Leslie Fish
Leslie Fish (born 1953) is an American filk musician, songwriter, author, and anarchist activist who pioneered the commercial development of filk, a genre of folk music inspired by science fiction, fantasy, and fandom culture.[1][2] Emerging from New Jersey suburbs where she displayed early musical talent, Fish entered science fiction fandom in the 1960s, composing her first filk song in 1963 and gaining prominence through performances at conventions.[2][3] Fish co-produced the first commercial filk recording in 1976 with the DeHorn Crew, marking a milestone in the genre's transition from amateur to professional output, and has since authored over two hundred songs addressing themes of space exploration, individual liberty, historical resistance, and self-reliance.[1][4][5] Notable works include "Hope Eyrie," a pro-space anthem adopted by NASA enthusiasts, and "Banned from Argo," a enduring Star Trek parody that exemplifies her witty, narrative-driven style.[5][2] Her song "The Horsetamer's Daughter" inspired a libertarian novella, Tower of Horses, which critiques tyranny and celebrates communal defense against oppression.[6] Recognized with multiple Pegasus Awards, including Best Writer/Composer in 1987, Best Original Filk Song for "Hope Eyrie" in 1984 and "Witnesses' Waltz" in 1986, Best Female Filker in 1986, and induction into the Filk Hall of Fame, Fish's influence extends to albums like Cold Iron and Firestorm: Songs of the Third World War.[7] Politically, she espouses anarchism, drawing from influences like Robert Heinlein to promote voluntary cooperation, technological progress, and rejection of coercive authority in her lyrics and prose, earning a Special Prometheus Award in 2014 for her emphasis on rational self-governance.[6][2]
Early Life
Childhood and Formative Influences
Leslie Fish was born in 1953 and raised in the suburbs of New Jersey by parents preoccupied with social climbing and financial success, in an environment she later described as "dull, ruthlessly respectable."[2] Her early family life featured constant exposure to music, stemming from her mother's professional background in the field, which fostered Fish's innate musicality; she reportedly sang before she could talk and whistled on pitch by eight months of age.[2] Fish developed an early affinity for folk music traditions, singing folk songs for years before acquiring her first guitar at age 16, despite parental resistance to her pursuits over more conventional training like classical music.[2] She dedicated approximately one hour daily to practicing the instrument, immersing herself in folk singing and honing skills that emphasized self-taught discipline and rejection of imposed structures.[2] Her formative literary interests emerged young, with exposure to science fiction before age six through television programs such as Captain Video and films like Destination Moon, followed by reading both juvenile and adult science fiction books.[2] By 1963, at around age ten, Fish composed her first filk song, "Fellowship Going South," inspired by J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings, marking an initial spark of creative synthesis between literature and music that encouraged individualistic storytelling.[3] These early encounters cultivated a preference for speculative narratives emphasizing personal agency over conformist norms.[2]Entry into Science Fiction Fandom and Filk
Leslie Fish composed her first filk song, "Fellowship Going South," in 1963 at age 10, drawing inspiration from J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings and adapting the tune of a traditional folk melody to recount the Fellowship's journey.[8][9] This precocious work, copyrighted that year, represented an early personal fusion of literary fantasy with songwriting, predating formalized filk conventions.[10] Growing up in the Phoenix area, Fish immersed herself in local science fiction fan circles during adolescence, participating in activities tied to emerging fandoms such as Trekkers following the 1966 premiere of Star Trek.[3] These engagements exposed her to organized fan gatherings and zine culture, where she began sharing writings and rudimentary musical pieces aligned with speculative themes.[2] By age 16 in 1969, Fish took up the guitar to perform folk music, gradually adapting it toward science fiction and fantasy motifs encountered in fandom.[2] This shift involved reworking traditional tunes for Trek-inspired or Tolkien-esque narratives, performed informally at convention room parties, which fostered her reputation as an emerging filk contributor and set the foundation for genre-specific musical innovation without yet venturing into recordings.[2][3]Musical Career
