Mike Allen (born 1969) is an American news reporter and columnist, as well as an editor and writer of speculative fiction and poetry.
Life
Allen is married to Anita Allen, with whom he runs Mythic Delirium Books.[1] In his day job, he is a news reporter and arts and culture columnist for a daily newspaper in Roanoke, Virginia,[1] where he currently lives.
Literary career
The Philadelphia Inquirer has described Allen as being "[a]mong the better-known practitioners of speculative poetry"[2] and said his poems "work best when his bizarre lyricism is put in the service of a scary and taut narrative."[2]
Allen also used Kickstarter to continue publishing Clockwork Phoenix, a fantasy fiction anthology series he began editing in 2008.[5][8][9]
Strange Horizons called the first crowdfunded volume, Clockwork Phoenix 4, a look into "the future of publishing, in which a crowd-sourced publication from a very small press can produce, and can present professionally and beautifully, work which is at the height of what is being written in genre."[10]
Recognition
Allen's short story "The Button Bin"[11] was a finalist for the 2008 Nebula Award for Best Short Story.[12] In 2015, his debut short story collection Unseaming was a finalist for the Shirley Jackson Award for best single author collection.[13] In 2017, an anthology he edited, Clockwork Phoenix 5, was a finalist for the World Fantasy Award—Anthology.[14] In 2021, Allen received a second Shirley Jackson Award nomination for his 2020 collection Aftermath of an Industrial Accident: Stories.[15]
Allen has won the Rhysling Award for best speculative poem three times, in 2003, 2006, and 2007.[16]
"Epochs in Exile: A Fantasy Trilogy" (co-authored with Charles M. Saplak), Rhysling Award, Best Long Poem, 2003 (winner)
"The Strip Search," Rhysling Award, Best Short Poem, 2006 (winner)
"The Journey to Kailash," Rhysling Award, Best Long Poem, 2007 (winner)
"The Button Bin," Nebula Award, Best Short Story, 2008 (nominee)