Professional Bio

Rebecca Moesta (pronounced MESS-tuh) wanted to be an author since her early teens, but it wasn't until 1991 that she began writing in earnest. Her most recent solo novel, BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER: LITTLE THINGS, debuted in August 2002. With her husband, Kevin J. Anderson, she has written the movie novelization of THE LEAGUE OF EXTRAORDINARY GENTLEMEN under the pseudonym of "K.J. Anderson" (June 2003); a movie novelization of SUPERNOVA (May 2000); a novelization of the popular StarCraft computer game STARCRAFT: SHADOW OF THE XEL'NAGA, under the pseudonym of "Gabriel Mesta" (July 2001); and a Star Trek graphic novel, THE GORN CRISIS (January 2001). The team, currently working on a series of humorous monster comics (October 2003), has also written two young adult TITAN A.E. novels, TITAN A.E.: CALE'S STORY and TITAN A.E.: AKIMA'S STORY (May 2000), two high-tech Star Wars Pop-up Books, and a series of fourteen young adult STAR WARS novels:

Young Jedi Knights Series

Heirs of the Force(Jun 1995)
Shadow Academy (Sep 1995)
The Lost Ones (Dec 1995)
Lightsabers (Feb 1996)
Darkest Knight (May 1996)
Jedi Under Siege (Aug 1996)
Shards of Alderaan (Dec 1996)
Diversity Alliance (Mar 1997)
Delusions of Grandeur (Jun 1997)
Jedi Bounty (Sep 1997)
The Emperor's Plague (Dec 1997)
Return to Ord Mantell (May 1998)
Trouble on Cloud City (Aug 1998)
Crisis at Crystal Reef (Dec 1998)

Moesta has written several science fiction stories, both on her own and with her husband, and co-written three science fiction and fantasy novels under a pseudonym. In addition to her many fiction credits, she has had photographs, computer art, and nonfiction articles published in numerous science fiction magazines. She has also authored three novels in the Junior Jedi Knights series:

Junior Jedi Knights Series II

Anakin's Quest (Apr 1997)
Vader's Fortress (Jul 1997)
Kenobi's Blade (Oct 1997)

Born in Heidelberg, Germany, to American parents, and raised in Southern California, Moesta has traveled extensively in Europe. She has one son, who keeps her busy nearly every minute that she doesn't spend writing. She is also CEO of WordFire, Inc., the company that she and Kevin J. Anderson jointly own. Moesta is currently developing proposals for three Young Adult series. Her remaining time is spent serving as final reader and copyeditor on her husband's manuscripts.


Personal Bio

Rebecca Moesta Anderson Rebecca Moesta (Anderson) was born Rebecca Sue Moesta on November 17, 1956, in Heidelberg, West Germany, to American parents. Shortly thereafter, her family moved to Darmstadt, where her father taught theology at a small seminary. Just before Rebecca's sixth birthday the family moved back to the United States and settled in Pasadena, California. She lived in Pasadena for the next seventeen years while she attended grade school, junior high, high school, and college.

The fourth of five children (she has an older brother, two older sisters, and a younger brother) Rebecca began reading fantasy from the moment she could read. As early as second grade she remembers being an avid reader -- even after bedtime, when she would often sneak a book under the covers and read it, one line at a time, by the dim light of her electric blanket controls.

Rebecca's love of science fiction was influenced greatly by her father, a high school English teacher who holds advanced degrees in both English and theology. Rebecca also credits Mrs. Whitaker, the children's librarian at her public library, for steering her toward the types of books she enjoyed. By the time she was ten, Rebecca had already integrated science fiction into her reading diet. Rebecca's mother, a nurse and a pragmatist, felt it her duty to introduce some reality into her daughter's life by sneaking biographies, adventures, and the occasional spy novel onto her reading stack. Though Rebecca fell hook, line, and sinker for these subversive tactics, she by no means abandoned her first love of fantasy and science fiction. She struck back by reading aloud from the works of George McDonald, C.S. Lewis, Lloyd Alexander, and others to her sisters, brothers, mother, father, grandmother, friends, dog -- anyone who would sit still long enough to listen.

Starting in her early teens, Rebecca dreamed of writing her own books, plotted them in her head, and gave them titles. On Saturday mornings, Rebecca and her sister Diane watched every sword, sandal, and sorcery movie ever made. And, whenever a new science fiction movie or television show debuted, Rebecca and her father were there to watch it. She was a Star Trek fan from day one.

Rebecca was not a Star Wars fan from day one. She was, however, a fan from day two. She was in college and looking forward to a summer break when her younger brother told her about a fantastic new science fiction movie she just had to go and see. She wasn't completely convinced at first‹since her brother's tastes ran to movies like Godzilla and Rodan‹but when a group of her friends from Caltech suggested seeing Star Wars the day after it opened, she willingly agreed. When she and six of her techer friends, arrived at the Chinese Theater in Hollywood that evening and camped out for three hours in line, they had no idea what they were about to see. Fortunately, it proved to be worth the wait. Her love for the movie was instant and enduring.

Throughout her college days, Rebecca managed the offices at a small electronics company in Southern California. This, along with her friendships with techers, her love of science fiction, and a lifelong association with her father, sealed her fate: Rebecca became the founding member and faithful adherent of a philosophical system of beliefs she calls Gadgetology.TM The devout gadgetologistTM sums up her belief system as follows: If anything -- be it electric, abstract, electronic, mental, or mechanical -- is the newest, the latest, the greatest, the best, I will undoubtedly want one; indeed, I must eventually have one. After Rebecca graduated with a Bachelor of Liberal Arts from Cal State LA, she married one of her many beaus from Caltech and for the next eleven years became Rebecca Moesta Cowan.

In 1981, Rebecca and her first husband moved to New Haven, Connecticut, where he entered the PhD program in nuclear physics at Yale University. After one year, the couple transferred to Darmstadt, and lived in Germany until 1987 during the graduate research and dissertation phases of his doctoral studies.

While living once again in West Germany, Rebecca took graduate courses with Boston University and earned a Masters of Science degree in Business Administration. She spent the next couple of years teaching courses in math and business management for noncommissioned officers (NCOs) in the Army. During this time she became pregnant with her first and only child, Jonathan, who was born in Wiesbaden. A month later the family returned to the United States and, two months after that, settled in Livermore, California.

In 1989 Rebecca took a position at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory as a proof reader and copy editor. There she formed a science fiction club. She met Kevin J. Anderson when her club asked him to be a guest speaker at one of their weekly meetings. She later worked as his copy editor on several technical documents. After Rebecca's split from her first husband in 1990, Kevin and Rebecca began dating. They married on September 14, 1991.

 

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