Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Guest Blog: Killing Them Quietly by Ian Rogers.
When asked to describe the type of stories in my debut collection, Every House Is Haunted, I tend to pause and try to think about how exactly I should phrase my response.
It would be easy to say the book is a horror collection, but it wouldn’t be entirely accurate. Yes, some of the stories could be classified as “horror,” but not all of them. Some are thrillers or mysteries with a supernatural bent. One of them, “The Tattletail,” about a kid with a pet demon, would even qualify as young adult.
I prefer to call Every House Is Haunted a collection of dark fiction, which is still a copout of sorts, but it’s also the only way I can describe the ground covered in the 22 stories that make up the book.
This is not to say that I shy away from the horror label. I’ve seen some authors blow a gasket when someone has dared to call them a “horror author.” You’d think they’d just been told they smell bad. Which makes sense, I guess, since those writers who avoid the horror label tend to do so because to some readers it does have a kind of stink on it.
I don’t mind calling myself a horror author, and I certainly don’t mind if someone else refers to me in that way. I’ve gotten over the urge to follow it up with: “Oh yes, I write horror, but not that kind of horror.” By which I meant pointlessly gory horror, with two-dimensional characters and the kind of plots (I use the term loosely) that are more interested in the body count than telling any kind of story.
Although I consider myself to be a fairly big Stephen King fan, when it comes to my own work, I often cite authors like Shirley Jackson and Charles L. Grant as influences. Grant especially with his brand of “quiet horror,” eschewing the “gore for the sake of gore” tales that made up so many books during the horror boom of the 1980s. Which is not to say that I don’t like the occasional gory story. But that doesn’t mean these tales can’t be executed with a certain sense of style. Take, for example, the work of Clive Barker, one of, if not the best, writer of graphic horror fiction.
Grant is also the one credited with using the term “dark fantasy” to differentiate between his brand of “quiet horror” and the gorier variety. While I appreciate Grant’s need to distance himself from those stories, “dark fantasy” is not a term I’d use to describe my own work, mostly because “dark fantasy” is an actual genre to some people, usually referring to tales of high fantasy (knights, wizards, dragons, etc.) with a strong horror element.
I think “quiet horror” is a much better term, both in general and to describe the stories in Every House Is Haunted. After all, when it comes to haunted houses, whether it’s Shirley Jackson’s Hill House, or a “real” one featured on an episode of Unsolved Mysteries, what better way is there to describe the horrors that always start out so innocuously.
At least the horrors start out quiet. The screaming comes later.
Ian Rogers is a writer, artist, and photographer. Every House Is Haunted (ChiZine Publications) is his first collection. A second collection of stories, SuperNOIRtural Tales, featuring supernatural detective Felix Renn, is forthcoming from Burning Effigy Press. For more information, visit ianrogers.ca.
Website - everyhouseishaunted.com
Twitter - @onemoreshadow
Facebook Author Page - http://www.facebook.com/supernoirtural
October 31, 2012 Writing, Publishing, and Speculative Fiction Links and Plugs
Interviews and Profiles
Advice/Articles
- Suvudu (Jeff VanderMeer) interviews Karin Tidbeck.
- Suvudu (Shawn Speakman) interviews Brom.
- My Bookish Ways interviews AJ Colucci and Jennifer Hillier.
- The Functional Nerds interviews Chris F. Holm (podcast).
- The Galaxy Express interviews Sharon Lynn Fisher.
- The Qwillery interviews Lee Collins.
- JS Online (Jim Higgins) interviews Bradley P. Beaulieu.
- BBC interviews Philip Pullman and Neil Gaiman (podcast).
- Adrienne Kress interviews London Particulars.
- Anime News Network (Todd Ciolek) interviews Yoshitaka Amano.
Advice/Articles
- Mary Robinette Kowal (Monte Cook) on Small Matters.
- Inkpunks (Wendy Wagner) on Sh*t from Shinola.
- The Bathroom Monologues on The Books That Scared Us.
- John Scalzi's The Big Idea: Robert St. Amant.
- Jeff Salyards on A Song in My Heart. Or on My Site. Or Something.
- Nerdist (Eric Idle) on “Galaxy Song,” the New Biological Version.
- Romancing the Genre (Tam Linsey) on Science Fiction Romance – A Ball in Both Courts.
- George R.R. Martin on Maps.
- The Guardian (Damien Walter) on Ursula K Le Guin: stories for the ages.
- B&N Community (Terry Brooks) on The Sword of Shannara - 35 Years Later.
- Innsmouth Free Press (Brian M. Sammons) on Cthulhu Eats the World: Miskatonic – Part 1: The Inhuman Stain.
- Mike Brotherton on 50 Ultimate Genre Match-Ups.
- Science Fiction.com (Dave Taylor) on The Ten Scariest Sci-Fi Movies.
- Tor.com (Matthew Mercier) on You Don’t Know Poe: 10 Weird Things About Edgar Allan Poe.
- Missions Unknown (Scott A. Cupp) reviews Rubber.
- In Richard A. Kirk’s Backyard.
- Adorable Alien by Michael Dashow.
- Concept spaceship art by Darren Douglas.
- Disney Buys LucasFilm.
- Paul S. Kemp Signs Up for Third Instalment of the Tales of Egil and Nix.
- Zahrah the Windseeker wins the Black Excellence Award for Outstanding Achievement in Literature (Fiction).
- Steve Berman call for submissions.
Tuesday, October 30, 2012
October 30, 2012 Writing, Publishing, and Speculative Fiction Links and Plugs
Interviews and Profiles
Advice/Articles
Reviews
News
Peer-Funded Projects
- Radio National interviews Angela Slatter (podcast).
