Book Review – The Highest Frontier

It is a holiday, I have found time to write. Yay! Have a book review. This is for The Highest Frontier by Joan Slonczewski, which is a very strange book. It took me several chapters before I understood what I was supposed to be reading, or possibly found a way of approaching the book that made it readable. Once I had done so, however, I appreciated a lot of its inventiveness.

By the way, if you are interested in the biology of intelligence I heartily recommend this article about some of the smartest creatures of the planet: octopuses.

Jeff’s Overlooked List

Over at Onmivoracious Jeff VanderMeer has posted his list of overlooked SF&F books of 2011. There are sixteen books there, and as I have copies of half of them I can vouch for Jeff’s good taste. Some of them are even available in my store:

And because I want you to buy good books, no matter where they are sold, I also need to let you know that SF Gateway has all of their books on sale at £2.99 (about $5) between Christmas and New Year. I am so going to stock up.

Looking Ahead

SF Signal has a mind meld post looking forward to new SF&F material due in 2012. This has reminded me what a lot of good books are due. Here’s some of the things I am hoping to read next year:

  • In the Mouth of the Whale, Paul McAuley
  • Transmission, John Meaney
  • Blue Remembered Earth, Al Reynolds
  • Arctic Rising, Tobias S. Buckell
  • Some Kind of Fairy Tale, Graham Joyce
  • The Outcast Blade, Jon Courteny Grimwood
  • The Kingdoms of Dust, Amanda Downum
  • The Drowning Girl, Caitlín R. Kiernan
  • Intrusion, Ken MacLeod
  • Hide Me Among the Graves, Tim Powers
  • The Fractal Prince, Hannu Rajaniemi
  • Black Heart, Holly Black
  • Ison of the Isles, Carolyn Ives Gilman
  • Radiant Days, Elizabeth Hand
  • Empty Space, M. John Harrison
  • The King’s Blood, Daniel Abraham
  • The Drowned Cities, Paolo Bacigalupi
  • The Killing Moon, N.K. Jemisin
  • 2312, Kim Stanley Robinson
  • Blackout, Mira Grant
  • The Shadowed Sun, N.K. Jemisin
  • Railsea, China Miéville
  • Weapon of Flowers, Liz Williams

And that only takes us up to July on the Locus Forthcoming Books list. I know there are more books from Cat Valente, Kameron Hurley, Elizabeth Hand, Mary Gentle and Chris Moriarty that I’ll want to get. Then there’s all the YA that doesn’t get on the Locus lists. This is an embarrassment of riches.

Update: And Nick Harkaway’s Angelmaker, which unaccountably is not on the Locus list.

Update 2: And Roz Kaveney’s novel is finally coming out in July, and is also not on the Locus list.

Utopia At Strange Horizons

I’m a little late to this (so thanks to World SF), but Strange Horizons has reviewed Ahmed Khaled Towfik’s novella, Utopia. The review is by Sofia Samatar who is doing a PhD in African Languages and Literature at the University of Wisconsin, and is therefore far better qualified than I am to pronounce on Egyptian SF. The thing that caught my eye in the review was this:

The English edition of Utopia contains all the quotations from poetry and lyrics of “orgasm music” present in the Arabic one, but the Arabic text also includes snippets of journalism which do not appear in the English translation. These bits of text are not referenced, and may be fictional, but they have the form of quotations from actual newspapers. The longest one—nearly two pages of small print—is a list of statistics on the assault, rape, and murder of women. According to the translator, Chip Rossetti, the editors of the English edition chose to remove the journalistic sections to preserve narrative flow. This decision does a disservice to the book, for it is only in these statistics that violence against women is presented as violence against women and not metaphor.

I am inclined to agree with Sofia here. I wish I had known about this when I met Ahmed Khaled (and the Bloomsbury PR people).

Robots Are Marching

Sean Wallace has been posting tables of contents for forthcoming Prime anthologies. Naturally I am looking out for Clarkesworld stories.

First up we have Robots: The Recent AI, which follows in the steps of Paula Guran’s anthologies, Vampires: The Recent Undead, and New Cthulhu: The Recent Weird. The book is edited by Rich Horton and Sean Wallace, and the Clarkesworld stories selected are:

  • “A Jar of Goodwill” by Tobias S. Buckell
  • “Silently and Very Fast” by Catherynne M.Valente

You can see the full ToC here. It looks excellent.

In addition Rich has released the ToC for his 2012 Year’s Best Science Fiction and Fantasy anthology. The Clarkesworld stories are as follows:

  • “Ghostweight” by Yoon Ha Lee
  • “The Smell of Orange Groves” by Lavie Tidhar
  • “The Cartographer Wasps and the Anarchist Bees” by E. Lily Yu

Congratulations all, and I can see I need to re-read “Ghostweight”. The full ToC is here.

