February Conventions

After a couple of quiet months it is time to start convention travel again. This coming weekend I be doing production on Salon Futura #6, which should provide a nice Valentine’s present for you all on Monday. Jonathan Clements has a very appropriate article. The rest of us are rather less romantic.

The following weekend (19th) I shall be in London for Picocon. Juliet McKenna is one of their Guests of Honour, so someone from BristolCon has to be there to show support. It will be great to catch up with Juliet and their other GoHs, Kari Sperring and Paul McAuley. I’ll be in London on the Friday night, but I have to be on a train home on Saturday evening.

And the weekend after that I shall be in Cardiff on the Saturday for their inaugural comic expo. Paul Cornell will be there, as will some of the BristolCon artists. I’m looking forward to meeting Steve Upham as he has provided the cover for Salon Futura #6. I’m dragging John Meaney along to see what all this comic stuff is all about. And my pal Barry Nugent of Geek Syndicate will be launching his first graphic novel, which should be cause for celebration.

I will, of course, have copies of Dark Spires available at both these events, should you wish to avail yourself of the special convention discount rate.

Academic Conference in Liverpool

Today I got email from the University of Liverpool advertising a one-day academic conference called Current Research in Science Fiction (CRSF for short). While the event is aimed primarily at postgraduates, they are also hoping to attract independent scholars and industry professionals. The keynote speeches will be by Adam Roberts and Andy Sawyer. The call for papers is available here (PDF).

That’s the good news. The bad news is that it will be taking place on Saturday, June 18th, which means it clashes with the Eurocon in Stockholm. This is a real shame, because I won’t be able to go, and a bunch of my Finnish academic friends are also committed to Stockholm. Rats!

London: One-Day SF Comics Conference

Via Bryan Talbot, who is a guest speaker, I have discovered that there is a one-day academic conference on “Surrealism, science fiction and comics” at Somerset House on Saturday January 22nd. It is organized by the Courtauld Institute of Art Research Forum. Admission is £15 and advance booking appears to be required. Details here. Anyone going?

Living in the Future

I’ve had a weekend of being busy with Wizard’s Tower and Clarkesworld matters, but I do have a post for you. I wrote this a few weeks ago and then forgot about it. It is a report on the one-day conference at the Architectural Association that I went to last month.

What does science fiction have to do with architecture? Not a lot, you might think, but the Architectural Association begs to disagree, because its London School of Architecture run a series of seminars with the pulp-inspired title of Thrilling Wonder Stories that bring together speculative fiction writers, comics creators, video game producers and futurologists. The objective appears to be to encourage those who will build the cities of tomorrow to think about what those cities might look like. One such day of seminars too place in later November.

The role of buildings in framing the stories of our everyday lives was amply demonstrated by Will Self, promoting his book, Walking to Hollywood. Self said that if he were a dictator he would force all architects and urban planners to walk through cities as part of their training. Not that this would necessarily help, because sometimes buildings are designed to be hostile. Self reserved particular ire for airports, which he described as “a kind of abattoir of the psyche,” but he acknowledged that they were deliberately made that way to discourage travelers from getting excited about dashing around the globe at vast speeds. Airlines much prefer us to be bored and docile when we fly.

Buildings can be instruments of political oppression too. Jeff VanderMeer described how, in his novel Finch, the invading Grey Caps revise and repurpose the architecture of the city of Ambergris in order to make their mark on the landscape, and send a message to the human population that the city no longer belongs to them. Admittedly we are talking about mushroom people here, but VanderMeer pointed out that he uses fantastic settings in his fiction to encourage his readers to think more deeply about the issues he is discussing. A reader brings far less emotional baggage, and far fewer preconceived ideas, to a story about Ambergris to one about an invasion of a real world city.

Video game designers have very particular requirements for their cities. It was interesting, therefore, to discover that the ideal setting for a game in which nothing happens except that people run around with big guns killing each other is a Libertarian utopia of the type proposed by the seasteading movement.

