Teresa Edgerton

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Teresa Edgerton
Born 1949
Van Nuys, California, United States
Pen name Madeline Howard
Occupation Author
Nationality United States
Genre Fantasy, steampunk, fantasy of manners
Website
teresaedgerton.com

Teresa Edgerton (born 1949) is an author of fantasy novels and short stories set in worlds that parallel the Middle Ages and the 18th century.

Literary biography

Born Teresa Ann Waller in Van Nuys, California, in 1949, she lived in the Los Angeles area until the age of 14, when her family moved to northern California. In high school, she spent her lunch hours in the school library, devouring one historical novel after another. At about that same time she discovered fantasy writers T. H. White, J. R. R. Tolkien, and C. S. Lewis, and science fiction writer Andre Norton, whose combined influence would inspire her to begin creating imaginary worlds of her own. She met her husband, John Edgerton, in 1971, when she was working as a Tarot reader at a local Renaissance faire, and he was part of a Society for Creative Anachronism troupe putting on demonstrations of medieval tourney combat. They have four grown children: Gwyneth, Daisy, Megan, and John-Miles.

Her interest in medieval society, alchemy, magic, and Celtic mythology led her to begin writing the Green Lion Trilogy, a project which was to consume the next ten years of her life. The first book of the series, Child of Saturn, was a finalist for the Compton Crook Award. It is set in Celydonn, a fictional Celtic realm whose carefully worked out tongue is, in the writer's own words, "not intended to represent any real-world Celtic tongue of dialect"[citation needed] but rather is "an intentionally fanciful combination of Welsh, Irish and pseudo-Celtic elements"[citation needed] resulting from "a pattern pf migrations, intermarriages and inter-tribal cultural exchanges which could have taken place on Ynis Celydonn and nowhere else".[citation needed]

After completing this trilogy, her interest turned from epic fantasy to the pseudo-sciences of the 18th century, which resulted in the steampunkish fantasy of manners Goblin Moon, a book which still commands an enthusiastic cult following.[citation needed] Other books and short stories followed.

However, publication of The Queen’s Necklace – despite good reviews[clarification needed] – didn't produce enough sales to satisfy her publishers, and for a time she was unable to renew her publishing contract. In 2004 she was offered the chance to relaunch under the pseudonym Madeline Howard, and has since struck out with a new trilogy, Rune of the Unmaking, with the successful[clarification needed] first novel, The Hidden Stars.

Notable themes in Edgerton's work include the struggle to maintain decency, dignity, and kindness even when faced with dire circumstances. Her heroes and heroines are often conflicted characters who chastise themselves harshly for failings that her readers easily forgive. Edgerton’s prose is richly descriptive,[according to whom?] reflecting her love of 19th and early 20th century writers, and her desire to construct a textured and realistic secondary reality for each of her works.

Published works

Novels

The Queen’s Necklace (2001)

Green Lion trilogy (the first Celydonn trilogy)

  • Child of Saturn (1989)
  • The Moon in Hiding (1989)
  • The Work of the Sun (1990)

The second Celydonn trilogy

  • The Castle of the Silver Wheel (1993)
  • The Grail and the Ring (1994)
  • The Moon and the Thorn (1995)

Goblin Moon duology

  • Goblin Moon (1991)
  • The Gnome’s Engine (1991)

The Rune of Unmaking trilogy (writing as Madeline Howard)

  • The Hidden Stars (2004)
  • A Dark Sacrifice

Short stories

  • "The Ghost in the Chimney" (1991)
  • "TITANIA, or The Celestial Bed" (1994)
  • "My Soul into the Boughs" (1995)
  • "A Wreath of Pale Flowers for Vitri" (1996)
  • "Tower of Brass” (1997)
  • "Rogue's Moon” (1997)
  • "Dying by Inches” (2001)
  • "Captured in Silver” (2004)

External links