Title Contest: Military Fantasy Anthology

Back in June, I sold an untitled anthology to Baen on the subject of “military fantasy.” And what is that, you might ask? Military SF, of course, is a long-time staple of science fiction, but fantasy fiction often has just as many battles and military engagements and yet we rarely hear the term “military fantasy.” So I proposed an anthology that would focus on those fantastical battles and the soldiers that fight them.

In any case, the contracts were signed, the contributors started writing their stories, and all was well. The problem was: I couldn’t think of a title for the damn thing. I found that particularly troubling as I pride myself on being able to come up with good titles, and, indeed, I frequently suggest alternate titles to authors who sell me stories. Thus this failing on my part to come up with an adequate title for this book has plagued me lo these many months. Well, I guess that’s not quite true. I’ve come up with plenty of adequate titles. I just haven’t come up with anything that feels perfect.

Which brings us to this blog post. I need your help, dear readers: What the heck should I call this thing? Rather than just ask and solicit suggestions, I thought I’d make a contest out of it, so the person who makes the best suggestion would win a cool prize.

Before we get to the nitty-gritty, here’s a bit more info about the book. There are still a couple of stories forthcoming, but I’ve already accepted stories from the following authors: Myke Cole, Glen Cook, Simon R. Green, Tanya Huff, Yoon Ha Lee, Ari Marmell, T.C. McCarthy, Seanan McGuire, Elizabeth Moon, Linda Nagata, Weston Ochse, Carrie Vaughn, and Django Wexler. Otherwise, all you really need to know is that its focus is military fantasy. Think The Battle of Helm’s Deep from Lord of the Rings; The battles in Naomi Novik’s His Majesty’s Dragon; The Battle of the Blackwater from GRRM’s A Song of Ice and Fire. And naturally several of the anthology’s contributors have written military fantasy novels and other stories as well.


So let’s do this, people! Help me title this anthology.

Prizes for the Winner: (1) A copy of the anthology (hardcopy, when it comes out); (2) A one-year ebook subscription to Lightspeed Magazine; (3) An ebook of my anthology Seeds of Change; (4) Acknowledgement of your contribution in the book itself.

Disclaimer: If I don’t get any entries that I think are good enough to use as the title, I reserve the right to not title the book with the winning entry. However, I will definitely choose a winner, and whoever has the best entry will receive the prizes even if I end up not using their title on the book.

Rules: Just fill out the form below with your title suggestions, your name, and your email address. That’s it! I’ll decide which title I like best and I will declare that title the winner.

What I’m Looking For: The ideal title would be short and to the point, and say both “military” and “fantasy” equally. I’ve been thinking something that takes a well known military phrase or title and gives it a fantasy twist could work.

Best (?) Things We’ve Come Up With So Far: Blood & Magic; Tactical Magic; Military Magic. (FWIW, it’s totally fine for it to not have “magic” in the title!)

Deadline for Submissions: Jan. 31, 2014

Note: Contest Closed! Thanks everyone for submitting your suggestions!

Read More

The Geekiest Thing I’ve Ever Done

This is a post about what is quite possibly the geekiest thing I’ve ever done. And being I’m a professional geek, that’s really saying something.

It IS in fact about football, but trust me, it’s super geeky. I mean, I’ve always thought that there’s plenty geeky about football fans anyway–the obsessive tracking of stats, the unthinking devotion to your favorite franchise, even when it sucks, etc. Which, of course, leads us to Fantasy Football, which I’ve always said is actually way geekier than anything I do on a day-to-day basis. But I digress; this is NOT about Fantasy Football. Or rather, it’s not about the traditional definition of Fantasy Football.

So anyway, I’m a geek, but I grew up loving sports as well, especially NFL football, and one of my early video game obsessions was the Madden NFL football game series. One of my favorite things about Madden has long been the ability to build and create your own team from scratch—to basically build an expansion team. Not only build your own team, but then also develop the players too. In that respect it shares a lot in common with a roleplaying game; you don’t get XP per se, but your skills advance based on how well you do, etc.