Development as a Folk and Filk Musician
![Leslie Fish performing][float-right] Leslie Fish developed her musical abilities through self-taught guitar proficiency, acquiring her first instrument at age 16 and dedicating approximately one hour daily to practice amid a longstanding interest in folk music traditions.[2] This foundation enabled her to blend established folk techniques with science fiction and fantasy-themed content, marking an early evolution toward filk performance as she began composing and singing such material at convention room parties in the late 1960s and early 1970s.[2] Her appearances at these events fostered a growing reputation as a prominent sci-fi folksinger, contributing to the nascent filk community's expansion through informal live settings.[2][9] By the mid-1970s, Fish's involvement extended to producing initial filk recordings, including limited-run tapes that represented pioneering efforts in commercializing the genre and helped disseminate fan-oriented music beyond live gatherings.[2][3] These activities solidified her influence in shaping filk's structure, emphasizing original, fandom-inspired compositions performed acoustically in convention halls across the United States.[11] In February 1982, Fish relocated to the San Francisco Bay Area following an invitation from Off Centaur Publications after their Bayfilk convention, transitioning to full-time engagement in music and writing as their house musician.[2] This shift allowed sustained production of filk material on commission while preserving connections to East Coast networks through ongoing convention sales and collaborations within the broader fandom circuit.[2] Her professionalization during this period further propelled filk's recognition, establishing performance circuits at science fiction gatherings as a core venue for the genre's live evolution from amateur sing-alongs to structured artist showcases.[2][11]Key Songs, Themes, and Recordings
One of Leslie Fish's most enduring compositions, "Hope Eyrie," written in 1969 shortly after the Apollo 11 moon landing, celebrates human achievement in space exploration through lyrics evoking optimism and frontier expansion, often regarded as an informal anthem within filk circles.[12] Another prominent work, "Banned from Argo" (recorded in 1976), employs humor to satirize recurring science fiction tropes of interstellar misadventures and shore leave indiscretions, drawing from tropes in works like those of Poul Anderson and gaining widespread popularity despite occasional bans at filksings for its bawdy content.[13][14] Fish's lyrics recurrently explore motifs of personal liberty, self-reliance, and resistance to coercive authority, as seen in songs like "Jefferson and Liberty," which invokes revolutionary defiance against tyranny through armed self-defense, and broader catalog entries referencing anarchist principles and individual sovereignty over collectivist impositions.[15][16] These narratives prioritize causal agency in human action, portraying self-sufficient protagonists navigating dystopian or exploratory scenarios without reliance on institutional salvation, a thread consistent across her filk output from urban survival ballads to interstellar anthems.[17][6] A pivotal recording milestone occurred in 1976 when Fish, alongside The DeHorn Crew, released Folk Songs for Folk Who Ain't Even Been Yet, recognized as the inaugural commercial filk album and establishing a template for genre distribution beyond convention tapes.[9][18] This cassette featured early versions of signature tracks like "Banned from Argo" and underscored filk's transition toward structured production, influencing subsequent releases such as the 1977 follow-up Folk Songs for Solar Sailors.[19]Collaborations and Commercial Impact
Leslie Fish formed a key musical partnership with The DeHorn Crew, a band organized in 1975 by members of the Chicago branch of the Industrial Workers of the World, including Fish on vocals and guitar.[20] Together, they produced Folk Songs for Folk Who Ain't Even Been Yet in 1976, recognized as the inaugural commercial filk recording, which compiled original and adapted songs blending folk traditions with science fiction themes for sale beyond convention circles.[19] This effort marked an early shift from informal fan performances and cassette tapes to structured vinyl releases, with tracks like "The Engineer's Hymn" later reissued on CD compilations such as Folk Songs for Solar Sailors in 2002.[19] In 1982, Fish collaborated with Off Centaur Publications, the pioneering label that established filk as a viable full-time commercial enterprise through professional recording and distribution.