David D. Levine is the author of novel <i>Arabella of Mars</i> (Tor 2016) and over fifty science fiction and fantasy stories. His story Tk'Tk'Tk won the Hugo Award in 2006, and he has been shortlisted for awards including the Hugo, Nebula, Campbell, and Sturgeon. His stories have appeared in <i>Asimov's</i>, <i>Analog</i>, <i>F&SF</i>, numerous Year's Best anthologies, and his award-winning collection <i>Space Magic</i>. He lives in a hundred-year-old bungalow in Portland, Oregon.
Hugo award winning author David D. Levine's first full length novel, Arabella of Mars, is the delicious love child of Jane Austen, Patrick O'Brian, and Jules Verne! Sent back to England from her family's estate on Mars, Arabella despises the life of a staid young Regency lady. Then a shocking threat to her family on Mars forces her to undertake a desperate, impossible journey back to the colony--a journey that will change her forever. Arabella Ashby is a great character, and wonderful worldbuilding, tight plotting, and a breakneck pace make Arabella of Mars a real page turner! I look forward to the next book in the series. --New York Times bestselling author Mary Jo Putney, author of Not Always a Saint and Once a Soldier This rollicking interplanetary adventure captured my heart. Who could resist a world in which coal-powered ships sail to Mars, borne aloft by balloons of Venusian silk, doing battle en route with French privateers? To protect family and fortune, Arabella Ashby masquerades as a boy and takes a berth as a cabin boy on a fascinating voyage. There's a mysterious captain, an intriguing automaton, pirates, Martians, a bit of romance, and so much more. I'm grateful Levine has promised a sequel. Arabella Ashby proves herself to be a clever and capable heroine, and I'm looking forward to her next adventure. --Nebula, World Fantasy, and Philip K. Dick Award-winning author Pat Murphy David Levine has reached back past the Martian romances of Percival Lowell to an even earlier moment, creating a precursor to steampunk that I suppose we should call sailpunk. It's a delightful addition to the Matter of Mars, bridging the long gap between Kepler and Burroughs with a Regency entry, filled with all the drama of the Napoleonic wars, now here complicated by a drastic Martian intervention, and animated most of all by Arabella, a young woman filled with curiosity and courage. It's a very clever and entertaining start to a memorable saga. --Kim Stanley Robinson, author of the Nebula-winning and Hugo-winning Mars trilogy Regency space opera in its best form! An intrepid, intelligent heroine, wonderful characters, and a breathtaking conflict. Who could ask for more? --Patricia Rice, author of Saturn's Daughter series If Edgar Rice Burroughs, Jules Verne, and Patrick O'Brien had sat down together to compose a tale to amuse Jane Austen, the result might be Arabella of Mars. So. Much. Fun! --Madeleine Robins, author of The Stone War, a NYT Notable Book, and the Sarah Tolerance Regency mystery series David Levine's entertaining debut is a delightfully detailed airship adventure, complete with romance, pirates, Martians, automata, and a charming Jules Vernian imagining of the alternate-world science involved in sailing a ship straight through our solar system. --Tina Connolly, author of the Ironskin Trilogy and Seriously Wicked Interplanetary pirates! Imperiled inheritances! Disguises! Rebellion! Romance! Arabella of Mars is a blast--a smart, resourceful heroine, a non-stop adventure packed with thrills, charm and surprises, and a fascinating world I hope to see a lot more of. A thoroughly engaging debut. --Kurt Busiek Shades of Jules Verne! Levine delights with genre-bending thrills in this Regency whizzbang. --Ellen Klages