BIO
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Born
in 1959, I am a rare creature -- a native of North Vancouver,
B.C., Canada. I grew up in the Upper Lonsdale area, half
a block from the house my grandfather built. My father (born
in 1908) grew up in the same neighbourhood, but in the intervening
50 years almost everything about the area had changed so much
that it might almost have been a different planet. Who
knows, maybe that's what inspired my interest in science fiction.
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I
graduated from Carson Graham Secondary School, Capilano College, and
Simon Fraser University (B.A. in History). In the intervening
years I have worked in public relations (for Capilano College), been
a freelance medical writer, and done a lot of tedious but essential
office work for a wide variety of organizations (including the Vancouver
Art Gallery, Petro-Canada, Reid Crowther, and the B.C. Coalition of
People with Disabilities). I currently work for QLT, a cutting
edge biotech company.
Apart
from three years in Calgary (1988-90), I have lived in the Vancouver
area all my life. In particular, four years in a crumbling high rise
in the seething, fascinatingly diverse West End inspired much of Dance
of Knives. My partner, Clint, and I currently lead a bipolar
commuting lifestyle. During the week we inhabit the basement of
an old mansion in Shaughnessy (urban Vancouver), where the cafes are
full of people talking on cell phones, and on weekends we go back to
our trailer park home near the small fishing village of Gibson's Landing,
where the Bargain Store parking lot is full of pick-up trucks.
In
1977 I attended my first science fiction convention (Westercon 30 in
Vancouver) and that started a serious habit. I joined the B.C.
Science Fiction Association and began attending conventions up and down
the West Coast and across Western Canada. I have chaired two conventions
and worked on a number of others, including Vancouver's annual convention,
V-Con (see links page), Banffcon and Westercon.
As
a freelance journalist, I have written articles for newspapers and magazines,
including the Vancouver Sun, the Medical Post, and American
Libraries Journal. I have also written and edited plain language
legal publications for the People's Law School and the Representation
Agreement Resource Centre. Several years ago I began writing SF
book reviews which appeared in Tomorrow SF magazine. These
days my monthly review column can be found at On Spec magazine's
web site (see links). My most recent short story "Squat" appeared
in the Spring 2000 issue of On Spec. I am a member of SFWA
(Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America) and SF Canada.
Dance
of Knives is my first novel. I am working on a sequel, Second
Childhood.
klahowya@gmail.com