Kyla Ward

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Kyla Ward
Kyla Ward in 2007
Kyla Ward in 2007
BornNew South Wales, Australia
Pen nameEdwina Grey (shared)
OccupationWriter, actor
NationalityAustralian
Period1994–present
GenreSpeculative fiction
Website
kylaw.livejournal.com

Kyla (Lee) Ward is an Australian writer of speculative fiction, poet and actor. Her work has been nominated multiple times for the Ditmar Award, the Aurealis Award , the Australian Shadows Award , the Bram Stoker Award and the Rhysling Award. She won the Aurealis Award in 2006 for her collaborative novel Prismatic (as by 'Edwina Grey').

Biography[]

Ward was born in New South Wales, Australia. She attended the University of Technology, Sydney where she gained a BA in communications.[1]

Writing[]

Ward was first published in 1994 with her poem "Mary" which was featured in the magazine Bloodsongs. In 2002 her short story "The Boneyard" was nominated for the Ditmar Award for best short fiction but lost to Lucy Sussex and Jack Dann.[2] In 2006 she won her first award with the novel , co-authored with and under the shared pseudonym of Edwina Grey. Prismatic tied with Will Elliott's The Pilo Family Circus to win the Aurealis Award for best horror novel.[1][3]

Ward has also contributed to role-playing games including Buffy the Vampire Slayer Roleplaying Game by Eden Studios, Inc. and White Wolf's Demon: The Fallen.

Acting[]

Ward has also been a member of the Theatre of Blood repertory company where she acted and also wrote. In 2018 she became the eponymous Guide to Deadhouse, Tales Of Sydney Morgue, an immersive theatre production devoted to true crime in Sydney city and taking place at historic locations. [1] Ward wrote and produced and acted in the short film Bad Reception which premiered at A Night of Horror 2009 and screened at the Vampire Film Festival in New Orleans. Ward has also worked as an assistant director and sound recordist in a number of short films,[1] for instance as sound recordist on Indulgence (1996) (written and directed by Glenn Fraser).

Artwork[]

Apart from illustrating her own collections, Ward also has contributed artwork for various publications including , the cover of Epiphanies of Blood: Tales of Desperation and Thirst, Southern Blood, Borderlands, Bloodsongs, Tabula-Rasa, and Burnt Toast.[1]

Awards and nominations[]

Year Award Work Category Result
2002 Ditmar Award "The Boneyard" Best short fiction Nomination[2]
2002 Ditmar Award Tabula-Rasa (with David Carroll) Best fan production Nomination[2]
2003 Aurealis Award "Kijin Tea" Best horror short story Nomination[4]
2004 Ditmar Award "Kijin Tea" Best short story Nomination[5]
2006 Aurealis Award (with Evan Paliatseas and David Carroll as Edwina Grey) Best horror novel Won[3]
2007 Ditmar Award Prismatic (with Evan Paliatseas and David Carroll as Edwina Grey) Best novel Nomination[6]
2007 Ditmar Award "The Bat's Boudoir" Best short story Nomination[6]
2012 Rhysling Award "The Soldier's Return" Best long poem Nomination[7]
2012 Rhysling Award "The Kite" Best short poem Nomination[7]
2013 Rhysling Award "Lucubration"" Best long poem Nomination[8]
2018 Australian Shadows Award "A Shared Ambition - Horror Writers in Horror Fiction" Best non-fiction Nomination
2019 Bram Stoker Award "And In Her Eyes The City Drowned" Best short story Nomination
2019 Australian Shadows Award "Revenants of the Antipodes" Best poem Won
2020 Australian Shadows Award "The Danse Macabre - an essay" Rocky Wood Award for non-fiction and criticism Won
2020 Rhysling Award "The Macabre Modern" Best long poem Third Place[7]
2021 Bram Stoker Award "Should Fire Remember the Fuel?" Best short story Nomination

Bibliography[]

Novels[]

  • (2006, with Evan Paliatseas and David Carroll as Edwina Grey)

Short fiction[]

