Fantastic Fiction @ KGB Raffle — Support Literacy & Win Fabulous Prizes!

Loyal readers of this blog will recall my frequent mentions of the Fantastic Fiction reading series at the KGB Bar in Manhattan that I regularly attend. Well, FF@KGB moderators Ellen Datlow and Matthew Kressel have launched a raffle to help support the series.

A full list of prizes is available on the raffle website, but check out this partial list:

  • Story in a bottle by Michael Swanwick
  • Tuckerization by Lucius Shepard
  • Tuckerization by Elizabeth Hand
  • Tuckerization by Jeffrey Ford
  • Pen & Ink drawing of an animal-your choice- by Gahan Wilson
  • Original art for a George R. R. Martin novel by Tom Canty
  • John Picacio signed print of art for Michael Moorcock novel
  • Naomi Novik signed TEMERAIRE first edition
  • Your very own wormhole from physicist Michio Kaku
  • Peter Straub line-edited manuscript of novel in progress
  • Holly Black signed advance copy of GOOD NEIGHBORS
  • Original art by Terri Windling
  • Carol Emshwiller signed manuscript of THE ABOMINABLE CHILD’S TALE
  • Complete set of back issues and lifetime subscription to PARADOX MAGAZINE
  • Critique of a short story by Ellen Datlow
  • Critique of a short story by Gardner Dozois
  • Critique of a short story by Nancy Kress
  • Two year subscription to SYBIL’S GARAGE MAGAZINE
  • Ray Bradbury limited edition worth $900
     

Not to mention the autographed copy of Wastelands I’ve donated to the cause. So if you’ve been really wanting to read Wastelands but couldn’t afford (or were too cheap) to buy it, here’s your chance–with a little luck, you could get it for just a dollar.

The raffle begins July 14 and ends July 28.

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Best New Bands

In a recent post on his blog, John Scalzi asked his readers to tell him what new music or artists they’re listening to these days, with the following rules:

For the purposes of this discussion, “new” is defined to mean:

1. The artist/band started publicly releasing music (or alternately made their major label debut) after January 2005;

or

2. The artist/band started publicly releasing music (or alternately made their major label debut) after January 2003, but you only heard about them in the last year.

I posted a long comment over there, but thought it was worthwhile posting here as well. So here it is:

I listen almost exclusively to metal, so I don’t have much in the way of recommendations outside of that sphere, but there’s a rock band called Priestess that I like a lot. Their first album, Hello Master, came out in 2006. It’s got some really nice guitar-driven stuff on it, which is not surprising given I discovered them via Guitar Hero.

Now, into metal:

My favorite discovery included in this batch is a band called Eluveitie (pronounced El-way-tea). They’re Swiss, their name is a word in Etruscan, and some of their vocals are in Gaulish (the rest in English). They kind of sound to me like early In Flames, but with a bad-ass flute player. Seriously, this is the most metal a flute has ever been. They’re what you call “folk metal” or “pagan metal,” which blends the playing of traditional folk instruments (bagpipes, flute, hurdy-gurdy) with death metal.

Another fine folk metal band is Korpiklaani (2006). Similar to Eluveitie, but a bit more inclined toward drinking song-type songs. Also, more accordion.

Draconian are deemed a “gothic/doom” metal band. They mix traditional doom/death vox with more traditional “clean” singing from a female vocalist. They’ve got albums going back to 2003, but I just discovered them this year, plus they probably still haven’t had what you’d call a “major” label debut.

Scar Symmetry, a melodic death metal band, with a single vocalist who does some of the best good cop/bad cop vocals I’ve ever heard. His death vox are about as brutal as the guy from Dethklok, but his clean vox qualify as actual good singing.

Two power metal bands I really dig (power metal basically being music with instrumentation similar in complexity to death metal, but with clean singing vocals, like Iron Maiden) are Dark Empire (2006) and Communic (2005). These two would probably be the most accessible (other than Priestess) to non-metal fans of all the bands I’ve mentioned.

Actually, I may have been hasty in proclaiming Eluveitie my favorite recent discovery–there’s also Protest the Hero (2006). They’re generally considered a “metalcore” band, though to me they really stand out from that pack, mainly due to the insane complexity of their guitarwork. Also, their first “major” album, Kezia, is a concept album which Wikipedia describes as “the elegy of a young woman after whom the album is titled. The story is chronicled in the perspective of three characters: The Prison Priest, The Prison Guard/Gunman, and Kezia herself. Each character is designated a section containing three songs, with a single retrospective finale concluding the album.” Their follow up to Kezia, Fortress, is equally awesome.

So, what new awesome bands do you guys like?

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Vampire Reprint Anthology

Hot on the heels of my announcement that I’ll be editing a reprint anthology of dystopian fiction for Night Shade Books, I’m happy to announce that I’ll also be editing a reprint anthology of vampire fiction for them. It’s tentatively scheduled for publication in late 2009, so my deadline for recommendations would be around September 1, 2008, though the sooner the better. As with my previous reprint anthology projects, to assist me in assembling this volume, I’ve setup a database to solicit recommendations from readers and writers of vampire fiction.

I’ve got the entry form duplicated on a page here on my blog, but the homepage for the database can be found at johnjosephadams.com/vampires.htm, so if you’re going to spread word of the database (and please do!) please use that URL. Meanwhile, the spreadsheet displaying the recommendations can be viewed at johnjosephadams.com/vampires2.htm.

BTW, it doesn’t have a title or even a tentative title yet, so if you want to suggest one of those too, feel free!

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Mid-Afternoon With Conan O’Brien

When I was doing my “what I’ve been up to” roundup post the other day, I completely forgot about one of the very cool things I did: I attended a behind-the-scenes taping of Late Night With Conan O’Brien. My friend Andrea Kail works for the show as a script supervisor, so she was able to get me and pals Amy, Rob, and Brian into the control room during taping. I’ve gone to see the show live in the audience before, but this was the first time I went and did the backstage tour.

We arrived super early by accident, so Andrea parked us in her office, where we hung out while she ran off to … supervise the scripts, I guess. When the time came to enter the studio, we learned that Tim Russert had just died, and so the crew were in a frenzy, making last minute changes to the show so that Conan could address the news. (Keep in mind that though Conan airs late night, it tapes at around 4 PM.) So they bumped Conan’s monologue and inserted a brief eulogy by Conan. Much of their frantic work consisted of finding the right clips of Russert on the show to air.

Otherwise, the show seemed to go quite smoothly, and it was fun to sit back and watch. NY Giants sackmaster Michael Strahan was a guest, along with comedian D. L. Hughley. Strahan freaked Conan (and everyone else) out by bending his fingers in ways no fingers should bend (his do because of his numerous injuries). D. L. said lots of funny things, and then another comedian did some standup, which was pretty funny as well.

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