So when I started playing it again recently, I created my own team. When you do that, you can just replace an existing team in the NFL with your team and take on their roster, or you can have it randomly create a team for you. I chose the “Cupcake” option, which basically gives you a team of all fictional players, who are all kind of shitty, but usually with a handful that have good development potential. (Essentially an expansion team type of roster.) So I did that, and since I had just been playing Fallout: New Vegas, and because I found a cool atomic-looking stock image amongst those you can choose for your team’s logo, I named my team the New Vegas Fallout.

photo 3 (1)

And that was cool. I spent an inordinate amount of time trying to get my team colors just right, and I named the fan section of my home stadium (which the Raiders call “The Black Hole”) “The Wasteland.” And that amused me. I was sad that I couldn’t have a fallout symbol as my team logo, but I figured the atom-with-footballs was good enough.

As it happens, one of the randomly-generated players on my team was named Coulson, naturally I thought of him as Agent Coulson from the Marvel movies and Agents of Shield, and every time he made a play it made me happy. There was another player who almost had a geeky name, and that only enhanced the fun. And all of this seemed to make it more palatable for my long-suffering housemates who had been subjected to my playing of football video games.

I decided to go all in, and made myself a real fantasy football team–by which, of course, I mean a football team of fantasy characters. The game lets you edit player names, so I painstakingly went in and renamed each and every player on my team. (I say painstakingly because I was doing it on a PS3 without any kind of keyboard peripheral, so you can imagine how tedious that was.)

photo 5

Some of the player names I tried to pair them up with a position that seemed to make sense.

  • Jean-Luc Picard (QB) – Obviously! And of course he’s a team captain.
  • Peter Spiderman (WR) – Duh! His hands are supersticky!
  • The Flash (WR) – Duh! He’s fast!
  • Frodo Baggins (HB) – It just seemed like “ringbearer” and running back kind of felt like they went hand in hand to me, plus…
  • Samwise Gamgee (FB) – …that let me pair Sam and Frodo up as companions working toward the same goal. (Also I liked to imagine the opponent’s end zone as Mordor, so any time the running back runs in untouched, I would think “It seems one simply CAN walk into Mordor.”)
  • I’m Batman (DT) – I’m not sure what position it makes the most sense for Batman to play, but I figured defense makes sense if you imagine them as the protectors and the offense as the villains who are attacking. And of course I could have named him THE Batman, but I liked “I’m,” because then I could imagine him, every time he sacks the QB or hits the RB for a loss, standing over them and growl-whispering in their helmets “I’m Batman.”
  • The Nazgul (DE) – I like to think this was one of my more inspired renames. Good Defensive Ends are known for their ability to relentlessly pursue their opponents, and I felt like that kind of sums up the Nazgul perfectly.
  • Rubius Hagrid (C) – He’s a giant and thus would make an excellent offensive lineman, I figure. Same goes for Hodor Hodor and Jabba the Hutt and The Kingpin.

(Out of necessity, I ended up with a lot of people on my team whose first name is “The.” A bunch of them are also just named “Mr.” as their first name. Because it’s important that their main geeky name is their LAST name so I see it when I’m playing, since players are IDed by their last name only.)

Others, they don’t make as much sense.

  • Logan Wolverine (WR) – Um, because he CUTS THROUGH THE DEFENSE?
  • Wesley Crusher (DT) – Um, because he CRUSHES THE QB?

Er…yeah. I mean, obviously there were only so many positions where there was some kind of logic behind the renaming. And geek that I am, I dutifully renamed the whole team (even the third string players who I was never likely to actually see on the field). You can see a photoset over on Flickr that shows the whole team. Lots of Game of Thrones, Star Trek, and comic book references to be had. Also lots of Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter references, though those were mostly to amuse my stepdaughter, who is crazy for Harry Potter, and my sister-in-law, who is nearly as big a nerd for LOTR as Stephen Colbert. You can also view a Google Docs spreadsheet with all the player names.

