Biography
Michael K. Iwoleit was born in Düsseldorf in 1962 and lives in Wuppertal today. He took his A-levels and completed an education as laboratory assistant in 1982. Afterwards he studied philosophy, German philology and social sciences and worked as a lab assistant at the Heinrich Heine University in Düssel-dorf. Since 1989 he is freelance writer, translator, critic, and editor mostly in the science fiction field. Starting in the mid-nineties, he also worked as a copywriter and translator for advertising and IT industry.
As a science fiction writer he is best known for his novellas which have won the Deutsche Science Fiction Preis five times and the Kurd Laßwitz Preis two times. Together with Horst Pukallus he was awarded with the Kurd Laßwitz Preis 2000 for the translation of Iain Banks’ Feersum Endjinn. He published four novels and about 30 stories in anthologies and magazines, several of which have been translated into Bulgarian, Croatian, English, Italian, Polish and Spanish. He is co-founder of the German science fiction magazine Nova and co-founder and editor of the international science fiction magazine InterNova that today runs as a webzine. He has translated, among others. works by Cory Doctorow, Sean Williams, Chris Moriarty and David Wingrove.