British Fantasy Award Nomination

I’m still in shock from the news that Killers has been nominated for the British Fantasy Award.

OK, so it may only be one nomination, which is all that’s needed to get it onto the long list, but the fact remains that someone likes it enough to nominate it. For a small press outfit publishing an anthology edited by a relatively new author this is a huge plus. Not just for the publicity, but also for the sense of vindication.  The real honour goes to the writers who made the book, of course.

It doesn’t matter if I don’t win, or get onto the final ballot. It’s a cliche, but being nominated really is an honour.

• April 4th, 2009 • Posted in Awards, Books, Events, General • Comments: 1

Twittering

I may be the last person in the world to come to the table, but I’ve bitten the bullet and joined Twitter.

Although I’ll admit to being off-put by the 140 character limit, most of my reluctance to do it had nothing to do with Twitter itself, but was a symptom of a wider manifestation.

I have a finite amount of time, unless I’m to give up the day job (unlikely at the moment) or to stop writing, which is the whole point of blogging for me — I have the anthology Future Bristol to promote– so I have to ration that time.

I’m already on LJ, Facebook, MySpace, WordPress, LinkedIn, and GoodReads, as well various forums such as Interzone‘s, EPIC, and multiple other groups. Admittedly I can import LJ into WordPress, but until I work out how to transfer more of the posts, I have a significant duplication of work.

But that said, so many people recommended it that I felt I had to join up, and so far I’m finding Twitter to be less work than I envisaged, so maybe my reluctance was misplaced.

Time will tell.

• April 3rd, 2009 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

Another Review for Future Bristol

Lyndon Perry has just posted his review for Future Bristol over at The Fix.

It’s terrific.
 
Woot!

• April 2nd, 2009 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

April Fools

Given that all kinds of wierdness is hitting the net today, from Alan Shearer being made manager of Newcastle United to SF sales increasing during a time of recession, I’ve decided not to post anything.

You wouldn’t believe me anyway.

• April 1st, 2009 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

BSFS Meeting

Last night’s meeting of the Bristol SF & Fantasy Society pulled an unprecedented 15 attendees. Scary — we hit double figures and beyond!

And there’s talk of an event in September. More details to follow.

And today the actual copies of Future Bristol arrived. Yippee!

• March 31st, 2009 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

P-Con Nearing

In about two and a half hours I’m off to Dublin for Phoenix Con VI, so I’ll go quiet for a couple of days, unless I’m one of the people lucky enough to get wi-fi access. I’m looking forward to it — despite the fact that the slavedrivers have put me on four panels and a ‘meet the author’ session.

• March 27th, 2009 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

Winning The Lottery

My day job is in a hospital  working about fifteen hours a week. It’s a balancing act between how few hours I can do to keep our finances ticking over while not slowing up work on the next novel.

At least that’s the theory.

In practice my employers will go to extraordinary lengths to delay paying their staff.

For a three day week, I have to complete no less than twenty-seven data entries on a time-sheet; my name, NI number, employee number, and for each day the date, start time, end time, break, total hours worked, and location. On top of that my boss has to complete four more entries for each day worked.

If any of them are omitted or filled in incorrectly in any way, my pay for that week is delayed while the query is resolved. Furthermore, the complexities of our National Insurance scheme mean that if I get two weeks pay in one week, and none in the other, rather than pay in both weeks, I lose about £10.50 per time. Furthermore, if anyone else makes an error, or there delays because of the internal post, I again lose out. 

Then they decided to cut all lines of communication apart from a web form that can only be filled in on the employer’s intranet site.

On at three occasions this year my pay has been delayed because of my own errors — but on another four occasions it’s been delayed by someone else’s mistake or procedural change.

That means that fifteen per cent of my pay has been delayed by a week.

Sometimes I feel that I’d be better off doing the lottery. Sometimes when I get paid, it feels as if I’ve won the lottery.

• March 26th, 2009 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

My Own Personal Twilight Zone Moment

As I sat on the bus on the way home tonight, I toyed with what music I wanted to listen to while I worked. I decided that since it had been years since I’d listened to the Don’t Look Back album from Boston, I’d like to hear it again. It’s over thirty years old now, but it’s a great side one especially. 

Unfortunately I only have it on vinyl, so  I decided to download it from Napster.

Half an hour later I wrote a disgusted note to them, got the album down from the attic, and cleared the clutter off the turntable.

While the album was playing I caught up on correspondence, and then decided to see what my teenage heroes were up to nowadays.

And as vocalist Brad Delp launched into A Man I’ll Never Be, came the TZ  moment — bearing in mind that I’d not listened to the album in years– as Delp sang "I can’t get any stronger/ I can’t climb any higher / You’ll never know just how hard I’ve tried," I read the awful newsof his suicide two years ago.

I know that it’s pure coincidence, I know that there’s no significance to it, but I’ve never felt so weirded out.

I shot across and had that damned album off the turntable before you could say "Tom Sholtz."

Hopefully things will return to normal the next time I get out an old album.

• March 24th, 2009 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

Pyrrhic Victory

I think I may just have lost a sale, due to speaking my mind.

A piece that I submitted some time ago came back to me for revisions. No issue there; I’m happy to make changes as per an editor’s requests.

"I would like you to…." is fine. What I won’t tolerate is questions in caps (= shouting) or repeated comments like "You need to…"

I don’t need to do anything to a piece. I *need* to pay my rent, and go to work in the morning. That is *need*.

So I wrote saying exactly that, politely but firmly. I added that he will have the revisions next week, but I suspect that I’ll get a terse note back saying "Don’t bother."

But sod it, I’m being paid for my work, not to be a punch-bag for some upstart who wants to vent his creative spleen on me.

I’ll just have to write something else instead. It may be a pyrrhic victory, but I’ll settle for that.

• March 23rd, 2009 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

Sunshine = Productivity?

It’s been another lovely sunny day, although that’s due to end soon, and it’s a real pleasure being able to take the laptop out into the garden while Kate reads. If I sit with my back to the sun, I can keep working without losing the laptop’s screen in the sun. I’m not sure whether there’s an established link between sunshine and productivity, but certainly my productivity has soared this week

Today I’ve written the obligatory 000 words, thereby passing the midpoint of Damage Time, finished reading –and reviewed– The Interpreter by Brian Aldiss, written most of a capsule article on Brian Aldiss for the benefit of the less knowledgeable readers on Suite101, and read –and reviewed, as well– most of Interzone 221.

It’s back to work in the bowels of the Eye Hospital tomorrow, which is one of the reasons why I want to get ahead.

 Another reason is that I’m in Dublin next weekend for P-Con VI. I’m on some interesting panels:-

13:00 Sat – Room 2 – Money in SF

How does it work, and how much is a Credit worth in Euro anyway?

16:00 Sat – Room 2 – High Priests and Priestesses of Love

An agony aunt response to questions of love supplied, anonymously, by Convention members.

 14:00 Sun – Room 2 – The End of the World as We Know it?

Are we about to enter the standard issue dystopia that sf has been warning us about (fluctuating oil prices, economic collapse, global warming etc.)?

 15:00 Sun – Room 2 – Genre fiction magazines

Genre fiction magazines are finding it more difficult to survive.  What are the options for survival, or are they a "dead horse"?

 If anyone has any thoughts on these topics, do share…

 

• March 22nd, 2009 • Posted in General • Comments: 0