The hard-working Jeff VanderMeer has a new column on The Huffington Post. While the column is notionally about “political fiction” you can bet that large quantities of it will be about SF, simply because SF is a genre that lends itself particularly well to political discussion. Go ye and give it eyeballs, folks. This is another route into mainstream culture and Jeff needs our support.
Science Fiction
Science-Fictional News
Today’s RSS feeds and email have included quite a few items that reinforce the idea that we now live in a science-fictional world.
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Bujold GoH Speech
I missed Lois McMaster Bujold’s Guest of Honor speech at Worldcon, but it is available online here and, as Timmi Duchamp points out, it has some interesting things to say about genre and the structure of genre novels.
WolfeWiki
Oh yeah. And about time too. I shall have more to say about this when I’m free of Worldcon.
Finncon Shout-Outs
While I’m thinking about Finncon stuff, I want to make quick mention of some of the people I met there.
Firstly there are Johanna Koljonen and Nina von Rüdiger. These ladies are, collectively, Ms. Mandu, purveyors of fine Finnish feminist manga. I suspect that you’ll be hearing a lot more about them from me. In the meantime, here’s Nina’s web site.
Secondly there is Tanya Tynjälä who is a Peruvian science fiction writer living in Finland. I’m delighted to find someone who knows the Latin American SF scene very well, and I hope to meet a lot of new people with Tanya’s help. Her web site is in Spanish, French and Finnish.
Update: Language list corrected as per Jukka below.
Another One Goes Live
I’m feeling slightly more awake today, so I’ve been able to get yet another web project live. This one is for the SF in SF Readings series. Many thanks to the excellent Mike Dashow for the fabulous artwork, and of course to Jacob and Rina for asking me to do it in the first place.
(Sharp eyed people will notice that the site is currently on a re-direct to the SFSFC site, where the new site is being hosted. I’ll be moving the domain when I get back from Worldcon.)
Glyer on Hugo History
Mike Glyer has an excellent post on the origins of the Hugo trophy.
Asian SF – Help!
So today at the sauna I got asked to help with a panel, because the Finns know I am an expert on SF and can talk about anything. Tomorrow I have to fill a 1 hour panel talking about Asian science fiction. I know almost nothing. And so I’m asking you folks. I have emailed David Brin to ask about the Chengdu convention. Any other help would be much appreciated. Thank you.
China meets Brazil
My buddies in Brazil have been busy – there is an interview with China Miéville on Post Weird Thoughts.
SFWA Moves Forward
The newly elected management of SFWA has been impressively active since taking over. Check out this list of activities, for example. It sounds like Russell Davis and his team not only know what they are doing, but want to move the association forward. If they start making noises about doing something for associate members I might even consider re-joining.
Banks on His Career
It isn’t Rejection Friday any more, but Iain (M.) Banks is interviewed in The Guardian and talks about how his early days as a writer were filled with rejection.
Support Readings!
Ellen Datlow writes to let me know about the raffle being organized to support the KGB readings in New York. There’s some great stuff on offer (though I don’t actually need to be Tuckerized by Liz Hand – I’m sure that Ceryl Waxwing from Aestival Tide was based on me, even though we’d not met when Liz wrote it).
And that’s a good excuse for me to remind everyone in the Bay Area that there will be an SF in SF reading on Saturday night, featuring Jay Lake and Susan Palwick. Details here.
Time To Stop Editing
OK, so I promised you all a post on the gender balance question. I seem to have been writing it for ages (and pestering Kevin to read re-writes). I’m still not happy with it, but I’ve decided that I need to stop fiddling and get on and post it. If it means everyone is unhappy with me, well it won’t be the first time. You can find the post here.
Meanwhile back to writing about bathrooms, and maybe air travel, and the Rushdie review…
Liz on Tom
Elizabeth Hand has a lengthy obituary for Tom Disch on Salon. It being online-only, she’s had far more room to write, so it is well worth a look. It is also the first obituary I have seen that actually uses the word “gay” as opposed to pussyfooting around the issue by saying that Disch “lived with” Charles Naylor or some other such polite euphemism. (Clute used “partner”, which made the point without setting off copy editor alarms.)
