," Analog 7/91, voted best short story of the year.)
Sakers lives at Meerkat Meade in suburban Baltimore with his companion of many years, Thomas Atkinson.
As a writer and editor, he has explored the thoughts of sapient trees (The Leaves of October, Baen 1988), brought ghosts to life (Carmen Miranda's Ghost is Haunting Space Station Three, Baen 1989), and beaten the "Cold Equations" scenario ("The Cold Solution," Analog 7/91, voted best short story of the year.)
Sakers lives at Meerkat Meade in suburban Baltimore with his companion of many years, Thomas Atkinson.
Novels
Act Well Your Part (1986)
Lucky in Love (1988)
The Leaves of October (1988)
Carmen Miranda's Ghost Is Haunting Space Station Three (1990)
Dance for the Ivory Madonna (2002)
A Voice in Every Wind (2003)
The Curse of the Zwilling (2003)
The SF Book of Days (2004)
Weaving the Web of Days (2004)
A Rose from Old Terra: A Novel of the Scattered Worlds (2007)
Lucky in Love (1988)
The Leaves of October (1988)
Carmen Miranda's Ghost Is Haunting Space Station Three (1990)
Dance for the Ivory Madonna (2002)
A Voice in Every Wind (2003)
The Curse of the Zwilling (2003)
The SF Book of Days (2004)
Weaving the Web of Days (2004)
A Rose from Old Terra: A Novel of the Scattered Worlds (2007)
© 2009 FantasticFiction Bibliography by D C Wands Last Updated:
Questions? Comments? Corrections? Please email webmaster@fantasticfiction.co.uk
Questions? Comments? Corrections? Please email webmaster@fantasticfiction.co.uk