Everyone on the team was a fictional player, so I didn’t feel too bad about renaming them. Or rather everyone was fictional except for Chris Kluwe (P). Him, I cheated a bit to get him on my team, and so of course didn’t rename him. Why? BECAUSE HE’S CHRIS KLUWE THAT’S WHY.

photo 1 (1)

So anyway, yeah. That’s the geekiest thing I’ve ever done. What’s YOUR geek secret?

Read More

Cover & TOC Reveal: ROBOT UPRISINGS

Here’s the cover, cover copy, and table of contents for ROBOT UPRISINGS, an anthology I co-edited with Daniel H. Wilson. It’s forthcoming in April 2014, from Vintage Books, but you can pre-order it now.

Robot Uprisings

COVER COPY:

Humans beware. As the robotic revolution continues to creep into our lives, it brings with it an impending sense of doom. What horrifying scenarios might unfold if our technology were to go awry? From self-aware robotic toys to intelligent machines violently malfunctioning, this anthology brings to life the half-formed questions and fears we all have about the increasing presence of robots in our lives. With contributions from a mix of bestselling, award-winning, and up-and-coming writers, and including a rare story by “the father of artificial intelligence,” Dr. John McCarthy, Robot Uprisings meticulously describes the exhilarating and terrifying near-future in which humans can only survive by being cleverer than the rebellious machines they have created.

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

  • Foreword—Daniel H. Wilson
  • Complex God—Scott Sigler
  • Cycles—Charles Yu
  • Lullaby—Anna North
  • Eighty Miles an Hour All the Way to Paradise—Genevieve Valentine
  • Executable—Hugh Howey (reprint)
  • The Omnibot Incident—Ernest Cline
  • Epoch—Cory Doctorow (reprint)
  • Human Intelligence—Jeff Abbott
  • The Golden Hour—Julianna Baggott
  • Sleepover—Alastair Reynolds (reprint)
  • Seasoning—Alan Dean Foster
  • Nanonauts! In Battle with Tiny Death-subs!—Ian McDonald
  • Of Dying Heroes and Deathless Deeds—Robin Wasserman
  • The Robot and the Baby—John McCarthy (reprint)
  • We are All Misfit Toys in the Aftermath of the Velveteen War—Seanan McGuire
  • Spider the Artist—Nnedi Okorafor (reprint)
  • Small Things—Daniel H. Wilson

PRE-ORDER:

Read More

THE APOCALYPSE TRIPTYCH, Co-Edited with Hugh Howey

THE APOCALYPSE TRIPTYCH

I’m pleased to announce I’ll be co-editing three new anthologies with bestselling author Hugh Howey.

THE APOCALYPSE TRIPTYCH is a series of three anthologies of apocalyptic fiction, exploring three different facets of the form:

  • THE END IS NIGH: pre-apocalyptic stories—exploring the world on the brink of collapse. (Forthcoming June 2014)

  • THE END IS NOW: apocalyptic stories—exploring the end of the world as it happens. (Forthcoming December 2014)

  • THE END HAS COME: post-apocalyptic stories—exploring life after the end of the world. (Forthcoming June 2015)

THE APOCALYPSE TRIPTYCH will include stories by authors such as Paolo Bacigalupi, Seanan McGuire, Ben H. Winters, Elizabeth Bear, Scott Sigler, Robin Wasserman, and many more. Additionally, each volume will include a brand new story by Hugh Howey set in the world of his bestselling novel Wool.

To learn more about the project, check out io9’s coverage of the announcement, or visit the official website.

Read More

Codex Q&A: Alcoholic Drink of Choice?