I don’t know when the books are due you, but I’ll let you know as soon as I have them in store.

Science! At Home!

Want to do some home chemistry? Have a kitchen? You are all set.

Yes, it is the season of over-eating, at which time of year Cheryl’s mind turns to cookery, and therefore to cookbooks. This morning I saw a recommendation for Culinary Reactions: The Everyday Chemistry of Cooking by Simon Field. You probably don’t get to blow anything up, at least not in Mythbusters fashion, but it sounds like a lot of fun. Oddly the Kindle edition appears to be only available in the UK. I’ll let you know if I make anything exciting.

More Books

Yes, I have more new stock. Rounding up the new issues from Prime and Book View Café, we have:

And yes, all of these books are £2.99.

Fantastic Ladies

Continuing the rollout of new books in the store, I have a wealth of wonderful women fantasy writers for you.

Pride of place goes to Prime who are bringing back R.A. MacAvoy. Her Tea with the Black Dragon from 1983 was nominated for a host of awards, including the Hugo, Nebula and World Fantasy. It got second place in the Philip K. Dick Award, won the Locus Award for First Novel, and MacAvoy won the Campbell New Writer award on the strength of it. Her last novel was in 1993. In 2009 Subterranean published a limited edition novella, In Between, but Death and Resurrection is her first novel in 18 years. It is great to have her back.

Another book I am delighted to see in the store is The Lord of Two Lands by Judith Tarr. This World Fantasy nominee from 1993, featuring Alexander the Great, is much loved and I’m delighted to see Book View Café making it available again. They have also sent me Tarr’s The Dagger and the Cross, which is a sequel to Alamut which is already in store. Both are novels set during the Crusades.

Back with Prime, I also delighted to see Sarah Monette find a new publisher. Thus far they are offering her collection, Somewhere Beneath These Waves, and a new edition of her Kyle Murchison Booth mystery, The Bone Key.

Finally, with 2012 just over the horizon, someone had to write a Mayan novel. Step forward, Brenda Cooper and Prime. Mayan December could easily be just an exercise in cashing in, but the reviews look very promising so the book is worth checking out.

I’m pleased to report that, like Prime, Book View Café are selling their ebooks for £2.99. You can’t go wrong at that price, can you?

Freedom of the Cloud Roads

Email from Night Shade informs me that The Cloud Roads by Martha Wells is free in the US Kindle store today. You have to be logged in from a US-based IP address to see it, but this link should work if you are.

This is, of course, a cunning plan to encourage you to buy the soon-to-be-released sequel, The Serpent Sea, as well, but The Cloud Roads is a good book and it is free today, so if you have a Kindle why not give it a try? My review here.

Prime Year’s Bests

Continuing the upload of new Prime titles (and especially for Tero), their 2011 Year’s Best collections are now available in the store. I’m not entirely sure what year they refer to, but they certainly contain some great stories. Also I have been playing with a few new layout features in the store, so even if you are not planning on buying you might like to take a look. The books are:

Did I mention that they are only £2.99 each?

Australia Women’s Writing Challenge

Via Alisa Krasnostein I see that the Australian Women Writers blog is running a reading challenge to encourage people to read and review more books by, you guessed it, Australian women writers. For some reason I can’t put my finger on, these reading challenge things creep me out. It keep looking for the small print that proves I’m being exploited by signing up. But that’s probably just me. I’m pretty sure I will read and review a bunch of books by Australian women next year, and there will be plenty of good ones amongst them. If reading challenges are your thing, why not sign up.

New Anthologies from Prime

I’ve just added several new anthologies to the Wizard’s Tower bookstore. They are all from Prime, and therefore all at the great £2.99 price. They are:

Vampires from Paula Guran contains a selection of recently written short stories about the toothy undead, including contributions from Holly Black, Caitlin R. Kiernan and Kim Newman.

Halloween is another of Paula’s anthologies, this one being a celebration of the season of things going bump in the night. Authors include H.P. Lovecraft, Thomas Ligotti and Peter Straub.

Still with Paula, New Cthulhu features modern stories influenced by H.P. Lovecraft, with authors including Neil Gaiman, Elizabeth Bear, China Miéville, Sarah Monette and Charlie Stross.

Creatures from John Langan & Paul Tremblay is a survey of thirty years of big, bad nasties. Authors include Clive Barker, Kelly Link and Jeff VanderMeer.

Finally we have Lightspeed: Year One, in which JJA picks his favorites from the stories he has published in the first year of Lightspeed magazine.

All of them fabulous value. Much as I love paper, the trade paperback editions are around three times the price, and mostly only available in the USA.