- Lawrence M. Schoen interviews Julie E. Czerneda.
- Examiner (Josh Vogt) interviews Nancy Kilpatrick.
- Suvudu (Shawn Speakman) interviews Patrick Rothfuss.
- Fantasy Book Critic (Mihir Wanchoo) interviews Joe Abercrombie.
- Angry Robot Podcast interviews Adam Christopher and Chuck Wendig.
- My Bookish Ways interviews John Skipp and Regan Summers.
- Ginger Nuts of Horror interviews Michael Pugh and Ellie Wixon.
- Writing Excuses with Jim Zub (podcast).
Advice/Articles
- Omnivoracious (Susan J. Morris) on For Those About to Write, I Salute You (with 5 NaNoWriMo Tips).
- Omnivoracious (David Mitchell) on Adaptation is Translation.
- SF Novelists (James Alan Gardner) on The Skill List Project: Character Motivation.
- Stroppy Author on How to speak publisher: F is for Flat fee.
- Juliette Wade on Too many names? Tricks for managing your "cardstack."
- Kate Elliott on Cat’s Voice & Deciding What Point of View to Use.
- John Marco (David Bell) guest post.
- Apex Magazine (Jason Sizemore) on An Earnest Proposal: Read Some Short Fiction.
- Canada Writes (Peter Watts and Minister Faust) on Can sci-fi be a happy place?
- John Scalzi on The Big Idea: Zach Weinersmith.
- Alastair Reynolds on Engagement.
- bare•bones e-zine (Peter Enfantino & Jack Seabrook) on Batman in the 1970s Part 42: May and June 1976.
- Weird Fiction Review (Edward Gauvin) on Feeling Very Lonely in Beyond, Part I of II.
- Weird Fiction Review (John Clute) on Horror.
- Time (Nate Rawlings) on The Walking Dead Watch: The Governor Commeth.
- Wag the Fox (Lawrence Santoro) on I Never Dress for Halloween.
- Mary Robinette Kowal (Christopher Barzak) on Birds and Birthdays.
- Open Culture on Bela Lugosi Discusses His Drug Habit as He Leaves the Hospital in 1955.
- E! (John Boone) on Happy (Almost) Halloween, Edward Cullen—Here Are the 15 Best Vampires Not in Twilight!
- Clarion Blog (Michèle Laframboise) on Some idea myths.
Reviews
- Sci-Fi Fan Letter reviews The Unincorporated Man.
- Functional Nerds (Paul Weimer) reviews Babylon Steel.
- Kirkus Reviews (Leila Roy) reviews Venom.
News
- Electric Velocipede Open to Submissions.
- Spectrum 20 - Call for Entries Now Open.
- Chris Beckett's The Peacock Cloak.
- Dark Dragon Publishing Halloween Special.
- Alan Hunter (1923-2012).
- Tim Pratt book sale.
Peer-Funded Projects
Epic edited by John Joseph Adams
Monday, October 29, 2012
October 29, 2012 Writing, Publishing, and Speculative Fiction Links and Plugs
Interviews and Profiles
News
- Erin Underwood interviews Danse Macabre contributors.
- Black Gate (Emily Mah) interviews Melinda Snodgrass.
- About.com (Rowan Stormo-Flanagan) interviews Jasper Fforde.
- National Post (Mark Medley) profiles Michael Chabon and Junot Diaz.
- Hannah Tinti interviews Neil Gaiman (podcast).
- My Bookish Ways interviews Lee Collins and Darynda Jones.
- Fantasy Faction interviews Iain M. Banks.
- Locus interviews Kyle Cassidy.
- SFX (Nick Setchfield) interviews Russell T. Davies.
- The Coode St. Podcast episode 21.
- The New York Times (Julie Bosman) profiles R.L. Stine.
- Fantasy Book Critic (Liviu Suciu) interviews Miles Cameron.
- BEM's Blog on Kontrast – Swecon 2012.
- Book View Cafe (Sherwood Smith) on Good books are portals wherever we find them.
- Book Life Now (Bear Weiter) on Priorities and Time Thievery.
- Mary Robinette Kowal on Thoughts on narrating and mistakes.
- The Outer Alliance (Julia Rios) on Djibril al-Ayad and Lori Selke on Outlaw Bodies.
- Theodora Goss on Living Intensely.
- Omnivoracoius (Jeff VanderMeer) on Graphic Novel Friday: An Anomaly in Science Fiction Storytelling.
- The Book Smugglers (Stant Litore) on Stant Litore on the Relevance of Zombie Fiction.
- Charles Stross on Context is Everything. [via Paul Di Filippo]
- Irish Examiner ( Richard Fitzpatrick) on Tarzan Turns 100.
- Technology Review (Brian Bergstein) on The Deferred Dreams of Mars.
- The New York Review of Science Fiction on October 2012 Editorial: Duty Now for the Future
- Tor.com (Jo Walton) on Something Else Like... Introduction and Something Else Like... Heinlein.
- SFX (Dave Golder) on Top 10 Movie Psychics.
- WhatCulture! (Craig Stewart) on A History of Horribly Haunted Objects in Horror Films.
- WhatCulture! (Jeffrey Stewart) on 10 Ways To Make A Great Star Trek TV Show.
- MJ Wright on Learning from the master: Isaac Asimov’s future visions.
- Celluloidical (Scott) on Top 20 Batman-On-Film Moments.
- Publishers Weekly (Susan J. Wolfson and Ronald Levao) on Why 'Frankenstein' Is the Greatest Horror Novel Ever.
- Locus (Gary Westfahl) reviews Cloud Atlas.
