Ursula Vernon
Ursula Vernon (born May 28, 1977) is an American author, illustrator, and cartoonist renowned for her contributions to fantasy literature and art, particularly in children's books, adult novels under the pseudonym T. Kingfisher, and the acclaimed webcomic Digger. Raised in a military family and influenced by her mother's career as a fine artist, Vernon developed an early interest in drawing and storytelling, eventually earning a degree in anthropology from Macalester College before pursuing freelance illustration. Her multifaceted career spans graphic novels, middle-grade series, and horror-infused fantasy, earning her prestigious accolades such as the Hugo, Nebula, and Mythopoeic Awards for innovative storytelling and vivid illustrations.[1] Vernon's breakthrough came with the webcomic Digger (2003–2011), an epic tale of an atheistic wombat engineer in an underground fantasy world, which won the Hugo Award for Best Graphic Story in 2012 and the Mythopoeic Award for Adult Literature in 2013.[2] In children's literature, she created popular series like Dragonbreath (2009–2016), featuring a young dragon navigating school and adventures, and Hamster Princess (2015–2018), reimagining fairy tales with anthropomorphic rodents; the standalone Castle Hangnail (2015) also secured a Mythopoeic Award for Children's Literature.[1] Transitioning to adult fiction as T. Kingfisher, Vernon explores darker themes in works such as The Twisted Ones (2019) and What Moves the Dead (2022), a gothic retelling of Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher," while her short fiction includes Nebula-winning stories like "Jackalope Wives" (2014) and Hugo-winning "The Tomato Thief" (2016).[2] Under the T. Kingfisher name, Vernon's recent novels have garnered widespread acclaim, including Nettle & Bone (2022), which won the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 2023 after being nominated for the Nebula Award for Best Novel in 2022 for its tale of a determined princess on a quest for revenge, Thornhedge (2023), recipient of the 2024 Hugo Award for Best Novella, A House with Good Bones (2023), What Feasts at Night (2024), and A Sorceress Comes to Call (2024).[3] Additional honors include Locus Awards for What Moves the Dead (2023), A House With Good Bones (2024), What Feasts at Night (2024 Best Novella), and A Sorceress Comes to Call (2025 Best Fantasy Novel), reflecting her versatility in blending folklore, horror, and humor.[4] Now based in New Mexico, Vernon continues to produce through her Red Wombat Studio, maintaining a prolific output across genres while advocating for independent creators in speculative fiction.[5]Early life and education
Childhood
Ursula Vernon was born on May 28, 1977, in Japan to American parents belonging to a military family.[1] Due to her father's military service, the family relocated frequently during her early years, living in various locations across Europe, Asia, and the Middle East before settling primarily in Oregon, Arizona, California, and Minnesota, where she spent much of her childhood.[1] The constant moves—totaling 18 by the time she was 20—contributed to a nomadic family dynamic that exposed her to diverse environments.[1] Her mother, a fine artist specializing in painting, played a key role in nurturing Vernon's creative inclinations, often encouraging her to take art classes and pursue artistic expression.[1] From a young age, Vernon showed strong interests in art, animals, and storytelling; she was particularly drawn to anthropomorphic animals, which would later shape the themes in her illustrations and narratives.[1] As a child, she aspired to become a writer, avidly reading instructional books such as Orson Scott Card's How to Write Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror and even subscribing to Writer's Digest.[1] These formative experiences, including imaginative writing projects during her pre-teen and early teen years, laid the groundwork for her lifelong engagement with fantastical and animal-centric tales.[1]Academic background
Ursula Vernon attended Macalester College in Saint Paul, Minnesota, in the mid-1990s, where she majored in anthropology, studying anthropology and biology, and earned an undergraduate degree in the field.[6] She lived in the Saint Paul area for about a decade, until around 2008, which provided a formative environment that blended rigorous social sciences with creative pursuits.[5] Vernon's coursework in anthropology emphasized ethnographic interviewing and cultural analysis, skills that shaped her approach to storytelling by highlighting natural dialogue patterns and human behaviors.[7] These studies, combined with her interests in folklore and mythology—reinforced through her anthropological lens—fostered a deep appreciation for myth, cultural narratives, and their intersections, elements that later permeated the fantastical and folkloric themes in her writing and illustrations.[7] She also enrolled in several art classes during her time at Macalester, marking an early foray into formal visual training that complemented her academic focus and ignited her dual career in authorship and illustration.[6] Although her anthropology background initially drew her toward archaeology, Vernon ultimately chose not to pursue a traditional career in the discipline, citing its heavy reliance on interpersonal communication and bureaucratic tasks as mismatches for her strengths.[7] Instead, she pivoted to freelance art and writing upon completing her education, leveraging the interdisciplinary insights from college to build a professional path centered on creative expression.[5]Professional career
