The groundbreaking and influential James Tiptree, Jr. was born 100 years ago

Alice B. Sheldon (James Tiptree, Jr.)

Born in Chicago, IL on August 24, 1915, Alice B. Sheldon (née Bradley) was the daughter of lawyer and naturalist Herbert Bradley and Mary Hastings Bradley, a popular and prolific writer of fiction and travel books. Young Alice traveled the world with her parents. Following 1921-22 trip to Africa, she enjoyed her first published credit when she contributed to her mother’s short story, “The Women Men Don’t See.” A graphic artist and a painter, Sheldon, under the name "Alice Bradley Davey" was an art critic for the CHICAGO SUN between 1941 and 1942.

image

Alice Sheldon with the kikuyus, a native tribe from Africa

After her first marriage ended, Alice joined the United States Army Air Forces and worked in  photo-intelligence group. Near the end of the war, while stationed in Paris, she met her second husband Huntington (Ting) Sheldon, future Director of the Office of Current Intelligence for the CIA. Returning to the States, Alice, as “Alice Bradley,” published her first short story “The Lucky Ones” in THE NEW YORKER (November 16, 1946). In 1952 she joined the CIA, but resigned in 1955 to return to college. Alice Sheldon eventually got a Bachelor of Arts degree at American University (1957–59) and  a doctorate at George Washington University in Experimental Psychology in 1967. 

Alice adopted her “James Tiptree, Jr.” persona to protect her academic reputation. As Tiptree, she garnered immense praise for her numerous tales that often stretched the boundaries of the genre by challenging the perceptions of gender. Her many awards include two Hugo (1974 novella, "The Girl Who Was Plugged In”; 1977 novella, “Houston, Houston, Do You Read?”), three Nebula (1973 short story, “Love Is the Plan the Plan Is Death”; 1976 novella, “Houston, Houston, Do You Read?”; 1977 novelette, “The Screwfly Solution”), and a 1987 World Fantasy for the collection TALES OF THE QUINTANA ROO.

Alice with husband Ting

In 1977, her Tiptree identity was outed. Her identity as a woman surprised many in the field. Sheldon continued writing as Tiptree until her tragic death in 1987. In 1991, Karen Joy Fowler and Pat Murphy established the James Tiptree, Jr. Award for works of science fiction or fantasy that expand or explore our understanding of gender. 

Tiptree eventually penned the two novels

UP THE WALLS OF THE WORLD and BRIGHTNESS FALLS FROM THE AIR. Tiptree’s numerous stories have been collected in many volumes including TEN THOUSAND LIGHT-YEARS FROM HOME, WARM WORLDS AND OTHERWISE, OUT
OF THE EVERYWHERE AND OTHER EXTRAORDINARY VISIONS, THE STARRY RIFT,
TALES OF THE QUINTANA ROO, CROWN OF STARS, and HER SMOKE ROSE UP
FOREVER
. Her poetry form the late 1940s and early 1950s were collected in 

NEAT SHEETS: THE
POETRY OF JAMES TIPTREE, JR
.

For more info about HER SMOKE ROSE UP FOREVER, visit the Tachyon page.

Cover by John Picacio.

For more info about NEAT SHEETS: THE POETRY OF JAMES TIPTREE, JR, visit the Tachyon page.