- Jvstin Style reviews The Firefly Witch.
- Kurzweil reviews Science Fiction Prototyping: Designing the Future with Science Fiction.
- 30+ Out-Standing Work of Deviant Artists.
- Miniature Worlds: A Digital Collage of Hundreds of Photographs.
- Epic Alien Poster and more Art by Godmachine.
News
- Manga Author Named French Knight.
- Random House and Penguin Merger Talks.
- Doctor Who Christmas Special Prequel For Children In Need.
Friday, October 26, 2012
October 26, 2012 Writing, Publishing, and Speculative Fiction Links and Plugs
Interviews and Profiles
Advice/Articles
News
- The Agony Column interviews Malinda Lo (podcast).
- Sense of Wonder (Literatura Fantastica) interviews Guy Gavriel Kay.
- When Gravity Falls interviews Gail Martin.
- [SFFWRTCHT] interviews John Picacio.
- Strange Enough interviews Clifford Pickover.
- Liberation Frequency (Bernice Watson) interviews Jim Francis.
- Timothy C. Ward interviews Kat Heckenbach.
- Galactic Suburbia Episode 71.
Advice/Articles
- Kristine Kathryn Rusch on The Business Rusch: Rights Reversion.
- Mary Robinette Kowal (E.C. Myers) talks about Quantum Coin.
- Theodora Goss on Being Alive.
- Gail Carriger on The Traveling Author.
- Guardian (Margaret Atwood and Naomi Alderman) on Why we're co-writing a zombie novel.
- Bastard Books (Andrea) on Metamorphosis of Urban Fantasy and Cover Art Models.
- The Future Fire (Kay T. Holt) on Hush!
- BoingBoing (DJ Pangburn) on How Roger Zelazny's Lord of Light transformed into the CIA's Argo covert op.
- Lou Anders (Gail Z. Martin) on What's in a World?
- Smart Pop Books (Michael A. Burstein) on The Friendly Neighborhood of Peter Parker.
- Mr Ripleys Enchanted Books on Horror Book Reads - For A Great Halloween.
- Tor.com (Grady Hendrix) on The Great Stephen King Reread: ’Salem’s Lot.
- Flavorwire (Emily Temple) on 10 Essential Alternative Anthologies for the Modern Reader.
- Missions Unknown (Scott A. Cupp) on Road Trip and The Weird.
- Sci-Fi Fan Letter reviews Invasion of the Body Snatchers.
- Illustrations by Lukas Brezak.
- Fantasy Concept Art by Guillaume Menuel.
- Concept spaceships by Jeremiah Humphries.
- Containment Breach: Sub-Level 5 by Brad Rigney.
News
- Sci-Fi Author Kim Stanley Robinson to Participate in "Landscape, Art and Other Worlds" Discussion at ASU Art Museum.
- Robot Hall of Fame Inductees.
- Janet Berliner-Gluckman (1939-2012).
Thursday, October 25, 2012
October 25, 2012 Links and Plugs
Interviews and Profiles
Advice/Articles
News
- The Enchanted Inkpot (Leah Cypess) interviews Morgan Keyes.
- Matt Molgaard interviews Jonathan Maberry.
- My Bookish Ways interviews Kim Newman.
- Omnivoracious (Jeff VanderMeer) profiles William Alexander.
- LA Times (Susan Carpenter) interviews Matthew Reinhart. [via Paul Di Filippo]
- Charlie Rose interviews J.K. Rowling (video). (via Suvudu)
- Audible UK (Stacy Patton) interviews Lavie Tidhar.
- The Future and You with Jim Craig, Micki and Stephen Euin Cobb (podcast).
- Audio Go interviews Sam Stone.
- Flickering Myth (Trevor Hogg) interviews Brian De Palma .
- AMC (T Sahara Meer) interviews Kevin Smith.
- E-Book Revolution interviews James Alan Gardner (podcast).
- Gollancz (Marcus) interviews AJ Dalton.
Advice/Articles
- Genreville (Rose Fox) on In Praise of the Implausible.
- Tansy Rayner Roberts on Cheesecake Fantasy and Other Good Causes.
- Paul Kincaid on What Rough Beast, part 1.
- Pornokitsch (Jared) on New Releases: The Mammoth Book of Best New Horror 23.
- Book View Cafe (Laura Anne Gilman) on Practical Meerkat Returns: My First Time, Redux.
- The King of Elfland's Second Cousin on Escaping into Fantasy: Thoughts on Transportive Fiction.
- Kirkus Reviews (John DeNardo) on Generation Starships: Fiction and Fact.
- Brian Ruckley on What Happens to a Writer’s Words After They’re Released Into The Wild?
- Apex (Guy Hasson) on Two Worlds, One People.
- Smart Pop Books (Lisa M. Dinella, Gary W. Lewandowski, Jr., Ph.D.) on It's All in the Family.
- Starship Reckless on Why We May Never Get to Alpha Centauri.
- The Millions (Edan Lepucki) on Literary Fiction is a Genre: A List.
- 40FortyKey on Best Links for Writers and Publishers (October, 24).
- Barnes & Noble (Jeremy Cesarec) on 5 Things that Scare Horror Writer David Wong.
- SciFi Ideas (Mark Ball) on 10 Ideas for Alternate History Scenarios.
- The New Yorker (Arthur Krystal) on It’s Genre. Not That There’s Anything Wrong With It!
- My Bookish Ways on Scare-a-Thon Top 5 (Books and Films!): Stephen Blackmoore, author of City of the Lost.
- ScreenRant (Paul Young) on 15 Worst Movie Villain Costumes.
- Flavorwire (Emily Temple) on 10 of Literature’s Greatest Comeback Books.