[2] This partnership yielded albums like The Undertaker's Horse (1985) and Chickasaw Mountain (1986), featuring her compositions performed solo or with guest musicians, which were marketed directly to filk enthusiasts via mail order and convention vendors.[21] These releases expanded filk's reach, transitioning it from a niche hobby to a genre with dedicated catalogs, as evidenced by subsequent digital availability on platforms like Spotify and Bandcamp, where her catalog includes over a dozen albums aggregating hundreds of tracks.[22] Fish's collaborative output and prolific songwriting—encompassing more than 100 original filk pieces—fueled filk's commercialization by providing reusable, thematic material that other performers adapted and recorded, thereby sustaining sales in convention circuits and independent labels.[2] Her accessible structures, drawing from folk and sea shanty forms, encouraged community-wide production of marketable covers and anthologies, indirectly boosting the genre's economic viability without reliance on mainstream industry support.[23] Recent archival efforts, including 2024 releases of approximately 200 remastered tracks, underscore enduring commercial interest in her foundational contributions.[24]Literary Contributions
Short Stories and Novels
Leslie Fish has contributed short stories and novellas primarily to science fiction and fantasy anthologies, often in shared-world universes such as C. J. Cherryh's Merovingen Nights and Marion Zimmer Bradley's Darkover. Her prose works emphasize self-reliance, resistance to authority, and fantastical elements drawn from folklore and speculative settings, frequently expanding on themes from her filk songs.[25] In the Merovingen Nights series, Fish authored multiple stories, including contributions to Festival Moon (1987), which features tales of intrigue in a canal-city setting, and Fever Season (1988), exploring survival amid plague and political tension. These pieces integrate her interest in historical analogs and individual agency within ensemble narratives coordinated by Cherryh. She also contributed to Sword and Sorceress XXI (2004), with the story "Multiple Choice," a fantasy tale involving magical choices and consequences in a sword-and-sorcery framework. Fish's Darkover novella "Tower of Horses" appeared in Music of Darkover (2013), a collection focused on musical and cultural elements in Bradley's telepathic world. The story, an expansion of her earlier filk song "The Horsetamer's Daughter," depicts a horse-taming protagonist defending communal autonomy against feudal overlords in the Hellers Mountains, earning a special Prometheus Award in 2014 from the Libertarian Futurist Society for its portrayal of voluntary cooperation and defiance of tyranny.[25][26] In fan fiction, Fish novelized her iconic Star Trek filk "Banned from Argo," releasing the prose version online in early 2021 as a backstory elaborating the song's humorous misadventures of a starship crew on shore leave. This self-published work, available for free download, extends the satirical narrative into a full-length fan novel serialized via blog and direct distribution.[27]Recurring Themes in Fiction
In Leslie Fish's speculative fiction, a prominent motif is the resistance of decentralized communities against tyrannical authorities, often depicted through rural or frontier groups employing ingenuity and mutual aid to evade exploitation by centralized powers such as aristocrats or wizards.[26] This theme underscores personal empowerment, as protagonists harness innate abilities—like psychic bonds with animals—to assert autonomy and defend collective freedoms without reliance on hierarchical intervention.[26] Such narratives prioritize self-governance and voluntary cooperation over imposed collectivism, reflecting a preference for individual initiative in speculative worlds.[6] Horse culture recurs as a symbol of mobility, self-sufficiency, and unyielding freedom, integrated into stories where equine partnerships enable survival and rebellion against stasis or domination.[6] Survivalist ethics further permeate her works, portraying characters who thrive through practical resourcefulness and preparedness in harsh, post-technological environments, emphasizing empirical strategies for endurance over dependence on external systems.[6] These elements serve as mechanisms to explore cause-and-effect dynamics of liberty, where actions rooted in personal agency yield resilient outcomes.[26] Fish's fiction contrasts with prevalent science fiction tropes by favoring depictions of armed self-defense and decentralized liberty, rather than resolutions through collective submission or utopian oversight, thereby highlighting the practical efficacy of individualism against authoritarian overreach.[6] This approach aligns her stories with explorations of anti-statist principles, where empirical self-protection and voluntary networks prevail in speculative crises.[26]Political and Philosophical Views
