Ada Palmer

Ada Palmer
Palmer performing with the musical group Sassafrass at the 75th Worldcon in Helsinki, Finland, in August 2017.
Born Ada Palmer
Occupation Novelist, historian, professor, composer
Nationality American
Education
Period 1981–present
Genre Historical fiction, speculative fiction, science fiction, dystopian fiction
Notable works Too Like the Lightning
Website
adapalmer.com

Ada Palmer is an American historian and writer and winner of the 2017 John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer. Her first novel Too Like the Lightning was published in May 2016.[1] The work has been well received by critics and was nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Novel.[2]

Early life and education

The daughter of computer engineer Douglas Palmer and artist Laura Higgins Palmer, Ada grew up in Annapolis, Maryland. Following her undergraduate education, Ada Palmer obtained a doctorate at Harvard University.[3]

Academic career

Following a stint at Texas A & M, Palmer began teaching at the University of Chicago.[3]

As a scholar, Palmer researches and teaches about the Renaissance period. She teaches a well-known class on the Italian Renaissance wherein students enact the 1492 papal election, complete with secret meetings, betrayals, and a final vote conducted in full costume.[4] In a recent interview, Palmer discussed her experience with the class, suggesting that students have a lot of favorable biases about this period despite its darker underside.[5]

Palmer co-authored The recovery of ancient philosophy in the Renaissance: a brief guide with James Hankins in 2008. Her own first book, Reading Lucretius in the Renaissance, was published in 2014. Palmer holds that the Lucretius poem "De rerum natura", rediscovered in the Renaissance, could be the first document offering a profane worldview; that is, the possibility to describe how the universe works without any divine influence. This theory has implications for the development of political science as well as other secular worldviews. Palmer and Hankins also argue that Lucretius' ideas directly influenced Niccolò Machiavelli and utilitarianism, because of the ways in which his theories helped them create an ethics working per se, without any external, godly influence.[6]

Fictional work

Terra Ignota

Palmer's first novel Too Like the Lightning, the first of the Terra Ignota series, was published in 2016, and was nominated for the 2017 Hugo Awards.[2] It has been described as a rational adjacent book,[7] a work influenced both by science-fiction and historical genres,[8] a fact the author has confirmed.[9] The novel won the 2017 Compton Crook Award for the best first novel in the genre published during the previous year.[10]

The series currently has three novels, with a fourth and final installment planned for publication in 2019.[11]

  1. Too Like the Lightning (2016)
  2. Seven Surrenders (2017)
  3. The Will to Battle (2017)
  4. Perhaps the Stars (2019)

References

  1. "Historian Ada Palmer's debut sci-fi novel receives acclaim, award nominations". Division of the Social Sciences. University of Chicago. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  2. 1 2 Trendacosta, Katharine. "Here Are the 2017 Hugo Awards Finalists". io9. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  3. 1 2 Jason, Heller. "Science, Fiction And Philosophy Collide In Astonishing 'Lightning'". NPR. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  4. Palazzolo, Stephanie. "Uncommon Interview: Hugo Award Nominee Ada Palmer". The Chicago Maroon. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
  5. "Progress", You Are Not So Smart, #96.
  6. Farell, Henry. "The rediscovery of this writer in the Renaissance opened the way to the modern world (and, more important, the invention of political science)". Washington Post. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
  7. ENEASZ. "Interview – Ada Palmer (Too Like The Lightning)". The Methods of Rationality Podcast. Retrieved 2 May 2017.
  8. Farell, Henry (10 May 2016). "What's so brilliant about Ada Palmer's Too Like the Lightning". Crooked Timber. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
  9. Palmer, Ada. "The Big Idea: Ada Palmer". Whatever. John Scalzi. Retrieved 4 May 2017.
  10. "The Thirty-Five Compton Crook Award Winning Novels from inception in 1983 through 2017". Baltimore Science Fiction Society. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
  11. "Hey, it's sci fi author Ada Palmer here to talk about my future utopian series Terra Ignota! AMA!". Reddit.
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