She had a story published in the original anthology of werewolf stories, Running With the Pack.[8]
As a participant in Launch Pad, she developed a fourth-grade science class astronomy unit.[9]
Awards and recognition
Her short story "Five Ways Jane Austen Never Died" was selected for inclusion in Prime Books' Fantasy: the Best of the Year for 2006.[10]
Samantha Henderson won a second place
Rhysling Award in 2009 in each of the long and short poem categories ("Spell" for the short poem, and "Hungry: Some Ghost Stories" for the long poem).[11]
Her
Ravenloft novel "Heaven's Bones" was one of the genre-related nominees for "Best Speculative Fiction Novel: Original" at the 2009 Scribe Awards.[12]
The poem "In the Astronaut Asylum", by Kendall Evans and Samantha Henderson won first place in the "Long Poem" category at the 2010 Rhysling Awards,[13] and was one of the finalists at the 2010 Nebula Awards.[14][15]
Her poetry collection "The House of Forever" won second place in the "Best Chapbook" category at the 2013 Elgin Awards.[16]
^George, Patrick (2008-08-17). "ArmadilloCon still has read on sci-fi, 30 years in" (pages
1 and
2). Austin American-Statesman. Archived from the original (pages
1 and
[1]) on 2024-01-20. Retrieved 2024-01-20 – via
Newspapers.com.
This article needs additional or more specific
categories. Please
help out by
adding categories to it so that it can be listed with similar articles.(March 2024)
She had a story published in the original anthology of werewolf stories, Running With the Pack.[8]
As a participant in Launch Pad, she developed a fourth-grade science class astronomy unit.[9]
Awards and recognition
Her short story "Five Ways Jane Austen Never Died" was selected for inclusion in Prime Books' Fantasy: the Best of the Year for 2006.[10]
Samantha Henderson won a second place
Rhysling Award in 2009 in each of the long and short poem categories ("Spell" for the short poem, and "Hungry: Some Ghost Stories" for the long poem).[11]
Her
Ravenloft novel "Heaven's Bones" was one of the genre-related nominees for "Best Speculative Fiction Novel: Original" at the 2009 Scribe Awards.[12]
The poem "In the Astronaut Asylum", by Kendall Evans and Samantha Henderson won first place in the "Long Poem" category at the 2010 Rhysling Awards,[13] and was one of the finalists at the 2010 Nebula Awards.[14][15]
Her poetry collection "The House of Forever" won second place in the "Best Chapbook" category at the 2013 Elgin Awards.[16]
^George, Patrick (2008-08-17). "ArmadilloCon still has read on sci-fi, 30 years in" (pages
1 and
2). Austin American-Statesman. Archived from the original (pages
1 and
[1]) on 2024-01-20. Retrieved 2024-01-20 – via
Newspapers.com.
This article needs additional or more specific
categories. Please
help out by
adding categories to it so that it can be listed with similar articles.(March 2024)