Shadow Man Post-Script

The book chat yesterday was very interesting, and threw some new light on Shadow Man that I’d like to share with you.

The first thing I should note is that Shadow Man doesn’t attempt to create an ideal view of a genderqueer society. The focus of the book is on the conservative Harans, not on the more liberal Concord Worlds. What Scott is trying to do is show how silly our treatment of intersex people is, by creating a world in which intersex births are more common. Her entire knowledge of intersex people appears to have come from Fausto-Sterling’s essay, which is now acknowledged to be woefully simplistic. But that’s not really her point, many other made-up, more complex gender systems for humanity would have done the same job.

I was somewhat surprised that some people thought that the Concord Worlds was supposed to be seen as an ideal society. As Matt Cheney noted, Tatian has his own hang-ups, and I think it is simpler and more sensible to assume that’s because he’s a flawed character as well, rather than assuming that the author is trying to portray an ideal view of gender and failing.

And talking of which, if you can’t figure out what the author intended from reading a book, trying to decide whether the author has “failed” or not is a bit pointless. There are books in which it is very clear that the author is pushing an agenda, and may even has a mouthpiece character, but most writers are more sensible than this.

What would have been nice was for Scott to write a sequel in which Warreven gets to travel to the Concord Worlds and find out that they too have odd hang-ups about the wrangwys, but sadly that didn’t happen.

Anyway, if what you are looking for is a book that gives a realistic portrait of genderqueer people (as we know them), with sympathetic characters that you can identify with, then Shadow Man is not the book for you. My apologies if I gave the impression that it might be.

A particular issue that we discussed is that many of the Haran characters in the book seem to think that Warreven was foolish not to opt to be legally female and marry Tendlathe. From our point of view this seems odd, because our practice is for intersex children to be raised as male if at all possible. Why would any parent want a girl when they have an option to have a boy? Well, that’s the way the doctors present the choice anyway. But on Hara intersex kids don’t have to opt for a gender until adolescence, which changes the equation somewhat. In particular Warreven had the opportunity to become the wife of the dictator’s son, and turned it down to register as “male”.

It is hard to get inside the character’s head here. Possibly Warreven had some inkling of the sort of bigot Tendlathe would become, but 3e could still have registered as female. Maybe registering as male made the point more forcefully. Maybe there was a gender identity issue at play. However, Scott seems blissfully unaware of the concept of gender identity, so I don’t think that is likely. For what it is worth, my view is that Warreven was primarily interested in staking 3is right to 3is identity as a herm. I think 3e chose to register as male because he knew that 3is gender performance was closer to feminine than masculine, and consequently this would create maximum incongruence between 3is legal gender and 3is perceived gender. Registering as male may also have helped further 3is career as a civil rights lawyer.

Building a Better Bookstore

I am almost caught up with all of the backlog that built up over June and July, so I should soon be able to start thinking about how to improve the Wizard’s Tower bookstore. Top of my list is to add automatic downloads to Kindle and Ibis, because convenience seems to trump just about everything else where customers are concerned, but there must be other things I can do as well.

Gary and Jonathan were talking about one of the problems in the latest Coode Street podcast. If you go to Amazon and ask for SF&F books there are apparently more than 72,000 to choose from. Many of those are going to be spam books. Those that Amazon promotes will be promoted because their publisher has paid to have them promoted. So how do you know what to buy?

Today Foyles posted the results of a Twitter survey on what people want from a bricks and mortar bookstore. Smell is going to be a bit difficult to reproduce, but what about some of the other things? Could they be done online?

So, over too you lot. What would you like to see me do with the store?

Book Chat Reminder

I’ll be heading off to a party in Darkest Somerset soon, but I should be back online around 7:00pm, UK time (2:00pm East Coast, 11:00am Pacific). At that time the #FeministSF chat on Twitter will be discussing Shadow Man by Melissa Scott (my review here). All you need to do to join in is follow the #FeministSF hashtag on Twitter. Hopefully I’ll see some of you then.

Book Review: Shadow Man

One of the books that I talked about a lot in the gender panel at Eurocon was Shadow Man by Melissa Scott. Given that I was so impressed, and in the spirit of talking about science fiction by women, I thought that I should write a review. Here it is.

Update: By the way, if you are interested in doing your bit for intersex people in our world, as opposed to in imaginary ones, there’s a petition on Change.org that’s trying to get the UN to take notice of the problem. (Hat tip to Jane Fae Ozimek.)

Also, Maya Posch, the intersex person that Jane Fae blogged about, is an avid fantasy reader and writes computer games for a living, so definitely one of us. Community support, if you please.

Introducing Linda Nagata

What were people saying about lack of women SF writers? Well, I’ve just added one to the store. I’m very proud to stock all four volumes of Linda Nagata’s Nanotech Succession:

The Bohr Maker won the Locus Award for Best First Novel.

For those of you who hate trilogies, don’t worry, this is an interconnected series of stand-alone novels, not one book cut into pieces.

