Category: GENERAL

Mmmm. Spam!

I got a spam recently that I found somewhat interesting. Apparently there’s someone out there who knows how to turn chicks into zombies.

xr scot mmmm bongo
Using this system: 1492 pail kraft 95%
You can make any woman submit to you INSTANTLY;
You can make with her EVERYTHING you want;
It’ll be a pleasure for her to fulfill all your DIRTY desires;

I don’t know what the hell that means–I guess I’m supposed to click the link. Of course, I’m afraid to click. Besides, the zombie apocalypse is unstoppable anyway–no need to rush it along.

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Top Ten SF Books Not Authored by White Men

There’s been much discussion lately about New York Times SF reviewer Dave Itzkoff’s top ten list–which was criticized for, among other things, being made up entirely of white men: no women or people of color on the list.

So, that leads me to my questions:

(1) What are your top ten SF/Fantasy books (novels, collections, etc.) written by women?

(2) What are your top ten SF/Fantasy books (novels, collections, etc.) written by people of color?

It’s unclear whether Itzkoff was including fantasy in his list, or excluding it on purpose, but for the purposes of my question, let’s say fantasy is okay to include. (I’d say he probably *was* including fantasy–since I’d assume most if not all of the Mieville stories in Looking for Jake are fantasy [I haven’t read it yet].)

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Excerpt: Seeker by William Nicholson

I received a press release the other day, about a new novel called Seeker by William Nicholson.  It included an exerpt of the novel, and encouraged me to reprint it online if I so desired.  So I thought I’d try it out.  Here’s the synopsis, and the exerpt will be in the extended entry.

Seeker

Book One of the Noble Warriors

By William Nicholson

Published by Harcourt

May 2006;$17.00US; 0-15-205768-4

Three very different heroes, brought together by a shared dream.

On the rocky island of Anacrea, in a garden within the great castle-monastery called the Nom, lives the All and Only, the god who made all things. He is protected by an elite band of fighter monks. These are the Nomana, the Noble Warriors.

Seeker, who lives on the island, is now sixteen, at last old enough to follow his brother into the ranks of the Nomana.

Far away, Morning Star, also just sixteen, is leaving home to achieve her lifelong wish to join the Nomana.

And when a beautiful, violent river bandit known as the Wildman finds himself completely helpless before two Nomana, he too, is determined to become a Noble Warrior.

But these are dangerous times. Secret enemies have sworn to destroy Anacrea, and in the imperial city of Radiance, where human sacrifices are thrown to their deaths every evening, elaborate plans to attack the Nom are in place. Soon, in a shocking turn of events, Seeker, Morning Star, and the Wildman are caught up in a bloody and harrowing race to save the god of the Nomana — and themselves — from destruction.

An epic coming-of-age story about courage, friendship, desire, and faith, Seeker heralds the beginning of a riveting new series.

(more…)

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WNBA Skill-Building Workshop

In this case, the WBNA is the Women’s National Book Association, so you’ll be learning stuff about writing, not dunking.  They’re having a “skill-building workshop for writers at the query stage”

Writers are invited to bring their cover letters, synopses (1000 words or less please) and first page of a novel or narrative.

Agents will review one item per session and offer insights into what gets an agent’s attention, what works and what doesn’t.  Each session is ten minutes. Writers can meet with multiple agents. No pitching required or expected: just seeking and getting advice.

Confirmed agents include:

Loretta Barrett, Loretta Barrett Books

Jennifer Lyons, Lyons & Pande

Jenny Bent, Trident Media

Stephany Evans, Imprint Agency

Paige Wheeler, Folio Literary Management

Kate Epstein, Epstein Literary Agency

Byrd Leavell, Waxman Literary Agency

Al Longden, Rights Unlimited

Janet Rosen, Sheree Bykofsky Agency

Jessica Regal, Jean V. Naggar Literary Agency

This is a great opportunity to find out what’s wrong with the query you’ve been sending or catch problems before you start sending it.

Thursday, April 20, 2006

6:30pm -8:30pm

Small Press Center

20 West 44th Street

Reservations by April 10, 2006 are required. Email your name and number of desired sessions to: wnbaevents @ earthlink.net

Least expensive: one ten minute session: $30

Better value:  three ten minute sessions: $60

Best deal: ten ten minutes sessions: $125

10% discount for current members of WNBA.

For questions or further information contact: Janet Reid, jetreidliterary @ earthlink.net, 718 821 4996.

