Glenn Grant's first collection Burning Days (2011, Nanopress) includes his new hard-sf/horror story "Flowers of Avalon." The title story "Burning Days" was on the 2005 Tiptree Jury's Long List. Glenn's short stories have appeared in Interzone, Northern Stars, ArrowDreams: An Anthology of Alternate Canadas (Signature Editions, 1997), Island Dreams: Montreal Writers of the Fantastic (Véhicule, 2003), Year's Best SF 10 (Harper/EOS, 2005), and (in French) in Solaris. With David G. Hartwell, he co-edited Northern Stars: The Anthology of Canadian Science Fiction (Tor, 1994) and a second volume, Northern Suns (Tor, 1999). Glenn's reviews and nonfiction have appeared in Science Fiction Eye, The Montreal Gazette, NYRSF, Science Fiction Studies, bOING bOING, Singularity, Going Gaga, and Virus23. He edited and published three issues of the 'zine Edge Detector, and was a founder and contributor to the underground comic 'zine Mind Theatre. His 1990 article on memes, "A Memetic Lexicon," has spread virally, appearing in dozens of magazines, journals, and websites, and has been translated into German, Spanish, French, Arabic, and Polish. His illustrations can be seen in the GURPS: Traveller line of SF RPG books from Steve Jackson Games. He has been nominated for the Aurora Award for his editing and for his illustrations. Born in London, Ontario, since 1989 he has lived in Montréal, where he is a member of the Montreal Commune sf writers' group. At the annual Burning Man festival his name is "Science," and he is one of two Montreal Regional Contacts for the Burning Man organization. His new blog, "Collapsing Stars," can be found at glenngrant.ca.