Also new in the store are Skye Object 3270a, a YA science fiction novel, and The Dread Hammer, a fantasy comedy written by Linda’s alter-ego, Trey Shiels.

Roll Up And See The Show

Progress! I have found the time to write a book review.

And it is a good one too. I’m very impressed with Genevieve Valentine. You can read my review of Mechanique here, and buy the e-book here.

Yeah, the post title was a quote from Emerson, Lake & Palmer. I’m old, remember. Besides, fabulous Geiger cover.

Lots More Books

A whole bunch of new books came in for the store while I was in Finland. They are now all available for you to buy.

First up, a warm welcome to Adam Roberts. Like many established authors, Adam is looking to sell short fiction direct to his fans. We are delighted to be able to stock his novelette, Anticopernicus. And it is only £0.86.

On the subject of short fiction, Lethe has sent us Wagers of Gold Mountain, a short story by Steve Berman set in gold rush era San Francisco. It’s only £0.60.

Also new is issue #6 of Bull Spec magazine, which features an interview with Ann & Jeff VanderMeer. Love the cover.

Last but by no means least, we have a whole lot more books from Book View Café. They are:

Happy shopping!

Some Good Guys

Thankfully there are many wonderful persons of the male persuasion in the world. Here are a couple of shout-outs.

Firstly to Joe Gordon who has done a fine post on the Womanthology project.

And secondly to Marco and Lee at Angry Robot. You probably already know that they publish Lauren Beukes, Kaaren Warren and Aliette de Bodard. Also in the pipeline are Jo Anderton and Anne Lyle. And today they added Madeline Ashby. All of these ladies write science fiction. (Aliette’s novels are fantasy, but her Hugo-nominated story is SF set at a later time in the same world.)

See, it’s not hard to find women SF writers when you put your mind to it. Or indeed to publish them and have a massive international success on your hands. My only regret is that, of all those ladies, Anne is the only Brit. I guess it must be something to do with the climate.

The Gateway Opens

The trouble with good ideas is that they are often very obvious. When I started Wizard’s Tower last year one of the things I thought I could do was use ebooks to publish the back lists of authors whose work had fallen out of print. I knew that this would only work if the big publishers felt that such an enterprise was not worth the effort. Little did I know that Gollancz was already working on a similar project. It has taken them a while to go public with it, but the press release came out today and it sounds very impressive.

The real spark of genius, however, is the linking of the ebook catalog to another Gollancz project, the Clute/Langford online version of the SF Encyclopedia. A hat tip to Darren Nash for that one.

The list of authors given in the press release is as follows: Poul Anderson, Barrington J. Bayley, Gregory Benford, Michael Bishop, James P. Blaylock, James Blish, Marion Zimmer Bradley, John Brosnan, Fredric Brown, John Brunner, Algis Budrys, Kenneth Bulmer, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Pat Cadigan, John W. Campbell, Jr, Terry Carr, Arthur C. Clarke, Hal Clement, D.G. Compton, Michael G. Coney, Edmund Cooper, Richard Cowper, John Crowley, L. Sprague de Camp, Samuel R. Delany, Philip K. Dick, Gordon R. Dickson, Christopher Evans, Philip Jose Farmer, John Russell Fearn, Alan Dean Foster, Mary Gentle, Mark S. Geston, Joseph L. Green, Colin Greenland, Nicola Griffith, Joe Haldeman, Harry Harrison, Frank Herbert, Philip E. High, Robert Holdstock, Cecelia Holland, Robert E. Howard, Raymond F. Jones, Leigh Kennedy, Garry Kilworth, Damon Knight, Henry Kuttner, Tanith Lee, Murray Leinster, H.P. Lovecraft, Katherine MacLean, Barry N. Malzberg, Phillip Mann, David I. Masson, C.L. Moore, Ward Moore, Edgar Pangborn, Frederik Pohl, Rachel Pollack, Tim Powers, Mack Reynolds, Keith Roberts, Eric Frank Russell, Josephine Saxton, Bob Shaw, Robert Silverberg, Clifford D. Simak, Dan Simmons, John Sladek, Cordwainer Smith, E.E. ‘Doc’ Smith, Norman Spinrad, Olaf Stapledon, Theodore Sturgeon, William Tenn, Sheri S. Tepper, James Tiptree, Jr, E.C. Tubb, George Turner, Harry Turtledove, Jack Vance, Ian Watson, Ted White, Kate Wilhelm, Connie Willis, Robert Charles Wilson, Gene Wolfe.

Doubtless more will be added in due course. For more information and regular updates, see the official website.

Romance in Baker Street?

OK, so I’m a bookseller these days, and every so often that means I have to plug stuff. Well today I have seen a lengthy review on Tor.com of A Study in Lavender. Brit Mandelo seemed to like the book, and I know a lot of you like Holmes and/or gay romance. Also I added the book to the store just last week. Why not give it a look and perhaps make my pals at Lethe Press happy?

