Christopher Brown | |
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christopherbrown |
Christopher Brown is an American author, who is known for writing science fiction and nature-focused nonfiction.
His first novel, Tropic of Kansas, was published in 2017 by Harper Voyager,[1] and was a finalist for the 2018 John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Science Fiction Novel of the year.[2] Tropic of Kansas tells the story of a brother and sister traveling across an ecologically damaged United States during a period of political unrest.
His work frequently focuses on issues at the nexus of technology, politics, economics and ecology. His short fiction and criticism has been published in a variety of anthologies and magazines, including MIT Technology Review’s Twelve Tomorrows, LitHub, Tor.com, Reckoning, and The Baffler.
He was a 2013 World Fantasy Award nominee for the anthology he co-edited, Three Messages and a Warning: Contemporary Mexican Short Stories of the Fantastic.[3]
His novel Rule of Capture, a speculative legal thriller about a lawyer defending an accused eco-terrorist, was published by Harper Voyager in 2019.[4] The sequel, Failed State, follows the further escapades of defense lawyer Donny Kimoe as he appears before a post-revolutionary truth and reconciliation tribunal, and was nominated for the 2021 Philip K. Dick Award.
In 2020 Brown began writing a weekly newsletter about urban nature and wildlife, Field Notes,[5] and his new narrative nonfiction book drawing on the same material, A Natural History of Empty Lots: Field Notes from Urban Edgelands, Back Alleys and other Wild Places, is slated for publication by Timber Press in September 2024.[6]
Prior to 2012, Brown wrote under the name Chris Nakashima-Brown.
Brown lives in Austin, Texas, where he is a member of the Turkey City Writer's Workshop and also practices technology law.