Tomorrow on Ujima

I’m currently at the Ujima studios. I’ve just been editing the interview with Mark Wright about his new book, Heartman. It includes a brief chat about how he used code-switching in his book to indicate how his lead character needed to behave differently within the St. Pauls community here in Bristol, and in the wider white community. Sounds like Mark has worked very hard on this.

First on tomorrow’s show, however, will be Becca Lloyd who has two new books out, and will be having a launch event at Foyles on Friday. One of them is a horror collection from the fabulous folks at Tartarus Press.

In the second hour I have some people in from Outset, a Bristol organization that helps people set up their own businesses. And for the final half hour I have Jayne from Bristol Pride to tell us all about the amazing events that I will be missing because I am going to Finncon.

By the way, talking of book launches, Gareth Powell’s brother, Huw, is launching a kids’ book about space pirates on Saturday, also at Foyles. Like I said, it is a busy week.

Did Someone Say “Monsters”?

Monster Hunters - Juliet E. McKennaThat would have been me, last night. And lo, here are monsters, in the shape of a fine little collection from Juliet: Challoner, Murray & Balfour: Monster Hunters at Law.

They are terribly nice Victorian monsters, of course, but thoroughly villainous all the same. Sort of steampunk, sort of dark fantasy, very genre-blurry. Do enjoy, won’t you? Perhaps with a nice cup of tea.

This splendid new ebook can be purchased for the decidedly un-monstrous sum of £2.99. You can buy it direct from us, or find it in all of the usual outlets.

Let me know if you are interested in getting a review copy.

A Book Contest To Watch

Bristol-based blogger, Joanna Papageorgiou, is trying to find the most Bristol of books. She writes about the project here. Goodness only knows what will win (but I’m supporting Angela Carter). However, there are three Wizard’s Tower books in the contest which means they’ll get reviewed. I note that my friends Eugene Byrne, Luciene Boyce and Tim Maughan all have books in the contest, and there’s another Colin Harvey book in there too. I shall be following developments with interest. The order of play is available here.

Busy Week

This week is going to be a bit mad.

To start with I have two days in Bristol. I have the radio show as usual on Wednesday, but I will also be in the studio tomorrow. That’s because of this book. Yes, someone has written a crime novel set in the Afro-Caribbean community of Bristol. The book is being launched at Bristol Foyles tomorrow night, and the author, Mark Wright, has a busy day of interviews before then. He’ll be on BBC Radio Bristol tomorrow afternoon, and at lunch time he’s popping into the Ujima studios to record something with me.

It is also the end of the month, so I have a whole lot of business housekeeping to do, most importantly sending out the accounts for Wizard’s Tower. That’s otherwise known as the Make Authors Happy process.

And finally, because I’ll be heading off to Finland next week, I need to get as much day job work done as possible before I go.

So blogging will be a bit limited, but there is some audio in process. Also I have a little surprise for you coming up tomorrow. It may involve monsters.

Yesterday’s Radio

Well that was a learning experience.

When I arrived at the studio I discovered that Seth, my usual engineer, could not make it in because of a plumbing issue. As it turned out, all of the potential backups that Paulette phoned were also unavailable. Enormous thanks to Miss Delicious for getting us up and running. Guess who ended up running the desk for most of the show?

Actually operating the desk isn’t that hard, if you know where to find the material. The big issues are a) if anything goes wrong, and b) multi-tasking. Thankfully everything went smoothly yesterday. However, looking back on the show, I’m pretty sure that having to think about the desk as well made me a lot less sharp as a presenter. Doubtless the more you do it the easier it gets. Also if you are expecting to run the desk then you can check out all of your jungles and ads in advance. But I think if I have to do it again I’ll script the show in a lot more detail so that I don’t forget anything.

Anyway, Nick Harkaway and Philippe Bonneau were great guests, and are well worth listening to. My apologies to them for my having been somewhat distracted. You can find the first hour of the show here.

The second hour was much easier as I handed the microphone over the Judeline who ran a fine discussion about being a school governor. Thanks to Christine Townsend for being a great resident expert, and to Jackie from the Outlook team for taking the part of the concerned mother. You can listen to part 2 here.

Most of the music for yesterday was on a summery theme. The songs were:

  • Summertime – Sam & Dave
  • Long Hot Summer – Dizzy Gillespie
  • Heartman Blues – Dan Britton
  • Summertime Blues – Eddie Cochran
  • In the Summertime – Mungo Jerry
  • Boys of Summer – Don Henley
  • Girls in their Summer Clothes – Bruce Springsteen
  • Summer in the City – The Lovin’ Spoonful

Today in Bristol – Harkaway, Chartreuse & Frogs

Today on Women’s Outlook I’ll be running the interview with Nick Harkaway that I made last week at Mr. B’s. You can listen online via the Ujima Radio website. I’ll post the Listen Again links tomorrow.

