Tuesday, April 30, 2013

[GUEST REVIEW] Kate Onyett on “Vince Cosmos” – Glam Rock Detective [feedly]


 
 
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[GUEST REVIEW] Kate Onyett on "Vince Cosmos" – Glam Rock Detective


Kate Onyett lives and works in Oxford, UK, doing her bit for the NHS and the sick of England. When not nursing a doctor's ego, she can be found reading and reviewing speculative fiction, and is open to suggestions and submissions for such (gizmomogwai at hotmail dot co dot uk). Her interest in the speculative found full flowering at university, when she talked her tutors into letting her write first about vampires, and then about pirates. Yarr.

It is 1972, and Poppy Munday travels down from South Shields in North England to seek her fortune and make something of herself in the Big Smoke that is hip and happening London. Supported by an older, worldlier cousin and a motherly landlady, Poppy overcomes homesickness and near tragedy (her favourite glam rocker survives being shot at while on stage) to win a competition to meet that same idol, Vince Cosmos. Foiling a second assassination attempt plunges her into Vince's world of intergalactic adventure and intrigue. She joins forces with him and the strange little man from the upstairs flat to stop Martians taking over the world, one sequinned boot-step at a time.

Vince Cosmos is a funky, lively mix that harks back directly to the comfy, cosy adventures of late 70s, early 80s sci-fi adventures at tea time (the era of my own youth), and there is more than a whiff of classic Doctor Who about the style and tone of the play. This is not surprising, given that it is the brainchild of Paul Magrs, a respected fantasy and sci-fi author who has written for Doctor Who, and whose books are quirky gems, written with a humorously light touch. This is not grand, epic space opera, nor a grinding, angst-filled dramatic 'event'. But it is a lot of fun, with an appealingly innocent sensibility. These are adventures where nothing so awfully terrible happens that the heroes cannot save the day, and where more potentially dangerous events are exciting instead of intimidating, leaving the heroes undeterred and unscathed. A theatre may be blown up, and a hotel suite shot up, but no one is killed. Baddies escape to make trouble for another day and death and grief are quite 'alien' to this nostalgic tale.

The story comes directly through Poppy's point of view, narrating her own adventures, and we learn bit by bit about glam-rock detecting only as she becomes initiated. She emerges as an amazed but centred young woman, with a brave, pragmatic streak. She steps in and instigates a fair bit of the action, saving the day more than once, but is happy to let Vince to take the limelight. As for Vince himself, Magrs ideas for glam-rock era music-making and Martian-hunting culminated in the question "What if Ziggy Stardust really was an alien?" and Vince was born in glorious stereo format. He is a pitch-perfect clone of Bowie's most famous creation: dolled up in outrageous costumes and makeup, his attitude one of light insouciance, his music based on the ethic of prog-rock space opera. The role of Vince, thanks to Ziggy's enduring influence, is a tremendously strong underpinning for the entire premise. Vince's angle is what he does offstage; his assertion that he and his sidekick know the 'truth' about Martians; invaders sneaking in by stealth, against whom he does battle. Sometimes vain and self-centred, Vince can seem shallow, although a final 'good night' phone call with Poppy to make sure she is OK at the conclusion of the play's events shows that he can be sweetly thoughtful on occasion.

Aliens Among Us may seem a little cliché, but are not so surprising to Poppy. A quick précis of history between her and Vince midway through reveals that in this version of 1972, Martians really did try to invade at the end of the nineteenth century, and not just in the imagination of H.G. Wells. When the strong-arm tactics failed, the Martians retreated and are now apparently using more subtle infiltration techniques to achieve their nefarious ends.

But do not be mislead, there is no comparison to be made about paranoid, 'them within us' politics, Invasion of the Body Snatchers-style. Colours, flashy false fronts and hidden identities shimmer and dance lightly across this narrative, adding interest and only allowing for dramatic reveals in suitably exciting moments. Accusations of intentional gravitas would be completely inaccurate, and unfair. There has never been the intention — from author to production to finished product — that this is about anything but what it presents: colourful adventures and exciting scrapes. At the end of the day, the baddies are baddies and the goodies are goodies, operating under the banner of righteous defence.

The events of the play have a distinct voice…that of a very British form of nostalgia, a tone at which Magrs excels. It was an exciting time, as in the 70s new possibilities were straining at the leash of tradition British social norms, especially in the melting-pot of London. With its nostalgic, golden glow, encapsulated by the hopeful Poppy, come to seek her fortune down south, and who ends up with a whole lot more, the play is an ambassador for rosy-tinted memory. The overall effect is a merchandising of the near-past into a convivial, more positive time. And it tugs at the memories of anyone grown into adulthood, who can still recall the wide-eyed passions of youth, before life got complicated and serious.