Artistic beginnings
After graduating from Macalester College with a degree in anthropology, Ursula Vernon transitioned into freelance illustration, influenced by art classes she took during her studies that sparked her interest in visual storytelling.[8] Her early work drew on anthropological themes, incorporating cultural and mythical elements into illustrations of animals and fantastical creatures.[1] By 2002, she had established Red Wombat Studio as a self-employed artist, focusing on commercial commissions such as game art and book covers to sustain her career.[9][10] In 2008, Vernon's freelance efforts included creating artwork for the board game Black Sheep by Fantasy Flight Games, alongside other illustration assignments that provided her primary income.[10][11] She experimented with digital tools, adopting software such as Painter and Photoshop to produce detailed, expressive pieces, often featuring anthropomorphic animals that blended whimsy with intricate designs.[12] These tools allowed her to shift from traditional media like watercolor and acrylic to more efficient digital workflows, enabling broader experimentation in her portfolio.[12] Vernon's initial forays into webcomics began around 2003, when she launched Digger as a black-and-white experimental series on the furry art site Yerf, marking her entry into serialized digital storytelling.[1] She also shared standalone animal illustrations on platforms like DeviantArt and exhibited prints at furry conventions, where sales of her quirky, personality-driven works—such as unamused creature portraits—helped supplement her freelance earnings.[1][13] These convention appearances served as key outlets for early publications of her art, fostering a dedicated online following.[1] Settling in Pittsboro, North Carolina, around 2004, Vernon faced the typical uncertainties of freelancing in a rural area, including inconsistent commission flow and the need to market her work independently through online communities and events.[1] For over a decade, she supported herself primarily through these illustration gigs and convention sales, navigating financial instability by diversifying her output between custom pieces and personal projects.[1][14] This period laid the groundwork for her later successes, honing her skills in both traditional and digital media amid the solitude of North Carolina's creative landscape.[14]Writing and publishing
Ursula Vernon's writing career gained momentum following the success of her webcomic Digger, which won the Hugo Award for Best Graphic Story in 2012 and opened doors to traditional publishing deals.[15][16] This recognition, combined with her established reputation in online creative communities, led to her debut children's book, Dragonbreath, published in 2009 by Dial Books, an imprint of Penguin Young Readers Group.[17] The hybrid format of text and illustrations in the Dragonbreath series leveraged Vernon's artistic background, allowing her to self-illustrate and blend visual storytelling with narrative prose.[18] To distinguish her adult-oriented fantasy and horror works from her children's literature, Vernon adopted the pseudonym T. Kingfisher, first using it for the 2013 novella Nine Goblins published through Red Wombat Studio, her independent press.[1] By the late 2010s, she expanded under this name with self-published and small-press titles like Clockwork Boys (2017), before shifting to major houses; starting in 2022 with Tor.com Publishing, which issued her adult novels such as What Moves the Dead and subsequent works.[19] This transition to Tor marked a significant milestone, enabling broader distribution and critical acclaim for her genre-blending stories.[20] Post-2023, Vernon's output under T. Kingfisher has increasingly emphasized horror elements, as seen in titles like A House with Good Bones (2023, Nightfire) and Snake-Eater (2025, 47North).[21][22] She actively engages with the science fiction and fantasy community through appearances at conventions such as Worldcon and Bubonicon, where she has served as a guest artist and panelist.[23] Additionally, Vernon co-hosts podcasts with her husband, Kevin Sonney, including Productivity Alchemy on creative workflows and The Hidden Almanac, a speculative fiction audio series, fostering an online community via her Red Wombat Studio blog and social media.[5]Literary works
Children's books