  • "The Feast" (1999) in Aurealis No. 24 (ed. , )
  • "The Boneyard" (2001) in Gothic.net September 2001
  • "Poison" (2002) in Passing Strange (ed. Bill Congreve)
  • "Sakoku" (2002) in (ed. Cat Sparks)
  • "Kijin Tea" (2003) in (ed. Cat Sparks)
  • "The Oracle of Brick and Bone" (2005) in Borderlands No. 5
  • "The Bat's Boudoir" (2007) in Shadowed Realms No. 9
  • "A Tour of the City of Assassins" (2009) in Ticon No. 4
  • "Cursebreaker: The Welsh Widow and the Wandering Wooer" (2010) in Scary Kisses (ed. Liz Grzyb)
  • "Erina Hearn and the God of Death" (2010) in (ed. Angela Challis & )
  • "Cursebreaker: The Jikininki and the Japanese Jurist" (2013) in The New Hero: Vol. 1 (ed. Robin D. Laws)
  • "Reading the Game" (2013) in
  • "The Loquacious Cadaver" (2013) in The Lion and the Aardvark: Aesop's Modern Fables (ed. Robin D. Laws)
  • "Who Looks Back?" (2013) in Shotguns v. Cthulhu (ed. Robin D. Laws)
  • "The Character Assassin" (2013) in Schemers (ed. Robin D. Laws)
  • "Cursebreaker: the Mutalibeen and the Memphite Mummies" (2015) in Hear Me Roar (ed. Liz Grzyb)
  • "The Leucrotta" (2015) in Gods, Memes and Monsters: A Twenty-first Century Bestiary (ed. Heather J. Wood
  • "And In Her Eyes the City Drowned" (2018) in Weirdbook #39
  • "Should Fire Remember The Fuel?" (2020) in Oz Is Burning, (ed. Phyllis Irene Radford)
  • "A Whisper in the Death Pit" (2021) in Weirdbook #44

Poetry[]

  • The Land of Bad Dreams (edited by Charles (Danny) Lovecraft). Sydney: P'rea Press, 2011. ISBN 978-0-9804625-7-9. Illustrated by the author, contains otherwise unpublished work.

Note: The launch of this book was accompanied by dramatic interpretations by various theatre groups. Video of the performances is available on the kylawtr Youtube channel. Reviewing the volume at Hellnotes, the reviewer praised Ward's work: [1]

  • The Macabre Modern and Other Morbidities (edited by Charles (Danny) Lovecraft). Sydney: P'rea Press, 2019 ISBN 9780994390127. Illustrated by the author, contains otherwise unpublished work.

Note: The launch of this book was accompanied by a "danse macabre". Video of the performances is available on the kylawtr Youtube channel.

Poems[]

  • "Mary" (1994) in Bloodsongs #3 (ed. Chris A. Masters, Steve Proposch)
  • "Herbal Tea" (1995) in Bloodsongs #6 (ed. Steve Proposch)
  • "Night Cars" (1999) in Abaddon #2
  • "The Land of Dreams Gone Bad" (2011) in Midnight Echo #5
  • "The Exorcism" (2011) in Midnight Echo #5
  • "The Kite" (2011) in The Land of Bad Dreams
  • "The Soldier's Return" (2011) in The Land of Bad Dreams
  • "Lucubration" (2012) in Avatars of Wizardry (ed. Charles Lovecraft)
  • "Necromancy" (2014) in Spectral Realms #1
  • "The Stone of Sacrifice" (2016)in Spectral Realms #4
  • "Dual Purpose" (2017)in Spectral Realms #6
  • "Vanth – A Myth Derived" (2017) in Eternal Haunted Summer
  • "Tattered Livery" (2017) in Weirdbook #37
  • "Libitina's Garden – a triptych" (2018)in Mythic Delirium 4.4
  • "Revenants of the Antipodes" (2019) in HWA Poetry Showcase V, ed. Stephanie Wytovich
  • "Mourning Rites”, (2019) in The Audient Void #7
  • "The Siege", (2020) in HWA Poetry Showcase VII, ed. Stephanie Wytovich
  • "Lo Stregozzo", (2020) in Eternal Haunted Summer

Role-playing games[]