Anarchist and Libertarian Principles
Leslie Fish explicitly identifies as an anarchist, describing anarchism as "purely a political theory, holding that 'power' -- the ability to force others to do your will -- is the root of all evil."[2] She arrived at this view independently during her college years, after studying the Bill of Rights and histories of anarchist thought, concluding that laws alone cannot secure rights and often fail to curb underlying issues like bigotry.[2] Her framework prioritizes the elimination of coercive authority, envisioning a society free from government monopoly on force, where individuals operate without imposed hierarchies.[2] Central to Fish's principles are voluntary association and anti-statism, positing that humans naturally form cooperative groups to address needs, much like animals building instinctive structures, without requiring external compulsion.[28] She argues that "get the government out of the picture, and the people will solve their problems themselves," rejecting state intervention as an impediment to organic problem-solving and self-reliance.[28] In her ideal anarchist society, voluntary cooperation enables industrial advancement and space exploration, drawing on historical precedents like Spain's anarchist provinces during the 1930s Civil War and the pirate republic of Tortuga in the 17th century, where communities thrived absent centralized control.[2] Fish's ideology draws from science fiction literature that champions individual sovereignty and critiques centralized power, with key influences including Robert Heinlein, whose works like Starship Troopers emphasize self-reliant ingenuity over bureaucratic overreach.[6] She favors narratives of "ingenious folk who manage to supply themselves and their friends with what they need to survive and succeed," viewing such self-reliance as foundational to independence.[6] In a 2022 interview, Fish highlighted liberty's role in creativity, praising Alfred Bester's The Stars My Destination for restoring "the power of life and death back to the people," thereby empowering individual agency and innovation.[6] Additional inspirations encompass 19th-century anarchist thinkers like Max Stirner, Mikhail Bakunin, Peter Kropotkin, and Leo Tolstoy, alongside modern libertarians such as L. Neil Smith.[28]Advocacy for Individual Rights and Self-Reliance
Leslie Fish has long advocated for private gun ownership as an essential bulwark against governmental tyranny, arguing that an armed populace provides the only reliable deterrence rooted in historical precedents of successful resistance by citizens to oppressive regimes. In her song "They Were Having a Sale at the Gun Store," released in the early 2000s, she promotes acquiring firearms for self-defense and liberty preservation, emphasizing empirical realities of personal vulnerability without such means.[2][29] This stance aligns with her broader anarchist philosophy, where concentrated power incentivizes abuse, as evidenced by her references to ineffective legal protections during the Civil Rights era despite legislative efforts.[2] Fish promotes self-reliance through her music and writings, countering narratives of dependency on state or collective structures by highlighting individual ingenuity and resourcefulness as keys to survival and freedom. Songs such as "Freedom Road" embody this ethos, portraying paths to autonomy via personal initiative rather than institutional aid.[2] Her works often depict protagonists who thrive by supplying their own needs, drawing from real-world causal chains where self-sufficiency mitigates risks of systemic failure or exploitation.[6] In critiquing government overreach, Fish applies reasoning from incentives and outcomes, asserting that centralized authority inherently erodes rights through misguided interventions that fail to address root causes of injustice. She traces her anarchism to observations in college, where laws like those advancing civil rights were undermined by persistent biases, proving that coercive structures distort behavior rather than reform it.[2] This perspective informs her rejection of expansive state roles, favoring decentralized agency to prevent the causal progression from power accumulation to tyranny.[6]Engagement with Broader Social Issues