Yes, this is, compared to some sci-fi, as light as a feather. But the high production values and strong, cheerful performances; especially from Lauren Kellegher as perky Poppy and smooth-tonsiled Julian Rhind-Tutt as Vince, mean that it is a hugely enjoyable bit of froth. As a package Vince Cosmos is a neat, lovingly crafted little bubble of historical flavour. It is a reinvented 1970s Britain with some brilliant characterisations, produced with an eye firmly on the fun. And it is on this, it's highest and most amiable merit, it should be judged. Bafflegab's production works in magical symbiosis with Magrs's writing, producing a top-notch product that entertains and amuses, with starry potential for future episodes.




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The SF Signal Podcast (Episode 187): Interview with APEX Editor/Publisher Jason Sizemore [feedly]


 
 
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The SF Signal Podcast (Episode 187): Interview with APEX Editor/Publisher Jason Sizemore

In episode 187 of the SF Signal Podcast, Patrick Hester chats with APEX Editor/Publisher Jason Sizemore.

About Jason:

Since 2004, Jason Sizemore has followed his passion through Apex Publications, a nationally distributed publisher of science fiction, fantasy, and horror books. He started with just a small print zine (Apex Digest), then a pro-level online zine (Apex Magazine–still going strong), then books, and then ebooks. He edits anthologies, mostly for Apex, occasionally does copy editing (when pressed) and have done plenty of acquisition editing over the years. He also writes.

Links:

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Cover & Synopsis: “The Quarry” by Iain Banks [feedly]


 
 
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Cover & Synopsis: "The Quarry" by Iain Banks

Amazon has the cover art and synopsis of the upcoming novel The Quarry by Iain Banks, hittng bookstore shelves on June 20, 2013.

The author credit lacks the "science fictional "M." because this isn't science fiction, however, it is the author's last novel and one whose themes are familiar.

Here's the synopsis:

Kit doesn't know who his mother is. What he does know, however, is that his father, Guy, is dying of cancer. Feeling his death is imminent, Guy gathers around him his oldest friends – or at least the friends with the most to lose by his death. Paul – the rising star in the Labour party who dreads the day a tape they all made at university might come to light; Alison and Robbie, corporate bunnies whose relationship is daily more fractious; Pris and Haze, once an item, now estranged, and finally Hol – friend, mentor, former lover and the only one who seemed to care. But what will happen to Kit when Guy is gone? And why isn't Kit's mother in the picture? As the friends reunite for Guy's last days, old jealousies, affairs and lies come to light as Kit watches on.

Book info as per Amazon US [Also available via Amazon UK]:

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Little, Brown (June 20, 2013)
  • ISBN-10: 1408703947
  • ISBN-13: 978-1408703946

[via Upcoming4.me]




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Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Tidbits for 4/29/13 [feedly]


 
 
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Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Tidbits for 4/29/13

Interviews & Profiles

News

Crowd Funding

Articles

Art

More Fun Stuff

Want More? See SF Signal's Twitter, Facebook, and Google+ pages for additional tidbits not posted here!



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Here’s the Cover for Alastair Reynolds’ New Doctor Who Book, “Harvest of Time” [feedly]


 
 
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Here's the Cover for Alastair Reynolds' New Doctor Who Book, "Harvest of Time"

Alastair Reynolds tackles Doctor Who in his next novel Doctor Who: Harvest of Time, hitting bookstores in June.

Here's the brief and generic description of the book:

One of science fiction's most acclaimed authors delivers a spectacular original novel in the Doctor Who universe featuring the Third Doctor, as played by Jon Pertwee.

Book info as per Amazon US [Also available via Amazon UK]:

  • Paperback: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Broadway (June 4, 2013)
  • ISBN-10: 0385346808
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385346801



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Live Video Writers Workshop with Mike Resnick and Paul Di Filippo [feedly]


 
 
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Live Video Writers Workshop with Mike Resnick and Paul Di Filippo

Starship Sofa's newest event is a Live Video Writers Workshop with Mike Resnick and Paul Di Filippo happening on Sunday, 16 June 2013 from 17:00 to 19:00 (BST).

What will be covered in the live video workshop

Mike Resnick – How to run a career: how to meet editors, how to choose an agent, how to make domestic and foreign sales, what contract clauses should scare you away before you have an agent, what worldships have good records of success, new sources of income that have opened up since the turn of the century.