In July 2013, I served as the “editor-in-residence” for the Codex Writing Group, which meant basically I was asking a month-long AMA (“Ask Me Anything”) interview. With Codex’s permission, I’m re-posting the Q&As here on my blog. The questions were all provided by members of Codex.

***

I can’t figure out if this question is non-writing related or extremely writing related… Alcoholic drink of choice?

I actually don’t drink at all (or smoke or do any drugs). I am, what you might call, a teetotaler, which as it turns out, actually has nothing to do with a fondness for tea. Which seems kind of appropriate given that I now live in a former temperance colony.

My dad was an alcoholic and he died when I was 8, so that may have something to do with it. Perhaps as a result of that, I just never developed any desire to drink. The funny thing is, growing up I had super easy access to both alcohol and weed and cigarettes, so I could have easily indulged in those if I had wanted to. It’s just never held any appeal for me.

ETA: Since I listen to metal, it might be relevant to point out that there’s this movement known as “straight edge,” which basically is just a cooler(?) way of saying “teetotaler.” Personally, I never identified as straight edge, or made any decisions about my life based on that philosophy. For me it was just a personal choice.

***

HELP FUND MY ROBOT ARMY!!!

From October 1 – October 31, I’ll be running a Kickstarter campaign for a new project called HELP FUND MY ROBOT ARMY!!!, an anthology of improbable, futuristic, magical, & alternate-world crowdfunding projects. Please check it out, consider backing it, and, if you’re so inclined, spread the word!

Read More

Codex Q&A: What music do you mostly listen to?

In July 2013, I served as the “editor-in-residence” for the Codex Writing Group, which meant basically I was asking a month-long AMA (“Ask Me Anything”) interview. With Codex’s permission, I’m re-posting the Q&As here on my blog. The questions were all provided by members of Codex.

***

What do you mostly listen do? Classic 80’s metal? Death metal? Thrash? More punk-influenced styles? Progressive/instrumental metal? Do you prefer the more melodic sung vocals or the Cookie Monster-style delivery that’s popular these days? What are some of your favorite bands?

I talked about this a bit earlier in the Q&A. Here’s what I said about metal:

If anyone’s interested in the metal I listen to, here’s a spreadsheet export of my iTunes library. It’s almost all metal, though there’s also probably some random shit in there that I added to my library and rarely (if ever) listen to it. I do like some lighter stuff, but I just don’t listen to it very much. Here’s my current playlist.

Some of my favorite bands: Dark Tranquillity, In Flames, Protest the Hero, At the Gates, Baroness, Eluveitie

To expand a bit on that, melodic death metal is probably my favorite subgenre of metal, but I also listen to a lot of folk metal and metalcore. But my library has a pretty good mix of subgenres. There’s thrash, progressive, power metal…all kinds of stuff.

As for vox: I don’t particularly have a preference for one or the other. I tend to like bands that mix up the screaming with some clean singing.

I feel like a failure as a metalhead–and as a human being–for not mentioning Mastodon in my answer. So, yes, I do like–nay, love–Mastodon. Also, I once killed a man because he killed my goat. Though there are so many bands I could have mentioned as favorites, it’s inevitable that I would neglect to mention some. Like I didn’t mention Lamb of God!

***

HELP FUND MY ROBOT ARMY!!!

From October 1 – October 31, I’ll be running a Kickstarter campaign for a new project called HELP FUND MY ROBOT ARMY!!!, an anthology of improbable, futuristic, magical, & alternate-world crowdfunding projects. Please check it out, consider backing it, and, if you’re so inclined, spread the word!

Read More

Codex Q&A: What gives you the creeps in fiction?

In July 2013, I served as the “editor-in-residence” for the Codex Writing Group, which meant basically I was asking a month-long AMA (“Ask Me Anything”) interview. With Codex’s permission, I’m re-posting the Q&As here on my blog. The questions were all provided by members of Codex.

***

What gives you the creeps in fiction?