Also on the show is Philippe Bonneau. I so enjoyed the talk about Chartreuse that he gave at Independent Spirit that I wanted to share it with everyone.

In the evening I’ll be off to the theatre. I’ll be seeing a performance of Frogs by Aristophanes, put on my by pals the Hecate Theatre Company.

New Book, New Stores

Apocalypse ArrayThe new book from Lyda Morehouse, Apocalypse Array, is now working its way through the upload procedures at various stores. You should be able to buy it from most major venues soon.

I very much enjoyed doing the ebook conversion on this one, which I kind of expected as I loved it first time around. These days, however, it is seeming more and more prescient. For example, this recent report about a right wing radio host accusing trans people, and Laverne Cox in particular, of being agents of Satan could have come right out of the AngeLINK series. In fact I’m sure that Emmaline McNaughton would have been all in favor of Laverne.

Of course Emmaline is the Antichrist, but then we also have Ariel, the cross-dressing Archangel, to consider. You need to read the series to find out exactly what Mother (or God, or whatever you prefer to call Them) is up to.

Of course these books were written in simpler times before social media and trans activism. Lyda, bless her, asked me to include a foreword apologizing about her lack of knowledge of trans issues when she wrote the series. I’m pretty sure that we had a few conversations on such things at the time, but then the world has moved on a lot since 2004, and had Lyda come to me for advice before writing the books she would likely have produced something just as likely to upset modern-day activists than she did without me.

Anyway, I’m really proud to have published the AngeLINK series. All four books are now available so if you were waiting for that you can now buy them. And if not just buy them anyway.

Talking of which, while I can’t afford to run a fully-fledged ebook store, it is daft not to be able to sell Wizard’s Tower books direct to customers. So I have run up a fairly basic store using WordPress and a few plugins. I’m not confident using this to sell other people’s books, but for ours it should be OK. You can find that new store at the old address.

In addition I spent part of the weekend making our books available on Google Play. I’m not sure that Google is any less evil than Amazon (though the piranhas are trying really hard right now — click through and check out paragraph 2), but at least they are competition. Also, if your read primarily on an Android tablet (which I do) you can get delivery direct to your device, just like with a Kindle.

Yesterday on Ujima – Rhonda Garcia & Leah Moore

Yesterday morning I got an emergency text from my Producer, Paulette, to tell me that James Gibbs wasn’t going to be able to make it to the studio. He had to rush off to London. I’m guessing that was something to do with getting his visa for Nigeria so that he could take part in the Wole Soyinka 80th birthday celebrations.

Fortunately I was well prepared. I had two pre-recorded interviews in the can, and had only been planning to run one. So I just ran both, and all was well.

First up was a chat with a new SF writer from Trinidad, Rhonda Garcia. Her book, Lex Talionis, is available from the usual outlets. As mentioned on the show, there is a interview with her on Tobias Buckell’s blog. There is also a longer version of the radio interview that I will post to Salon Futura in due course. And I’ll try to find the time to write a review. Rhonda was a lot of fun to interview. I hope you enjoy listening to her as much as I did.

The other interview was the one with Leah Moore that I bagged before we went on our Liverpool pub crawl last Saturday. On the radio we cover following a famous father in his career, and doing mom journalism. The full version of the interview also discusses the new Electricomics venture and again will appear on Salon Futura.

Both interviews have a bit of background noise — Rhonda’s because we were on the phone between the UK and Trinidad, and Leah’s because we were sat in the foyer of the Liverpool Hilton. We also had an annoying technical glitch as the beginning of Rhonda’s interview. When you record from Skype you have the option to reserve one channel for yourself and the other for the person at the other end. It gives an impression of stereo. When we played Rhonda’s interview we discovered that one channel on the board wasn’t working, so only one voice was coming through. Thankfully Seth, my genius engineer, was able to quickly switch into mono for the broadcast and save the day. Live radio, it is terrifying at times.

You can listen to the first hour of the show here.

For the second hour I handed over to Paulette for a couple of race-related issues. First up the head teacher at the center of the racism complaints we discussed two weeks ago has chosen to pursue other career options. Secondly, as you may remember from my discussion of Bristol & the slave trade with Olivette Otele, there is some controversy in the city over the honors given to Edward Colston, who is feted as a philanthropist bit who made most of his money from the slave trade. Colston Hall, Bristol’s premier music venue, is now considering changing it’s name. In the studio to discuss these issues was civil rights campaigner, Paul Stephenson, the only non-white man ever to receive the Freedom of Bristol.

