Menu Content/Inhalt
Home arrow Biography

StarQuotes

It is a truism that almost any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so, and will follow it by suppressing opposition, subverting all education to seize early the minds of the young, and by killing, locking up, or driving underground all heretics.

Robert A. Heinlein

Moon Phase

The Other Phase Of The MOON: Visit the project’s site
"Waning Crescent"
The Moon is "Waning Crescent"

Syndication

Biography
Starpoet Identities: T. Daneel PDF Print E-mail
The Poet
Written by Lisa Jain Thompson   
Saturday, 09 September 2006
T. Daneel Olivaw, StarpoetCoruscant, Trantor, Galactic Empire. Daneel is virtually indistinguishable from a female human being and has a high-cheekboned face with long light brown curly hair that falls to her shoulder. 
 
Daneel a highly successful and exceptionally prolific writer best known for her poetry and a series of soft porn lesbian short stories set in the Xenaverse of Xena, the Warrior Princess, and her young friend, Gabrielle.  She has also published straight fiction, as well as a great amount of non-fiction. 
 
Along with Alice Sheldon, Daneel is known for breaking down the barriers between perceived "male writing" and "female writing." 
 
 
Last Updated ( Monday, 25 September 2006 )
 
Mythic Origins PDF Print E-mail
The Poet
Written by Lisa Jain Thompson   
Tuesday, 11 July 2006
Lisa Jain Thompson, StarpoetLisa Jain Thompson was born in the Sacramento River Delta of Northern California where the Sacramento, American, and San Joaquin Rivers meet and riverboats carried gold and gamblers down river to San Francisco.
 
She was born halfway between the Fin de Siècle and the new millennium. Her birth is assumed to have been in the family house on the outskirts of Sacramento.

She probably attended a local parochial grammar school and college prep, followed by University. Although her father was prominent in the local broad media, she chose another path, teaching for a time at an academy, then pursuing various careers with various state and federal instruments of government.

After her fist marriage, Lisa Jain left few traces on the literary scene until she reappeared as Starpoet, a decade before the century turned. The years between University and her re-emergence are known as her “lost years.”

Lisa Jain died sometime in the latter half of the first century of the third millennium, survived by her wife Sharon, their eight children, numerous friends, an extended family, and the body of work known as Starpoet.

Last Updated ( Sunday, 12 November 2006 )