I’m going to again cheat and copy this answer from an interview I did, which I think gets to the heart of your question:

For horror, the best way to grab the reader, I think, is to make them feel something visceral. It’s a tough trick to pull off, and a lot of horror fiction–even great horror fiction–doesn’t quite manage it, but when it does, man do you know you’ve got something special. I’m not easily frightened or disturbed by fiction–be it prose or film–so whenever I come across something that truly unsettles me, I immediately take notice. Otherwise, what I look for just boils down to the basic tenets of good storytelling: deft prose, engaging characters, originality… I want to be surprised and delighted by an author’s turn of phrase, or by the plot turns a story takes, or–in a case where the events are all but inevitable–that feeling of satisfaction of a story coming to a conclusion in the only way that it can.

Also, from another interview, I discussed what scares me in real life:

Other than death itself, the threat of dementia and the like robbing me of who and what I am is probably the thing that scares me most in life. When I first started working at F&SF, I had moved up to New Jersey from Florida and went to live with my grandparents, who both had gotten to the point where they couldn’t really take care of themselves anymore. My grandmother had a litany of ailments–she was mostly blind, mostly deaf, fairly crippled by arthritis and other various symptoms of old age. My grandfather, though, despite smoking a couple packs of unfiltered cigarettes a day since the age of thirteen, was pretty much healthy as a horse–except for that fact that he had Alzheimer’s. He’d kind of shamble through the day, mostly unaware of what was going on, but every now and then you’d see this glimmer of awareness in his eyes, or in something he said. But mostly he just sat and smoked cigarettes and drank coffee–all day, nonstop, probably because he couldn’t remember how recently he’d had either. Being a person who thinks a lot about zombies, I couldn’t help but think of how Romero’s zombies always seemed to just remember that one thing in life they had been most passionate about and so, in Dawn of the Dead, for instance, they flock to the mall, because that’s what our consumer culture had embedded as important in their minds. And so, as unkind as it might seem, I couldn’t help but see this parallel with my grandfather who had become very much like a zombie himself, reanimated by nicotine and caffeine. 

So–yeah. That. That’s mostly what scares me. I guess that’s kind of a longwinded way of saying that I’m afraid of getting old and dying, but I thought maybe if I explained my firsthand experience with it, it would seem a less whiney and more valid dread. Though now that I’m married and have a family, I have the additional fear of losing them or having them lose me. The latter is, at least, a good thing in a way since it helps motivate me to take better care of myself.

And other than basic genre differences and what those entail, what do you look for in Nightmare slush that you wouldn’t in Lightspeed slush?

It’s mostly just about how dark a story is. Since Nightmare is for not just horror but also dark fantasy, how dark a story is is usually the deciding factor where something would be a better fit. I’ve had a number of stories that were submitted to Magazine A, but I thought fit better at Magazine B and vice versa. Sometimes it’s just a gut feeling. One of the reasons I wanted to launch Nightmare is because I was getting more good dark fiction than I could conceivably use in Lightspeed if Lightspeed were to remain a general SF/F magazine without some specific dark focus.

***

HELP FUND MY ROBOT ARMY!!!

From October 1 – October 31, I’ll be running a Kickstarter campaign for a new project called HELP FUND MY ROBOT ARMY!!!, an anthology of improbable, futuristic, magical, & alternate-world crowdfunding projects. Please check it out, consider backing it, and, if you’re so inclined, spread the word!

Read More

Codex Q&A: Would you tell us a few personal details about yourself?

In July 2013, I served as the “editor-in-residence” for the Codex Writing Group, which meant basically I was asking a month-long AMA (“Ask Me Anything”) interview. With Codex’s permission, I’m re-posting the Q&As here on my blog. The questions were all provided by members of Codex.

***

I think sometimes writers forget that editors are people too.  Would you tell us a few personal details that you feel comfortable sharing? Your cats, your hobbies, your interests, things like that?

Charles Tan (Bibliophile Stalker) just did a little interview with me along these lines: i.e., not about publishing, but about my other interests.

