1990s–2000s As an aspiring writer, Wells attended many local writing workshops and conventions, including the
Turkey City Writer's Workshop taught by Bruce Sterling. Her first published novel
The Element of Fire (1993) is also the first volume in the
Ile-Rien series. It was a finalist for that year's
Compton Crook Award and a runner-up for the 1994
Crawford Award. Her second novel
City of Bones (1995) is a stand-alone SF/F novel that received a starred review from
Publishers Weekly, a black diamond review from
Kirkus Reviews, and was on the 1995
Locus Recommended Reading List for fantasy. Her third novel and second volume in the Ile-Rien books
The Death of the Necromancer (1998) was nominated for a
Nebula Award.
The Element of Fire and
The Death of the Necromancer are stand-alone novels that take place in the fictional country of Ile-Rien, which is the same universe for the
Fall of Ile-Rien trilogy:
The Wizard Hunters (2003),
The Ships of Air (2004), and
The Gate of Gods (2005). Her fourth novel was a stand-alone fantasy titled
Wheel of the Infinite (2000). In 2006, she released a revised edition of
The Element of Fire. Her fantasy short stories include "The Potter's Daughter" in the anthology
Elemental (2006), which was selected to appear in ''The Year's Best Fantasy #7
(2007). This story features one of the main characters from The Element of Fire
. Three prequel short stories to the Fall of Ile-Rien
trilogy were published in Black Gate Magazine'' in 2007 and 2008. She has written media
tie-ins for the
Stargate franchise, including: •
Reliquary (2006) and
Entanglement (2007) set in the
Stargate Atlantis universe • "Archaeology 101", a short story based on
Stargate SG-1 for issue No. 8 (Jan/Feb 2006) of the official
Stargate Magazine 2010s–present Wells' longest-running fantasy series is
The Books of the Raksura, which included five novels and two short fiction collections published by
Night Shade Books:
The Cloud Roads (2011),
The Serpent Sea (2012),
The Siren Depths (2012),
Stories of the Raksura Vol 1: The Falling World & The Tale of Indigo and Cloud (2014),
Stories of the Raksura Vol 2: The Dead City & The Dark Earth Below (2015),
The Edge of Worlds (2016), and
The Harbors of the Sun (2017). The series was nominated for the
Hugo Award for Best Series in 2018, and
The Edge of Worlds was reviewed in
The New York Times. Wells has written two young adult fantasy novels,
Emilie and the Hollow World and
Emilie and the Sky World, published by Angry Robot/Strange Chemistry in 2013 and 2014. She has also written two
Star Wars tie-ins, ''Empire and Rebellion: Razor's Edge
(2013) and "Bespin Escape" The Empire Strikes Back: From a Certain Point of View
(2020). where she delivered a speech called "Unbury the Future" about
marginalized creators in the history of science fiction and fantasy, movies, and other media, and the deliberate suppression of the existence of those creators. During 2018, Wells was the leader of the story team and lead writer for the new
Dominaria expansion of the card game
Magic: The Gathering. She also taught writing workshops at
ArmadilloCon,
WorldCon,
ApolloCon, and Writespace Houston, and was the Special Workshop Guest at
FenCon in 2018. In 2017, Wells published
All Systems Red, the first novella in her
Murderbot Diaries series. The novella was number 8 on
The New York Times Bestseller List for Audio in May 2018. It was followed by the sequel novellas
Artificial Condition (2018),
Rogue Protocol (2018), and
Exit Strategy (2018); a short story, "Compulsory" (2018); and a full novel sequel,
Network Effect (2020), which made
The New York Times Bestseller List for Novel. On April 26, 2021,
Tor.com publishing announced that they had signed a deal with Wells for six books, including three more in
The Murderbot Diaries. In September 2022,
Tor Books shared the cover of
Witch King, the latest novel by Wells that was released on May 30, 2023. Tor describes the book as a story "of power and friendship, of trust and betrayal, and of the families we choose." Its sequel,
Queen Demon, was released on October 7, 2025. ==Awards and nominations==