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Katherine Kurtz
Katherine Kurtz was born in Coral Gables, Florida during a
hurricane on October 18. Her mother worked in university
administration, then as a legal secretary, and also taught
English as a Second Language in the Peace Corps in
Venezuela. Her father worked as a radar specialist for
Bendix Avionics. Both are now retired.
On her second birthday, Katherine is told, she recited the
entire poem, "Little Orphan Annie", for her grandparents
without hesitation or error. She says she cannot remember a
time when she could not read.
Katherine did not find elementary school very challenging.
By third grade, she had successfully lobbied for permission
to check out books usually reserved for fifth and sixth
graders, such as The Black Stallion. She soon
went on to read out that school library and also the local
public library. For some years, she was convinced that her
mother did not know that she read by flashlight under the
covers at night.
During her senior year at Coral Gables High School,
Katherine was named a regional semi-finalist in the
Westinghouse Science Talent Search: an accomplishment that
helped her win a four-year science scholarship to the
University of Miami, where she graduated with a B.S. in
Chemistry. Her interest in science led her to medical
school, also at the University of Miami, but after a year
she decided she would rather write about medicine than
practice it. By this time she had also had the famous dream
which became the Deryni Series.
(For those who have not read Deryni Archives,
Katherine had what she describes as a "very vivid dream" on
October 16, 1964, after which she wrote some notes on two "3
X 5" cards. Several years later, she wrote the novella "The
Lords of Sorandor," recognizable parts of which appear in
Deryni Rising.)
She sold her first novel, Deryni Rising (actually,
the first trilogy, The Chronicles of the Deryni) to
Ballantine Books (later Del Rey) on her first submission
attempt! She completed her second two novels, Deryni
Checkmate and High Deryni, while completing
her MA in medieval English history at UCLA and writing
instructional materials for the Los Angeles Police
Department. Her early work built on the popularity of
J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings Trilogy, but she
soon defined and established her own sub-genre of
"historical fantasy" set in close parallels to our own
medieval period and featuring "magic" that much resembles
what some of us might call extrasensory perception. Nearly
all of the 15 Deryni books currently extant remain in print,
and fans eagerly await the third novel in the Childe Morgan
Trilogy, now in progress.
While adding novels to the Deryni series, Katherine began
further utilizing her historical training to develop another
sub-genre she calls "crypto-history," in which the "history
behind the history" intertwines with the "official"
histories of such diverse periods as the Battle of Britain
(Lammas Night, one of her favorites), the American
War for Independence (Two Crowns for America),
contemporary Scotland (The Adept Series, with co-author
Deborah Turner Harris), and the Knights Templar (two more
novels with DTH, plus three anthologies of short stories
about the Templars).
Katherine also created Deryni Archives: The
Magazine, which contains stories, articles, and artwork
by fans, and edited the first several issues herself.
In 1983, Katherine married the dashing Scott MacMillan, and
thereby acquired her son Cameron. Until last year, they
made their home in Ireland, in a mildly haunted gothic
revival house called Holybrooke Hall, but have recently
returned to the United States and taken up residence in a
historic house in Virginia, with their five Irish cats and
one "silly-looking" dog. (The ghosts of Holybrooke appear
to have remained behind.)
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