Leslie Fish has critiqued enforced diversity initiatives in media and culture, arguing that prioritizing demographic representation over merit and storytelling quality leads to artistic and commercial failures. In a July 2023 blog post, she highlighted Hollywood's remakes and spin-offs as examples where "Diversity and Transgenderism [are] shoved in their faces," resulting in audience disinterest and box-office underperformance, and advocated for independent creators unbound by such mandates.[30] She favors diversity based on individual merits and ideas rather than superficial traits like skin color, aligning with her broader emphasis on meritocracy to dismantle imposed stereotypes.[31] Fish has expressed skepticism toward aspects of transgender advocacy, particularly those involving youth and public education, viewing them as promoting fluid identities that conflict with biological realities and foster dependency rather than self-reliance. In a June 2023 post, she criticized "drag queen story hours" and related efforts as pushy tactics that expose children to adult-oriented gender experimentation, potentially eroding personal responsibility.[32] Earlier, in December 2022, she opposed gender reassignment procedures for minors, attributing transgender identification in part to resentment of rigid gender roles and calling for their abolition through equal treatment and opportunity, while rejecting medical interventions as solutions.[33] Fish contends that terms like "transphobia" mischaracterize rational disagreement as irrational fear, often masking underlying sexism in stereotypical presentations of gender transition.[34] On immigration, Fish has advocated for strict controls to preserve cultural cohesion and manage resource strains, launching a Change.org petition for a ten-year moratorium on all U.S. immigration to address overcrowding and integration challenges.[35] In December 2022 commentary, she noted public revolts in Europe and Asia against high immigration rates as evidence of unsustainable policies, linking them to governmental instability and cultural dilution.[36] Her stance frames open borders as naive, urging learning from historical grievances like Native American experiences with unchecked influxes rather than repeating them.[37] These positions reflect her libertarian prioritization of individual and communal self-preservation over expansive collectivist ideals.Controversies and Criticisms
Conflicts within Fandom Communities
In the filk and science fiction fandom communities, Leslie Fish's expressed views on transgender issues and firearms ownership have sparked notable disputes, particularly on platforms like Reddit's r/filk subreddit. Discussions intensified in early 2024, with users criticizing her public statements—such as a May 2023 blog post denying the existence of transphobia and critiquing transgender activism—as incompatible with progressive norms, leading to characterizations of her positions as "gender critical" and transphobic.[38][39] These critiques often highlighted specific incidents, including her 2021 comments deadnaming musician Alexander James Adams, prompting initial calls to avoid supporting her work.[40] Counterarguments emerged emphasizing the separation of an artist's politics from their creative output, with one January 2024 thread outlining five reasons why boycotting Fish's music was deemed unproductive, arguing that such actions undermine the apolitical ethos of filk as a genre rooted in fan-driven expression.[41] Her pro-gun advocacy, reflected in songs like "Flight 93" which attributes certain historical failures partly to gun control policies, has also drawn ire from those viewing it as clashing with anti-gun sentiments prevalent in contemporary fandom spaces.[42] Community divisions peaked with explicit boycott appeals, such as a January 12, 2024, post titled "Please do not support Leslie Fish 2, electric boogaloo," which linked to evidence of her reiterated stances and urged disengagement from her performances and recordings.[39] In response to escalating debates, subreddit moderators imposed a moratorium on January 22, 2024, prohibiting further discourse on Fish's "problematic status" until March 1, 2024, to allow a cooling-off period amid reports of heated exchanges and user fatigue.[43] This measure underscored broader tensions between factions prioritizing ideological alignment and those defending artistic autonomy within niche fandom circles.Responses to Accusations of Problematic Stances