- Geekosystem on 10 Worst Science Fiction Governments.
- John Scalzi on Humble eBook Bundle Post-Mortem.
- The Rejectionist on Some Books I Have Been Reading Lately.
- Environment Concept by Layne Johnson.
- Hawken concept art by Khang Le.
- Demographics of the Lord of the Rings - graphic.
News
- Finalists for 2012 National Book Awards Announced.
- Lev Grossman Endorses Korean Language Learning Fantasy Game on Kickstarter.
- Futuredaze video.
Earth and Air by Peter Dickinson
Wednesday, October 24, 2012
October 24, 2012 Links and Plugs
Interviews and Profiles
Art
News
- China Daily (Kelly Chung Dawson) profiles Ken Liu.[via Andrew Porter]
- When Gravity Falls (Devi-James Balcombe-Danzig) interviews Louise Morgan.
- My Bookish Ways interviews Christopher Golden.
- The Functional Nerds interviews John Mierau (podcast).
- Wired (Lewis Wallace) interviews Felicia Day (video).
- Weird Fiction Review (Kat Clay) profiles Charles Beaumont.
- Weird Fiction Review interviews Peter Bebergal.
- Tansy Rayner Roberts on Hack, Slash, Squish: Gender and Sex In Season One of Game of Thrones.
- Jennifer Marie Brissett on The Eleusinian Mysteries of Octavia E. Butler: The Mother-Daughter Struggle in Parable of the Talents.
- Strange Chemistry Top Ten Tuesday – featuring Cassandra R Clarke.
- Dark Wolf's Fantasy Reviews (Lawrence Santoro) on What Turns People into Lovers of Horror?
- Lavie Tidhar on E-books and the price of coffee.
- Canada Writes (David Nickle) on No such thing as "just lunch".
- Canada Writes (Robert J. Sawyer) on Five myths about science fiction writers.
- John Anealio on Why Are We Obsessed With Zombies?
- The New York Times (Ginia Bellafante) on A Nightmare on Park Avenue. [via Andrew Porter]
- Topless Robot (Kevin Guhl) on The 10 Best Episodes of the 1980s Twilight Zone TV Series.
- Vandana Singh on Strange Horizons and Me.
- Book View Cafe (Deborah J. Ross) on Revisiting Nightmares: Fantasy/Horror Crossovers and Trauma Recovery.
- SF Novelists (David B. Coe) on Six Non-Writing Things That Might Improve Your Writing.
- Chuck Wendig on Why Writers Must Beware Quackery.
- io9 (Charlie Jane Anders) on At Last, Official Maps of George R.R. Martin’s World, From Westeros to Qarth.
- My Bookish Ways reviews The Weird Girls.
- Sci-Fi Fan Letter reviews Diverse Energies.
Art
- Ture Ekroose's Portfolio.
- Dontnod by Paul Chadeisson.
- Creative Paintings by David Palumbo.
- Mountain Bash by Adrian Majkrzak.
- WakfuOgrest by Philippe Colin.
- Concept ships from Buryat.
- Chris Wooding New Covers.
- Mars Attacks Judge Dredd.
- Star Trek The Original Series by *dusty-abell. [via Stubby the Rocket]
News
- BVC Announces Dispossession, by Chaz Brenchley.
- Prime Books Welcomes Steve Berman.
- 'Star Trek' fans tie the knot at Klingon wedding during London convention. [via Paul Di Filippo]
- All Hallows Read 2012! Win Some Amazing YA Science Fiction Books!
- Call for Submissions: Year’s Best YA speculative fiction.
- Jo Anderton Book Launch, Kinokuniya Bookshop, Sydney, Thursday November 1st.
- WorldFuture 2013 Earth Sessions.
Quantum Coin by E.C. Myers
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
October 23, 2012 Links and Plugs
Interviews and Profiles
Advice/Articles
Art
News
- Lawrence M. Schoen interviews Kij Johnson.
- If You're Just Joining Us interviews Paul Tremblay (podcast).
- The Writer and the Critic episode 24 (podcast).
- My Bookish Ways interviews Lisa Morton.
- When Gravity Falls (Devi-James Balcombe-Danzig) interviews Sarah Lotz.
- Writing Excuses episode 7.43 with James L. Sutter (podcast).
- Suvudu (Shawn Speakman) interviews Terry Brooks (video).
Advice/Articles
- Juliette Wade on Caught between too much pointless detail and not enough? Choose your "logic of caring.".
- Kat Howard on The birds and the bees and the pens and the pages.
- The Enchanted Inkpot (Amaris Glass) on What's Your Inner Mythology?
- Susan J. Morris on Frightening Writing: Tips for Scaring off Pants.
- Haikasoru (Nick Mamatas) on Cthulhu Is Japanese.
- Orbit (David Brin) on Are we alone in the universe? Alien Life, Alpha Centauri & The Fermi Paradox.
- Tor.com (Neil Gaiman) on Ghosts in the Machines.
- Book View Cafe (Patricia Rice) on Market Manipulation.
- Smart Pop Books (Lawrence Watt-Evans) on Matchmaking on the Hellmouth.
- Black Gate (Howard Andrew Jones) on The Business of Writing: Joining the Community.
- The Qwillery (Ian Rogers) on A Picture Is Worth More Than A Thousand Words.
- io9 (Jess Nevins) on Mirai-ki: The Forgotten History of Japan’s Early Science Fiction.
- The Underground Bunker on Scientology’s Sea Org Application: What Are Your Crimes?
- Topless Robot (Jason F.C. Clarke) on The 10 Greatest Giant Movie Monsters of All Time.
