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Karen Anderson (writer)

Karen Anderson
Born June Millichamp Kruse
September 16, 1932
Erlanger, Kentucky, US
Occupation Writer, editor
Nationality American
Period 1958–present
Genre Fantasy

Karen Kruse Anderson (/ˈkrzi/; born September 16, 1932) is the widow and sometime co-author of Poul Anderson and mother-in-law of writer Greg Bear.

Anderson was born June Millichamp Kruse in Erlanger, Kentucky, near Cincinnati, Ohio.

She is noted as the first person to use the term filk music in print. She also wrote the first published science fiction haiku (or scifaiku), "Six Haiku" (The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, July 1962). She also probably coined the term sophont to describe the general class of sapient beings.

As a student of philology she, in 1950, along with three friends, founded a Sherlock Holmes society, naming it the "Red Circle Society." She was, around this time, a friend of Hugh Everett III, whose theories about parallel universes Poul Anderson later became an enthusiast.

Robert A. Heinlein dedicated his 1982 novel Friday in part to Karen.

In the 1980s she was an active writing collaborator with her husband, co-authoring several books.



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