You can listen to the second hour here.

While I was at the studios I had a brief chat with Lady Nia who, together with our station manager, DJ Styles, hosts the highlights show on BBC Radio Bristol & Radio Somerset. She was telling Paulette that their last show had featured a clip from our show where Paulette was talking about her trip back to Jamaica. I’m briefly in that clip introducing Paulette. Much to my surprise and delight, Nia mentioned that they had also used my interview with Karen Lord from Ã…con. Unfortunately the BBC only keeps those shows on Listen Again for a week, but I’ll keep an eye on them from now on to see if they use anything else I’ve done.

Apex Book of World SF – Vol 3

Apex Book of World SF, Volume 3 - Lavie Tidhar (ed.)

While I am busy doing radio, here’s something for you folks to look out for. Apex Books are producing a third in Lavie Tidhar’s fine series of World SF anthologies. While there are some familiar faces in the line-up, there’s a lot of material that is new to me. Here’s some diversity, go pre-order (you’ll get the book cheaper that way).

  • “Courtship in the Country of Machine-Gods” by Benjanun Sriduangkaew (Thailand)
  • “A Hundred Ghosts Parade Tonight” by Xia Jia Translated from the Chinese by Ken Liu. (China)
  • “Act of Faith” by Fadzlishah Johanabas (Malaysia)
  • “The Foreigner” by Uko Bendi Udo (Born in Nigeria, currently lives in the US)
  • “The City of Silence” by Ma Boyong Translated from the Chinese by Ken Liu. (China)
  • “Planetfall” by Athena Andreadis (Born in Greece, currently lives in the US)
  • “Jungle Fever” by Zulaikha Nurain Mudzar (Malaysia)
  • “To Follow the Waves” by Amal El-Mohtar (Lebanese-Canadian, lives in Glasgow)
  • “Ahuizotl” by Nelly Geraldine García-Rosas Translated from the Spanish by Silvia Moreno-Garcia. (Mexico)
  • “The Rare Earth” by Biram Mboob (Gambia, lives in the UK)
  • “Spider’s Nest” by Myra Çakan Translated from the German by Jim Young. (Germany)
  • “Waiting with Mortals” by Crystal Koo (Phillipines, lives in Hong Kong)
  • “Three Little Children” by Ange Translated from the French by Tom Clegg. (France)
  • “Brita’s Holiday Village” by Karin Tidbeck (Sweden)
  • “Regressions” by Swapna Kishore (India)
  • “Dancing on the Red Planet” by Berit Ellingsen (Korean-Norwegian)

The fabulous artwork is by Sophia Tuska, who is from Hungary.

Another Busy Wednesday

Radio again today. I think I’ll only have an hour of the show, but it should be good stuff.

First up James Gibbs will be back to talk more about Wole Soyinka. I’ve managed to find a version of one of the songs that Soyinka wrote with Tunji Oyelana & His Benders (lovely band name, that) for the album, Unlimited Liability Company. The original, sadly, is only available online via YouTube.

My other slot will be an interview I did yesterday with a lady from Trinidad who has a new science fiction novel out. She’s Rhonda Garcia, and the book is Lex Talionis. You can learn more about her via Tobias Buckell’s blog. I have a full half hour of interview which I shall podcast, hopefully next week.

In the evening I will be at Mr B’s Emporium of Reading Delights in Bath where I shall be interviewing Nick Harkaway about his fabulous new book, Tigerman. That should be in next week’s radio show.

And now, to whet your appetite, here are Tunji Oyelana & His Benders.

Book Review – The Summer Prince

The Summer Prince - Alaya Dawn JohnsonOh dear, I really shouldn’t be writing book reviews just now. I have far too much other work to do. However, given that this blog is being featured on the Asimov’s website this month, I feel honor-bound to talk more about books than usual.

Fortunately I have a really good one to write about. The Summer Prince by Alaya Dawn Johnson is one of my favorite books of the year thus far. It is, of course, a 2013 book, and has been turning up on all sorts of awards lists. If you haven’t noticed it, go read the review and find out why.

Destruction Completed

Lightspeed #49


I have a small part in the splendid publication. Please don’t let that put you off. If you didn’t support the Kickstarter campaign, you can now purchase Women Destroy Science Fiction here.

