Martin H. Greenberg

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Martin H. Greenberg (born March 1, 1941) is a prolific American speculative fiction anthologist, not to be confused with anthologist Martin Greenberg (born 1918).

Greenberg took a doctorate in Political Science in 1969, and has taught at the University of Wisconsin since 1975. His first anthology was Political Science Fiction (1974, with Patricia Warrick), intended to be used as a teaching guide, then continuing with a sequence of educational anthology titles under the series name Through Science Fiction. In the late 70s Greenberg began partnering with Joseph D. Olander on more conventional SF anthologies.

He shared the 2005 Prometheus Special Award with Mark Tier for the anthologies Give Me Liberty and Visions of Liberty.

Greenberg typically teams up with another editor, splitting the duties of story selection, editing, copyright searches, and the handling of author royalties. Major partners include Isaac Asimov (127 anthologies), Charles G. Waugh, Jane Yolen, and Robert Silverberg.


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