- WhatCulture! (Drew Dietsch) on 10 Obscure Superheroes That Badly Need A Movie Treatment.
- Blastor (Krystal Clark) on 12 most annoyingly useless horror movie authority figures.
- Innsmouth Free Press (Harry Markov) on The Horror that is Horror, Tales to Terrify.
- My Bookish Ways reviews Trucker Ghost Stories.
- The Functional Nerds (Paul Weimer) reviews Among Thieves.
Art
- Surreal Digital Art – Max Mitenkov.
- Hot Digital Art by Reza ilyasa.
- The Rule of Law by Arseniy Korablev.
- Flying Machine- Landing Baseby ~thiennh2.
News
- The Super Big Fungi Pre-Sale.
- Decolonization Issue #2: Call for Submissions.
- Annual Bard Fiction Prize Is Awarded To Brian Conn.
- P D James wins at Women of the Year Awards.
- Locus Online to Host All-Time Best Polls in November.
- Marshall Leaves ChiZine.
- New Anthology: Oz Reimagined.
- British Comic Awards – Judges Announced.
- Rare Star Explosion Reveals Hidden Black Hole in Our Galaxy.
- WSFA Small Press Award - 2012 Winner.
Monday, October 22, 2012
October 22, 2012 Links and Plugs
Interviews and Profiles
News
Phantom Drift #2
- Random Buzzers Q&A with Margo Lanagan.
- The Coode St. Podcast with James Bradley.
- My Bookish Ways interviews DJ McIntosh.
- Matt Molgaard interviews Joe R. Lansdale.
- The Qwillery interviews Carrie Clevenger.
- Apex interviews Lavie Tidhar.
- My Bookish Ways interviews Max Gladstone.
- Book View Cafe (Marie Brennan) on Folklore from the inside and out.
- Book View Cafe (Sherwood Smith) on When editors say ‘Yes, but . . .’
- Book View Cafe (Steven Popkes) on Consideration of Works Past: Parzifal.
- Book Life Now (Ivan Ewert) on Writing Horror (When You Didn’t Think You Could).
- Inkpunks (Christie Yant) on What are you doing differently? Reigniting the creative fire.
- Daniel Jude on 2001: A Space Odyssey Explained.
- CNN (Zaina Adamu) on Exploring space: Why’s it so important?
- Jim Van Pelt on Why I Go to Conventions.
- PopSci (Colin Lecher) on Will The City Of The Future Look As Insane As This?
- Wired (Bruce Sterling) on Design Fiction: Utopia, Technology and Pickles.
- Listverse (KMM) on Top 10 Stereotypical Horror Movie Victims.
- John Wiswell on Bathroom List: 8 Things Hollywood Can No Longer Make Creepy.
- My Bookish Ways on Scare-a-Thon Top 5: Will Hill, author of The Rising.
- Paul Di Filippo reviews John Park.
- Cover reveal for Titan's reissue of Philip José Farmer's Flesh.
- Machinalia by Boris Artzybasheff.
- Star Wars Original Trilogy Poster Collection from Lynx Collection.
News
- KGB October 17, 2012 photos by Ellen Datlow.
- Dark Regions Press releases Crooked House by Joe McKinney.
- Humble Ebook Bundle breaks the $1,000,000 barrier.
- Large Hadron Collider Won't Destroy Earth With Planet-Eating Black Hole, Court Says.
- Free Graphic Novel: High Society Brings Steampunk With a Philippine Twist.
Phantom Drift #2
Friday, October 19, 2012
October 19, 2012 Links and Plugs
Interviews and Profiles
Diverse Energies edited by Tobias S. Buckell & Joe Monti
- Locus interviews Kij Johnson.
- AudioFiles interviews John Kessel (podcast).
- My Bookish Ways interviews Chaz Brenchley and Phillipa Bornikova.
- The Roundtable Podcast WorldCon 2012.
- Mike Brotherton on Science Fiction in the Age of Exoplanet Discovery.
- Den of Geek (Ryan Lambie) on 10 sci-fi films to look forward to in 2013.
- Tech Republic (Jay Garmon) on Top 10 best sci-fi inspired rock albums.
- Kristine Kathryn Rusch on The Business Rusch: Why Writers Disappear (Part Three).
- Mary Robinette Kowal (Maurice Broaddus) on The Knights of Breton Court.
- Bookworm Blues (Carol Berg) on Thoughts on Writer’s Block.
- Kirkus Reviews (Andrew Liptak) on H.P. Lovecraft and the Other.
- Tor.com (Grady Hendrix) on The Great Stephen King Reread: House Rules and The Great Stephen King Reread: Carrie.
- Graham Edwards on Poltergeist II, Young Sherlock Holmes.
- Orson Scott Card on Real and Surreal Art.
- bare•bones e-zine (Jack Seabrook) on Ray Bradbury on TV Part Six: The Alfred Hitchcock Hour "The Jar".
- CNN (Henry Hanks) on 'Tron' animated series feeds the need of fans.
- Missions Unknown (Scott A. Cupp) on Road Trip.
- Sci-Fi Fan Letter reviews Invasion of the Body Snatchers.
- Amazing Digital Illustrations by Nicponim.
- Big-Eyed Super Heroes by Ahmad Kussha.
- NYCC 2012: Batman - Death Comes to Gotham Panel Art.
- Sci-Fi city by Mauricio Alvarado.
- Halo 4 Concept Art by Nicolas Bouvier.
- Two-Book Strange Chemistry Deal for Eliza Crewe.
- Prime Books 2 012 Catalog.
- DC Retains Superman Rights.
- How to Follow The Walking Dead Third Season in Comic Books.
