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・ Judith Margolis
・ Judith Martin
・ Judith Mason
・ Judith Massare
・ Judith Mayhew
・ Judith McConnell
・ Judith McCoy Miller
・ Judith McCreary
・ Judith McGrath
・ Judith McHale
・ Judith McNaught
・ Judith Meauri
・ Judith Meierhenry
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・ Judith Merkle Riley
Judith Merril
・ Judith Meulendijks
・ Judith Meuli
・ Judith Michael
・ Judith Miller
・ Judith Miller (antiques expert)
・ Judith Miller (disambiguation)
・ Judith Miller (philosopher)
・ Judith Moffett
・ Judith Mok
・ Judith Moore
・ Judith Moriarty
・ Judith Mountains
・ Judith Méndez
・ Judith N. Shklar


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Judith Merril : ウィキペディア英語版
Judith Merril

Judith Josephine Grossman (January 21, 1923 – September 12, 1997), who took the pen-name Judith Merril about 1945, was an American and then Canadian science fiction writer, editor and political activist, and one of the first women to be widely influential in those roles.〔
Although Judith Merril's first paid writing was in other genres, in her first few years of writing published science fiction she wrote her three novels (all but the first in collaboration with C.M. Kornbluth) and some stories. Her roughly four decades in that genre also included writing 26 published short stories, and editing a similar number of anthologies.
==Early years==

Merril was born in Boston in 1923 〔 to Ethel and Samuel (Shlomo) Grossman. Her father committed suicide in 1929 soon after she started school. In 1936, her mother found a job at Bronx House and moved them to the New York City borough of the Bronx. In her mid-teens, Merril pursued Zionism and Marxism.〔 According to Virginia Kidd's introduction to ''The Best of Judith Merril'', Ethel Grossman had been a suffragette, was a founder of the women's Zionist organization Hadassah, and was "a liberated female frustrated at every turn by the world in which she found herself".〔Merril, Judith (1976). ''The Best of Judith Merril''. New York: Warner Books. ISBN 0-446-86058-1. Page 7.〕
In 1939, Judith graduated from Morris High School in the Bronx at 16 and rethought her politics under the influence of the Hitler-Stalin Pact (August 23), shifting to a Trotskyist outlook. She married Dan Zissman the next year, less than four months into a relationship that started when they met at a Trotskyist Fourth of July picnic in Central Park. Their daughter Merril Zissman was born in December 1942. In this period, she also became one of the few female members of the New York City-based group of science fiction writers, editors, artists and fans, the Futurians, which included Kornbluth. The Zissmans separated about 1945; in 1946 Frederik Pohl, another Futurian, began living with her. After her divorce from Zissman became final in 1948, she married Pohl on November 25; they divorced in 1952.〔

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