Ursa Major Award, Hugo Award, Nebula Award, Mythopoeic Award, WSFA Small Press Award
Ursula Vernon (born May 28, 1977) is an American freelance writer, artist and illustrator. She has won numerous awards for her work in various mediums, including
Hugo Awards for her graphic novel Digger and fantasy novel Nettle & Bone, the
Nebula Award for her short story "
Jackalope Wives", and
Mythopoeic Awards for adult and children's literature. Vernon's books for children include Hamster Princess and Dragonbreath. Under the name T. Kingfisher, she is also the author of books for older audiences. She writes short fiction under both names.
Career
Ursula Vernon grew up in
Oregon and
Arizona. She studied
anthropology at
Macalester College in
Saint Paul, Minnesota, where she first took art classes.[2] She first became known for her webcomics and as a freelance artist, particularly for her works containing
anthropomorphic animals. She then moved into writing and illustrating a number of children's books, her first being published in 2008, and then books for adults under the pseudonym T. Kingfisher.[3][4] She decided to start using the pseudonym in order to avoid confusion amongst parents who were only familiar with her as a children's book author,[5] and chose it because she loves
kingfishers (and as an homage to Ursula K. LeGuin, who once joked that the initials "U.K." could stand for "Ulysses Kingfisher").[6] Vernon has published short fiction under both names, and has won a number of awards for them including the
Hugo Award and
Nebula Award.
She regularly attends
conventions to exhibit and sell her work. She has been a guest of honor at
Midwest FurFest 2004 and 2009, and the Artist Guest of Honor at
Further Confusion 2010. Vernon was the Author Guest of Honor for Mythcon 45[7] and a Guest of Honor at
Eurofurence 20, both in August 2014. In 2017, she was the Author Guest of Honor at
Arisia '17.
Vernon podcasts with her husband, Kevin Sonney.[8]
In June 2023, Vernon announced she had been diagnosed with breast cancer;[9] however, by December of that year, she announced that her treatment had been successful and she was "cancer-free".[10]
Works
Books for younger audiences
Vernon is the author and illustrator of the Dragonbreath and Hamster Princess children's book series, published by Dial Books:
Before becoming a published children's book author Vernon was primarily a freelance artist and illustrator, and she still regularly produces new works of art. Her work includes the creation of
digital art as well as the use of more traditional mediums such as
watercolour and acrylics, with much of her more recent work being
mixed media. Most of her art work is available as prints. Vernon has also taken commercial commissions such as book covers and game art.
Her artwork titled The Biting Pear of Salamanca became an
internet meme in the form of the "LOL WUT pear"[16] and has been made into a
resinfigurine due to its popularity.[17] She has also designed labels for a series of tea and soap products.[18][19][citation needed]
Her cover for Best in Show won the 2003 Ursa Major Award for Best Anthropomorphic Published Illustration.[41]
For her work on Digger, Vernon was nominated for the 2006
Eisner Awards in the category "Talent Deserving of Wider Recognition",[42] and won the 2005
Web Cartoonists' Choice Award for "Outstanding Black and White Art". Digger has also been nominated in the "Outstanding Anthropomorphic Comic" category.[43][44]
^In 2019,
SFWA announced that the
Andre Norton Award is considered a
Nebula category.[36][37] It is awarded for middle grade or young adult science fiction or fantasy (or related genre), including graphic novels.
^
abVernon, Ursula; Patrick Keith (September 2004).
"Interview with Ursula Vernon". www.epilogue.net. Retrieved March 6, 2011. Digger, ... is a fantasy about a wombat