Joan Slonczewski

Joan Lyn Slonczewski is a biologist at Kenyon College, known as a feminist science fiction writer.

Biography
Slonczewski earned an A.B. in biology, magna cum laude, from Bryn Mawr College in 1977. She completed a postdoc at the University of Pennsylvania in 1984, studying calcum flux in leukocyte chemotaxis. She visited at Princeton University and the University of Maryland, Baltimore, before accepting a position at Kenyon College. Slonczewski's research focuses on the pH (environmental) stress response in Escherichia coli, using genetics techniques.

Slonczewski teaches both biology and science fiction courses. From 1996 through 2008, she has been awarded Howard Hughes Medical Institute funding for undergraduate biological sciences education, which she uses to improve science instruction and to foster summer science fellowships for minority and first-generation students.

Slonczewski is also a member of the Quakers and Quakerism featured in her first novel Still Forms on Foxfield.

Fiction
Her 1986 Campbell Award-winning novel A Door Into Ocean shows her command of genetics and ecological science, as well as her commitment to pacifism and feminism. It depicts the ecosystem of a planet covered entirely by water, inhabited by an exclusively female race of genetic engineers. Daughters of Elysium (1993), The Children Star (1998), and Brain Plague (2000) are loose sequels.

A serialization of her The Children Star (1998) appeared in Analog Science Fiction and Fact, a magazine known for hard science fiction.

Her most recent book, Brain Plague (2000) depicts a world where intelligent microbes inhabit human brains. The microbial aliens have potential for great good as well as great evil. They evolve in the same way as pathogens such as the AIDS virus or as symbionts such as our digestive bacteria, which help keep humans healthy. Brain Plague tells of a future in which genetic engineering, combined with nanotechnology can do everything from shaping our bodies to growing enormous buildings for us.

Novels

 * Still Forms on Foxfield (1980)
 * A Door Into Ocean (1986)
 * The Wall Around Eden (1989)
 * Daughter of Elysium (1993)
 * The Children Star (1998)
 * Brain Plague (2000)

Science Publications

 * J. L. Slonczewski and John W. Foster, 2006, Microbiology: An Evolving Science, a core microbiology textbook for undergraduate science majors, W. W. Norton & Co., New York.

Awards

 * Robert Tomsich Award, for outstanding achievement in research in science, Kenyon College, 2001.
 * Silver Medalist, National Professor of the Year program, Council for the Advancement and Support of Education, Washington DC, 1989.
 * John Campbell Memorial Award for Best Science Fiction Novel, A Door into Ocean, 1987.