Diverse Energies edited by Tobias S. Buckell & Joe Monti
Thursday, October 18, 2012
October 18, 2012 Links and Plugs
Interviews and Profiles
Advice/Articles
News
- Chuck Wendig interviews Margaret Atwood.
- The Enchanted Inkpot (William Alexander) interviews Georgia McBride.
- Adventures in SciFi Publishing interviews Tina Connolly (podcast).
- Lightspeed Magazine (Earnie Sotikoroks) interviews Nancy Kress.
- Lightspeed Magazine (Jennifer Konieczny) interviews Brian Ruckley.
- The Future And You interviews John G. Hartness.
- My Bookish Ways interviews Gary McMahon.
- Geek's Guide to the Galaxy interviews Mike Mignola (podcast).
- Fireside interviews Daniel Abraham.
- Flickering Myth (Trevor Hogg) interviews Jon Thum, Rudi Holzapfel and Sara Bennett.
- The Command Line interviews Cory Doctorow (podcast).
- Omnivoracious (Seira Wilson) interviews Lois Lowry.
Advice/Articles
- Rachel M Brown on Portal Fantasy: Threat or Menace?
- Genreville (RoseFox) on Whither Portal Fantasy?
- Mary Robinette Kowal on The difference between audience and market.
- Theodora Goss on Our Inner Dialog.
- Kirkus Reviews (John DeNardo) on Getting From Here to There in Science Fiction.
- My Bookish Ways (Paul Weimer) on Five Frights from Lovecraft and Carpenter.
- Inside Science (Emilie Lorditch) on Using Science Fiction to Educate.
- Smart Pop Books (Ned Vizzini) on Reading the Right Books.
- The Bathroom Monologues on What Stories Scared You?
- Book View Cafe (Maya Kaathryn Bohnhoff) on Faith in Fiction 10: Religions of a Certain Age.
- Rachelle Gardner on What Does a Book Edit Look Like?
- Juliette Wade on How much Worldbuilding before you write? (especially for NaNo folk).
- John Scalzi on Gawker, Reddit, Free Speech and Such.
- io9 (Annalee Newitz) on 10 Planets from the Alpha Centauri System, According to Science Fiction.
News
- Terra Nova Anthology: Cover Art and Table of Contents.
- Arthur Suydam asks for help in recovering stolen artwork.
- Amazing Stories Seeking Genre Bloggers!
- StarShipSofa No 260 Bradner Buckner.
- Protecting Project Pulp No. 14: Tim Powers.
- New Steampunk From Book View Cafe.
- Quercus Comes to North America.
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
October 17, 2012 Links and Plugs
Interviews and Profiles
Advice/Articles
News
Crowd-Funded Projects
- Rose Fox interviews Jo Walton (video).
- Kindle Daily Post interviews Kim Harrison and Jocelynn Drake.
- My Bookish Ways interviews Joe Landsdale.
- Sword and Laser interviews G. Willow Wilson (podcast).
- Fantasy Literature FanLitAsks.
- SF Squeecast with Elizabeth Bear, Paul Cornell, Seanan McGuire, Lynne M. Thomas, and Very Special Guest Ellen Kushner (podcast).
- Virtual Memories interviews Michael Dirda (podcast). [via Paul Di Filippo]
- The Functional Nerds interviews John Kovalic (podcast).
- Outer Alliance Gaylaxicon panel with Lyda Morehouse, Jeff Eddy, Kyell Gold, Gary Russell, Zan Christensen, and Barbara Schulz.
- Weird Fiction Review (Desirina Boskovich) profiles Jerome Bixby.
Advice/Articles
- Chuck Wendig on 25 Things Writers Should Know About Conferences And Conventions.
- Book Life Now (Galen Dara) on Balance.
- Gollancz (Darren) on Science Fiction: Rumours of its Death Have Been Greatly Exaggerated.
- Black Gate (Michael Penkas) on In Defense of Red Sonja: The Vow.
- Alien Romances (Deborah Macgillivray) on Wolf in Wolf's Clothing.
- The Night Bazaar (Nathan Long) on Dim Bulb.
- Smart Pop Books (Chris Roberson) on An Angel on His Shoulder, A Devil on Hers.
- Lawrence Person on Forged Book Signatures in the UK?
- The King of Elfland's Second Cousin on Balancing Beauty, Language, and Story.
- Fortykey (Letizia Sechi) on Best Links for Writers and Publishers.
- SF Novelists (Marie Brennan) on This Wardrobe Closed Until Further Notice.
- Staffer's Book Review on The Constantine Affliction.
- Sci-Fi Fan Letter reviews Beyond.
- Barnes & Noble Review (Paul Di Filippo) reviews The Female Detective.
- Ttrax by djahal.
- Mars Attacks.
- Star Wars as Medieval Manuscript Illustrations.
- So Many Stunning Covers.
- Classic film posters, 'Toy Story'-style.
News
- Apex Magazine Subscription Drive.
- Announcing Europa SF.
- JRR Tolkien letter reveals poor sales of The Hobbit. [via Paul Di Filippo]
- New Short Fiction: The Perimeter by Will McIntosh.
- John Picacio launches creator-owned company.
- Baen Fire Season—Carolina Tiger Rescue Fundraiser.
- Pinback’s ‘Sherman’ Reboots Cult Soviet Sci-Fi Flick.