Most architecture students, however, will have more practical problems in mind. They will not get to design killing grounds. Nor should they need to be told that mysterious ruins can impart a sense of wonder to fiction. Bryon and Shelley were playing with those ideas centuries ago. Did the guests lecturers have anything more appropriate?

Geoff Manaugh brought up the very real but somewhat exotic issue of nuclear waste depositories such as the proposed Yucca Mountain facility in America, or the actual facility at Onkalo in Finland. Given that the waste will continue to be dangerous for millennia to come, deterring curious explorers from future generations is a real design issue. Manaugh talked largely of booby traps. My suggestion of stationing a balrog and hordes of bloodthirsty orcs at the bottom of the shaft to deter trespassers did not get much traction.

Rachel Armstrong talked enthusiastically of seeding the lagoons of Venice with artificial lifeforms that would build a coral reef under the city, shoring up its foundations. Had Prince Charles been there he would doubtless have muttered darkly about “gray goo” and the end of life as we know it. But HRH has always had a fondness for the gloom-filled imaginings of Michael Crichton. I much prefer Kathleen Ann Goonan’s take on nanotechnology. Her Flower Cities are bursting with creativity, and sometimes keep the humans around as pets.

The speakers whose ideas would have the most immediate impact on our lives were Anthony Dunne and Fiona Raby. They describe themselves as “design provocateurs,” so perhaps their suggestions were not intended entirely seriously, but they certainly provoked comment.

Raby talked about the future of agriculture, noting that by 2050 the population of the planet will reach 9 billion. Her solution to this was a return to foraging, with people equipped with external digestion systems that would enable them to feed of a much wider range of plants than is currently possible. No self-respecting science fiction author would come up with such a solution, unless it followed a massive reduction in population. The whole point of farming is that it allows you to support a much larger population on a smaller amount of land.

Besides, thanks to Harry Harrison, science fiction readers know that in the future we will all be living on stuff called “Soylent Green”. Had Dunne known that, he would not have suggested a future in which “euthanasia parties” would be followed by burning the corpse and making a granny-powered battery that the family could take away and use. Dead bodies are too useful to burn.

Dunne also had some very strange ideas about the future of the security industry. Police forces are apparently already working on brain scanners. Dunne suggested that each neighborhood would have a local scanner operator. He’d have a friendly name like “Dave” or “Nick”, and instead of a crisp black, jack-booted outfit he’d wear an ill-fitting, second hand uniform as a result of public spending cuts. The theory was that this would make us more comfortable about having our little grey cells examined.

Another way in which our governments busily snoop upon us is Echelon, the global surveillance network. Dunne suggested that we might be more relaxed about having our emails read and phone calls listened to if the chaps doing it lived locally and were easily recognizable because they wore red hats with antennae on them. I suspect they’d have a jolly motto too — something about “three main weapons: a global surveillance network, powerful supercomputers, and pretty red hats.” Goodness only knows what Orwell would have made of this.

This, I think, is where science fiction writers are needed. Left to themselves, engineers of all types tend to obsess over functionality at the expense of thinking about how their creations will be used. One of the objectives of science fiction is to consider the effects of new technology on people. While there are those who still think that science fiction should only be about ideas, it is in the interaction of those ideas with the book’s characters where the real power of fiction is unleashed. There are many science fiction writers who do that very well.

Traveling European Fans Wanted

Via Steve Green on Facebook I understand that TAFF, the Transatlantic Fan Fund, is in a bit of a crisis this year. The deadline for nominations for the 2011 race, which will take a fan from Europe to the Worldcon in Reno, is this Saturday. To date only one candidate has come forward (John Coxon), and the rules of TAFF state that if the race is uncontested then it must be canceled.

So here is a big opportunity for a European fan. If you would like an expenses-paid trip to Reno, why not give TAFF a try. Of course there are obligations (see the official website for details), but nothing a reasonably organized person can’t cope with. You will need three nominators from Europe (one of whom could be me if I know you), and two from North America (whom I can help you find), so if you have two local friends you are all set. How about it?