Paul Di Filippo – How to develop speculative ideas: sources, extrapolations, research methods, and investigation of literary lineage to avoid reinventing the wheel. Then, how to conceive of the best possible story-telling format or frame for any particular idea. How to be generous with the reader, not skimpy, thus producing stories with the heft and feel of our overstuffed reality. Also, how to deal with pitfalls.




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Free SF, Fantasy and Horror Fiction for 4/27/2013 [feedly]


 
 
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Free SF, Fantasy and Horror Fiction for 4/27/2013

So my novel's free through the end of April.

For those of you who have supported me and read After The Fires Went Out: Coyote (I really appreciate it) and want a little more of Baptiste and his band of misfits, I'm looking for some beta readers to take a look at Book Two: Shards. Please email me if you're interested, or if you are an influencer/blackmailer who can get me critiques from John Scalzi, Neil Gaiman, or Snooki.

What's special about today's free fiction?

  1. Daily Science Fiction has a short story by Evan Dicken
  2. Lovecraft eZine #23 – April 2013
  3. Drabblecast #280 – Trifecta XXV


Written

Written – Flash

Written – Serialized

  • @HiLobrow: Goslings by J.D. Beresford – Chapter 21 [Post-apocalyptic Novel - from 1913]

Audio

Free eBooks

Excerpts




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Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Tidbits for 4/27/13 [feedly]


 
 
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Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Tidbits for 4/27/13

Interviews & Profiles

News

Events

Crowd Funding

Articles

Art

More Fun Stuff

Want More? See SF Signal's Twitter, Facebook, and Google+ pages for additional tidbits not posted here!



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Next Item: (4431) Black Prism Bk #2; Blinding Knife by Brent Weeks

Publisher's Summary 

Gavin Guile is dying.

He'd thought he had five years left - now he has less than one. With 50,0000 refugees, a bastard son, and an ex-fiancée who may have learned his darkest secret, Gavin has problems on every side. All magic in the world is running wild and threatens to destroy the Seven Satrapies. Worst of all, the old gods are being reborn, and their army of color wights is unstoppable. The only salvation may be the brother whose freedom and life Gavin stole 16 years ago.

LENGTH
24 hrs and 19 mins

MUSIC INTERLUDE #1:
Album: Various Artists, 100 American Trucker Songs Disc 3

Album: Various Artists, Love Songs From The Movies

Music Podcast: Smooth Jazz Affair Show #188 (03-08-2013) with Sal Calfa

MUSIC INTERLUDE #2:
Album: Various Artists, 100 Funny Favorites Disc 3

Album: Various Artists, 100 Movie Classics Disc 7

Music Podcast: Le Jazz Affair Show #643 (03-10-2013) with Sal Calfa

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Starting: (4430) OTR, Podcasts & Music by Various Performers

Starting this item/book. For details on this item/book and other items/books, see one of my blogs.

Reviews of books, movies, etc. Blog:http://audio-book-addict.blogspot.com

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Finished: (4429) Templar Chronicles 1; Heretic (GA) by Joseph Nassise

Narration: excellent.

Story: thrilling action packed story of the templers in current day battling evil.

Dwight A. Hunt, Sr. A+, MCP
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Next Item: (4430) OTR, Podcasts & Music by Various Performers

Summary: 

Tech Podcast: All About Android-83-Nexus After Dark with Jason Howell, Eileen Rivera and Ron Richards

Album: Brooks & Dunn Greatest Hits Collection

Sci-Fi Podcast: Clarkesworld Magazine; Ep-741-(To See the Other) Whole Against the Sky by E. Catherine Tobler

Sci-Fi Podcast; Escape Pod; Ep-372-flash Fiction Special by Various

Tech Podcast: Ipad Today-121-Ipad Mini Vs. iPad 4 Retina, Photosmith with Sarah Lane & Leo Laporte

Music Podcast; Le Jazz Affair Show #075 (08-16-2006) with Sal Calfa

Sci-Fi Podcast: SF Site Podcast; Review if I Were You Jul 2010 by Gil T. Wilson

Music Podcast; Smooth Jazz Affair Show #175 (12-07-2012) with Sal Calfa

Album: Fourplay, Snowbound

Talk Radio Show: Whitley Striebers Dreamland; Richard Hoagland Interview Pt 1 through Pt 3

Dwight A. Hunt, Sr. A+, MCP
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Starting: (4429) Templar Chronicles 1; Heretic (GA) by Joseph Nassise

Starting this item/book. For details on this item/book and other items/books, see one of my blogs.

