Showing posts with label non-fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label non-fiction. Show all posts

Thursday, May 28, 2015

This and that

Not much news about fiction, but I have two short non-fiction pieces up this week: one at SF Signal, where I was part of a Mind Meld about movies that are better than the books they're based on, and one at the SFWA blog, where I wrote about why I'm a member and volunteer.

Next week is that launch date for The Year's Best Military SF and Space Opera, which includes my story "Rules of Engagement." Baen is having a special promotion where readers can vote on which story they like the best, with the winner being awarded at DragonCon.

Next week is also the Nebulas, where I'll be participating at the group autograph session if nothing else (I don't have final word about programming yet.) We're going a few days early to see Chicago, so it should be a good trip in several different ways.

#SFWAPro

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Guest blog up at Novelocity: What fictional creature would you most like as a pet?

 
 
 
 
No time for a Spoiler Space this week because I've been in the recording studio (don't worry, I'm not starting a singing career; I'm recording audio for an educational computer game we're doing at the day job.) Luckily, my guest blog at Novelocity has been posted: I'm in fine company among Leslie Williams, Lawrence M. Schoen, Beth Cato, Ken Liu, Steve Bein, Fran Wilde, Tina Connolly and Michael R. Underwood as we all talk about what fictional animal we'd most like to have as a pet (hint: I get to use the phrase "two tons of psychic warmoose.")






#SFWAPro

Friday, June 20, 2014

Guest blogs roundup, with bonus icebergs

In case you missed them, here are the guest blogs I did this week about Irregular Verbs and Other Stories:

The Big Idea: Matthew Johnson, in which I talk about the big ideas behind the stories in the collection -- and all the little ideas too.

My Favorite Bit: Matthew Johnson Talks About Irregular Verbs and Other Stories, where I talk about how my favourite parts of the collection are those I didn't write, and also icebergs.

The Scariest Part: Matthew Johnson Talks About Irregular Verbs and Other Stories, in which I blame my son for making me write the scariest story in the book.

The Story Behind Irregular Verbs and Other Stories, in which I explain why I write spec fic and why writing is about finding out who hurts the most.


#SFWAPro

Thursday, October 04, 2012

A book-shaped hole

This blog post by Alastair Reynolds is a great contribution to the whole "Is SF exhausted" debate, but what I really loved about it is that it articulates better than ever why I write what I write -- because, as Reynolds puts it, he sees "a book-shaped hole where one ought to be," something he thinks ought to exist that nobody else is doing. It's a way of looking at it that I find comforting as I slowly begin the process of writing another unsellable book.

Tuesday, October 02, 2012

The future, one thing at a time

The latest issue of Clarkesworld is up, and with it an article I wrote in which I argue against Campbell's Law ("the future doesn't change one thing at a time".) This has been percolating for a long time, ever since I was quoted that law during a critique of one of my stories many years ago. The critique, as it happens, was entirely right, but I never entirely bought into the general argument behind it... so hang onto those grudges, kids, they just might pay off someday!

Friday, September 28, 2012

The forest for the trees

Aeon Magazine has an article currently online by Hugh Thomson called "The Sherwood Syndrome" that got me thinking a lot about forests. Thomson points out that contrary to popular belief, England has not had a significant degree of forest since the Bronze Age. He quotes from Oliver Rackham's book The History of the Countryside: "Even in supposedly backward counties such as Essex, villa abutted on villa for mile after mile, and most of the gaps were filled by small towns and the lands of British farmsteads." This is, of course, contrary to the idea that the "true" England -- represented by figures like Robin Hood or the Green Man -- resides in the forest. It's a fascinating article, and it immediately got me thinking about some possible implications Thomson doesn't explore: for instance, was the idea of their own country as having been virgin forest until relatively recently a factor in why the English believed, contrary to all evidence, that North America was fundamentally empty? (Compare English to French settlement patterns, for example, or the fact that even today the sophistication of states like the Iroquois Confederacy -- which significantly influenced the development of the U.S. Constitution -- is absent from the popular imagination.) Is it part of why we here in Canada, one of the most urban countries in the world, still think of ourselves as being engaged in a struggle with a vast wilderness? That's not even to mention its effect on fantasy literature, both in the UK and North America, which is something I'm going to have to take awhile to think about.


Thursday, September 20, 2012

My Writing Elsewhere: Frodo's Journey

Matt Mikalatos is hosting a series of guest posts as part of Tolkien Week over at his blog, and he graciously allowed me to do one on Frodo, Joseph Campbell and the hero's journey. There are also some terrific posts from Cat Rambo, MK Hutchins and others.

Monday, May 28, 2012

Some pig

Joanne Kates is retiring today as the Globe and Mail's restaurant reviewer. For those of you who don't know her work, she has a very distinctive voice and a very narrative way of writing a restaurant review that was one of my main inspirations in writing my story Long Pig. Everyone have some dim sum this week in her honour.

Friday, December 23, 2011

Three sales to the wind

Some of you may have noticed it's been a little quiet around here lately, the result of an unusually busy work schedule and the arrival of our new little guy; in fact, I recently realized that I didn't have a single original story out this year. Fortunately, 2012 is already looking a lot more positive: first, my story "The Last Islander" will be coming out from Asimov's, probably sometime in the spring; second, I made my first-ever sale to Fantasy & Science Fiction, my story "The Afflicted,"; and finally I have a non-fiction piece coming in Clarkesworld on the role of food in fantasy and SF, probably in late spring. Keep checking in and I'll keep you posted!

Have a wonderful holiday season and a happy new year!