Ursula Vernon's children's books are characterized by their whimsical humor, vibrant illustrations, and engaging adventures featuring anthropomorphic animal protagonists, often blending prose with comic-style panels to appeal to middle-grade readers. Self-illustrated by Vernon, these works frequently incorporate educational elements drawn from folklore, mythology, and natural history, fostering themes of friendship, bravery, and self-discovery without overt didacticism. Her style emphasizes lighthearted escapism while subverting traditional tropes, making complex ideas accessible through relatable characters and fantastical settings.[24][17] The flagship Dragonbreath series, spanning 11 volumes from 2009 to 2016, centers on Danny Dragonbreath, a young dragon who struggles with his inability to breathe fire, alongside his best friend Wendell the iguana and classmate Christiana the ninja. Each book follows their escapades into mythical realms, such as battling were-wieners or exploring haunted caves, infused with factual tidbits about animals and legends to spark curiosity. The series highlights enduring friendships amid chaotic adventures, earning praise for its hybrid format that eases reluctant readers into longer narratives.[25][17] In the Hamster Princess series, published between 2015 and 2018 across six books, Vernon reimagines fairy tales through the eyes of Harriet Hamsterbone, a bold hamster princess afflicted with unbreakable bones who embarks on quests with her loyal giant quail, Mumfrey. Titles like Harriet the Invincible (a twist on Sleeping Beauty) and Ratpunzel playfully dismantle princess stereotypes, promoting empowerment and clever problem-solving rooted in folklore traditions. The anthropomorphic rodent world brims with satire and action, maintaining Vernon's signature illustrative flair.[26][27] Vernon's earlier standalone Nurk: The Strange Surprising Adventures of a (Somewhat) Brave Shrew (2008) introduces a timid shrew on an underground quest inspired by classic adventure tales, showcasing her early talent for compact, illustrated storytelling with undertones of anthropology through shrew society dynamics. Similarly, Castle Hangnail (2015) follows 12-year-old Molly, a witch's apprentice who unexpectedly manages a magical castle's minions, blending humor with themes of suitability and magic drawn from gothic folklore. These works exemplify Vernon's consistent approach of self-illustration and subtle educational layers, influencing her later explorations in folklore for broader audiences.Adult fiction as T. Kingfisher
Under the pseudonym T. Kingfisher, Ursula Vernon publishes fantasy and horror novels intended for adult readers, allowing her to explore mature themes distinct from her children's literature. She began using this name in 2017 with the release of Clockwork Boys, the first installment in what would become the World of the White Rat series, marking a shift toward intricate world-building and character-driven narratives in secondary worlds. The pseudonym, inspired by her favorite bird and a nod to Ursula K. Le Guin, helps separate her adult-oriented works, which often blend humor with darker elements, from her younger-audience books.[28] The World of the White Rat series, set in a shared universe centered around the Temple of the White Rat—a order of god-touched scribes—encompasses several interconnected novels originally conceived between 2009 and 2013 but rebranded and expanded under the T. Kingfisher name. Key early entries include the Clocktaur War duology: Clockwork Boys (2017), featuring a team of misfits on an espionage mission against mechanical threats, and its sequel The Wonder Engine (2018), which resolves the duology's high-stakes plot with themes of redemption and unlikely alliances. Later additions like Swordheart (2018) introduce romantic elements through a widow's adventure with a sardonic mercenary, further establishing the series' mix of adventure, romance, and wry humor in a medieval-inspired setting.[29] The Saint of Steel series, published between 2020 and 2023, forms a quartet within the World of the White Rat universe, focusing on the surviving paladins of a shattered god known as the Saint of Steel, who went mad and was destroyed by other deities. Paladin's Grace (2020) follows a widowed perfumer and a bereaved paladin navigating grief and budding romance amid a murder mystery, emphasizing themes of faith, forgiveness, and emotional healing. Subsequent books—Paladin's Strength (2021), Paladin's Hope (2022), and Paladin's Faith (2023)—expand on these motifs, pairing paladins with diverse partners like a bear-like warrior and a scholar, while exploring institutional distrust and personal redemption in a world wary of divine warriors. The series is noted for its cozy yet tense romantic fantasy, blending action with introspective character arcs.