David Zindell
David Zindell | |
---|---|
Born | Toledo, Ohio, U.S. | November 28, 1952
Occupation | Fiction writer |
Education | University of Colorado Boulder (BA) |
Genre | Speculative fiction |
Website | |
davidzindell |
David Zindell (born November 28, 1952) is an American science fiction and fantasy writer.
Writing career
Zindell's first published story was "The Dreamer's Sleep" in Fantasy Book in 1984. His novelette "Shanidar" won the Writers of the Future contest in 1985 and gave rise to his first novel, Neverness (1988), a science fiction epic. It was followed by a sequel trilogy called A Requiem for Homo Sapiens (1992-1998). In 2023 he added a new book to the Neverness universe called The Remembrancer's Tale.
The Neverness universe has been hailed as Dune for the 1990s.[1] Human civilization has explored and settled the galaxy using ships that interface a pilot's mind to the mathematical underpinnings of the physical universe. Artificial intelligences live as super-intelligent gods running on clusters of moon-sized computer brains. Humans have modified themselves to create a tapestry of religions and philosophies that interweave with alien cultures to amplify human potential and seek transcendence. The books often employ anthropological and ecological perspectives to examine the nature of consciousness, memory and evolution.
Zindell's fantasy epic The Ea Cycle (2001-2007) examines the evolution of consciousness through the struggle between good and evil, exploring themes of empathy, morality, war and fate. The plot concerns a prince named Valashu Elahad searching for a relic called the Lightstone to stop the immortal Morjin, Lord of Lies, who seeks to create a world filled with madness.
In 2015 he published Splendor, a memoir. In 2017 he published The Idiot Gods, a novel told from the point of view of killer whales, which are sapient. It is the first of the Xanayan series, followed by If I Am God in 2024 and The Woman and the Whale in 2025.
Zindell's work has been translated into German, Dutch, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Japanese, Russian and Italian.
Reception and themes
John Clute wrote that Zindell was a "romantic, ambitious, and skilled" writer.[2]
New Scientist wrote that: ‘David Zindell writes of interstellar mathematics in poetic prose that is a joy to read’[3] and that he presents ‘A disturbing vision of the impending collapse of a transgalactic society…the ideas are hard SF with philosophical undertones, and the story is compelling. Zindell makes you think’.[4]
Zindell has described his style as an attempt to communicate the connectedness of things, the connection between mysticism and evolution, and the possibilities of life,[5] and his fiction as an attempt to heal false dichotomies such as materialism and spirituality.[6]
Personal life
Zindell was born in Toledo, Ohio, and resides today in Boulder, Colorado, where he works as a test coach;[7] he received a BA in mathematics and minored in anthropology at the University of Colorado at Boulder.[8]
Publications
Fiction
Neverness universe
- "Shanidar", Writers of the Future (March 1985); online reprint at infinity plus
- Neverness (New York: D. I. Fine, 1988)
- A Requiem for Homo Sapiens (trilogy):
- The Broken God (HarperCollins, 1992); US ed., Bantam, 1994
- The Wild (Harper Voyager, 1995); US ed., Bantam, 1996
- War in Heaven (Voyager, Bantam, 1998)
- The Remembrancer's Tale (Harper Voyager, 2023)
Ea Cycle
- The Lightstone (London: Harper Voyager, August 2001), (Tor Books, June 2006), also published as two volumes, The Ninth Kingdom (June 2006) and The Silver Sword (Voyager, 2002, Tor, 2887) and again together as The Lightstone: The Complete Novel (2022)
- Lord of Lies (Voyager, 2003); US ed., Tor, 2008
- Black Jade (Voyager, 2005); released in U.S. only as e-book
- The Diamond Warriors (Voyager, 2007); released in U.S. only as e-book
Xanayan Novels
- The Orca's Song (originally published as The Idiot Gods, Harper Voyager, July 2017)
- If I am God (Harper Voyager, 2024)
- The Woman and the Whale (forthcoming)
Collections
- Shanidar and Other Stories (Bhodi Books, 2020)
Short fiction
- "The Dreamer's Sleep", Fantasy Book, December 1984
- "Shanidar", L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future, 1985
- "Caverns", Interzone (UK), Winter 1985/86
- "When the Rose Is Dead", Full Spectrum 3, June 1991
- "Martian Compassion", The War of the Worlds: Fresh Perspectives, 2005
- "The Tiger", Shanidar and Other Stories, 2020
Nonfiction
- Read This (1994)
- Splendor – A Memoir (Bhodi Books, 2015)
References
- ^ "Read online «Neverness», David Zindell – LitRes". Литрес. Retrieved 2025-07-14.
- ^ Clute, John: The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction, page 1368. Orbit, 1993
- ^ #author.fullName}. "Review: Space opera for the 1990s". New Scientist. Retrieved 2025-07-14.
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has generic name (help) - ^ #author.fullName}. "Collected works". New Scientist. Retrieved 2025-07-14.
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has generic name (help) - ^ "Storms of Numbers, Chalices of Light: an interview with David Zindell". infinityplus.co.uk. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
- ^ "David Zindell: Back to Roots". Locus.com. Retrieved 17 November 2021.
- ^ "Colorado Test Prep for SAT, ACT, GRE, and GMAT". davidzindellcoaching.com. Retrieved 2017-06-17.
- ^ Charles N. Brown. "David Zindell: Back to Roots" (excerpt), Locus 44:6, No. 473 (June 2000). Retrieved 2000-09-07.
External links

- Official website
- David Zindell on Goodreads
- A Chat with David Zindell (Part 1 of 2) and A Chat with David Zindell (Part 2 of 2), an interview on Tales From The Bridge
- David Zindell on Mathematics in 'Neverness', an interview on The Science in The Fiction
- Marty and Holly on Books by David Zindell, Sue Burke and Cory Doctorow on The Science in The Fiction
- Storm of Numbers, Chalice of Light, an interview on Infinity Plus
- David Zindell at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- David Zindell at Library of Congress, with 7 library catalog records