SFWA Names Robin McKinley Its 39th Grand Master!

The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association (SFWA) is proud to announce that Robin McKinley has been named the 39th Damon Knight Grand Master for her contributions to the literature of science fiction and fantasy. 

Graphic congratulating the new Grand Master, with a background of red roses.

The SFWA Damon Knight Memorial Grand Master Award recognizes “lifetime achievement in science fiction and/or fantasy.” It is named after author Damon Knight, SFWA’s founder and the organization’s 13th Grand Master. McKinley joins 38 writers who’ve been granted the title, including other luminaries such as Nalo Hopkinson, Peter S. Beagle, Connie Willis, Ursula K. LeGuin, Ray Bradbury, Anne McCaffrey, and Joe Haldeman. 

Robin McKinley is one of the leading writers of the modern fairy-tale retelling genre, and indeed, her debut Beauty, a retelling of Beauty and the Beast, could be said to have started the fairy-tale retelling trend. She is also celebrated for her original fantasy novels. Her 1982 book The Blue Sword received the Newbery Honor, and its 1984 prequel The Hero and the Crown was awarded the Newbery Medal. School Library Journal said, “Her work has impacted not just the Newbery canon, but the fantasy genre, too.” Her 1985 anthology Imaginary Lands won the World Fantasy Award, and Water, the 2002 collection she co-wrote with Peter Dickinson, was later nominated as well.  

Sunshine (2003), a dark sensual vampire fairy tale that Neil Gaiman called “A gripping, funny, page-turning, pretty much perfect work of magical literature,” won the Mythopoeic Award for Adult Literature and was named to NPR’s “Top 100 Science-Fiction Fantasy Books” list and Tor.com’s list of “Best SFF Novels of the Decade.” Spindle’s End, McKinley’s Sleeping Beauty retelling, was named to Time Magazine’s “100 Best Fantasy Books of All Time” in 2020.   

McKinley’s biography, in her own words, follows this announcement, as well as her full bibliography. She also welcomes visitors to her author website and her blog.

“I read McKinley’s Deerskin in my late-twenties and it turned my world upside-down,” says SFWA President Jeffe Kennedy. “From there I went on to read everything McKinley has written. With every story, each book, she haunts, delights, and enlightens me. Naming an author who’s been such a profound influence on me as both a reader and a writer as SFWA’s newest Grand Master is one of the greatest privileges of my life.” 

On being named a SFWA Grand Master, McKinley shares, “I am astonished, amazed, delighted & dumbfounded. Thank you very much.”

The 39th Damon Knight Memorial Grand Master award will be presented to McKinley at the 58th Nebula Awards ceremony, which will take place during the annual SFWA Nebula Conference. Further details about next year’s conference will be released soon.


 

ROBIN McKINLEY

Personal Biography

Robin McKinley usually says she’s from Maine because it’s simpler. That’s where her family settled after her father retired from the Navy. When she left to go to college she was never, ever coming back. She spent years in Boston and New York City and remains very fond of both cities. But she found herself inexplicably buying a little house in Maine and came to the astonished conclusion that she was settling down there.

Which is when Peter Dickinson happened, because that’s how these things go. He had this complicated idea about a transatlantic commute, which she knew both of them would hate. She’d grown up moving on every year or two, she still knew how to do it. Also, she’d fallen in love with Peter’s big English garden almost as hard as she’d fallen in love with him. She said, I’ll emigrate, but you have to marry me. So that’s what they did. She planted a lot of roses in that garden.

She spent nearly 30 years in Hampshire, but after Peter died it felt less and less like home. When she’d emigrated, their area was still mostly countryside and little towns, but it had been relentlessly turning into a posh London suburb. She was moaning to one of her stepsons about this and he said, here’s a mad idea, why don’t you move up here?

Here being Scotland.

She now lives on the top of a hill overlooking a small Scottish town to the ocean. Thanks to the patient stepson and his wife, who hauled her up here and installed her in their spare room while she found and renovated her new house. This was rather more of an adventure than expected. The wiring, for example, dated from the 1950s. But when they tore out the 60-year-old fitted carpet, there was the original Victorian wood and tile flooring, and behind the plasterboard most of the original hearths were still there too. We will pass swiftly over the interesting experience of moving in before there was either a working kitchen or bathroom. Also the Flying Piano—I’m not joking about the hill—when all 96 tons of my gear came up from storage in Hampshire, and had to be hoicked in somehow.

