A young woman raised within the sterile limits of a Biodome longs to be free...taking her chances Outside, a place where the victims of a devastating virus dwell. But even greater dangers await Outside: the warring factions that have turned the once-beautiful mesas into a slaughterground, the Edgewalkers who tread a fine line between sanity and madness, and the astonishing truth about her own destiny, which may trigger the ultimate destruction of both worlds!
Catherine Wells is the author of seven novels and assorted short stories. Her works included "Mother Grimm" from Roc Books, a division of Dutton Signet, which was a finalist for the 1997 Philip K. Dick Award; and the Coconino trilogy from Del Rey Books, a division of Random House. Her short stories have appeared in "Analog," "Asimov's Magazine of Science Fiction," and anthologies such as "Wastelands: Stories of the Apocalypse" (Nightshade Books 2008) and "Redshift: Extreme Visions of Speculative Fiction" (Penguin-Putnam 2001). Her latest novel, "The Aztec Eagle" from ePress Online, is available in both paperback and multiple digital formats.
Ms. Wells holds a Master of Library Science degree from the University of Arizona and is employed as a medical librarian in Tucson, Arizona. She is married with two grown children and enjoys singing, hiking, and theatre.
Catherine writes: My official biography will tell you that I was born in LA but moved to the small town of Robinson, ND, at the tender age of four. There I grew up (sort of) and went to Jamestown College (Jamestown, ND) and earned a BA in theater, and got married. We lived for three years in Connecticut, where daughter April was born, before going back to ND, where daughter Joanne was born. While living in Bismarck, I got my first break as a writer: three of my plays were produced at my church, including one that was filmed for local television.
The official bio also says that in 1982, we moved to Tucson, Arizona, where I had some more plays produced, got my masters in library science at the UofA, and finally sold my first novel. (You will notice the prominence of desert motifs in my work.) Mother Grimm did me proud when it was nominated for the 1997 Phillip K. Dick Award.
What my official biography won't tell you is ...
My philosophy is, there's no point in having kids if you can't embarrass them.
One Halloween, my younger daughter wanted to know if I was going to dress up in a costume to go to work at the library. I told her I was going to put my hair back in a bun, wear my reading glasses, and go as a librarian.
My favorite authors are Parke Godwin, James Clavell, Orson Scott Card, and Jane Austin. My favorite musical artists are Billy Joel and the Harry James Orchestra. (What do you mean, you never heard of Harry James? How old are you? Okay, okay, neither am I, but I have these CDs of Big Band music, and his "Velvet Moon" is the best.) My favorite food is good Sonoran-Mexican cooking (which is very different from Chihuahuan-Mexican, New Mexico-Mexican, and chain-store Mexican), and I don't eat vegetables. I have hot tea every morning to jump-start my day, I prefer sun tea with my meals, and I can't abide coffee.
I'm a desert rat by adoption (or absorption), and no, I really don't miss snow. Not one little bit.
My ethnic origins are pretty muddy, having one ancestor who came over on the Mayflower (he's the guy that fell overboard and had to be rescued) and the rest of that line weaving its way through assorted communities across the country to reach North Dakota. But my mom is a full-blooded Finn (second generation American), which makes me half finished. Uh, half Finnish.
I recently wrote an historical fiction novel set in 11th century Scotland, and it required a lot of fascinating research, not only on the Scots of that era but on the Vikings. I discovered that most of what passes as history is really opinion. But don't get me started. Macbeatha, I will vindicate your name! Even if I don't spell it right.





