Terri Windling
Terri Windling is an American editor, artist, essayist, and the author of books for both children and adults. She has won nine World Fantasy Awards, the Mythopoeic Fantasy Award, and the Bram Stoker Award, and her collection The Armless Maiden appeared on the short-list for the James Tiptree, Jr. Award. In 2010 Windling received the SFWA Solstice Award, which honors "individuals with a significant impact on the speculative fiction field". Her work has been translated into French, German, Spanish, Italian, Czech, Lithuanian, Turkish, Russian, Japanese, and Korean.
In the American publishing field, Windling has been one of the primary creative forces behind the mythic fiction resurgence that began in the early 1980s, through her work as an innovative editor for the Ace and Tor Books fantasy lines and as the editor of more than thirty anthologies of magical fiction. She created the Fairy Tale Series of novels that reinterpret classic fairy tales. She is also recognized as one of the founders of urban fantasy, having published and promoted the first novels of Charles de Lint, Emma Bull, and other pioneers of the genre.
With Ellen Datlow, Windling edited 16 volumes of Year's Best Fantasy and Horror, an anthology that reached beyond the boundaries of genre fantasy to incorporate magic realism, surrealism, poetry, and other forms of magical literature. Datlow and Windling also edited the Snow White, Blood Red series of literary fairy tales for adult readers, as well as many anthologies of myth & fairy tale inspired fiction for younger readers, such as , The Faery Reel, and The Wolf at the Door. Windling also created and edited the Borderland series for teenage readers, and The Armless Maiden, a fiction collection for adult survivors of child abuse like herself.
As an author, Windling's fiction includes The Wood Wife and several children's books: The Raven Queen, The Changeling, A Midsummer Night's Faery Tale, The Winter Child, and The Faeries of Spring Cottage. Her essays on myth, folklore, magical literature and art have been widely published in newsstand magazines, academic journals, art books, and anthologies. She was a contributor to The Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales, edited by Jack Zipes.
As an artist, Windling specializes in work inspired by myth, folklore, and fairy tales. Her art has been exhibited across the US, as well as in the UK and France.
Windling is the founder of the Endicott Studio, an organization dedicated to myth-inspired arts, and was the co-editor with Midori Snyder of The Journal of Mythic Arts from 1987 until it ceased publication in 2008. She also sits on the board of the Mythic Imagination Institute. Windling married Howard Gayton, the British dramatist and co-founder of the influential Commedia dell'arte troupe, the Ophaboom Theatre Company, in September 2008, and lives in Devon, England.
In May 2016, Windling gave the fourth annual Tolkien Lecture at Pembroke College, Oxford, speaking on the topic of fantasy literature in the post-Tolkien era.
Works
Fiction
- "The Green Children", The Armless Maiden, Tor Books, 1995
- The Wood Wife, Tor Books, 1996
- "The Color of Angels", The Horns of Elfland, New American Library, 1997
- The Raven Queen, with Ellen Steiber, Random House, 1999
- The Changeling, Random House, 1995
- The Old Oak Wood Series, Simon & Schuster, illustrated by Wendy Froud
- * A Midsummer Night's Faery Tale, 1999
- * The Winter Child, 2000
- * The Faeries of Spring Cottage, 2001
- "Red Rock", Century Magazine, 2000
- The Moon Wife, Tor Books, forthcoming
- Little Owl, Viking, forthcoming
Nonfiction
- "Surviving Childhood", The Armless Maiden, Tor Books, 1995
- "Transformations", Mirror, Mirror on the Wall: Women Writers Explore Their Favorite Fairy Tales, Anchor, 1998
- Co-writer and editor of Brian Froud's Good Faeries/Bad Faeries, Simon & Schuster, 2000
- "On Tolkien and Fairy Stories", Meditations on Middle-Earth, St. Martin's Press, 2001
- Contributing writer to The Oxford Companion to Fairy Tales, edited by Jack Zipes, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2002
- Contributing writer to Fées, elfes, dragons & autres créatures des royaumes de féerie, edited by Claudine Glot and Michel Le Bris, Hoëbeke, France, 2004
- Contributing writer to Panorama illustré de la fantasy & du merveilleux, edited by André-François Ruaud, Les Moutons Electriques, France 2004
- Numerous articles on myth and mythic arts for Realms of Fantasy magazine and the Journal of Mythic Arts, 1992–2008
Anthologies
- Elsewhere, Volumes I–III, edited with Mark Alan Arnold, Ace Books, 1981–1983
- Faery, Ace Books, 1985
- Year's Best Fantasy and Horror series, with Ellen Datlow, 1986-2003
- Snow White, Blood Red series, with Ellen Datlow
- *Snow White, Blood Red, Morrow/Avon, 1993
- *Black Thorn, White Rose, Morrow/Avon, 1994; Prime Books, 2007
- *Ruby Slippers, Golden Tears, Morrow/Avon, 1995; Prime Books 2008
- *Black Swan, White Raven, Avon Books, 1997; Prime Books, 2008
- *Silver Birch, Blood Moon, Avon Books, 1999
- *Black Heart, Ivory Bones, Avon Books, 2000
- Sirens and Other Daemon Lovers, with Ellen Datlow, HarperPrism, 1998; Avon, 2002
- The Armless Maiden and Other Tales for Childhood's Survivors, Tor Books, 1995
- Retold Fairy Tales series, with Ellen Datlow
- *A Wolf at the Door and Other Retold Fairy Tales, Simon & Schuster, 2000
- *Swan Sister: Fairy Tales Retold, Simon & Schuster, 2002
- *Troll's Eye View and Other Villainous Tales, Viking, 2009
- Mythic Fiction series, with Ellen Datlow, illustrated by Charles Vess
- *The Green Man: Tales from the Mythic Forest, Viking, 2002
- *The Faery Reel: Tales From the Twilight Realm, Viking, 2004
- *The Coyote Road: Trickster Tales, Viking, 2007
- *The Beastly Bride: Tales of the Animal People, Viking, 2010
- Salon Fantastique with Ellen Datlow, Thunder's Mouth Press, 2006
- Teeth with Ellen Datlow, HarperCollins, 2011
- After with Ellen Datlow, Disney/Hyperion, forthcoming 2012
- Queen Victoria's Book of Spells with Ellen Datlow, Tor Books, forthcoming 2013
Series edited
- The Fairy Tale Series, created with artist Thomas Canty, Ace Books and Tor Books, 1986 to present – novels that retell and reinterpret traditional fairy tales; by Steven Brust, Pamela Dean, Charles de Lint, Tanith Lee, Patricia C. Wrede, Jane Yolen, and others
- Brian Froud's Faerielands, Bantam Books, 1994 – contemporary fantasy novellas by Charles de Lint and Patricia A. McKillip, illustrated by Brian Froud
- The Borderland Series, New American Library, Tor Books, Harper Prism, 1985 to present