Reviews of books, movies, etc. Blog:http://audio-book-addict.blogspot.com

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Finished: (4428) Janissaries by Jerry Pournelle

Narration: great.

Story: good story of modern day soldiers taken to another planet that is at our mid evil times. The leader of the soldiers befriends some of the natives and battle others.

Dwight A. Hunt, Sr. A+, MCP
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Monday, April 29, 2013

Next Item: (4429) Templar Chronicles 1; Heretic (GA) by Joseph Nassise

Summary by Graphic Audio: 

At the end of the First Crusade, the church created a monastic military order known as the Knights Templar. Now, rising up from the ashes of history, they are the Vatican's last defense in the war between good and evil…

Cade Williams is no ordinary man. His ability to cross over to the other side makes him uniquely qualified to command the Church's special operations division. As a modern-day Knight, Cade can use the curse that has scarred his soul as a weapon against the forces of darkness. But a new kind of unholy war is brewing — and soon Cade may be the last man standing…between the living and the dead.

The desecration of Templar cemeteries has sparked a full-scale investigation. Cade and his team suspect that a cabal of necromancers is behind it all. Their purpose: to claim the legendary powers of a lost holy relic for their own ungodly campaign. For Cade, there's only one way to stop them — by tracking the dead himself…crossing the most sacred of battle lines…and facing his own terrifying demons.

Approximate Run Time: 6 hours

Dwight A. Hunt, Sr. A+, MCP
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Finished: (4427) Swan Song by Robert McCammon

Narration: excellent.

Story: an enjoyable look at a nuclear war between Russia and the U.S. and survival after nearly all major U.S. cities are nuked. Along with the struggle to survive years of nuclear winter,  there's a battle between good and evil including magic and the supernatural.

Dwight A. Hunt, Sr. A+, MCP
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Starting: (4428) Janissaries by Jerry Pournelle

Starting this item/book. For details on this item/book and other items/books, see one of my blogs.

Reviews of books, movies, etc. Blog:http://audio-book-addict.blogspot.com

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Sunday, April 28, 2013

[GUEST INTERVIEW] Kit Reed interviewed by Keith Brooke [feedly]


 
 
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[GUEST INTERVIEW] Kit Reed interviewed by Keith Brooke

Kit Reed has two new books this year: her spontaneous human combustion novel, Son of Destruction from Severn House (US and UK), and her "best of" collection, The Story Until Now, from Wesleyan University Press. The collection includes some classics and some favorites, as well as six new, never-before-collected stories. Earlier books include What Wolves Know (PS Publishing), a Shirley Jackson Award nominee in 2011, and Enclave (Tor, 2009). She is Resident Writer at Wesleyan University.


Keith Brooke: Your work could be labeled SF, fantasy, horror, suspense, weird, literary and/or any number of other things, but taken as a whole (and even in many cases individually) your stories defy categorisation, and you describe your work as "transgenred".

Kit Reed: I do, because there are so many things my stories are, or aren't. Some them are clearly SF, if you read that as Speculative Fiction, but some of them are straight-up realism, or "literary," and it bothers me that "literary" has become both a "genre" and a dirty word. And, me as transgenred? I think I made up the word because I moved around so much as a kid. It opened up so many possibilities that people don't get when they're rooted in one place. The word fits because I'm like the boll weevil, I go everywhere and I don't belong anywhere.

KB: Are categories helpful or limiting?

KR: If you're a writer who builds everything on- what are those things?- Tropes– categories are limiting.

Essentially, they're a useful marketing tool- if you're an editor and not a writer, or a writer intent on cracking a single, limited marke–, because within those categories, you can only do certain things. When I send work out, I'm always surprised by what goes where, and how people respond to it.

KB: Should more writers shrug off genre labels and come out as trans-genred?

KR: I think it's going to depend on the individual writer. As a destination to be mapped and arrived at on a certain time, transgenre is pretty nebulous. I didn't get there by deciding I want to be that. It was me looking back and figuring out where I'd been.

These things- categories of all kinds or jumping the traces- are all based on who individual writers are and what they want to be. If you want to be the world's greatest science fiction writer, horror writer, fantasist or suspense writer without turning any of those things on their heads, by all means go for it!

KB: This year sees publication of two new titles, a novel, Son of Destruction, and a big retrospective collection, The Story Until Now. Son of Destruction is a puzzle about the nature of spontaneous human combustion, a story of the transience of both success and failure, and of small-town America where decades-old mysteries have repercussions resonating through to the present day – as Tom Shippey writes in his enthusiastic Wall Street Journal review, your "fictions are layered, their hearts revealed retrospectively." Is this layering a conscious construction, or is it just how things come out?