Please feel free to pass this information along to writers you know!

I’m not familiar with this workshop, but it sounds interesting, so I thought I’d pass it along to those who might be interested.


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Missing Pages

Go check out this awesome movie trailer. It’s beautifully shot, and uses an odd technique, which just must be seen. It’s a seven minute trailer for a 24 minute short film. Just go watch it, trust me–it rocks. And yes, it’s SF.

Watch it. (At the moment, however, it seems as though they’ve exceeded their bandwidth hooziwhatsis.)

(via Chris Roberson)

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Music Reviews & Used Books

On Wednesday night, I attended a Media Bistro class on writing music reviews, taught by Mike Wolf, music editor of Time Out New York.  The class was at 7PM, and I got out of work a little early, so when I got into the city I had some time to kill before the class.  Gordon recommended I check out the Housing Works Used Book Cafe, which I did.  It’s a very cool little bookstore, with lots of nice (and unoccupied!) chairs to sit and read, and a nice selection of ultra cheap books, which is the only kind of book I’m allowed to buy since I get pretty much anything new I want for free (I don’t even have time to read all of those).  I found a few interesting books which were all a dollar or fifty cents.  Here’s what I got:


books.JPG

Since I was there because I was waiting around to take a class on how to do freelance music reviews, I thought the Freelance Writer’s Handbook was particularly appropriate.  As for the others: well, Pirates, Pirates, Pirates–duh! Pirates rule.  There’s three SF anthologies there, which I’m totally a sucker for, especially when they only cost fifty cents.  That one you probably can’t make out there is a year’s best from the seventies (I think) edited by Forry Ackerman.  The Ten Tomorrows is an antho edited by the infamous Roger Elwood, who apparently flooded the market with anthologies in the seventies and almost single-handedly ruined the SF anthology market (because he put out so many, and they were shoddy).  This book, however, looks to have a very impressive TOC, so this doesn’t look like one of the shoddy ones.  And if it is, <shrug>.  It only cost fifty cents.  As for Herbert’s Space Trip–that looked so strange, I had to have it.

After plucking those gems off the cheapie shelves, I settled down to get some reading done, and discovered that the instrumental band Mastery is pretty good music to read by.  I generally find music with lyrics to be too distracting, and I’d never have been able to concentrate with the sounds of people talking all around me. 

So I read for about an hour, then headed over to 494 Broadway, home of the Media Bistro classes.  The class was good–I feel like it gave me a better understanding of what I should be putting into a music review.  At the end of the class, the instructor critiqued some reviews the class was assigned to bring in, and it was pretty helpful to hear his edits of the other students’ work. 

As for mine, he read it during class because I’d asked a question and used my review as an example.  He said it was “not bad,” and seemed pretty pleased with it. For everyone else’s reviews he critiqued at the end of class, he had a lot more negative remarks, so I took his lack of criticism of mine as a positive thing.

The assignment was to write a review of your favorite album ever (100-150 words)–no matter the genre, the original release date, etc.  I had a hard time deciding on my favorite album, then just decided to pick a really great one I’m infatuated with at the moment.  So I chose Slaughter of the Soul by At the Gates.  Here’s my review:

In 1995, Swedish metal gods At the Gates released Slaughter of the Soul, the crowning achievement–and swansong–of their legendary and influential career. Whereas their “greatest hits” compilation, Suicidal Final Art, showcases the best of the raw talent and potential of earlier albums, Slaughter shows them realizing that promise, with its pure, relentless ear-crushing fury: the brilliant and complex guitar melodies, the primal anger of Lindberg’s (harsh, but understandable) vocals, the dark but deep lyrical content.  Although At the Gates contemporaries In Flames and Dark Tranquillity are often credited as the founders of the Gothenburg melodic death movement, Slaughter is the album that paved the way, and every band playing that style now is standing on the shoulders of these giants.

First, I should note that I was wearing an In Flames t-shirt, which Wolf noticed and said “Cool shirt.  I like In Flames.”  (So he knows about death metal.)  The only specific comments on the piece he had were that “legendary” is cliche and should never be used.  He also initially questioned me calling them “metal gods,” but then reconsidered, as that sort of thing kind of goes along with metal reviews.  He did question them being godly–saying, who are gods really? Metallica, Slayer, bands like that.  I conceded the point, but added that perhaps I should have called them “death metal gods,” which they certainly are (and the rest of the review goes on to back up).  

