Here’s a thought; as I type this, it’s 12.07 on the 183rd day of the year. We are seven minutes past the mid-point of the year — from now on, we’re closer to 2011 than we are 2009. As someone who spends a lot of time thinking about the future, that has a certain satisfaction to it. And of sourse we’ll be even closer to 2011 when you read this.
But looking back 36 hours, I had a thoroughly good time chatting to Eric Brown before and after the BSFA meeting in London on Wednesday night. It seems incredible that he’s been writing for over 20 years, but he has, and had some interesting points to make about Haworth in Yorkshire, SF, reviewing and writing for readers who have difficulty reading.
It was also nice to get to chat to Ian Whates, since we both of us always seem to be busy at cons. I’m not sure where he finds the energy to write, edit, publish and find time for the BSFA. Long may he continue.
And after over 30 years, it was good to say hello again to Geoff Ryman.
More on that another time, when we’ll be even closer to 2011…
• July 2nd, 2010 • Posted in
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As I noted over at Suite 101, The Speculative Literature Foundation has announced that its seventh annual Older Writers Grant is to be awarded to Mario Milosevic, for his ‘Untied States of America’ which appeared in Interzone 228. It’s particularly interesting for three reasons:
First, this is the first time since 2007 that I’m familiar with the winning entry, and for all my reservations, it’s a worthy winner.
Secondly, I judge the awards myself in 2007, and it was a tough call then to pick just one winner, so I understand perfectly Malon Edwards comments of “Honorable Mentions for the Older Writers Grant go to Michele Cashmore, April Grey, Lynne MacLean, Ada Milenkovic Brown, and J.A. Huets for their entertaining submissions, which made the selection of the winner a difficult but enjoyable process.”
Yep, not much has changed there, then. Come the deadline, there’s usually much tearing of hair. 🙂
Lastly, and most selfishly, in five months time I’ll be eligible for the award myself. Not that I think that I have a prayer of winning it, but I have to have a go…it’s nice to see what benchmark’s been set.
It’s been a productive morning — I’m now 20% of the way through Ultramassive, 21000 words in, and I’ve critiqued a short story for Critters to keep membership of that that particular group ticking over. Plus the review of Black Static 17 is posted.
So now –since it’s 23c in the shade and it feels criminal to be inddors on such a nice day, I’m going to sit under a tree and catch up on some z’s for an hour. There have to be some benefits to being a writer, after all….
• June 28th, 2010 • Posted in
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OK, so it’s ofiicial: I’m an idiot.
I plugged the laptop in before coming away, and made sure that it was plugged in. What I didn’t check was that said battery was secure. It wasn’t, so when I took my 1.35kg paperweight with me, it had a battery with no charge.
Instead, you get some post-con ramblings here.
There is talk of making it a two-day event next year; whether or not it is one day or two, I’m really looking forward to it.
• June 14th, 2010 • Posted in
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I’m packing before heading northwards for tomorrow’s Alt.fiction in Derby, so this will be one of the quicker posts, especially as I need to do some thinking about panels.
I’m on the 10am opener talking about classic SF, together with Tony Ballantyne and Paul Cornell; then at 3pm I’m being locked in a broom cupboard with Mike Cobley and That Man Ballantyne (again) to podcast on The Future of the Future.
Meanwhile, over at Suite101, I’ve scribbled a few words on Futurismic‘s newest columnist, the always fascinating Luc Reid.
Hopefully, I’ll have time to write a few words tomorrow from the evnt itself, but until then…
• June 11th, 2010 • Posted in
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If you click on this link, you’ll see some thoughts on Saturday night’s Doctor Who (Vincent and the Doctor) which contain spoilers. This added comment will avoid them.
What prompted the post was my own reaction to the episode, and a number of negative comments that I’ve seen lamenting the direction that the series is taking. And in making the story small, even intimate (no threat to the world this week, just one Provencal village in danger), in making the drooling, near-psychopathic alien somehow almost poignant, and –heresy of heresies– in showing how resiliant the time-line is to change, Curtis certainly seemed to be deliberately flouting a number of conventions. But isn’t it about time some of the series’ conventions were flouted?
We’ve had five years of ever more grandiose set pieces. It’s about time Doctor Who lost some of the pomposity it accreted under RTD’s stewardship.
• June 7th, 2010 • Posted in
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I was all set to write a blog post today with my schedule next Saturday for Alt.Fiction in Derby, but my publishers –bless ’em!– have saved a me a job, and probably put up a nicer post to boot.
So here’s the link showing all the Angry Robot-eers and their schedules.
In a stop press, I’ll also be in a panel titled ‘sci-fi’ with Tony Ballantyne and Paul Cornell at 10am. I’m not quite sure what we’re going to talk about, but I have a suspicion that that it may just have something to do with science fiction…
• June 5th, 2010 • Posted in
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The only downside to weather like this is that I’d rather be out dozing in a sunny garden than stuck indoors. Nonetheless, such is my dedication to The Cause that while you lot have been out sunning yourselves, I’ve been working — yes, working! At least on the plus side, I’ve been able to read one story at a time outside, then nipped in and written it up.
Right, now for a doze…
• May 23rd, 2010 • Posted in
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I’ve just posted what may be either a one-off experiment, or the first of an occasional series at Suite101, in which I make my debut as an interviewer.
Black Static reviewer Peter Tennant is my first victim, and he did a series of fairly mundane questions proud, with some interesting and at times controversial answers (I may agree with Pete that Wembley should have been burned down, but not for his reasons!).
In the interest of full disclosure, most of the questions were adapted –or just pinched outright– from Angry Robot’s Lee Harris & Marc Gascoigne.
If you have a book or story coming out or if you have something to say in general about the genre, and you’re interested in being interviewed drop me a line, and we’ll see if this idea has legs.
• May 19th, 2010 • Posted in
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I’ve sold a short story, ‘Dark’ to the original anthology Fearology: Terrifying Tales of Phobias.
The ToC is:
Stephanie Kincaid – Bursting With Nutty Goodness
Colin Harvey – Dark
C. C. Blake – I Own My Fears
Val Muller – Horrible Harry
Mark Souza – Relative Undertow
F. J. R. Titchenell – Gravity
Robert Guffey – Birth Of A Nation
Camille Alexa – Things From Things
Jonathan Moon – The Fear vs The Need
Merrill Catharine Hodnefield – Isobel And The Machine
Ken Goldman – Donny Doesn’t Live Here Anymore
Joe Nazare – Bash
Quinn Hernandez – The Hell Behind Her Eyes
J. T. Seat – The Cock Collection
Gustavo Bondoni – Back In The Fold
Kody Boye – DJ Skippy Says Life Goes On
The only writers whose names I’m familiar with are Gustavo Bondoni and Camille Alexa, so I’ll be very interested to read all the other stories in the anthology.
On a very selfish note, it ends a dry spell that runs back to the start of the year.
More details to follow at a later date.
• May 17th, 2010 • Posted in
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