[30] Vernon's standalone works under the pseudonym highlight her versatility in fairy-tale retellings and genre-blending narratives. Nettle & Bone (2022), a dark fantasy about a determined woman's quest to assassinate a abusive prince using impossible tasks and unlikely allies, won the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 2023. The novella Thornhedge (2023) reimagines "Sleeping Beauty" from the perspective of a protective kappa, delving into themes of duty and hidden truths, and secured the Hugo Award for Best Novella in 2024. What Feasts at Night (2024), the second in the Sworn Soldier series (following What Moves the Dead in 2022, a gender-swapped retelling of Edgar Allan Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher"), follows a soldier confronting spectral hauntings in a remote manor, incorporating folk horror elements with psychological depth. In 2025, Vernon continued her prolific output with Hemlock & Silver (August), a standalone fantasy involving a healer navigating court intrigue and poisoncraft to protect a vulnerable princess. What Stalks the Deep (September), the third Sworn Soldier novel, extends the series' horror roots by plunging protagonist Alex Easton into underwater terrors and colonial mysteries. Snake-Eater (November) introduces a new tale of survival and deception in a wilderness setting, further showcasing her skill in tense, atmospheric prose. Post-2023, her works have increasingly hybridized horror and fantasy, incorporating darker psychological elements like familial trauma and existential dread, as seen in the Sworn Soldier entries and standalones such as A House with Good Bones (2023) and A Sorceress Comes to Call (2024), evolving her whimsical roots into more unsettling explorations of the human condition.Webcomics
Ursula Vernon began creating webcomics in the early 2000s, self-publishing them primarily through platforms like Webcomics Nation and her personal website, where she serialized narrative-driven stories blending fantasy, humor, and anthropomorphic elements.[31] Her works often feature detailed line art and intricate world-building, drawing from her background in illustration to craft immersive visual narratives.[32] Vernon's most prominent webcomic, Digger, ran from March 2003 to March 2011, comprising 759 strips that follow Digger, a pragmatic anthropomorphic wombat engineer who emerges from her underground tunnels into a surreal fantasy world filled with gods, demons, and tribal conflicts.[33] The series explores philosophical themes such as duty, identity, and cultural clashes through an epic adventure structure, with Digger allying with a statue of the god Ganesh to navigate threats like vampiric squash and warring hyena clans.[15] Rendered in black-and-white line art, Digger showcases Vernon's skill in creating expansive, textured environments and expressive character designs that enhance the story's depth without relying on color.[34] Digger achieved significant recognition, winning the 2012 Hugo Award for Best Graphic Story for its complete run, as well as the 2013 Mythopoeic Fantasy Award for Adult Literature, highlighting its impact on speculative fiction comics.[35] The webcomic transitioned to print collections published by Sofawolf Press, with seven volumes released between 2005 and 2012, followed by an 832-page omnibus edition titled Digger Unearthed in 2022 via a successful Kickstarter campaign that funded reprints and new artwork.[36] In addition to Digger, Vernon produced shorter webcomics, including the 32-page full-color Irrational Fears (circa 2003), a humorous exploration of childhood monsters like chupacabras, dust bunnies, and the creature under the bed, which later received a standalone print edition from Jarlidium Press in 2009.[37] She also created Little Creature and its sequel Little Creature and the Redcap, brief black-and-white series depicting a small, endearing forest creature's peculiar fondness for dangerous redcap fairies, emphasizing themes of innocence amid peril.[32] Vernon's webcomics fostered dedicated fan communities, particularly within furry and fantasy conventions where she has been a frequent guest artist, contributing to the growth of serialized online graphic storytelling through her emphasis on character-driven plots and accessible self-publishing.[38] These works influenced subsequent anthropomorphic fantasy comics by demonstrating how web formats could sustain long-form epics with philosophical undertones.[34]Artistic works
Book illustrations
Ursula Vernon's self-illustrations for her children's books blend traditional and digital techniques, often featuring watercolor, gouache, acrylic inks, colored pencils, and digital enhancements to depict whimsical fantastical creatures with a humorous edge.[39] This style emphasizes expressive characters and dynamic scenes that complement the narrative's playful tone, drawing from her background as a freelance artist.[40] In the Dragonbreath series, Vernon provides both covers and interior illustrations in a comic-book style using green, black, and white tones, creating engaging hybrid graphic novel formats that mix text with cartoon panels to follow the misadventures of young dragon Danny Dragonbreath.