Welcome, Book View Cafe

Slowly but surely, my little bookstore is growing. In the last few days I have started adding books from Book View Cafe, an authors’ collective that publishes some very fine SF&F writers. Thus far we have books available from Maya Kaathryn Bohnhoff, Katharine Eliska Kimbriel and Chris Dolley. There are a lot more to come. There will be some delay while I’m in Finland, but slowly and surely we will get there. In the meantime, happy shopping.

Out of the Mists

There’s an interesting discussion in the latest Coode Street Podcast in which Gary tosses out the idea that Mists of Avalon by Marion Zimmer Bradley is something of an ur text as regards feminist fantasy. I’ve been dredging my memory of books I read in the 1980s. Patricia McKillip and Elizabeth A. Lynn were both writing at the time, but I suspect that Gary is right in suggesting that Mists of Avalon had an enormous influence on the field. I also suspect that Dungeons & Dragons played its part, because the book was dropped into a market full of women role-players desperate for something to show how they might participate more fully in cod-medieval societies.

As with Gary and Jonathan, I have put no great thought into this. Feel free to tell us how wrong we are in comments.

China Starts the Week

On Monday China Miéville was one of the four guests on Radio 4’s Start The Week program, which is available as a podcast from the BBC (hopefully in all territories).

China is on at the end, but the whole thing is worth a listen. Indeed in many ways it is a SpecFic special as two of the other authors discussed, Dante and Shakespeare, where not shy of turning their backs on realism. Also China gets to comment in the other sections.

The discussion of EmbassyTown is fairly short but interesting. Host Andrew Marr clearly had difficulty with the SF and the usefulness of cognitive estrangement, but was smart enough to pick up on some Swift references which would anchor the book for his non-genre listeners. I was fascinated to see that A.N. Wilson absolutely loved the book. Now I want to get him and John Mullan together in a cage fight.

My main memory of the program, however, is going to be Andrew Marr mistakenly identifying Dante’s classic work as Paradise Lost. From now on, every time I make a stupid mistake in a podcast, I shall remember that.

Talking of EmbassyTown and podcasts, it is one of the books featured in the latest edition of The Writer and the Critic — one which was recorded live at Continuum 7 in Melbourne and guest-started Cat Valente. As often happens, Mondy and Kirsten get into a big fight about the book, and the messages it may or may not contain. In this case they are arguing mainly about the colonialism theme and whether or not the humans should have left the Akiekei alone in their apparent state of innocent bliss. Kirsten will doubtless be pleased to hear China, in the BBC program, talking about the Akiekei’s language being Edenic.

My own view is that China is far cleverer than most reviews have given him credit for. The colonialism theme is obvious, and like Kirsten and Mondy we can argue over the rights and wrongs of the human actions. However, in my own review for Salon Futura I argued that it is possible to read the Ariekei as being a metaphor for ourselves being colonized by the media and having to learn to understand the lies we are being told. When you do that, suddenly you are in the position of identifying with the Ariekei rather than with the humans, and your views as to whether you want to have your consciousness raised can change. That in turn feeds back into our thoughts about colonialism.

The Encyclopedia: It Lives!

Some wonderful news arrived in my email inbox while I was writing that last post. It was a press release from Gollancz committing them to publication of the third edition of the Science Fiction Encyclopedia. As you probably know, this will be an online edition, with the text being available free to all. (There may well be enhanced aspects of the encyclopedia that are available for a modest subscription, but the press release clearly says “text available free”.)

I’m sure that this will be a great relief to my good friends John Clute and Dave Langford, who have been laboring mightily over this for many years. Considerable credit is due to Graham Sleight who took on the business management end of the enterprise, and to John and Pamela Lifton-Zoline who provided invaluable support.

The job isn’t done yet. At the official launch later this year the “beta edition” will contain over 3 million words, but it won’t be complete. Further entries will be added through 2012. And then of course there will be the ongoing task of updating the entries. Sisyphus, I suspect, has it easy in comparison.

Anyway, congratulations to John, Dave, Graham and everyone else involved. I can’t wait to have the text my fingertips.

Um, fantasy edition next boys…

Two Award Nominees

One of the people I got to meet for the first time at Alt.Fiction last weekend was Helen Marshall who is an editor for ChiZine Publications. They are a Canadian small press, and Helen is Canadian, but chance has relocated her to England and hence to conventions.

I’m always pleased to make personal contact with people whose books I sell, but ChiZine is particularly notable right now because the company has two shiny new award nominees.

Firstly The Thief of Broken Toys, a novella by Tim Lebbon, is a finalist in the British Fantasy Awards.

In addition Chimerascope by Douglas Smith is a finalist in the Sunburst Awards (Canada’s answer to the Arthur C. Clarke Award).

I don’t have time to read every book I stock, so I’m always pleased to find that other people have decided the books I am selling are really good.