Karen Lee Killough (born 1942) is an American veterinary radiographer and writer of science fiction mystery novels under the name Lee Killough. She lives and works in Manhattan, Kansas.

Lee Killough
BornKaren Lee Killough
1942 (age 81–82)
OccupationAuthor, veterinary radiographer
NationalityAmerican
GenreScience fiction
Supernatural
Vampire
Mystery
SpousePat

Writing career

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Killough began her writing career with short stories. After a conversation at a science fiction convention with Joe Haldeman and James Gunn, she became convinced that the only practical way to continue writing was to write novels. She enjoys the conventions, and has explicitly said that the idea for her novel Deadly Silents was given her as a gift by a fan with whom she had discussed law enforcement at a convention, who felt he would never get a chance to write a novel based on the idea.[1]

Published works

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Series

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Bloodwalk
  1. Blood Hunt (ISBN 0-8125-0594-8, 1987)
  2. Bloodlinks (ISBN 0-8125-2064-5, 1988)
  3. Blood Games (ISBN 1-892065-41-X, 2001)

The first two were published in omnibus form as Blood Walk (ISBN 0-9658345-0-6, 1997)

Brill and Maxwell
  1. The Dopplegänger Gambit (ISBN 0-345-28267-1, 1979)
  2. Spider Play (ISBN 0-445-20273-4, 1986)
  3. Dragon's Teeth (ISBN 0-445-20906-2, 1990)

All three were published in omnibus form as Bridling Chaos (ISBN 0-9658345-3-0, 1998)

Other books

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Collections

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Anthologies edited

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  • Seeds of Vision: A Fantasy Anthology (2000) (with Jonathan Fesmire)

Personal life

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She retired in January 2000 after 29 years of working as a veterinary radiographer at the Kansas State University College of Veterinary Medicine.[2] Her husband, Pat, lost the use of his legs by 1983 and must use a wheelchair.

References

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  1. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on May 12, 2008. Retrieved March 11, 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) Killough's Guest of Honor speech at WisCon 7 (March 4–7, 1983)
  2. ^ "Kudos: STAFF RETIREMENTS: Karen Killough" (PDF). College of Veterinary Medicine Newsletter. Winter 2000. p. 7.[permanent dead link]
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