2011 Convention Schedule

With SMOFcon over, that’s the 2010 convention season wrapped up. It is time to look forward to 2011. This year’s con-going was thoroughly messed up by the US immigration issues and the hotel problems in Epinal. Hopefully I’ll have more luck next year. Here’s the preliminary schedule:

Other events may be added if they sound sufficiently interesting and I can afford to go.

And yes, there is a big, August-shaped hole in that schedule.

SMOFcon in Europe

This year’s SMOFcon took place in San José at the weekend. There was, unusually, a vote for the location of the 2011 event. This was won by a bid for Amsterdam. The convention will take place on the weekend December 2-4. Their website is here.

For the benefit of those of you not familiar with SMOFcon, it is a convention about running science fiction conventions. If you are involved in con-running in any way, this will be a good opportunity to meet up with a bunch of like-minded folks from North America and swap ideas. The event will probably also end up being a planning meeting for the proposed London Worldcon. Indeed, as there is a Tun meeting due on Dec 1st, I suspect there may be goings on in London, including a site visit, prior to the con getting started.

Current prices are good only until February 28th, 2011, so if you are thinking of going you should sign up soon.

The Science Fiction of Architecture

The other event I attended on Friday was Thrilling Wonder Stories 2, a series of lectures on SFnal themes put on by the Architectural Association’s School of Architecture. I’ll be writing something a little more serious on this in the near future, but for now I recommend the write-up by Paul Charles Smith, who was there for part of the day.

It was lovely to get to meet Paul, and to catch up with Ann and Jeff VanderMeer, Farah and the Clutes. The day was also very interesting, though I have to say that as a convention it was pretty disorganized. I don’t suppose they have to worry, as they have a guaranteed audience of students who are probably more used to sitting all day in overcrowded conditions on hard plastic chairs than us old folks are.

Will Self, by the way, was very funny, and also provided an object lesson in how to discourage members of the audience from asking questions. One of these days I shall try being that snarky to a questioner who asks something daft (though I doubt I’ll get away with it). And I now want to see a snark contest between Self and John Scalzi, because it could be awesome.

And if you are interested, Self’s book, Walking to Hollywood, was reviewed yesterday by the excellent Peter Murphy.

Finns Get Culture

On Friday morning I attended a press conference at the home of the Finnish Ambassador (a very splendid house in Kensington Palace Gardens). The purpose for the event was to launch the tenure of Turku as one of the two European Cities of Culture for 2011 (the other is Tallinn in Estonia).

The Cities of Culture programme is a splendid EU initiative that, each year, puts money into encouraging two cities to promote cultural events. Glasgow and Liverpool have both been beneficiaries. The Finns, as I have come to expect, take this very seriously. And I was there because I have cause to be in Turku in July and wanted to see what would be on offer. Others amongst you may also be heading there (I’m looking at you, Nalo).

Sadly we’ll miss the opening ceremonies, an extravaganza of acrobatics and pyrotechnics to be staged by a Manchester company that was also responsible for Liverpool’s opening event. Turku still has a thriving ship building industry, and the shipyards are an ideal venue for such a production.

What we should be able to see is Cirque Dracula, a new circus production from the Finnish company, Art Teatro, headed by Cirque du Soleil veteran, Pauliina Räsänen.

Sadly I think we will miss the Accordion Wrestling, but I did promise people on Twitter that I would explain what it was. It is essentially an accordion concert with “dancers” who get a little more physical than you would normally expect. It was invented by a Finnish musician, Kimmo Pohjonen, and you can learn more from his website.

Running throughout the summer will be a major art exhibition featuring the work of Tom of Finland. Touko Laaksonen, to give him his real name, was born near Turku and created a style for gay erotic art that pretty much established what most people probably now think of as the Freddie Mercury Look. Most of Tom’s work is now housed at a foundation based in Los Angeles, but a large amount of it is being brought over for the exhibition.

Of particular interest to me (because I’m still an oceanographer at heart) is the Contemporary Art Archipelago project, based in and around the beautiful islands off the Finnish coast near Turku. According to the folks at the press conference they are making a film speculating on the future of the islands. It will be called Archipelago Science Fiction, and as they are filming in the spring it may be available to be shown by July.

