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1[[quoteright:181:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tanithl33t.jpg]]
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3Tanith Lee (1947-2015) was a prolific British SF writer, who wrote over 70 novels and over 200 short stories. Her works include science fiction, fantasy, and horror, for adults and for children.
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5A dyslexic, she didn't learn to read until she was eight years old, when her father taught her. Thereafter she read insatiably. Her first novel, ''Literature/TheDragonHoard'' (1971), is a comic fantasy that takes the mickey out a wide range of {{fairy tale}} and {{mythology}} tropes while telling the story of how Prince Jasleth was forced to go on a quest after his family was cursed by a sorceress who wasn't invited to his birthday party. Other notable works for younger readers include ''Literature/TheUnicornTrilogy'' (1991-1997) and the ''Piratica'' series (2004-2007).
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7Lee's first novel for adults was ''The Birthgrave'' (1975), which was nominated for a UsefulNotes/NebulaAward. Other notable works for adults include ''The Silver Metal Lover'' (1981); the ''Literature/BitingTheSun'' duet (1976-1977); and the ''Literature/TalesFromTheFlatEarth'' cycle (1978-1986).
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9Owing to changes in the publishing industry in the 1990s, her work fell out of favor precisely because she was incredibly prolific and changed her subject matter and even her subgenre often. Publishers wanted authors to stick with one style, one genre, create an image and produce that way all the time. She continued to write, but had to store all her manuscripts because nobody wanted them. She was helped by the small press movement and the resolution of a court fight over some of her rights. At the end, she was working on a "Colouring Book" series, contemporary Gothic tales.
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11Tanith Lee also wrote two episodes of the 1970s science fiction TV series ''Series/BlakesSeven'', "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS3E9Sarcophagus Sarcophagus]]" and "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS4E9Sand Sand]]".
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13Her handwriting was almost illegible and she joked it would prove she was a "maniac".
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15In 2010, she revealed that she had been treated for breast cancer. On May 24, 2015, she died in her sleep. She was 67.
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17!!Works by Tanith Lee with their own trope page include:
18[[index]]
19* ''Literature/BitingTheSun'' Duet (''Don't Bite the Sun'' and ''Drinking Sapphire Wine'')
20* ''Literature/TheClaidiJournals'' (''Wolf Tower'', ''Wolf Star'', ''Wolf Queen'', and ''Wolf Wing'')
21* ''Literature/TheDragonHoard''
22* ''Literature/TalesFromTheFlatEarth'' (''Night's Master,'' ''Death's Master,'' ''Delusion's Master,'' ''Delerium's Mistress,'' and ''Night's Sorceries.'')
23* ''Literature/TheUnicornTrilogy'' (''Black Unicorn'', ''Gold Unicorn'', and ''Red Unicorn'')
24* ''Literature/WhiteAsSnow''
25[[/index]]
26----
27!!Tanith Lee's other works provide examples of:
28* AbusiveParents: Jane's mother in ''The Silver Metal Lover''. Also Myal Lemyal's father, who beat the boy with a belt every time his attempts to play the nigh-impossible instrument failed.
29* BerserkButton: In ''Vivia'', Vaddix was in peace negotiations with a defeated enemy when one of the disarming soldiers [[IJustShotMarvinInTheFace accidentally discharged his crossbow]], killing Vaddix's horse. He crucified the lot of them right there and then.
30* BizarreInstrument: Myal Lemyal uses a strange hybrid instrument that looks impossible to play, resembling two lutes bodged together with a flute's mouthpiece. [[spoiler: Because that's exactly what it is.]]
31* ChariotRace: ''Vazkor, Son of Vazkor'', aka ''Shadowfire'', has a chariot race that's an obvious homage to ''[[Film/BenHur1959 Ben-Hur]]''.
32%%* CityOfCanals: ''The Books of Venus''.
33* ClothingDamage / DefeatByModesty: Vivia [[spoiler: hides inside the flames after an attempt to burn her at the stake only succeeded in reducing her clothes to ash]].
34* CountryMatters: In case the brutal murders were not enough to tell the readers that Vivia's father is a nasty man, he also swears a lot and calls his underlings rude words.
35* DeadAllAlong: [[spoiler: Parl Dro]] in ''Kill the Dead''.
36* DealWithTheDevil: Deconstructed in the short story "Sold". A woman with serious medical and financial problems calls on the devil, asking if he would ''really'' give her health, wealth, beauty, and long life in exchange for her soul. [[spoiler:When he replies in the affirmative, she calls off the deal: all she really wanted was proof that she had a soul and that it was worth something.]]
37* DesperateObjectCatch: When Parl Dro needs to convince Myal Lemyal that the latter is an astral projection rather than a ghost, Dro tosses Myal's beloved musical instrument at him. Frantic to keep it from breaking, Myal exerts enough willpower to catch the instrument: something a newly-risen ghost shouldn't have the capacity to do.
38* DiseaseBleach: Felix Phoenix of ''Piratica'' used to have dark hair, until years in a workhouse as a child turned his hair white.