In an interview a couple years ago, when I was asked a similar question, I led off with “I’m a geek. I listen to metal. I follow the Oakland Raiders and the Orlando Magic. I’m obsessed with Rock Band. I have an illogical affinity for Star Trek: The Next Generation.”

Most of those things are still true. Still a geek, still a metalhead, still obsessed with TNG. I don’t follow sports as much anymore, though I’m still interested and I could fall back into it at any time. (Kind of ironic that, now that I actually live in Raiders territory, that my interest in football would wane.) Rock Band, it wouldn’t be fair to say I’m obsessed anymore. I don’t play it much these days, and in fact I’m so out of practice that I can’t really play on Expert anymore.

Metal

If anyone’s interested in the metal I listen to, here’s a spreadsheet export of my iTunes library. It’s almost all metal, though there’s also probably some random stuff in there that I added to my library and rarely (if ever) listen to it. I do like some lighter stuff, but I just don’t listen to it very much. Here’s my current playlist.

Some of my favorite bands: Dark Tranquillity, In Flames, Protest the Hero, At the Gates, Baroness, Eluveitie

Video Games

I go through periodic binges on video games. I try to avoid trying new ones a lot of the time though because I become obsessed with them and want to do nothing but play them until I’m done with them. I’m a huge fan of the Fallout series (I’m old enough that I actually played 1 & 2 even) and Skyrim. I lost a good month or more of my life to Grand Theft Auto 4.

One of my favorite books that I read in recent years is this book of video game criticism called EXTRA LIVES by Tom Bissel. Bissel is just such an astute video game critic, it’s a really enjoyable book. It probably helped that he and I seem to have an almost identical taste in video games, and reading his experience playing GTA IV was uncanny because of how similar it was to mine (though he, apparently, was also doing cocaine at the time, so that’s one major difference).

If you want to hear more about the intersection of JJA and video games, listen to Episode 84 of my podcast, The Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy.

Actually, if you want to learn more about my other interests, checking out the podcast is often a good way to do that. We talk about so many different topics on the show. A lot of the time we’re talking about publishing-related things, but we’ve done whole episodes focused on video games, horror movies, and all sorts of geeky things.

Television

I’m a big TV watcher. My favorite show ever is THE WIRE. Other favorites include BREAKING BAD, DEXTER, SOUTHLAND, HOMICIDE: LIFE ON THE STREET, FRIDAY NIGHT LIGHTS, ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT, THE OFFICE (US), PARKS & REC, THE WEST WING, GAME OF THRONES, HOMELAND… And, of course, as I mentioned above, STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION (though only maybe 25% of the show’s episodes are actually good, probably).

So as you can guess from my favorites there, one of my non-SF/F interests is police procedural type stuff. I’m fascinated by homicide detectives and whatnot. If I could be a homicide detective without all the dangerous/violent aspects of the job, I would totally be that (or would have tried to be). Though I may not have been very good at it, given I’d probably be crap at getting confessions out of people since, as my wife often points out, I am without guile. (And a good copy needs guile, it seems to me.)

Pets

I have two dogs and two cats, plus a third new cat that is technically Christie’s office cat, so I’m not sure whether or not to count him yet. (We’ve only had him for a couple of days, and he won’t let us pet him yet.)

Here’s a Flickr set.

The dogs are Suki and Jack. They’re outside dogs. Jack’s pretty derpy and an inveterate barker, so he wears this collar that sprays citronella in front of his face when he barks. They’re both impossible to walk.

Chewbacca and Maya are the house cats. Yoda is the new (office) cat. Chewie is basically the best cat ever, though we often say that he can’t possibly be a cat and he is clearly some other kind of cat-like creature. Maya is a very catty cat; she allows pets only when she wants them, and when she’s done with pets, the claws come out. Yoda we don’t know very well yet, but he’s been very skittish thus far. If you look at the photoset, you’ll see that Chewie is obviously my favorite.