Prime Price Drop

I did promise you some good bookstore news. Here it is. I’ve received instruction from Sean Wallace that I can reduce the price of all Prime titles to £2.99 (about $5 or €3.50). There are two exceptions: Rudy Rucker’s The Ware Tetralogy is still £6.49 because it is an omnibus containing four complete novels. And Ekaterina Sedia’s The Secret History of Moscow has always been £1.99. Aside from that, all Prime titles are now at the new price. So, if you fancy picking up, say:

then head on over as they are all available at the brand new £2.99 price.

Frawgs Online

Jeff VanderMeer emailed to say that Cheeky Frawg Books now have their own website. I am waiting eagerly for the arrival of the first volume of It Came From the North: Finnish Weird Fiction, edited by Jukka Halme and Tero Ykspetäjä. I also see from the Forthcoming Books list that the Frawgs will be publishing several novels by the very fine Michael Cisco, and an ebook edition of the sadly out of print but brilliant Encyclopedia of Victoriana by Jess Nevins.

Tom Abba on the Future of the Book

Last night I went to Bristol to hear my friend Tom Abba talk about the future of the book. Tom is an academic specializing in interactive narratives, and some of you may remember an experiment that he conducted earlier this year that began by mailing a number of prints in very large tubes to selected people in the publishing business.

I was a spectacular failure as regards the experiment. As a critic I get sent way too many stupid marketing gimmicks, and this one woke me up and got me out of bed at stupid o’clock. I really couldn’t be bothered to follow up what I expected to be an attempt to get me interested in someone’s self-published novel (which of course in a very real sense it was). However, other people did get drawn in by the mystery, and last night Tom reported on the experiment.

Along the way I learned quite a few interesting things, including the fact that back in the 1930s Dennis Wheatley published a number of crime novels in which you, the reader, were supposed to play the part of the detective. When you got to the end there was an envelope containing the name of the murderer. John Clute, naturally, owns copies of all of them.

As an investigation of the possibilities of interactive story telling, Tom’s project was very interesting, but whether it has anything to do with the future of the book I’m not at all sure. Neither is Tom, as he actually titled his talk, “This is not the future of the book”. However, we did get to discussing what future books might be like.

Tom’s vision is along the lines of the iPad app for The Wasteland, a rich, multi-media experience that rewards much re-reading and re-viewing. That’s certainly something I’d love to have, but such things inevitably cost a lot of money to produce and are not worth doing unless you expect big sales or you think you can sell it at a very high price.

I’m more interested in what ebooks can mean for the ordinary novel, which at its heart is a very simple thing. There are, of course, all sorts of ways in which some books require more effort to both create and read than others, and many people don’t read books at all, but there is a very big market for good stories, simply told.

If you want ebooks to do interesting things with that market then you can’t ask your readers to do anything too complicated. Even the Fighting Fantasy choose your own adventure books were limited mainly to people with a game-playing mindset, and are now mostly out of fashion. Ebooks may allow them to come back, but maybe we should start with something even more simple, if only because of the technology.

I’m currently reading The Alchemists of Kush by Minister Faust. It contains three separate narratives, and right up the front Faust says:

The Alchemists of Kush is composed of three stories. Each one is ten chapters long: “The Book of Then,” “The Book of Now,” and “The Book of the Golden Falcon.” Certainly, feel free to read the novel in the path it’s printed (Chapter 1: “Then” + “Now,” all the way to Chapter 10: Then + Now, followed by all ten chapters of “The Book of the Golden Falcon”). But you could also read all the “Then”s as a group, followed by all the “Now”s together, ending with “The Book of the Golden Falcon” … or read the first chapters of every “Falcon,” “Then” and “Now,” all the way through to each one’s tenth chapter.

That’s something that current ebook technology would allow you to do fairly easily (and I’d be delighted if Faust let me produce it). But you could go further. Imagine, for example, an ebook edition of the whole of A Song of Ice & Fire that allowed you to follow Tyrion, or Jon Snow, or whoever for as long as you wanted, up to a point where it was necessary to switch to another viewpoint character to find out what was happening elsewhere. There may be serious limitations on what can be done here because George didn’t write the books with a view to anything other than linear consumption, but someone else might write something more complex.

Another possibility is anthologies. I know that people like Jonathan Strahan spend hours agonising over the correct sequence for the stories in a book. What if they could provide several alternative sequences?

Tom wrote the whole of his experimental interactive novel using Scrivener. He told me that a tool of that sort was pretty much essential. I don’t think it would take too much work for Keith to allow the author to specify multiple paths through a novel, and get the software to spit out an epub file that supported all of those possible paths.