Crowd-Funded Projects
Rock On: The Greatest Hits of Science Fiction & Fantasy edited by Paula Guran
Tuesday, October 16, 2012
Guest Blog: Inspiration: When the Chafe Point Strikes a Spark, or what made the idea for a story into the maverick signature for a series by Janny Wurts
Janny Wurts is the author of numerous successful fantasy novels, including the acclaimed Cycle of Fire trilogy and The Wars of Light and Shadow series. She is also co-author, with Raymond E. Feist, of the worldwide bestselling Empire series. Her skill as a horsewoman, offshore sailor, and musician is reflected in her novels. She is also a talented artist, and illustrates many of her own covers.
A writer doesn’t draw their explosive ideas from the comfort zone. Passionate fire is more likely to flare from the stacked deck of discontent, and the vivid disappointments encountered amid the shattering experiences of life. How better to escape, as a middle child, from two older brothers who were bigger and stronger, and two younger sisters who tended to tattle when the tastier adventures involved a foray into the forbidden? And where better to stray off limits with safety, than to immerse in a work of fantasy? I gorged on faerie tales and mythology, since fantasy then was not as widespread, or as readily available.
Then, didn’t the stereotype grate on my nerves, that over and over again the ‘hero’ was a blond, always handsome and tall, and the bad guy was the sardonic sneak, inevitably with dark hair? And didn’t it sting, for a young brunette reader, that this profile carried over into movies, cartoons, and at times, even, to prejudice in real life?
I can honestly say that ranting annoyance seeded the original story concept: that the Wars of Light and Shadow would take this maddening, blinded cliché and stand it upside down with a vengeance. Oh, I’d play with the irony – the pretty, charismatic blond HERO-type would appear to hold all the right cards – but with two sides of the argument involved from the start, the little, introspective ANTAGONIST-type would in fact take the readers’ sympathy by storm.
Although the cookie cutter type Quest against a Dark Lord was prevalent at the time, I chose not to write my epic story in cast iron form. Along with the irritation just listed, Tolkien’s world building had set the bar. First thing I set off to build an original world, the history and the setting. Too young to have experienced enough, for me, this also involved biting off an enormous chunk of life experience: I embarked on exotic travel, offshore sailing, period re-enactment – ‘the epic’ became the excuse to experiment with every possible sort of fun to lend the action a facet of realism. I went overboard – literally – determined to bring the epic battles up to a benchmark standard. This involved research in depth, studying war and tactics from about the Roman era up to the point where gunpowder changed everything. Within the world just created, with about five interlocking approaches to magic, the various periods had to be ‘mixed and matched’ to fit a place and time that is not our earth. I watched movies, spent late nights chatting with historical war gamers, energized on enthusiasm, Earl Grey Tea and sugar high from Coca-Cola.
Then came The Moment – the spark – the life-changing crucible of experience that threw every concept I thought I had into meltdown. I attended a screening of a documentary film on the Battle of Culloden, re-enacted and shot in black and white, and depicted with all of the layers of ‘Bonnie Prince Charlie’ romance, stripped off. No flinching from the horror, as a small, ill equipped band of Scottish clansmen stood in the mud and sleet, being ripped apart as artillery fire pounded them down, from uphill, while their commanding officers failed to give the order to charge. I went into that dark theater naive with conviction, and came out in a head-spinning state of upheaval and shock. Sad to say that nothing in my life had prepared me for the gristly reality that is war.
All the worse, because overlaid on the facts I’d acquired, the horrific realities of The Battle of Culloden Field in fact were no different than any of the other armed encounters I’d studied (Roman era up to the emergence of gunpowder). History as taught in our classrooms was too often glossed over with sanitized lies. The news depicted by papers and networks became exposed, at one stroke, as grotesquely biased and over simplified. Movies, entertainment, and worst of all, epic fantasy perpetuated the distortion: war as told by the victor and glorified as a heroic endeavor inculcates the concept that might makes right. How tidy, that bloodletting causes are made clear, that one side is ‘wrong,’ the other is ‘better than’ and that the world’s sorry inequities find a just redress.
Left out of the picture: the misery, the brutality, the sheer bloody havoc that repeatedly solves nothing at all – that the winners of any conflict at arms had either: superior numbers, superior tactics, better weapons, or sheer dumb luck. The justifications that survive tell us nothing about what each side gave their lives for. We examine all too little from multiple viewpoints, take little stock of the cultural misunderstandings, and too often choose to turn the blind eye to the inequities never redressed, but glossed over until the nuance got steamrolled with death and ruthlessly eliminated.
Chafe point met spark with an impact that exploded every concept I had in the making. I have never again regarded the news, or a story, or a work of entertainment the same way. Life shifted to a quest to seek understanding, with recognition that right and wrong have many angles of view. Differences are messy, and the entanglements offered by ideologies fall far short, and truth is not absolute, but many-faceted. Nine volumes later, from Curse of the Mistwraith to Initiate’s Trial, the Wars of Light and Shadows still stretches to sound the heights and the depths. To explore the qualities that comprise a hero, then shift angle, and encounter the very same virtues precipitating a downfall. Balanced thought is about embracing change, and continuously expanding awareness. I can hope that this series, now two volumes from ringing in the finale, continues to break the polarized concept of black and white. That human beings are both good and bad, light and dark, expansive and fallible, selfish and altruistic – and above any other thing, richly inventive.
A series written over decades of life is bound to accumulate other chafe points along the way. Today’s fashionable penchant for grim-dark dystopia surely has sparked a personal backlash. I prefer the stance that loss of hope is ‘the enemy’ rather than the foibles and fallacies of human nature. Let Athera be a world where you might want to live, filled with causes that, but for the grace of knowing multiple sides of a conflict, will not flinch from difficult questioning of the pat answers. May the tables be turned, not once, but many times, and as a last flip off to the laziness of quite a few of my respected peers – let me never EVER rely on the cheater’s tactic of cliffhangers!
