A.M. Dellamonica

A.M. Dellamonica

4 Series

A.M. Dellamonica is a Canadian author known for her science fiction, fantasy, and alternate history works. She has taught creative writing at UCLA and reviews science fiction for SciFi.com and Tor.com. Dellamonica resides in Toronto, Ontario, with her wife and two cats.

In "Child of a Hidden Sea," the first book of the Hidden Sea Tales series by A.M. Dellamonica, 24-year-old Sophie Hansa is transported from San Francisco to the unfamiliar world of Stormwrack while trying to save her unknown aunt. Stormwrack consists of diverse island nations, each with unique cultures and economies, and Sophie finds herself at the center of a political conspiracy that threatens the world's stability. Everyone in Stormwrack seems to recognize her, yet she is forbidden to remain. Determined and resourceful, Sophie, with the help of a newfound sister and a reluctant ship captain, navigates the treacherous political landscape to fight for her right to stay in this enchanting world or face exile.

Indigo Springs/Astrid Lethewood

Indigo Springs

(2009)

Blue Magic

(2011)

Wild Things

(2012)

Stormwrack/Hidden Sea Tales

Child of a Hidden Sea

(2014)

A Daughter of No Nation

(2015)

The Glass Galago

(2016)

The Nature of a Pirate

(2016)

Short Stories/Novellas

The Cage

(2010)

Among the Silvering Herd

(2012)

The Ugly Woman of Castello di Putti

(2014)

The Color of Paradox

(2014)

Losing Heart Among the Tall

(2017)

Anthologies

Tesseracts 8

(2002)

Year's Best SF 8

(2003)

The Faery Reel: Tales from the Twilight Realm

(2004)

The Anthology at the End of the Universe: Leading Science Fiction Authors on Douglas Adams' The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy

(2005)

The Year's Best Science Fiction: Twenty-Fourth Annual Collection

(2007)

Super Stories of Heroes and Villains

(2013)

Some of the Best from Tor.com, 2014 edition

(2015)

Licence Expired: The Unauthorized James Bond

(2015)

Strangers Among Us

(2016)

Imaginarium 4

(2016)

The Sum Of Us

(2017)

Worlds Seen in Passing

(2018)

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