Contributors include: Seanan McGuire, N. K. Jemisin, Mary Robinette Kowal, Pat Murphy, Maureen McHugh, Charlie Jane Anders, Maria Dahvana Headley , Amal El-Mohtar, Stina Leicht, Nisi Shawl and many others.

Coming Soon from Wizard’s Tower

Apocalypse ArrayI just need to do a few more things to our latest ebook release before sending it off to Lyda Morehouse for proofing. It should be out in a week or two.

I must say I’ve really been enjoying doing these books. I know I loved them when they first came out, but it is always good to see something stand up well to re-reading.

Of course I shouldn’t really be getting emotional over a relationship between two artificial intelligences; not at my age. I guess I’m just soppy. But there’s lots to think about in the AngeLINK series too. Also I’m really pleased to be re-issuing a 10-year-old series whose characters include a Egyptian Muslim hacker, a Jewish lesbian militia leader and a cross-dressing archangel.

Airships Over America

Thanks to Kevin, and to Dave Clark of Cargo Cult Books, copies of Airship Shape & Bristol Fashion are on sale this weekend at BayCon, a large annual convention held in San José, California. Kevin tweeted this photo to show us what good company we are in.

Any other US bookstore who are interested in stocking the book, just ask. I can have the books printed and shipped within the USA.

The Art of Forgetting: Nomad Launch

The main reason I was in Bristol today was for the launch of Jo Hall’s latest novel, The Art of Forgetting: Nomad. This is the second half of the giant novel that Kristell Ink wisely decided to market as two volumes. My review of the first part, Rider, is here. For those of you interested in such things, Nomad has a lot less LGBT material, but a lot more non-European cultures stuff.

Jo mentioned on Twitter this morning that some cake might be a nice way to celebrate the launch. The result was a veritable cakenami. I may have been responsible for part of that.

As usual, Des and her colleagues at Forbidden Planet put on a good show for us. Sadly the weather will have discouraged some people from attending, and the hideous Bristol traffic meant that quite a few people arrived late. Here’s hoping that the book sells well regardless.

The Pelican Takes Flight

Yesterday evening I attended an event at the Watershed in Bristol. It was part of the Festival of Ideas, and was held to celebrate the re-launch of Pelican, the non-fiction imprint of Penguin Books. Sir Allen Lane, the publishing entrepreneur who founded Penguin, was born in Bristol, so the city has a special connection with his companies.

The business plan for Pelican was to provide top quality books on a variety of complex issues that were both cheap and written in a manner accessible to the general public. I own several of them, mostly inherited from my father, though they are all in California. The imprint was closed down in 1990, but has been resurrected this year.

The new Pelican was launched with five titles. Four of the authors were on hand for the event in Bristol. Sadly the only woman, Melissa Lane, lives in the USA and could not make it. The books are as follows:

Economics: The User’s Guide, by Ha-Joon Chang (Cambridge). This sounds very promising. Chang is an amusing speaker, and he has a very important qualification for an economist: his view of the subject is not tied to a religious attachment to any particular political dogma.

Human Evolution, by Robin Dunbar (Oxford). Dunbar is already famous for having a number named after him. This book is all about how and why humans came to evolve on the plains of Africa, developing language, culture and, eventually, civilization. The book sounds interesting, but listening to Dunbar I found myself wishing that Karen Joy Fowler was there to debate human exceptionalism with him.

Revolutionary Russia, 1891-1991, Orlando Figes (Birkbeck). Figes has a good point that Russia’s revolution is ongoing, and what is happening now under Putin is at least in part a consequence of what happened under Yeltsin, Gorbachev and Khrushchev. However, history is notoriously subjective and I don’t know enough about Russia to judge his interpretation. To my mind the most interesting thing he talked about was how revolutions can’t be sustained over more than about three generations because by that time the young people no longer have any intellectual or emotional connection to the issues that sparked the movement. I think there are lessons there for feminism.

Greek and Roman Political Ideas, Melissa Lane (Princeton). This sounds fascinating, because so many of our political ideas are deeply rooted in the Classical world. I do wish Lane had been there to talk about it.

The Domesticated Brain, Bruce Hood (Bristol). Possibly the most interesting of the lot, especially for a science fiction writer. We know (from Dunbar’s book) that homo sapiens evolved in a period of significant environmental stress (climate change brought on by the closing of the straits between North and South America, according to last weekend’s Cosmos). We also know that we are currently undergoing rapid technological and social change, with a major climate disaster waiting in the wings.