October 16, 2012 Links and Plugs
Interviews and Profiles
Advice/Articles
News
- Club Jade interviews Maya Kaathryn Bohnhoff (video).
- Reddit interviews Jacqueline Carey.
- Fantasy Matters (Megan Kurashige) interviews Will Alexander.
- Omnivoracious (Jeff VanderMeer) interviews Junot Diaz.
- Writing Excuses on Contemporary YA Fiction with Janci Patterson (podcast).
- Fireside Magazine interviews Lisa Grabenstetter.
- Canada Writes interviews Cory Doctorow.
- My Bookish Ways interviews Rob DeBorde.
- Fantasy Book Critic (Liviu Suciu and Mihir Wanchoo) interviews David Hair.
- David Brendon interviews AfroSF – Science Fiction by African Writers (part three).
- Suvudu (Sarah Peed) interviews Raymond Benson.
- ARD interviews George R.R. Martin (video).
Advice/Articles
- Theodora Goss on Meaning in Fairy Tales.
- Omnivoracious (Susan J. Morris) on Unnecessary Words, Blah Words, and Just Plain Wrong Words.
- Rachelle Gardner on Big Dreams vs. Realistic Expectations.
- Cassandra Clare on October is anti-Bullying month: on hiatuses and hate blogs.
- Grasping the Wind (Daniel A. Rabuzzi) on Women Must Be As Strong As Elephants”: Maggie, Sally, and The Indigo Pheasant.
- Black Gate (John ONeill) on The Paris Fashion Week of Fantasy Games.
- Mike Sterling on The Arkham House of Ideas. [via Paul Di Filippo]
- Bryan Thomas Schmidt on Writing The Short Query Novel Pitch.
- Lawrence Person on Holloween Horror Movies: The Sentinal.
- Warren Ellis on Greg Rucka's Alpha.
News
- Cemetery Dance Publications Halloween Short Stories eBook Promotion.
- Morpheus Tales Ebooks Now on Sale at the Robot Trading Co.
- Planet with four suns discovered by volunteers.
- Philip Pullman Narrates Fairy Tale Book Trailer.
- Belka, Why Don’t You Bark? book trailer.
Heiresses of Russ 2012 edited by Connie Wilkins & Steve Berman
Monday, October 15, 2012
October 15, 2012 Links and Plugs
Interviews and Profiles
Advice/Articles
Art
News
Events
- Odyssey Workshop interviews Alex Hughes.
- The Independent (Arifa Akbar) profiles Terry Pratchett.
- Omnivoracious (Jeff VanderMeer) profiles Iain M. Banks.
- Guardian Book Club interviews Iain M. Banks (podcast).
- Dan Patterson interviews Cory Doctorow (podcast).
- Fantasy Matters (Mark Schelske) interviews Kevin J. Anderson.
- Locus interviews Stanley Schmidt.
- Rationally Speaking Podcast On Science Fiction and Philosophy.
- The Coode Street Podcast episode 19.
- Galactic Suburbia Podcast episode 70.
- My Bookish Ways interviews John Hornor Jacobs.
- Stolen Droids interviews Larry Correia (podcast).
- Sci-Fi Fan Letter interviews Warren Hammond.
- Suvudu (Matt Staggs) interviews Jeff Carlisle, Chuck Palahniuk, Lia Habel, Carol Goodman/Juliet Dark, Lance Henriksen, Elizabeth Moon, Keri Arthur, G.T. Almasi, Kevin Hearne, Kim Harrison (video).
Advice/Articles
- Book View Cafe (Sherwood Smith) on Textual Purity.
- Fantasy Faction on The Evolution of Sexuality, Homosexuality and Gender in SFF: The chronology and detail of its literary evolution.
- James Nicoll on The Foundation Trilogy: Part Six of Eight.
- The Guardian (Ben Child) on Jurassic Park IV: something has survived (and scarily, it's half human).
- Slacktiviist (Fred Clark) on Theology & science fiction: A Calvinist dystopia.
- Smithsonian on A New Great Depression and Ladies on the Moon: 1970s Middle School Kids Look to the Year 2000. [via Paul Di Filippo]
- SFX (Alasdair Stuart) on Zombie Survival Tactics.
- Listverse (Jonny Anscombe) on Top 10 Overrated Videogames.
- Ragan's PR Daily (Laura Hale Brockway) on 12 quotes about reading to inspire writers.
- Tips on Life & Love (John Hornor Jacobs) on 5 Reasons to Be Excited about Season 3 of The Walking Dead.
- Den of Geek (Louisa Mellor) on 25 in-development US geek TV shows to look out for.
- Blastr (Jeff Spry) on Watch 9 over-the-top horror movie performances by Star Trek stars.
- Wired (Robert Mcmillan) on Why We Need a Supercomputer on the Moon. [via Paul Di Filippo]
- Locus (Paul Di Filippo) reviews Rudy Rucker.
- My Bookish Ways reviews Dark Currents: Agents of Hel.
Art
- 20 Best Examples Of Digital Gothic Art: Halloween Inspiration 2012.
- The Incredible Сreations Of Zach Bush.
- Steampunk Star Wars Illustrations by Björn Hurri.
- Digital Art by Lucas Graciano.
- Nazgul by Daroz.
News
- WSFA Small Press Award - 2012 Winner.
- Amber Benson to be Media Guest of Honor at Bram Stoker Awards Weekend 2013.
- You’re About to Get Some Money Back on Your Kindle Books.
- eBooks of Electric Velocipede 24 Available!
- Britain has alien-war weapons, says former government adviser. [via Paul Di Filippo]
Events
Remember Why You Fear Me by Robert Shearman
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