***

HELP FUND MY ROBOT ARMY!!!

From October 1 – October 31, I’ll be running a Kickstarter campaign for a new project called HELP FUND MY ROBOT ARMY!!!, an anthology of improbable, futuristic, magical, & alternate-world crowdfunding projects. Please check it out, consider backing it, and, if you’re so inclined, spread the word!

Read More

Codex Q&A: When looking at a translation how do you balance the story’s cultural origins with translating it into accessible prose?

In July 2013, I served as the “editor-in-residence” for the Codex Writing Group, which meant basically I was asking a month-long AMA (“Ask Me Anything”) interview. With Codex’s permission, I’m re-posting the Q&As here on my blog. The questions were all provided by members of Codex.

***

When looking at a translation, how much weight do you assign to the consideration (which militates toward preserving as much intact as possible) of having the story open a window into the soul of the country that produced it, and how much to the notion that it really should be playing on a level field with all the other stories originally written in English (which suggests rewriting the story nearly from scratch)?

Ultimately, I think that translations need to work just as well in English as any story that was written originally in English, but it ALSO may need to do what you’re saying–opening that window into the soul of the country that produced it. But that’s just for certain stories; some stories are going to be very much a product of the place that they were written in, whereas others will work well in translation, and not feel particularly foreign. For the stories where the culture is critical to the story, I think it’s definitely a difficult balancing act, to capture those elements that will convey the cultural differences to the foreign reader and yet still make the prose familiar enough to the reader that it is accessible. I’m not really sure how to offer advice for doing any of that, but I think those are the goals you need to shoot for.

***

HELP FUND MY ROBOT ARMY!!!

From October 1 – October 31, I’ll be running a Kickstarter campaign for a new project called HELP FUND MY ROBOT ARMY!!!, an anthology of improbable, futuristic, magical, & alternate-world crowdfunding projects. Please check it out, consider backing it, and, if you’re so inclined, spread the word!

 

Read More

Codex Q&A: What magazines other than Lightspeed and F&SF do you like to read?

In July 2013, I served as the “editor-in-residence” for the Codex Writing Group, which meant basically I was asking a month-long AMA (“Ask Me Anything”) interview. With Codex’s permission, I’m re-posting the Q&As here on my blog. The questions were all provided by members of Codex.

***

What magazines (other than Lightspeed and F&SF) do you like to read, and how do you tend to do it, i.e. e-reader, on their website, their print form, etc.?

The magazine I read most often cover-to-cover is probably MacLife. I just recently got a new PC running Windows 8, but for the past four years I was a Mac user, and I also have an iPhone and an iPad (Mini). I expect I’ll still find much interest in MacLife, as it’s as much an iOS magazine as it is an OSX one. I read that in hardcopy, because, well, because I keep it in the bathroom. (I don’t like to bring my phone or iPad in there, at least not after an unfortunate incident in which my phone was knocked off the sink as I washed my hands an plunged into the toilet.)

Otherwise, I try to keep up with the other short fiction magazines as much as I can. Those I almost always read on my iPad these days (in the Kindle app). I almost never read fiction on my computer; I’ll almost always get it onto my iPad somehow to read it. (That doesn’t count editing, of course, which IS done on the computer.)

I used to read DECIBEL every month, but I found I was usually better off just doing my own research into metal to find stuff I liked, since half the time when I read the reviews I had no idea what kind of album it would be or even what sub-genre of metal it is.

Is the world ending?

I hope not–that’s where I keep all my stuff!

***

HELP FUND MY ROBOT ARMY!!!

From October 1 – October 31, I’ll be running a Kickstarter campaign for a new project called HELP FUND MY ROBOT ARMY!!!, an anthology of improbable, futuristic, magical, & alternate-world crowdfunding projects. Please check it out, consider backing it, and, if you’re so inclined, spread the word!

Read More