Mildred Clingerman


Mildred McElroy Clingerman was an American science fiction author.
Clingerman was born Mildred McElroy in Allen, Oklahoma, and her family moved to Tucson, Arizona, in 1929. She graduated from Tucson High School and attended the University of Arizona. She married Stuart Clingerman in 1937.
Most of her short stories were published in the 1950s in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, edited by Anthony Boucher. Boucher included her story "The Wild Wood" in the seventh volume of The Best from Fantasy and Science Fiction and dedicated the book to her, calling her the "most serendipitous of discoveries." Her science fiction was collected as A Cupful of Space in 1961. She also published in mainstream magazines like Good Housekeeping and Collier's. Her story "The Little Witch of Elm Street" appeared in Woman's Home Companion in 1956.
Married women are portrayed in stories like “The Wild Wood” or “A Red Heart and Blue Roses” ; they suffer violations of body space, male intrusiveness, and the impostures of aliens. Her stories have also appeared in several anthologies, including literature textbooks for middle and high school students. A 2017 anthology, , includes all of her originally published stories.
Clingerman was a collector of books of all kinds, especially those by and about Kenneth Grahame, and of Victorian travel journals. Clingerman was as strongly associated with F&SF as Zenna Henderson. She was a founder of the Tucson Writer's Club and served on the board of the Tucson Press Club. She was posthumously awarded the Cordwainer Smith Rediscovery Award in 2014.

Awards

2014 Cordwainer Smith Rediscovery Award

Selected Works

“First Lesson”
“Stickney and the Critic”
“Stair Trick”
“Minister Without Portfolio
“Letters From Laura”
“The Last Prophet”
A Cupful of Space
“Red Heart and Blue Roses”
The Clingerman Files