Finncon 2011 will take place in Turku over the weekend July 16/17 (with the usual academic conference preceding it). Confirmed as Guests of Honor are Nalo Hopkinson and Richard Morgan.

The Royal Family Hates Me

I don’t suppose it was deliberate, but damn! Couldn’t they have picked a different date?

I haven’t seen Kevin since our trip to Australia for Worldcon. I won’t be seeing him over the holidays. The plan was that he’d come over to the UK for Eastercon, and we’d spend a bit of time together then. So what happens? Some damn fool decides to have a Royal Wedding that week.

In consequence I expect air fares around that date will go through the roof, hotels will be booked solid, and the country will close down for the week. Not to mention that there will be a massive outpouring of jingoistic nonsense and a flood of crappy souvenirs. Sigh.

Maybe we’ll just arrange to meet up in some other country, except we do want to go to Eastercon, what with Vincent Docherty and Roz Kaveney being Guests of Honour, and the convention having laid on an Admiralty Ball especially for Captain Standlee and his favorite space pirate.

BristolCon Briefly

It was, by all accounts, a great success. Rough figures suggest we had around 160 members, which is almost 3 times what we got last year. Everything ran to time and the tech worked. Paul Cornell and Joe Abercrombie were great, as were the many other authors who attended. I don’t know how happy the dealers and artists were with sales, but we did sell a bunch of copies of Dark Spires. I lived through the Writing Fight Scenes panel, mainly thanks to Joe who gallantly took on most of the crash test dummy duties himself.

I’d write more, but I have way too much other stuff to do. We are collecting links to con reports and I’ll put them on the BristolCon website in due course.

Now we need to get on and plan next year.

New Events in Cardiff & Leeds

The UK convention calendar is filling up nicely. Here are a couple of newcomers for early next year.

The Cardiff International Comics Expo (Feb. 26) is run by Mike Allwood’s Fantasy Events UK, the same people who run the Bristol event. Being in Cardiff, it will naturally have a Doctor Who focus. I’ll see Mike at BristolCon on Saturday and will find out more about it then, but I expect to be there.

ConJour (Mar. 12) is a new science fiction & fantasy convention in Leeds. Guests will include Mike Carey, Kate Griffin, Mark Charan Newton, Freda Warrington, Justina Robson & Adrian Tchaikovsky. Looking at the web site, it appears to be being run as a for-profit event along the lines of a comic convention rather than a traditional fan convention, which worries me a little because people who start out trying to make a profit from conventions are often disappointed and give up, but hopefully it will be OK.

World Fantasy Wrap

No, I wasn’t there, but I had a certain interest in goings on.

As it turns out, I did not win a Howie. The Special Award: UnNon-Professional category was won by Strange Horizons. This is entirely appropriate. They have been doing awesome stuff online for 10 years; Clarkesworld has only just started its 5th year. Had I been a judge, I would have given the award to them too.

I was pretty pleased with the other winners as well, though I was always going to be a bit sad over Best Novel. Fond as I am of The City and The City, I also love Finch and The Red Tree. It would have been particularly awesome for Caitlín to win.

Also, thanks to Jonathan Oliver of Solaris, I have solved a mystery. There has been some confusion over my apparently being listed as attending the convention. It wasn’t me, it was someone else with the same name.

So, for avoidance of confusion, I hereby note that I am not engaged to be married to James Maxey, though I’m sure he’s a lovely and talented guy. As to the other Cheryl, I apologize profusely if some people were unspeakably rude to you at the convention under the impression that you were me. I’m not normally a big fan of the changing your name when you get married thing, but in your case it may well be wisest thing to do.

I also note that I am not, nor ever have been, married to a professional soccer player.

World Fantasy Reporting

It is World Fantasy this coming weekend. Many of my friends are already on their way there. Assuming the weather doesn’t cause havoc (there were tornadoes in Ohio yesterday and some people’s flights have already been delayed) it will be a busy event. Obviously I can’t go, because it is in the USA. I won’t be doing much reporting either. Various things that happened at last year’s event, and in the past week, have led to me deciding that it would be politic for me to just ignore WFC.