The rest of the class gave me lots of ideas of how else I could have written that review, and what other kinds of things I could have added to it to make it better, if I had more words to work with. 

All in all, a pretty good learning experience.  If you live in or near a major city, check Media Bistro out–they offer classes in several different locations, and on a wide variety of subjects.  If you’re at all interested in freelance writing (non-fiction mostly, but there are some fiction classes), it’s worth checking out. 

 

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Alpha, the SF/F/H Workshop for Young Writers

If you’re a young’un and you write SF/fantasy, check this out:

Alpha, the SF/F/H Workshop for Young Writers (http://alpha.spellcaster.org), is a one-of-a-kind residency workshop for teens who write genre fiction. The application deadline is coming soon–at the end of March. The best twenty writers (14 to 19 years of age) who submit original science fiction, fantasy or horror stories will be accepted. For ten days in July, the students will stay at the University of Pittsburgh branch campus in Greensburg, PA. They’ll learn how to write from authors Timothy Zahn, Tamora Pierce, Dora Goss, Wen Spencer and others.

This is Alpha’s fifth year. Former Alpha students have sold stories to prominent publications including Boys’ Life, Realms of Fantasy, Writers of The Future, Fantasy Magazine, Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet, Fantastic Stories, Corpse Blossoms, Aberrant Dreams, and Fantastical Visions.

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Don’t Quote Me On This

I was just reading a book review in the New York Times, and I was going to post and say “Why the hell does the NYT put book titles in quotes instead of italics? Don’t they have an AP Style Guide?” It turns out, however, that putting quotes around book titles is the correct procedure according to AP Style. What’s up with that? No other style guide does that, why does the AP? It’s actually kind of stupid, if you think about it, since using italics to denote book titles and quotation marks to denote shorter works is a convenient short-hand way of differentiating between the two forms in a review. Do quotation marks have more journalistic integrity than italics?

On another note, this review is by the Times’s new SF reviewer, DAVE ITZKOFF, who is a former editor of Spin and Maxim. I know what you’re thinking: yes, those are the perfect qualifications to review SF for one of the most respected review venues in the world.

Now to be fair, I don’t know much about the guy–I didn’t know who he was until I googled him, but he says things in his review that make me scratch my head. First, he starts off with “Why does contemporary science fiction have to be so geeky?” and goes on to refer to the genre as “sci-fi” several times. He also says that, though he enjoyed Counting Heads very much, “[he] cannot [recommend the book to Kite Runner readers, friends, or anyone] in good conscience because if you were to immerse yourself in most of the sci-fi being published these days, you would probably enjoy it as much as one enjoys reading a biology textbook or a stereo manual.”

And this is the guy who the NYT decided would be the best person to review genre books for them?

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CBS Award Nominations

Everyone likes to nominate things for awards, right? Well, have you nominated stuff for this one yet? They extended the deadline just for you.

The Carl Brandon Society has extended the deadline for nominating works for the Carl Brandon Parallax Award and the Carl Brandon Kindred Award; two juried awards recognizing excellence in speculative fiction by or about people of colour. Each award comes with a $1,000 prize. The awards will be presented at Wiscon 30, to be held May 26-29, 2006 in Madison, Wisconsin, USA.

The CBS Parallax Award will go to a work of speculative fiction in English, written by a person of colour. Nominees may be asked to provide a brief statement self-identifying as a person of colour. Statements should be sent to the awards administrator. CBS Parallax Award Jury: Celu Amberstone; Steven Barnes; MJ Hardman; Karin Lowachee; Jennifer Stevenson

New deadline for nominations: March 15, 2006

For more information, visit the Carl Brandon Society website.

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LibraryThing

Today I discovered a wonderful way to waste time: LibraryThing.

LibraryThing is an online service to help people catalog their books easily. Because everyone catalogs together, you can also use LibraryThing to find people with similar libraries, get suggestions from people with your tastes and so forth.

Here’s my LibraryThing profile: http://www.librarything.com/profile/slushgod

And here’s my LibraryThing catalog: http://www.librarything.com/catalog/slushgod 

It’s got sortable ratings and lets you link to your own reviews (or publish your own reviews).  So, if you’re curious about my likes and dislikes, you can browse through my library by rating, either going to the top for good stuff, or going to the bottom for stuff to avoid.  My library’s not complete by a long shot, but there’s a good sampling there.  I mostly started with stuff I’ve reviewed. 

Check it out!

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