[18] Similarly, the Hamster Princess series features graphic novel-style artwork with sparse colors on covers and throughout the interiors, capturing the sassy escapades of hamster princess Harriet Hamsterreiner through bold, active visuals that amplify the stories' fairy-tale twists.[41] Early in her career, before 2010, Vernon undertook freelance illustrations for various projects, including fantasy and folklore-inspired works by other authors, though her primary focus shifted to self-illustrated books like Nurk (2008), which employed more traditional watercolor and gouache for its adventurous shrew protagonist.[39] By the 2020s, her technique had evolved to polished digital tools integrated with traditional elements, allowing for efficient production of detailed, vibrant illustrations in ongoing series while maintaining the handcrafted feel.[12] The visual humor in Vernon's book illustrations significantly boosts reader engagement, with critics noting how the funny, active artwork makes complex narratives accessible and entertaining for young audiences, contributing to the series' popularity among fans of graphic hybrids like Diary of a Wimpy Kid.[42]Standalone art and other media
Ursula Vernon's standalone artwork, distinct from her book illustrations and webcomics, encompasses a wide array of original pieces primarily featuring whimsical animal portraits and fantastical scenes, such as anthropomorphic creatures and mythical beasts like dragons and wombats. These works are showcased and sold through her official online gallery at Red Wombat Studio, where selected originals and prints are available for purchase, emphasizing her focus on quirky, narrative-free visual storytelling. Additionally, her extensive digital archive, containing thousands of pieces dating back over a decade, is hosted on DeviantArt, allowing public access to her evolution as an artist in mediums ranging from oils to digital painting.[43][44] Vernon offers merchandise derived from these standalone pieces via official retailers like TopatoCo, including high-quality art prints on matte paper, apparel such as t-shirts featuring motifs like saurian sweethearts and fantastical animals, and occasional calendars tied to her animal-themed series. These items highlight recurring elements from her art, such as humorous dragon depictions and rodent portraits, making her visual style accessible beyond galleries. While physical gallery exhibitions of her originals are limited, her selected artworks have been featured in curated online portfolios, underscoring a commercial emphasis on digital and print distribution over traditional shows.[45][46] In multimedia contributions, Vernon has provided illustrations for the board game Black Sheep, designed by Reiner Knizia, where her artwork depicts farm animals in a lighthearted, strategic context. These projects extend her standalone art into playable formats, blending her fantasy motifs with gameplay mechanics.[11] Post-2020, Vernon has continued producing digital art through platforms like Patreon, including process-oriented pieces like paintings shared through her creative outlets, often exploring surreal and personal themes that echo the whimsy in her writing, with much of her recent work using mixed media combining digital and traditional methods.[47][48] One notable commercial impact from her standalone work is the licensing of The Biting Pear of Salamanca, a surreal fruit portrait that gained meme status online; it was adapted into a resin figurine in 2009 and a 12-inch plush toy in 2010, demonstrating the crossover appeal of her peculiar imagery into consumer products.[49][50]Personal life
Family and residence
Ursula Vernon is married to Kevin Sonney, an IT professional and podcaster.[51] The couple collaborates on creative projects, including the podcast Kevin and Ursula Eat Cheap, in which they sample and review low-cost prepackaged foods over drinks.[52] Vernon lived in Pittsboro, North Carolina, from the early 2000s until late 2024, after moving across the United States multiple times earlier in her life.[1] In late December 2024, she and her husband relocated to a rural area on the east side of the Sandia Mountains near Albuquerque, New Mexico.[5][53] Her rural home setting fosters an interest in gardening and birdwatching, which inform the natural elements and themes recurring in her illustrations and stories.[54] She maintains a large garden and has expressed a particular fondness for mulch, activities that ground her daily routine amid her professional commitments.[54] Vernon's household includes chickens and pet ravens named Hugin and Munin, which contribute to the lively, animal-filled environment that echoes in her animal-centric works.[53] She balances family life with her career by integrating home-based pursuits like gardening with periodic travel to science fiction conventions, where she serves as a guest of honor and engages with fans.[55]Health and challenges