That does mean no live reporting of the awards. But don’t worry, I’m sure someone will be tweeting the results. I’ll certainly be keeping a close eye on Twitter in case Neil and Sean get to collect a Howie. I understand that Mike Willmoth will be posting commentary. I’m sure John Scalzi will as well. There should be no lack of reportage.

Fannish Goodwill

I’m still peripherally involved in running SFSFC conventions, even though I can’t attend any of them. The next one we have coming up is SMOFcon 28, which will take place in San José in December. SMOFcon is a convention about con running which, amongst other things, helps to spread knowledge of best practices throughout the fan community.

When SMOFcon is in other parts of the world we normally give out scholarships to local Bay Area fans who might otherwise be unable to afford to attend. I’m pleased to see that this year CanSMOF, the parent organization of the 2009 (Montréal) Worldcon, is giving out a couple of scholarships. One of those is for a Canadian fan (congratulations Kent Pollard), but CanSMOF decided to open up the second scholarship to fans from anywhere in the world, and I’m delighted to see that it has been awarded to Norm Cates of the New Zealand in 2020 Worldcon bid. That’s an excellent use of the idea.

I, Punchbag

I have just put the program schedule for BristolCon up on the website. I think MEG and Roz have done a really creative job with it. We are small con (currently edging up to 100 members) and we wanted to stick with a single track of programming, but at the same time we have a huge number of great writers attending. So we have gone for a series of rapid-fire readings between each program item, and also a mass signing (after the style of World Fantasy). The latter has been cunningly scheduled at lunch time because it is something that most people don’t have to be at for the whole hour.

I have two program items. The first is interviewing Joe Abercrombie, which will be a pleasure. The other is a panel on writing fight scenes.

As you know, I don’t write fiction — at least I don’t write good fiction — so what am I doing on that panel? Well, I foolishly told our programming team that I’d be happy to do any panel they wanted. That particular panel has John Meaney and Juliet McKenna talking about their martial arts skills, and Joe talking about whacking people with swords. Colin Harvey has nobly volunteered to keep them all from whacking each other. And me…

So we have martial artists/authors John Meaney and Juliet McKenna on hand to guide you through the mechanics of writing fight scenes, and maybe, if you’re lucky, demonstrate some moves on our other unsuspecting panellists…

So, if you want to see John and Juliet using me as a punchbag, memberships are available here.

Pressure Tells

It looks as if the long-running “Moongate” saga is coming to an end at last. From today’s World SF News I learned that Wiscon has decided to rescind their invitation to Elizabeth Moon to be one of their Guests of Honor for next year on account of the bizarre Islamophobic blog post she made earlier this year.

From a con-running point of view, this is a highly contentious issue. I don’t think anyone who has been involved in running a convention, or being a Guest of Honor, will be entirely comfortable about this. From one point of view it seems very much like a witchhunt was launched against Moon, and that the convention caved in to pressure. Exactly the same tactics could be used to force another convention to rescind an invitation to a guest because she is lesbian, or a feminist. Indeed, I’m sure someone out there in fandom is just itching to launch such a campaign.

But no decision takes place in a vacuum, and this one has taken a long time to happen. I’m sure that much discussion took place, both in public and in private. At least some people claim to have talked to Moon. Possibly they hoped she would issue some sort of retraction. Obviously she hasn’t done so, or we would have heard about it.

The public reaction has included discussion of the most suitable response, should Moon stay as a GoH. This has, to some extent, had the beneficial effect of putting the issue in the limelight. All sorts of people have written excellent posts challenging what Moon wrote. But at the same time Muslim and PoC fans were unhappy that they were being, as they saw it, required to defend their right to be at Wiscon. And many people simply didn’t want the atmosphere of the convention ruined by demonstrations. I suspect that quite a few people simply decided not to go this year. Membership take-up comparisons with previous years would be interesting.