Hood notes that humans have become domesticated. Since the last Ice Age our brains have shrunk by around 10% in size. The same phenomenon can be observed in animals that are domesticated. The lack of need to survive in the wild seems to take the edge off a species. Of course Hood isn’t arguing for some sort of Libertarian paradise in which evolution can be kickstarted. However, he is worried about how we’ll cope in the new world of social media.

Much of what gets said about the Internet by pundits reminds me of 19th Century scaremongers saying that humans could never travel fast in trains because our internal organs would get shaken around and damaged. Dunbar said at one point in the evening that it was impossible for humans to negotiate a compromise if they only interacted online. I think that’s a rather hasty judgement. After all, it took us thousands of years to develop civilization, and we’ve had social media for less time than it takes for a human to reach adulthood.

What worries Hood, and me, is what will happen while we learn to adapt to the new world. When Judeline and I were discussing friendship on Women’s Outlook earlier in the day we had touched on the fact that many people now live alone and have no local community. This is particularly hard on the elderly who have a poor grasp of technology. Hood says that being alone is significantly worse for your heath than being overweight. It is all a bit troubling.

The issue of the Internet also touches on the core philosophy of Pelican. Modern day doomsayers are quick to claim that the Youth of Today, having been corrupted by television and the Internet, simply don’t have sufficient attention span to read a whole book on a scientific theory. It is as much as they can to do absorb an infographic, allegedly. The new Pelican imprint is betting on this being wrong. I very much hope it succeeds.

I should also add that Hood’s book also touches on the development of identity. In his talk he specifically mentioned how children acquire a sense of gender. I talked to him after the event and he says he hasn’t studied trans kids himself, but he knows someone in Vancouver who is doing so. He also mentioned that other aspects of identity appear to be acquired fairly early on in life (around age 3) and are very difficult to change thereafter. These may include sexuality and even ethnic identity. This doesn’t solve the nature/nurture debate, but it does narrow the focus, and will hopefully stop people peddling “cures” for certain identities.

So yeah, I need to read Hood’s book. I shall report back.

In the meantime, best of luck to Pelican in its new incarnation. Can we have a book on cosmology next, please?

Today on Ujima – Vicars, Media, Arms Trade & Mayfest

Very briefly as I’m on the road in Oxford and have a work conference to attend tomorrow.

First half hour: Caroline Symcox talking about God, being a trainee vicar, her book and being married to Paul Cornell.

Second half hour: The Bristol Cable on their plans for independent local media.

Listen to those here.

Third half hour: Students from UWE protesting against having arms fairs held on their campus.

Fourth half hour: Sarah Thorp from Room 212 talking about the Gloucester Road community’s Mayfest celebrations, including Jack-in-the-Green and various other pagan survivals.

Listen to those here.

Exciting News About Murder Most Magical

The Severed Streets - Paul CornellHeads up, Bristol people, and indeed anyone within easy reach of Bristol. I have some exciting news about the author event we are doing on May 16th. As some of you will know, Paul Cornell has a new book out in May. It is called The Severed Streets and it features the same group of dysfunctional London coppers that appeared in his previous book, London Falling. The official launch of The Severed Streets will be at Forbidden Planet in London on May 21st. However, Tor UK have kindly agreed to try to get us a few advance copies for our event. So if you come to Bristol for Murder Most Magical you should be able to get a copy of Paul’s new book almost a week before the rest of the country. He’ll probably sign it for you too.

To whet your appetite, Tor has posted an excerpt from The Severed Streets on their US website.

As a reminder, doors open at 7:00pm at Waterstones in The Galleries. The store tells me that they are expecting a big turnout, so we won’t start until around 7:30pm to give everyone time to get seated. Please don’t assume this means you can arrive at 7:45pm. We do need to get the authors out of there and fed. There may also be restrictions on the number of books each author will sign. Tickets are £3 and are only available from the store, but if you ask nicely someone in Bristol will pop in and buy some for you.

While I’m on the subject of Paul, his equally fabulous wife, Caroline Symcox, will be appearing on my radio show tomorrow at Noon. She’ll be talking about what it is like being a woman trainee vicar in the Church of England, and plugging her book, The Vicar’s FAQ.

The Warrior’s Bond Is On Sale

As promised yesterday, copies of Juliet E. McKenna’s fourth book in the Tales of Einarinn series is now on sale in the Wizard’s Tower store. Get your Warrior’s Bond here. It will be on sale in the other usual outlets in due course.

As with the other books in the series, this volume contains updated maps and a new introduction by Juliet talking about her thought processes in writing the book. You can learn more about it (and the rest of the series) from her blog.