Justina Robson (born 11 June 1968 in Leeds, England) is a science fiction author from
Leeds, England.
Biography and publishing history
Justina Robson was born in Leeds on 11 June 1968, and studied philosophy and linguistics at the
University of York
, mottoeng = On the threshold of wisdom
, established =
, type = Public research university
, endowment = £8.0 million
, budget = £403.6 million
, chancellor = Heather Melville
, vice_chancellor = Charlie Jeffery
, students ...
. She worked in a variety of jobs – including secretary, technical writer, and fitness instructor – until becoming a full-time writer.
Robson attended the
Clarion West Writing Workshop and was first published in 1994 in the British small press magazine
The Third Alternative
''Black Static'', formerly ''The 3rd Alternative'', is a British horror magazine edited by Andy Cox. The magazine has won the British Fantasy Award for "Best Magazine" while individual stories have won other awards. In addition, numerous stories ...
, but is best known as a novelist. Her debut novel ''Silver Screen'' was shortlisted for both the Arthur C Clarke Award and the BSFA Award in 2000. Her second novel, ''Mappa Mundi'', was also shortlisted for the Arthur C Clarke Award in 2001. It won the 2000 Amazon.co.uk Writer's Bursary. In 2004, ''Natural History'', Robson's third novel, was shortlisted for the BSFA Award, and came second in the John W Campbell Award.
Robson's novels have been noted for sharply-drawn characters, and an intelligent and deeply thought-out approach to the tropes of the genre. She has been described as "one of the very best of the new British hard SF writers".
''Living Next-Door to the God of Love'' is a loose sequel to ''Natural History'', inasmuch as it is set in the same universe. ''Keeping It Real'' marks the beginning of a series, the Quantum Gravity Books.
On 27 July 2008 sh
spokeon BBC Radio 3 about
Doctor Who
''Doctor Who'' is a British science fiction television series broadcast by the BBC since 1963. The series depicts the adventures of a Time Lord called the Doctor, an extraterrestrial being who appears to be human. The Doctor explores the u ...
and various other science fiction shows for 25 minutes during the interval of the ''
Doctor Who Prom''.
Robson was announced in November 2008 as the guest of honour at the following year's
Novacon.
Robson was announced in April 2010 as an international guest of honour at Swancon 36 to be held 21 to 25 April 2011 in Perth Australia.
Robson announced in November 2010 the forthcoming publication of her first story collection, ''Heliotrope'', to be published in April 2011 by Australian independent publisher
Ticonderoga Publications
Ticonderoga Publications is an Australian independent publishing house founded by Russell B. Farr in 1996 and now run by Farr and Liz Grzyb. The publisher specializes in collections of science fiction short stories.
History and current
Tico ...
.
Bibliography
Novels
Natural History
(Stuff Universe) series
Quantum Gravity
Quantum gravity (QG) is a field of theoretical physics that seeks to describe gravity according to the principles of quantum mechanics; it deals with environments in which neither gravitational nor quantum effects can be ignored, such as in the vi ...
series
Transformers Cinematic Universe
Story collection
Literary universes
Natural History (Stuff) universe
Based on
M-Theory, the Unity lives in all 11 dimensions and watches our 4 dimensions for individual intelligences to entice into the Unity aggregate. It reads mental attitudes, desires, and intentions and can alter 4-D reality by action in the other 7 dimensions. While a mind is never truly lost translating into Unity, its identity is soon subsumed into the collective.
About ''translation'' into Unity: "Nobody has died. They are all ''within'', every life perfectly recorded, every experience distributed." "Translated individuals remain alive in the sense they are able to continue the natural process of consciousness." "the Translated were in a state of superposition, being both themselves and alive and conscious, but also unified with all other conscious beings within Unity." Physical bodies are gone from 4-D, but theoretically can be re-manifest as they were.
Stuff is Unity's manifestation in 4-D, appearing as an atomically undistinguishable mass that responds to intense thought and adapts itself to satisfy implicit need or desire. For example, Stuff appears as an instantaneous transfer FTL engine to a stranded inter-stellar ship, and transforms into a weapon needed by a scientist to defend himself against torture.
[Robson, Justina (2003). ''Natural History'']
Physical contact with Stuff can bleed one's intellect into Unity, normally transferring consciousness into 7-D after several uses unless Unity agrees otherwise. Strong personalities with disciplined minds can resist longer, or minds can voluntary translate immediately. While Unity purports to be benevolent and respectful, it has arbitrarily translated million-plus sized groups of individuals.
Sidebar pocket realities have been negotiated with Unity, who manifests them in Stuff and moves 4-D people between them and mainline human reality. They are maintained by Unity created engines, similar to today's computer games which implement a rule based virtual reality. Sidebars include
Metropolis (the
DC Comics Justice League of America), Dindsenchas (historical Celtic), Sankhara (Buddhist
Saṅkhāra).
An ancient galactic race boot-strapped itself into 11-D and Unity, leaving a mechanism built of stuff as two artificial moons around an earth-like planet. The continued existence/operation of these is probably essential to Unity. The Unity mechanism allows for multiple unconnected Unities, whose uncoordinated actions in 11-D can destroy the conditions that permit the existence of expanded 4-D space-times.
Quantum Gravity universe
References
External links
Justina Robsonhome page
Justina Robsonat Blogspot
Justina Robsonat Pinterest
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Justina Robsonon Worlds Without End
{{DEFAULTSORT:Robson, Justina
English science fiction writers
Writers from Leeds
Living people
Alumni of the University of York
1968 births
British women novelists