39* {{Expy}}: In ''Kill the Dead'', Parl Dro and Myal Lemyal are notorious expies of Avon (played by Paul Darrow) and Vila Restal from ''Series/BlakesSeven''.
40* {{Foreshadowing}}: Even before Parl Dro appears on-page, his status as [[spoiler: a ghost himself]] is subtly hinted at: Ciddey mentions that she'd heard stories of him "long ago", and practically everyone who recognizes him comments about him looking young for his age.
41%%* {{Grimmification}}: Some of her fairy tale retellings.
42* HauntedFetter: In ''Kill the Dead'', ghosts have an item from their previous life that links them to this plane. If the item is damaged or destroyed the ghost is sent to its final destination.
43%%* HumansAreBastards: To ''Vivia''.
44* ImNotAfraidOfYou: In ''Companions on the Road'', three mercenaries involved in sacking a castle are pursued by the vengeful spirits of people killed there. The ghosts invade their sleep and kill them in nightmares; but when the last remaining member of the group realizes that he pities the ghosts more than he fears them, they vanish.
45* ImplausibleDeniability: The white horse in ''Prince on a White Horse'' is not a TalkingAnimal, and will tell you so itself if you ask.
46* ImplausibleFencingPowers: In the ''Piratica'' books, this is practically a signature move for Art and her pirate crew. [[spoiler:Almost all of them are actually actors, and have only been trained in stage combat.]]
47* TheInsomniac: In ''Companions on the Road'', the main character is in danger from ghosts that kill in dreams, and so does everything possible to stay awake, including using drugs. After a few days, he's in terrible shape, exhausted and thinking confusedly, though not delusional.
48* InterspeciesRomance: ''The Silver Metal Lover'' and its sequel, ''Metallic Love'', in which, you guessed it, girl falls in love with robot.
49* IstanbulNotConstantinople: ''The Secret Books of Paradys'' are set in an alternate Paris, while ''The Secret Books of Venus'' are set in an alternate Venice. She also refers to the "Remusan Empire" in ''Cyrion''.
50* LadyLand: In ''East of Midnight'', a charming rogue unwittingly travels from a male-dominated world to a parallel female-dominated one, in which he happens to resemble the consort of the (female) Moon King.
51* OrificeInvasion: Featured in a story about a demon that takes possession of humans via their orifices.
52%%* OurVampiresAreDifferent: ''Vivia''.
53* ParentalAbandonment: Dead parents appear rather often. In 50 books we have 37 missing or dead mothers and 32 missing or dead fathers.
54%%* PerspectiveFlip: ''Red As Blood: Tales from the Sisters Grimmer''
55* PirateGirl: The Piratica series.
56%%* PowerPerversionPotential: A vampire demonstrates in ''Vivia''.
57* QuestForIdentity:
58** ''The Birthgrave''.
59** ''Prince on a White Horse'' is about a KnightInShiningArmor on a QuestForIdentity; he can't remember his past before the opening scene of the novel.
60* ReincarnateInAnotherWorld: At the end of ''Prince on a White Horse'', the knight regains his memories and learns that he is an example of this trope, having lived a full life in our world before dying and being reincarnated as the knight.
61* SexBot: In ''The Silver Metal Lover'' (and its sequel, ''Metallic Love''), a corporation comes out with a line of male and female humanoid robots in various metallic skin tones; they're advertised as "artists" (golds specialize in acting, silvers in music, coppers in dance) and though they ''can'' do those things, everyone seems to assume that they're really intended as sex bots and the other capabilities are just frills. Kind of a robotic HighClassCallGirl.
62* ShowWithinAShow: The entirety of [[spoiler: Electric Forest]], which isn't revealed until [[TheEndingChangesEverything the final chapter]] that completely turns the preceding events upside-down and purple, creating a last minute MindScrew while simultaneously acting as a MindScrewdriver.
63%%* SoBeautifulItsACurse: "Strindberg's Ghost Sonata".
64%%* SpookyPhotographs: "Yellow and Red".
65* TakenForGranite: The witch in ''Prince on a White Horse'' has an annoying habit of paralysing people at random, fortunately temporarily.
66* TalkingAnimal: In ''Prince on a White Horse'', the Prince has reason to suspect that the horse can talk, but the horse says he can't.
67%%* TomatoInTheMirror: ''Sabella'', ''Kill the Dead''.
68* TwiceToldTale: Many, including all the stories in ''Red As Blood: Tales from the Sisters Grimmer'', and ''Sung in Shadow'' (a reimagining of ''Theatre/RomeoAndJuliet'').
69%%* VaginaDentata: "The Weasel Bride".
70* WickedStepmother:
71** Subverted in "Red As Blood", a retelling of "Snow White" in which the stepmother is trying to save the day.
72** Subverted majorly in "The Reason For Not Going To The Ball" [[spoiler: Turning her stepdaughter into a scullery maid was to shield her from the notice of her molester father. The story/letter is to offer her stepdaughter a safe home and a way to escape the prince, a man who'd make the Marquis de Sade proud -- the reason for trying to prevent her from going to the ball in the first place.]]

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