Leslie Fish has rebutted accusations of transphobia by framing her positions as grounded in biological determinism and opposition to what she describes as coercive ideological narratives overriding empirical realities, such as sex-based differences in athletics and youth medical interventions. In a 2023 blog post, she highlighted a "subtle contempt" embedded in media depictions of transgender themes, attributing it to broader cultural propaganda that conflates gender identity with immutable biology, rather than acknowledging potential psychological or social influences.[38] She has consistently invoked libertarian principles of free inquiry, arguing that silencing dissent through social ostracism in fandom circles undermines the self-reliance and individual autonomy central to her worldview, as evidenced by her ongoing performances, including a February 2025 public singing of her song "A Toast for Unknown Heroes" amid calls for boycotts.[44] Critics, primarily from online filk communities, have cited specific instances like her 2021 deadnaming of musician Alexander James Adams (formerly Heather Alexander) as evidence of targeted hostility, yet Fish's defenders counter that such actions reflect a refusal to conform to preferred pronouns or names when they contradict observable sex characteristics, prioritizing causal realism over performative language.[40] [41] This stance aligns with her broader advocacy for evidence-based discourse, where she has questioned unsubstantiated claims about transgender psychology in public forums, emphasizing demographic consistency—her views mirroring those of many in her age cohort (born 1953)—over evolving social norms.[41] Fish rejects cancellation efforts as antithetical to artistic freedom, asserting that filk's roots in speculative and libertarian themes tolerate diverse, even unpopular, opinions without necessitating endorsement of the creator's politics. Supporters argue this separation preserves cultural heritage, noting her prolific output—including over 100 songs—transcends personal controversies, and empirical data on sex dimorphism (e.g., male physiological advantages persisting post-hormone therapy) substantiates her critiques of policies like transgender inclusion in women's sports, rather than mere prejudice.[41] [5] Her resilience is demonstrated by sustained activity, such as releases on Bandcamp and convention appearances, underscoring a commitment to uncompromised expression despite backlash from ideologically homogeneous subgroups within sci-fi fandom.[23]Other Activities
Involvement in Film and Media
Leslie Fish appeared in the documentary Trekkies 2 (2004), directed by Roger Lay, Jr., which examines the global Star Trek fandom, including interviews with fans, cosplayers, and convention attendees sharing personal stories of devotion to the franchise. Her participation highlighted her role as a prominent figure in sci-fi subcultures, though centered on fandom rather than scripted performance.[45] In the same year, Fish contributed to Finding the Future: A Science Fiction Conversation (2004), a panel-style video discussion featuring science fiction authors and creators debating the genre's societal impact and future directions.[46] These appearances represent her modest foray into media, confined to non-professional, documentary formats tied to convention circuits and fan discourse, without involvement in commercial narrative films or production roles.[45]Paganism and Related Interests
Leslie Fish identifies as a pagan and has composed at least 25 songs incorporating pagan themes, drawing on myth, magic, and nature-based spirituality.[2] Her work emphasizes personal, self-crafted spiritual practices over adherence to organized religious structures, reflecting a preference for individualized rituals and myth-making tailored to practical ends.[2] For instance, in songs like "White Man's Rain Chant," she explores concepts of "workable magic," portraying rituals as extensions of personal agency in engaging with natural forces.[2] This approach distinguishes Fish's paganism from mainstream neo-pagan movements, which often involve communal hierarchies or standardized initiations; she has commented on debates within pagan circles about the validity of "virtual" initiations, advocating for adaptable, self-directed forms that prioritize inner experience.[38] Her 2017 album Avalon is Risen compiles such bardic pagan compositions, blending wonder, humor, and mythological narratives to evoke a sense of enchanted realism rather than dogmatic observance.[47] Tracks like "Bold Pagan" explicitly affirm her proud rejection of monotheistic salvation in favor of autonomous pagan paths, with lyrics declaring, "I am a pagan, and proud to be. Their/your pledged Salvation is not for me."[48] Fish has participated in pagan events, including a performance of "Lord of the Dance" at the 1982 Pan Pagan Festival, where she contributed to communal expressions of folk spirituality through music.[49] These elements appear in her stories as well, where pagan motifs serve as vehicles for exploring individual mythopoesis—creating personal lore that aligns with empirical observation of the world—without reliance on external authorities.[2] Her oeuvre thus positions paganism as a creative framework for self-reliant spiritual inquiry, integrated into filk without prescriptive ideology.Works
