Which female science fiction writers also have degrees in "hard" science? (Catherine Asaro comes to mind.)
Which female science fiction writers write "hard" science fiction? (Obviously I have a mental list, but it may not be standard.)
What about writers for shows like Star Trek, which I don't know anything about?
I've heard claims that though 70% of all book buyers are female, science-fiction book buyers are predominantly male; can anyone support either of these claims?
How much would it cost to bring, say, Maureen F. McHugh to Seattle?
So what is on your list, however (possibly) idiosyncratic, of hard sf written by women? I asked lanval for an add'l opinion, and he pointed out that hard sf by men isn't a lengthy list either.
Of course I said that I had a list, when what I meant was that I spent a couple of days thinking about the problem a few months ago, and have now forgotten what I came up with. Nancy Kress, definitely-- her science is sometimes doubtful, but scientific innovation seems to drive her plots in a characteristically hard-science way. Vonda McIntyre's Nautilus series also has a science-driven feel. Cherryh has the grit that I associate with a lot of hard sf, but when you get down to it her characters are dominating . . .
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