Jean Rabe is an American journalist, editor, gamer and writer of fantasy and mystery. After a career as a newspaper reporter, she was employed by TSR, Inc. for several years as head of the Role Playing Game Association and editor of the Polyhedron magazine. Rabe began a career as a novelist for TSR and Wizards of the Coast, and over the last 30 years has produced over three dozen books and scores of short stories, at first in the genres of game-related fantasy and science fiction and later as an author of mystery novels.
Rabe has become known for collaborations with Andre Norton and a series of short story anthologies frequently co-edited with Martin H. Greenberg. Rabe admits she has ghost written a few works, and has co-written fiction and non-fiction works with such diverse writers as Gene DeWeese, Stephen D. Sullivan, Don Bingle, and F. Lee Bailey. She wrote her first "Piper Blackwell mystery" novel in 2018 and has published five books in the series.
Early life
Jean Rabe was born in Ottawa, Illinois, and learned to play games at an early age—checkers, chess, and euchre by the age of 7, and board wargames in high school.[2] In 1974 she enrolled in journalism at Northern Illinois University. In her junior year, while attending the inaugural Windycon games convention, she was introduced to the fantasy role-playing game Dungeons & Dragons, which had just been published by TSR earlier that year.[2] She subsequently took up the game as a hobby and social activity. She graduated from Northern Illinois with a Bachelor of Science in Journalism.[3]
TSR hired Rabe in 1987 to coordinate the RPGA Network.[20][21][22] She also used her writing skills to create magazine articles and novels. In addition, Rabe wrote and edited Dungeons & Dragons and Gamma World adventure modules.
When Wizards of the Coast purchased TSR, they published the rest of Rabe's Dragons of a New Age trilogy before bringing back Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman as the main authors of Dragonlance.[23] Her Dragons of a New Age trilogy consisted of Dawning of a New Age, Day of the Tempest, and Eve of the Maelstrom.[1] Her other Dragonlance work includes Maquesta Kar-Thon, co-authored with Tina Daniell, and The Silver Star. Her other work for TSR includes Red Magic, Secret of the Djinn, and Night of the Tiger.[1] Rabe also created content for Imperium Games.[24]: 263 Rabe worked with Janet Pack on The Forces of Dagnarus for the Sovereign Stone role-playing game.[1]
She has also written more than four dozen short stories, including stories set in the Dragonlance, Forgotten Realms, and Star Wars settings. Three of her Star Wars short stories—"The Breath of Gelgelar", "Day of the Sepulchral Night", and "The Farrimmer Cafe"—have been published in the Star Wars Adventure Journals.[1][25] She has written science fiction stories for Martin H. Greenberg's office in Green Bay, Wisconsin,[1] and coedited a number of all-original anthologies with Greenberg for DAW Books.
Writer
Rabe has also written articles for On The Lake, a local magazine for tourists.[1]
In 2005, Rabe served as a juror for the Andre Norton Award for young adult fiction, which was established that year.[26]
Dragonlance: Death March was nominated for the 2009 Special Gaming Scribe Award—awarded by the International Association of Media Tie-in Writers—for "Best Original gaming-related tie-in novel of 2009.[29]
Stalking the Wild Hare: Stories from the Gen Con Writer's Symposium, with John Helfers, Chris Pierson, and Marc Tassin (Walkabout Publishing, May 2010; ISBN978-0-9821-7990-1)
^"Member: Jean Rabe". Library Thing. Retrieved 2022-01-18. I attended Northern Illinois University, where I gained a Bachelor of Science degree in Journalism, with an emphasis on geography and geology.