  • Mystical Places
  • "Arcanities" (2001)
  • "The Schriebach Estate" (2001)
  • "The Scalper" (2009) in Eden Studio Presents #3
  • The Demon Storyteller's Guide (2002, co-author)
  • "Suffer the Children" (2003) in Fear to Tread
  • "The Court of Chimera" (2009) in Eden Studio Presents #3
  • "Dominion" (2009) in Pyramid Magazine #3/10
  • "The Journey of the Dead" (2011) in Pyramid Magazine #3/38

Contributed to:

  • The Demon Players' Guide (2003)
  • Damned and Deceived: the Book of Thralls (2003)
  • Demon: The Earthbound (2003)
  • Time of Judgment (2004)

Scripts[]

  • Bad Reception (2008) directed by , 4TOD Productions. Screened at A Night of Horror 2009, and the Vampire Film Festival 2009
  • Chocolate Curses, "a comedy in dubious taste." (2010) directed by Steve Hopley. Played as part of the Season II program of the Theatre of Blood
  • It's Only Magic, with Jon Blum. Intomedia (2020) directed by Josh Aviet.

Essays[]

  • "Scaring the Children" in Bloodsongs No. 8 (ed. Steve Proposch)
  • "Playing the Classics: Role Playing Your Favorite Novels" (2002) in Black Gate (ed. )
  • "Reading the Game – Depictions of Role-Playing in Popular Culture" (2013) in Strange Horizons No. 28 (ed. Niall Harrison
  • "A Shared Ambition - Horror Writers in Horror Fiction" (2017) in Midnight Echo #12
  • "The Danse Macabre" in The Macabre Modern and Other Morbidities (2019) P'rea Press.

Articles[]

  • "Gaming Freeform" (1994) in Australian Realms No. 17
  • "Australia" (1996) in The BFI Companion to Horror (ed. Kim Newman)
  • "Castle, Sweet Castle" (2002) in d20weekly.com
  • "Get Lost" (2004) in Dragon No. 326
  • "Tomb Raider" (2005) in Dragon No. 327
  • "The Petit Tarrasque and Other Monsters" (2005) in Dragon No. 329
  • "Australian Gargoyles" (2007) in Art Monthly Australia No. 200
  • "Coffin Culture" (2008) in Black: Australian Dark Culture #3
  • "Dark Humour in Revelation of the Daleks" (2010, with David Carroll and Kate Orman) in Burnt Toast
  • "Symbolism" (2010, with David Carroll and Kate Orman) in Burnt Toast
  • "Dungeons and Deadlines" (2011) in WQ Magazine

References[]

General
  • Kyla Ward at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
  • "Boys and Ghouls Come Out to Play" (newspaper article focusing on Australian women writers of horror).
  • Australian Speculative Fiction: A Genre Overview by Donna Maree Hanson, Aust Speculative Fiction 2005
Specific
  1. ^ a b c d e "Kyla Ward". Tabula-Rasa. Archived from the original on 24 January 2011. Retrieved 24 January 2011.
  2. ^ a b c "The Locus Index to SF Awards: 2002 Ditmar Awards". Locus Online. Archived from the original on 24 December 2002. Retrieved 24 January 2011.
  3. ^ a b "The Locus Index to SF Awards: 2007 Aurealis Awards". Locus Online. Archived from the original on 2 April 2010. Retrieved 24 January 2011.
  4. ^ "The Locus Index to SF Awards: 2004 Aurealis Awards". Locus Online. Archived from the original on 12 February 2005. Retrieved 24 January 2011.
  5. ^ "The Locus Index to SF Awards: 2004 Ditmar Awards". Locus Online. Archived from the original on 18 January 2010. Retrieved 24 January 2011.
  6. ^ a b "The Locus Index to SF Awards: 2007 Ditmar Awards". Locus Online. Archived from the original on 16 May 2008. Retrieved 24 January 2011.
  7. ^ a b c "The 2012 Rhysling Awards". Science Fiction Poetry Association. Archived from the original on 1 April 2013. Retrieved 1 April 2013.
  8. ^ "The 2013 Rhysling Awards". Science Fiction Poetry Association. Archived from the original on 9 November 2014. Retrieved 9 November 2014.

External links[]

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