About Grania Davis

Grania Davis wrote Dr. Grass (1978), The Rainbow Annals (1980), The Great Perpendicular Path (1980), and Moonbird (1986). She was married to author Avram Davidson from 1962 to 1964 and collaborated with him on several works including The Boss in the Wall (1998), which was nominated for the Nebula and Locus Awards, and Marco Polo and the Sleeping Beauty (1987). After Avram’s’s death in 1993, Grania co-edited collections of his stories, including The Avram Davidson Treasury (1998, with Robert Silverberg) which won the 1999 Locus Award for best collection. With Gene Van Troyer, she edited Speculative Japan: Outstanding Tales of Japanese Science Fiction and Fantasy (2007). 

 

As Author

As editor

  • The Scarlet Fig: Or Slowly Through a Land of Stone (co-editor, with Henry Wessells, 2005)

  • The Avram Davidson Treasury (co-editor, with Robert Silverberg, 1998)

  • The Investigations of Avram Davidson (co-editor, with Richard A. Lupoff, 1999)

  • Everybody Has Somebody in Heaven: Essential Jewish Tales of the Spirit (co-editor, with Jack Dann, 2000)

  • The Other 19th Century (co-editor, with Henry Wessells, 2001)

  • ¡Limekiller! (co-editor, with Henry Wessells, 2003)

  • Speculative Japan (co-editor, with Gene Van Troyer, 2007)

Short Stories

  • My Head’s in a Different Place, Now (1972)

  • The Hills Behind Hollywood High (1983) (with Avram Davidson)

  • The Word-Woman of Dza (1986)