In June 2023, Ursula Vernon was diagnosed with triple-negative breast cancer following the discovery of a 2.5 cm lump during a self-examination.[56][57] She promptly began treatment, which included chemotherapy regimens such as doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide (known as the "Red Devil") followed by paclitaxel (Taxol), administered through a port to manage the aggressive nature of the cancer. Surgery, likely a lumpectomy to remove the tumor, was performed after initial chemotherapy to shrink the mass, with recovery involving side effects like taste loss, fatigue, and emotional strain.[58] To cope with the physical and psychological toll, Vernon created and shared the comic series The Saga of Bob, humorously anthropomorphizing her tumor as "Bob" to process the experience through art.[57] By November 2023, Vernon announced that scans showed no evidence of disease, declaring herself cancer-free ahead of a planned month of radiation therapy in early 2024 to ensure complete remission.[59] In February 2025, she reported that her one-year follow-up mammogram was clear, confirming no evidence of recurrence.[53] In reflections shared during treatment and recovery, she emphasized resilience built through humor, creative expression, and support from her husband and close community, describing the ordeal as a period of profound bodily betrayal but ultimate triumph.[60][61] The health crisis significantly impacted her productivity, leading to a temporary shift toward shorter creative projects and a slower return to full writing capacity as she navigated recovery in 2024, though by 2025 she had resumed her prolific output, including new novels.[62][63] Throughout her career, Vernon has also faced broader challenges inherent to freelancing as an author and illustrator, including financial instability from irregular income and periods of creative burnout exacerbated by tight deadlines and industry pressures.[64] These issues, discussed in professional podcasts, highlight the ongoing demands of maintaining output without institutional support, though her health recovery marked a renewed focus on sustainable creative practices.[65]Awards and honors
Literary awards
Ursula Vernon, under her own name for children's literature and the pseudonym T. Kingfisher for adult fiction, has garnered numerous accolades for her prose works, recognizing her contributions to fantasy and speculative genres. These awards highlight her ability to blend humor, horror, and folklore in accessible yet profound narratives. Among her adult fiction achievements, Nettle & Bone (2022) won the Hugo Award for Best Novel in 2023, praised for its subversive fairy tale elements and strong character development. The same novel also secured the Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel in 2023, affirming its impact within the fantasy community.[66][67] Vernon's novella Thornhedge (2023) earned the Nebula Award for Best Novella in 2023, celebrated for its dark retelling of Sleeping Beauty centered on a changeling guardian. It further won the Hugo Award for Best Novella in 2024, marking consecutive Hugo successes for Kingfisher.[68][3] In middle-grade fantasy, A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking (2020), written as T. Kingfisher, received the 2021 Andre Norton Nebula Award for Middle Grade and Young Adult Fiction, lauding its whimsical yet tense story of a young baker using dough-based magic to thwart threats. For children's literature, Castle Hangnail (2015) won the 2016 Mythopoeic Fantasy Award for Children's Literature, recognized for its inventive world-building involving a magical castle and an unlikely witch-in-training. The Dragonbreath series, particularly the inaugural volume (2009), was honored with the 2012 Sequoyah Award for Children's Literature, acknowledging its engaging mix of graphic novel elements and prose adventures featuring a young dragon.[69][70] Vernon's shorter prose works have also been award-winning, including the Nebula Award for Best Novelette in 2014 for "Jackalope Wives," a folklore-infused tale of transformation and pursuit. Similarly, "The Tomato Thief" (2016) claimed the 2017 Hugo Award for Best Novelette, noted for its surreal Southwestern Gothic narrative. By 2025, these and other recognitions underscore Vernon's prolific output, with multiple wins across major speculative fiction awards, including the 2025 Locus Award for Best Fantasy Novel for A Sorceress Comes to Call (2024).[71]| Award | Year | Work | Category |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hugo Award | 2023 | Nettle & Bone | Best Novel |
| Locus Award | 2023 | Nettle & Bone | Best Fantasy Novel |
| Nebula Award | 2023 | Thornhedge | Best Novella |
| Hugo Award | 2024 | Thornhedge | Best Novella |
| Andre Norton Nebula Award | 2021 | A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking | Middle Grade/Young Adult Fiction |
| Mythopoeic Fantasy Award | 2016 | Castle Hangnail | Children's Literature |
| Sequoyah Award | 2012 | Dragonbreath | Children's Literature |
| Nebula Award | 2014 | "Jackalope Wives" | Best Novelette |
| Hugo Award | 2017 | "The Tomato Thief" | Best Novelette |
| Locus Award | 2025 | A Sorceress Comes to Call | Best Fantasy Novel |