About Sue Lange

Sue Lange

Currently Sue Lange is a filmmaker. She’s made a couple of award-winning short films (A Perfect You, Traffic Opera) and a feature (Dust Nuggets). She’s currently in development on her second feature, Le Bon Chef. Find out about it at the Le Bon Chef site.

Previously, Sue Lange was a founding member of Book View Café  (BVC), the authors’ collective that includes over 30 published writers such as Ursula K. Le Guin, Vonda N. McIntyre, Patricia Rice, and Sherwood Smith.

Lange tends to write funny and sarcastic, much of the time about the future. But not always.

Lange’s first novel, TRITCHEON HASH, was published in 2003 by Metropolis Ink and subsequently reissued by A Distant Mirror who subsequently went out of business.

Following that, Lange wrote WE, ROBOTS, for Aqueduct Press in 2007. In 2017 Night Shade Books included it in their anthology, More Human Than Human. For years Sue Lange would have killed to be published by Night Shade Books. By the time 2017 rolled around, she was no longer writing sarcastic science fiction. Now she was making films and would kill to have somebody at A24 return her calls. Maybe in 2030 that will happen.

In 2009, BVC released a collection of her previously published short stories entitled “Uncategorized.” Then in 2010, BVC released her literary science fiction novel, THE TEXTILE PLANET. This was her sarcasticest, scathingest, most inscrutable work yet. No one anywhere has read it.

Lange is known for exaggerating.

Her fourth novel, The Perpetual Motion Club, is available somewhere.

Her short stories can be found throughout the universe. Her most prominent publication, “Tige is the Man,” was published in 2012 in Nature, the longest running scientific journal anywhere. It’s out of the UK. Lange has always done better in Europe. You can read it for free here: https://www.nature.com/articles/488424a

Lange lives in Pennsylvania with three sinks, a shower, and a couple of toilets. She’s planning on marrying a celebrity someday.

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  1. Pingback: Me and Kurt | Sue Lange's Singularity Watch

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