The big problem here is reader software. We don’t want to create something that doesn’t work on most reading platforms. I had a long chat in the bar afterwards with Baldur Bjarnason, and was reminded of the a mess standards committees can be. Baldur tells me that the epub committee had furious arguments between factions we might describe as the “experimentalists” who wanted to create new features to see what people would do with them, and the “minimalists” who wanted to kick out any feature that no one was actually using.

Some of the things that interactive narratives need from the reader software are the ability to remember where the reader has been in the book, and to seamlessly allow the reader to page through the book regardless of which path has been chosen. You want page turning to just happen, not have to rely on clicking on links to follow the path you have chosen. It may be necessary for someone to offer additions to the standard to prove that a requirement for such features exists before the features can be widely adopted.

I’m hoping that such experimentation can happen through broswer-based readers such as Ibis, because most reader devices, and all personal computers, have a web broswer, so you’d still be able to serve the majority of readers.

I’m also acutely aware of the post Charlie Stross wrote the other day about Amazon’s domination of the ebook market. (80%, people!). Pretty much the only way that Amazon can be challenged is on technology, and because a new reading device requires massive investment in hardware and marketing, that’s unlikely to happen. Software is much easier, and the Kindle is notorious for how simplistic its software is. (I’ve not seen the Kindle Fire, but I don’t have great expectations.)

I will be interested to see where this goes. It is fun swapping ideas with smart people like Tom and Baldur, and as I have an ebook publishing company and plenty of experience in software I’d like to be part of the experimentation.

Spectrum Awards

The short list and winner of the Best Novel category of the Gaylactic Spectrum Awards (for works published in 2010) have been announced. The short list contains three books that I am proud to have in stock. They are:

  • Bob the Book by David Pratt (Chelsea Street Editions) — A story about a gay book, who gets separated from his partner and interacts with other books and people as he tries to find him.
  • A Book of Tongues by Gemma Files (ChiZine Publications) — Weird Western with lots of action, magic, crime, and a gay couple at the center of it all.
  • The Wolf at the Door by Jameson Currier (Chelsea Street Editions) — New Orleans, ghosts, and a gay hero blended into scary story with wit and sentiment.

I don’t have the winner, Under the Poppy by Kathe Koja, but you can find out all about it on The Writer and the Critic, and you can buy it from Weightless Books.

The full results are available on the Outer Alliance blog.

Best of the Year

I’m on the road in London most of today, so here’s a post I prepared earlier.

Over the weekend Jonathan Strahan posted the Table of Contents for The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year: Volume Six. Jonathan’s a friend, and we often like the same books, but I’m still always pleased to see that we are still in sync. There are many great stories on the list, and many more stories by great writers that I haven’t yet read, but now plan to. What I want to focus on, however, are the two stories that Jonathan picked from Clarkesworld. They are as follows:

This pleased me, because if you had asked me to pick my two favorite stories from this year’s issues, these two would probably be the ones I would have chosen. Of course I love Cat Valente’s “Silently and Very Fast” as well, but that’s a novella and therefore not likely to get into Jonathan’s anthology.

So, if you are looking for short fiction to read, and are wondering what Jonathan and I might recommend, click those two links and enjoy.

Book Review – The Courier’s New Bicycle

Here’s a blast from the past. One of the reasons I started Emerald City was to tell all of my friends in the UK and US about the great writers whose books they couldn’t buy because they were only published in Australia. Thanks to the Internet, things have got a lot better since then, but some writers still fall through the cracks. One of those writers is Kim Westwood. Thanks to a generous Aussie friend, I have been able to get a copy of her latest book, The Courier’s New Bicycle. You can read my review here.

Weightless Books Sale

Listening to the latest Coode Street Podcast, I have finally discovered why Black Friday is called Black Friday. As you may be aware, much of the retail business is focused on the Winterval shopping frenzy. That’s particularly the case for toy shops, but other stores do very well over the holiday as well. In the US, that shopping period starts on the Friday after Thanksgiving (when everyone except the shop staff are on vacation), and that Friday is the first day of the year on which many retail businesses finally break even, or “go into the black”, as the accounting vernacular has it. Thank you, Gary, for explaining.

Anyway, everyone with a retail store in the US is having a sale at the moment, and that includes ebook retailers, in particular our friends at Weightless Books. You can get 25% off just about anything, and a whopping 50% off books by Small Beer Press. This means titles by people like Geoff Ryman, Karen Joy Fowler, Maureen McHugh, Ted Chaing, Delia Sherman, and of course the first ever Translation Awards Long Form winner, A Life on Paper: Stories by Georges-Olivier Châteaureynaud (translated by Edward Gauvin). Gavin Grant explains all here. If you don’t buy anything else, get Redemption in Indigo by Karen Lord, because it is an absolutely wonderful book.