It is worth noting that the decision to rescind Moon’s GoHship appears to have been taken by Wiscon’s parent organization, not by the convention committee itself. This is exactly the sort of thing that parent organizations are for. A convention committee is almost certainly personally invested in the decisions it has taken. They may see the attacks on Moon as personal attacks against themselves. The parent organization is not so closely involved. Also it is less interested in the current year’s event, and more in the long term health of the convention. You have to assume that they felt the affair was doing Wiscon a lot of damage.

My own feelings on this have been very conflicted. As a Director of an organization that runs conventions I find the whole thing very scary, and I quite understand that many authors feel that a bad precedent has been set.

I’m also generally opposed to the whole “with us or against us” attitude that seems to have driven much of the debate. Moon’s comments might have been abominable, but I’m sure that there are very many Americans, and indeed British people, who think pretty much the same things. They have all been listening to the nonsense pumped out by the popular media over issues like the so-called “Ground Zero Mosque”, and now apparently a new panic about Islamic superheroes. Had this turned into an opportunity to get Moon to change her mind, it would have been a good thing. That hasn’t happened, and possibly the ferocity of the original response played a part in that.

Mostly, however, I don’t go in for confrontation on issues like this because I don’t expect to win. I’m so used to being patted on the head and told that the concerns of trans people are not a political priority, and that complaining will only make us more unpopular, that I have internalized that idea. I tend to opt for consciousness raising rather than confrontation. Why jump up and down and yell and get people hating you if you are only going to lose?

Look, for example, at what happened last year when Stonewall chose the rabidly transphobic Julie Bindel as their Journalist of the Year. My friends in London demonstrated outside the award ceremony, but the British LG community closed ranks and thumbed their noses. So much so that they have nominated another transphobic journalist this year: Bill Leckie, who has even drawn criticism from Stonewall Scotland for one of his offensive articles.

Given the way that feminism goes, I’m sure that Wiscon has had transphobic GoHs in the past. I suspect it will in future. One of the reasons I stopped going to Wiscon was that it became clear to me that I was the wrong sort of trans person for them. If I wanted to be more open about myself, Wiscon would not be a safe space for me. So I stopped going, rather than complain.

But you know, strange things happen. Because also in my morning blog feeds today was this article from Pink News. What do you know, Stonewall has caved too! Maybe yelling does work after all.

So where are we? Have we found ourselves in a world of mob rule where anyone with a following on the Internet can hound innocent writers and convention committees into doing their bidding? Or have we found ourselves in a world in which the ignorant expression of hatred for people you have defined as different, and therefore inferior and immoral, has become socially unacceptable?

Dublin In 2014

No, they are not bidding against London for a Worldcon. This is a much better idea.

James Shields was this year’s GUFF delegate. As such he got to visit the New Zealand Natcon as well as Aussiecon 4. Inspired by how well that worked, James came up with the idea of having a convention in Dublin a week after the (presumed) London Worldcon. After all, lots of Americans will be coming over for Worldcon, and we all know how Americans love to visit Ireland. James is bidding to be a Eurocon as well. Pre-supports are only €5. Kevin and I have already joined. More details here.

Octocon Wrap

Well, that was Octocon. Nice little convention.

On the plus side, they have a good hotel in a great city, and this year had a totally awesome guest. They also have a lot of enthusiasm. If I were more interested in film I’d be talking a lot about the Golden Blasters (winners here).

On the negative side, things were a bit chaotic. Of course that was in part because they didn’t know whether any of the Game of Thrones cast would turn up (kudos to Kristian Nairn for having the courage to do so), and with a con that small it doesn’t matter much if the program changes.

Personally I had a fun weekend meeting up with my Irish friends, with George & Parris, with Lorraine (who I had never met before) and a bunch of other interesting overseas visitors (hello Martina, Natalie, Monza, Katie). I didn’t get the interview with George, because by the time he was free of obligations he looked as exhausted as I felt. Neither of us would have been very good. I’m not sure that I’ll be back, mainly because these days I can’t afford the time or money to do conventions. Things will look up again when I have a bunch of books to promote and have a prospect of selling stuff at conventions.

Because I didn’t interview George I want to return to what he said about writing in his GoH speech, but that will need to be a separate post, and will need me to be more awake to write it.