KR: Partly I blame William Faulkner and Theodore Sturgeon for the flexibility. They taught me how to move around through time and space, from one consciousness to another. Partly I just can't help it. And the rest? As writer as well as reader, I need to open things up, go where they take me, because I'm easily bored.

KB: How much is Son of Destruction based on the real world?

KR: It's all very real to me, even the parts I don't know about. In a spare moment, Google Mary Reeser, a poor old lady who combusted in her chair in St. Petersburg, Fl. in 1957. Once you've seen the images, you'll never forget. What actually caused it is still a mystery. There have been others like it all over the world. I started with that. Then I wondered: OK, what if she wasn't the only one in St. Pete (which did, in fact, have another in the 60s). What if there was a third and she was a pillar of the most prestigious club in town?

KB: Is this a Florida you know?

KR: It is and it isn't. I did some time in Florida as a kid and got my first job at the St. Petersburg Times. It's a society I know- the clubs, the parties- and the rest, I made up.

KB: How did you go about choosing stories to include in The Story Until Now?

KR: I went for my favorites. I have a pretty strong sense of which are my best, and I wanted to make sure that it wasn't just the top of the pops like "The Wait" and "The Food Farm." I think more than a third came out in the new century, one in Asimov's SF in January of this year.

KB: What did you learn about Kit Reed The Writer from the process of going back over your work and picking out the highlights for this collection?

KR: This, I'm tickled to report, is that I haven't regressed or kept circling in the same old puddle like Eeyore. I think I got better over time.

KB: Incidentally, both of these books feature striking cover art by your husband Joe. How did this come about? Have you collaborated on any other projects?

KR: As you know, he's a great artist. He painted the automatic tiger on the cover of The Story Until Now after I wrote the story from an idea he had. And the cover painting for Son of Destruction is his painting of a waterfront hotel in St. Petersburg.

KB: What excites you as a writer?

KR: Whatever I just read. Whatever I'm just about to do.

KB: What is it that makes you think 'I have to write about that'?

KR: If I knew, I'd mainline it and try to figure out how to bottle it and sell it at a beeg price.

KB: You've done a lot of work with developing writers (I'm particularly thinking of your wonderful story workshopping classes at Wesleyan University held in an anonymized virtual MOO environment) – what conclusions did you reach about teaching writing?

KR: It forced me to try to explain things I knew but hadn't spelled out. I came away from the experience with a lot of friends who then became colleagues; we still keep in touch.

KB: Can you teach writing, or is it more a case of helping developing writers to learn?

KR: What you're trying to do is help them figure out what they're trying to say and decide what's the best way to do it. Essentially, it's an editorial thing.

KB: What's the biggest mistake a writer can make?

KR: A writer? Any writer? Not reading everything within reach.

A writer who teaches writing? Making students write like TEACHER instead of helping them learn how to write like THEMSELVES. Imagining there's a surefire How-to list and preaching it like the gospel, as though successes are result of taking one from Column A and three from Column B.

KB: What will we see next from you?

KR: Copious tweets from @TheRealKitReed and status updates on Facebook…until the next thing is done and sold and scheduled to come out. Until you've finished doing what you're doing, you're talking about intangibles. What will it be? Like the Pythons, I'm always trying for Something Completely Different.


Keith Brooke's first novel, Keepers of the Peace, appeared in 1990, since when he has published seven more adult novels, six collections, and over 70 short stories. For ten years from 1997 he ran the web-based SF, fantasy and horror showcase infinity plus, featuring the work of around 100 top genre authors, including Michael Moorcock, Stephen Baxter, Connie Willis, Gene Wolfe, Vonda McIntyre and Jack Vance. Infinity plus has recently been relaunched as an independent publishing imprint producing print and ebooks. His most recent novel, Harmony (published in the UK as alt.human), is a big exploration of aliens, alternate history and the Fermi paradox published in 2012 by Solaris and shortlisted for the Philip K Dick Award. 2012 also saw publication of Strange Divisions and Alien Territories: the Sub-genres of Science Fiction, an exploration of SF from the perspectives of a dozen top authors in the field (edited by Keith Brooke, published by Palgrave Macmillan). He writes reviews for The Guardian and Arc, teaches writing at the University of Essex, and lives with his wife Debbie in Wivenhoe, Essex.



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