George Guthridge | |
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Born | 1948 (age 75–76) |
Occupation |
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Nationality | American |
Education | Portland State University (BA) University of Montana (MFA) University of Alaska Fairbanks (PhD) Arizona State University |
George Guthridge (born 1948) is an American author and educator. He has published over 70 short stories and five novels and has been acclaimed for his successes teaching writing and critical/creative thinking. In 1997 he and coauthor Janet Berliner won the Bram Stoker Award for the Year's Best Horror Novel.
Guthridge earned a B.A. in English from Portland State University in 1970,[1] and a Master of Fine Arts in creative writing from the University of Montana.[1] He earned a PhD from the University of Alaska Fairbanks in 2010 and also took doctoral courses at Arizona State University.[1]
In the mid-1970s, Guthridge was teaching English at Loras College. A colleague in the department had received a grant to attend a science fiction convention in Milwaukee, but was unable to attend, so Guthridge went instead ("because Milwaukee is famous for beer"), although he confesses that at that time he despised science fiction and fantasy. At the convention, Guthridge met George R. R. Martin, who persuaded him to give speculative fiction a second look, and to write in the field himself. "George changed my life, he really did," Guthridge says. "Not just because he opened doors for me, but he opened this whole vista of sci-fi and fantasy and horror that I never would've gotten into."[2] In turn, Guthridge later helped Martin find a job at Clarke College. (Martin had been operating chess tournaments to supplement his writing income, but "wasn't making enough money to stay alive," says Guthridge.)[3] Guthridge has been a finalist for the Hugo Award and twice for the Nebula Award for science fiction and fantasy. In 1998 he and coauthor, Janet Berliner, won the Bram Stoker Award for the year's best horror novel.
From 1982, Guthridge coached school pupils in the Siberian Yupik Eskimo village of Gambell, Alaska, on the remote St. Lawrence Island in the Bering Sea, to national championships in academics. They became the only Native American team ever to do that—and they did it twice.[4] Guthridge's memoir of his years in Gambell was published as The Kids from Nowhere in 2006.[citation needed]
Novels
Nonfiction
Selected Short Fiction
1 with Janet Berliner 2 with Carol Gaskins 3 with Blythe Ayne 4 with Steve Perry 5 with Dianne Thompson 6 with George R.R. Martin
Guthridge also helped develop the Rural Alaska Honors Institute (RAHI). It has become one of the nation's top college preparatory programs for Native Americans. Over 2000 of its graduates have gone on to college success, including at such institutions as Harvard, Dartmouth, Yale, Notre Dame, Stanford, Berkeley, West Point, Annapolis, and the Air Force Academy.