Jay Lake
Joseph Edward "Jay" Lake, Jr. was an American science fiction and fantasy writer. In 2003 he was a quarterly first-place winner in the Writers of the Future contest. In 2004 he won the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in Science Fiction. He lived in Portland, Oregon, and worked as a product manager for a voice services company.
Lake's writings appeared in numerous publications, including Postscripts, Realms of Fantasy, Interzone, Strange Horizons, Asimov's Science Fiction, Nemonymous, and the Mammoth Book of Best New Horror. He was an editor for the "Polyphony" anthology series from Wheatland Press, and was also a contributor to The Internet Review of Science Fiction.
Personal life
Lake was born in Taipei, Taiwan; he was the eldest of three children born to Joseph Edward Lake. As a child he lived in Nigeria; Dahomey ; Canada; Washington, DC; and returned to Taiwan for a number of years when his father was posted there a second time. He attended high school at Choate Rosemary Hall and later graduated from the University of Texas in 1986.Lake publicly revealed his advanced case of colon cancer. He was diagnosed in April 2008, and it then "progressed from a single tumor to metastatic disease affecting the lung and liver, recurring after multiple surgeries and chemotherapy courses." He used crowd funding through YouCaring to pay for whole genome sequencing, towards the "small possibility that the results of such a test...may suggest a treatment path." Lake died of the illness on June 1, 2014, just five days before his 50th birthday.
Lake is the subject of a documentary called Lakeside – A Year With Jay Lake by Waterloo Productions. The film, which follows Lake's fight against cancer, had a special work-in-progress screening August 30, 2013, at the World Science Fiction Convention in San Antonio., it is in post-production and is scheduled to premier at Sasquan in Spokane Washington during the 73rd World Science Fiction Convention on August 21, 2015.
His posthumously published collection Last Plane to Heaven was honored with the 2015 Endeavour Award.
The City Imperishable
- Trial of Flowers Night Shade Books
- Madness of Flowers Night Shade Books
- Reign of Flowers
- "The Soul Bottles" from the anthology Leviathan 4: Cities is the first published story of The City Imperishable.
- "Promises: A Tale of the City Imperishable" in
''Mainspring'' universe
- Mainspring Tor Books
- Escapement Tor Books
- Pinion Tor Books
- "" and
- "", loose sequel to "Chain of Fools"
''Green'' universe
- Green Tor Books
- Endurance
- Kalimpura
- ""
- "The Passion of Mother Vajpai" in Subterranean: Tales of Dark Fantasy 2
''Sunspin Universe''
- Calamity of So Long a Life
- Their Currents Turn Awry
- The Whips and Scorns of Time
- All Our Sins Remembered
- "To Raise a Mutiny Betwixt Ourselves"
- ""
- ""
- "To This Their Late Escape"
- ""
- ""
Other novels
- Rocket Science Fairwood Press
- Death of a Starship MonkeyBrain Books
- The Specific Gravity of Grief Fairwood Press
- The Baby Killers PS Publishing
- Original Destiny, Manifest Sin
Collections
- Greetings From Lake Wu, Wheatland Press
- * Greetings from Lake Wu; Signed, numbered, luxury edition, Traife Buffet
- Green Grow the Rushes-Oh, Fairwood Press
- American Sorrows, Wheatland Press
- Dogs in the Moonlight, Prime Books
- The River Knows Its Own, Wheatland Press
- The Sky That Wraps, Subterranean Press
- Last Plane to Heaven: The Final Collection, Tor Books
Other works
Edited works
- Polyphony
- * Polyphony 1, Wheatland Press
- * Polyphony 2, Wheatland Press
- * Polyphony 3, Wheatland Press
- * Polyphony 4, Wheatland Press
- * Polyphony 5, Wheatland Press
- * Polyphony 6, Wheatland Press
- All-Star Zeppelin Adventure Stories, Wheatland Press/All-Star Stories
- TEL: Stories, Wheatland Press
- Spicy Slipstream Stories, Lethe Press
- The Exquisite Corpuscle, Fairwood Press
- Other Earths, DAW Books
- Footprints, Hadley Rille Books
- Down In The Ship Mines in
Short fiction
Title | Year | First published in | Reprinted in |
2012 | Asimov's Science Fiction 36/10&11 | ||
Rock of Ages | 2013 | METAropolis: Green Space |