How to Write Obituaries
There are many obituaries for Tom Disch now appearing around the world, several of them in mainstream newspapers. The one that I have been waiting for is in The Independent. As an encyclopedist, John Clute is often called upon to write obituaries, but seldom are they quite as personal as this one. The various dramas that affected Tom’s life, and which eventually led him to end it, were partly known to me because, on my various visits to their house, John and Judith would occasionally talk about how worried they were about Tom. They had, of course, known him for many years, and John’s obituary elegantly illuminates both Tom’s life and his reasons for leaving us. It also gives a rare insight into a man who is known as a friend, not just as a writer:
During these years, he grew into himself physically, both in mass, as he became heavy, but also in gravitas, as his presence became formidable. Tall and bald, he would bear down, colossus-like, upon his visitor, and though his voice was flute-high, he spoke in passages of such pith and wry sapience that a seminar seemed in the offing. But almost always this would change into hilarity. To him everything that humans did about things that mattered – from God to sex, from the Pope to the sestina – was ultimately silly. The heart of Tom Disch in person, gossiping profoundly about the world and its makings, was glee.
It can’t be easy – writing an obituary for a friend. I guess I’ll have to do one sometime soon. I hope I can at least manage half as good a job as Clute has done for Tom.
Swings, Roundabouts
Every time you start feeling good about your fellow humans – for example the Pride people coming up with an apology for Roz – you get reminded that there are also people with whom you’d rather not associate. I won’t say any more, because Tobias Buckell lays into the miscreant far more effectively than I could.
Tom Disch
Some very sad news via Ellen Datlow. I never met Tom myself, but I’ve been told so much about him by Clute that I feel I know him. Damn.
Entering Wonderlands
Not through a rabbit hole, though it feels a bit like that right now. Wonderlands is a new Ning-based social networking site for the fantasy fiction community. I found out about it from Mark Newton, and it appears to be UK-based as it only has 19 members and I can see John Jarrold, Debbie Miller, Neil Williamson and Darren Turpin amongst the usual suspects. So I have gone and signed up and now I’m waiting to be approved. I’ll let you know if that happens.
In the meantime I’m none too impressed with the software. Maybe it is just a theme that someone did for it, but the sign-up screens are pretty much impossible to read. Also when I clicked on “My Page” I got a message box that managed to tell me that my account was both pending and approved.
Anyway, I am now apparently approved, so I’m off to chat to people there. Feel free to come and join us.
Update: Now 50 members, and a whole lot of US people joined as well. Word is getting around.
Update 2: Debbie Miller appears to be the person who started this. Who knows what it might turn into, but thus far I have discovered a new fantasy convention due to take place in Chester next June. It is called Aetherica, and the GoHs will be Peter Beagle and Joe Abercrombie. Aside from John Wilson, the committee are people I don’t know, and that is good news because it means new con-running blood. Sadly I have to be in San Francisco for this, but I hope the con goes well and that they manage to make it a regular event.
Gender (Im)balance Dissected
The good folks at SF Signal have done one of those Mind Meld things on the question of gender imbalance in SF. I was asked to contribute to this, but I turned them down: not because I have anything against SF Signal – the Mind Meld thing is very popular and works quite well, so I was honored to be asked – but because I think that the whole debate has got very narrow and very silly. I may try to write something more general and (hopefully) more useful sometime soon.
Meanwhile David Moles has entered the affray, including the following:
I’d love to edit a fiction magazine that was run like a proper academic journal, by which I mean one based on anonymous independent peer review by experts in the field, which is in this case to say by published authors with expertise in the genre or subgenre of the story under submission.
I’m sure this would be totally dysfunctional, but it would be totally dysfunctional in a different way than our current totally dysfunctional short fiction publishing system.
And that is so true. If there is anything that a career in regulatory economics teaches you it is that no matter how many whiz ways people come up with to “fix” things that are “wrong”, the primary effect of all this huffing and puffing it to create something that is totally dysfunctional in a different way.
LRB on PKD
Via Andrew McKie I discover that the London Review of Books has a long article about Philip K Dick, inspired by the Library of America editions of his work.