And then, of course, there was COVID.

Scotland was one of my better ideas. And it’s funny, because it’s also a kind of full circle. My first bio for Greenwillow Books, years and years and years ago, said that I wanted to live in a castle in Scotland. I was very young then and didn’t realise how uncomfortable Scottish castles are. This is a standard double-fronted Scottish Victorian house and very comfortable indeed. Especially with Genghis, my German wire-haired pointer (GWHP) keeping my back warm as I sit at my computer. My last dog died during the first, worst lockdown and it was more awful than I can tell you. Approximately the last breed in the world that I wanted anything to do with was a GWHP—they’re 90-mph perpetual-motion machines and have an insane prey drive—but he needed a home and I needed a dog. Two years later and you diss GWHPs at your peril. Actually, not, I will fall down laughing and agree with whatever you say.

I’m also finally working again. I hope to have a final-ish draft of a new book somewhat thrashed into shape maybe by the end of this year? Maybe? I am wildly, inexpressibly glad to be writing again. And I’m planting roses in my new garden. But I still miss Peter.


 

ROBIN McKINLEY

Bibliography

 

Beauty (1978)

Children’s Literature Association Phoenix Award Honor Book (1998)

Cited as a Best Book for the Teen Age by New York Public Library (1980, 1981, 1982)

Horn Book Awards Honor Book (1978)

Cited on the Library of Congress Children’s Literature Center’s Best Children’s Book 1964–1978 list

 

The Blue Sword (1982)

Newbery Honor Book (1983)

Nominated for Mythopoeic Award (1983)

Locus Awards list (1983)

Best Young Adult Books citation from the American Library Association, 1982

Regularly included on lists of top fantasy books

 

Chalice (2008)

Locus Awards list (2009)

 

Deerskin (1993)

Nominated for Mythopoeic Award (1994)

Longlisted for the James Tiptree, Jr. Literary Award [now the Otherwise Award] in 1994

Locus Awards list (1994)

Best Books for the Teen Age citation (1994)

ALA Best Adult Book for the Teen Age (1994)

 

The Door in the Hedge (1982)

Nominated for Mythopoeic Award (1983)

 

Dragonhaven (2007)

“A sharply incisive, wildly intelligent dragon fantasy involving profound layers of science and society, love and loss and nature and nurture. … Quietly magnificent.” – Kirkus starred review

“McKinley renders her imagined universe so potently that readers will wish they could book their next vacation in Smokehill.” – Publishers Weekly starred review

 

Fire: Tales of Elemental Spirits (2009) – co-written with Peter Dickinson

Cited on the Bank Street CBC Best Children’s Book of the Year list (2010)

ALA’s Best Fiction for Young Adults (2010)

 

The Hero and the Crown (1984)

Newbery Medal winner (1985)

Nominated for Mythopoeic Award (1985)

Locus Awards list (1985)

ALA Notable Book (1985)

Horn Book Awards Honor Book (1985)

Regularly included on lists of top fantasy books

 

Imaginary Lands (1985)

World Fantasy Awards winner (1986)

Locus Awards list (1986)

 

A Knot in the Grain and Other Stories (1994)

Nominated for Mythopoeic Award for Children’s Fantasy (1995)

Locus Awards list (1995)

Horn Book Awards Honor Book (1995)

 

Outlaws of Sherwood

Horn Book Awards Honor Book (1988)

 

Pegasus (2010) 

“An enchanting fantasy that the author’s many fans will love.” – Publishers Weekly starred review

 

Rose Daughter (1997)

Nominated for Mythopoeic Award for Children’s Literature (1998)

Locus Awards list (1998)

ALA’s Best Fiction for Young Adults (1998)

 

Shadows (2013)

Nominated for Mythopoeic Award for Children’s Literature (2014)

 

Spindle’s End (2000)

Locus Awards list (2001)

“The 100 Best Fantasy Books of All Time”, Time Magazine (2020)

Regularly included on lists of top fantasy books

 

Sunshine (2003)

Winner of Mythopoeic Award for Adult Literature (2004)

Locus Awards list (2004)

“Top 100 Science-Fiction Fantasy Books”, NPR (2011)

“Best SFF Novels of the Decade”, Tor.com (2011)

ALA’s Best Fiction for Young Adults (2005)

Regularly included on lists of top fantasy books

 

Water: Tales of Elemental Spirits (2002) – co-written with Peter Dickinson

Nominated for World Fantasy Awards (2003)