Background
She grew up in Southern California and attended Santa Ana College, and earned a certificate in Vocational Nursing.
She grew up in Southern California and attended Santa Ana College, and earned a certificate in Vocational Nursing.
She also attended California State University Fullerton and received her Master of Fine Arts in Writing from Pacific University in 2006.
She began publishing in 1992 with a story for Asimov"s Science Fiction. She has published more than 80 short stories and essays, and her work has appeared in Parabola, Lilith Magazine, The Clackamas Review, Sciences Fiction, Witpunk, Bending the Landscape, The Mammoth Book of Tales from the Road, Midstream, Utne Reader, Calyx, Best New Horror, and other anthologies and magazines. What"s father was a teenage conscript in Stalin"s Red army and spent two years in a Prisoner Of War camp in Stuttgart.
He chose the surname "Nelson" after arriving in the United States.
Her mother was a German Holocaust survivor who was interned in the Riga ghetto and a series of work camps in and out of Germany. The stories in her collection, The Sweet and Sour Tongue incorporate "elements of science fiction and fantasy into domestic scenes of Jewish family life." She has written about Jewish practices including the ritual bath Mikveh and preparation of the dead by the volunteer Jewish burial society (Chevra kadisha).
What worked as a licensed vocational nurse and later volunteered with the Chevra kadisha. She lives in Portland, Oregon and was a contributing writer to the alternative newspaper, The Eugene Weekly.
She is an instructor at University of California, Los Angeles Extension in The Writers Program ().
She was the senior nonfiction editor for "Silk Road, a literary crossroads" journal, and is a fiction editors She is the co-editor with R. A. Rycraft of Winter Tales: Women Write About Aging from Serving House Books.
In 1999 she won the Nebula Award for The Cost of Doing Business, published in Amazing Stories. Her story collaboration with Eileen Gunn, "Nirvana High" was nominated for the 2005 Nebula Award for novelette. Her collection "Crazy Love" was a finalist for the Oregon Book Award Ken Kesey Fiction award in 2009.