Discography
Leslie Fish's recorded output primarily consists of filk albums, often self-released or through small labels like Off-Centaur Publications and Prometheus Music, spanning solo efforts, collaborations, and live recordings. Her early work with the Dehorn Crew established foundational filk releases on vinyl, later reissued on cassette and CD. Subsequent solo albums in the 1980s and 1990s emphasized original compositions, while later digital releases via platforms like Bandcamp extended her catalog into the 2020s.[50] Key releases include:- Folk Songs for Folk Who Ain't Even Been Yet (1976, with the Dehorn Crew, vinyl LP via T.J. Phoenix Publications).[9]
- Solar Sailors (1977, with the Dehorn Crew, vinyl LP via T.J. Phoenix Publications).[9]
- Skybound (1982, cassette; reissued on CD as early classics compilation).[50]
- The Undertaker's Horse (1985, cassette).[21]
- Chickasaw Mountain (1986, cassette).[21]
- Cold Iron (1986, CD RF-1012, first Kipling-themed album).[50][21]
- Firestorm: Songs of the Third World War (1989, cassette).[21]
- Leslie Fish Live! (1991, live recording).[21]
- Smoked Fish (1996, live at World Science Fiction Convention, CD RF1004D).[50]
- Our Fathers of Old (with Joe Bethancourt, Kipling songs, CD RF-1001D).[50]
- Serious Steel (with Joe Bethancourt, SCA-related, CD RF-1002D).[50]
- Avalon is Risen (2012, CD via Prometheus Music, bardic and Pagan-themed).[47]
- Sea of Dreams (2022, digital via Bandcamp/Prometheus Music).[51]
- Angel with a Sword (2022, digital via Bandcamp/Prometheus Music).[17]
- Fish Scraps (Live) (2023, live album, digital).[22]
Bibliography
Fish's prose fiction consists primarily of short stories, novellas, and collaborative novels published in science fiction and fantasy anthologies or as limited fan editions, with themes often exploring libertarian and anarchist ideals within speculative settings.[52] Novels- The Weight (1988), a Star Trek fan novel originally serialized in the zine Warped Space from 1976 to 1979, depicting anarchist-feminist resistance against authoritarian structures.[53][3]
- A Dirge for Sabis (1989), co-authored with C. J. Cherryh, the first volume in the Sword of Knowledge series set in Cherryh's universe, featuring a wizard's apprentice navigating political intrigue and personal agency.[54][55]
- The Voice of the Cockroach (1985), a post-apocalyptic tale published in the anthology After Armageddon, emphasizing survival and anti-authoritarian adaptation.[56]
- Tower of Horses (2013), a Darkover novella in the anthology Music of Darkover, expanding on themes of self-reliance and resistance to tyranny through horse-taming and community defiance.[57][26] Wait, no wiki, but [web:50] lfs.org and isfdb.
- "War of the Unseen Worlds" (1987), in the anthology Festival Moon (Merovingen Nights series), involving covert conflicts in a canal-city setting.[58]
- "Treading the Maze" (1988), a fantasy tale of navigation and independence.[59]
- "Walking on the Waves" (1990), exploring maritime adventure and autonomy.[59]
Awards and Recognition
Pegasus Awards
Leslie Fish has won the Pegasus Award ten times, with honors spanning categories such as songwriting, performance, and composition, reflecting her sustained impact on filk music as voted by convention attendees.[7] These awards, administered by the Ohio Valley Filk Festival (OVFF), provide empirical measures of community recognition, with wins distributed across decades that demonstrate ongoing appreciation despite shifts in fandom dynamics. Her victories include early accolades for foundational filk songs and later ones for genre-specific storytelling. The following table summarizes her Pegasus Award wins:| Year | Category | Work |
|---|---|---|
| 1984 | Best Original Filk Song | "Hope Eyrie" |
| 1986 | Best Original Filk Song | "Witnesses' Waltz" |
| 1986 | Best Female Filker | N/A |
| 1987 | Best Writer/Composer | N/A |
| 1989 | Best Fantasy Song | "Wind's Four Quarters" (with Mercedes Lackey) |
| 1999 | Best Hero Song | "A Toast For Unknown Heroes" |
| 2002 | Best Song That Tells A Story | "Horsetamer's Daughter" |
| 2003 | Best Classic Filk Song | "Banned From Argo" |
| 2005 | Best Space Opera Song | "Signy Mallory" (with Mercedes Lackey) |
| 2005 | Best Sword and Sorcery Song | "Threes" (with Mercedes Lackey) |