Home

Advertisement

Customise

Previous 20

6th Jan, 2010


[info]fjm

Book blog '10: number 2.

Mackenzie, J. (2008). Another Country: A Guide to the Children's Books of the Lake District and Cumbria. Bath, Girls Gone By.
James Mackenzie contacted me to correct some erroneous comments I made about the setting of a Geoffrey Trease novel. By george does he know his stuff.

The title of the book is slightly misleading in that although this book does provide details of many books it might be better described as _Another Country: A Guide to the Lake District and Cumbria through Children's Books_. I'd love to use it as a combination walking and reading holiday guide one day. Walk in the morning, read the related books in the evening.
Tags:

[info]fjm

Updated Non-Fiction/Best Related LIst

These are not suggestions as such, they are memory joggers for when you are trying to think of things for those awkward categories. More suggestions welcome. I'm happy to keep updating this until nominations close.


Clute, J. Canary Fever
Deepad: I Didn't Dream of Dragons: http://deepad.livejournal.com/29656.html?view=278744
Butler, Bould, Roberts, Vint., Routledge Companion to Science Fiction: Easterbrook, N. Alterity and Ethics, in The Routledge Companion.
Csisceray Ronay Jr., I. The Seven Beauties of Science Fiction.
Mendlesohn and James, A Short History of Fantasy
Mendlesohn: The Inter-Galactic Playground
Swanwick: HOPE-IN-THE-MIST: The Extraordinary Career & Mysterious Life of Hope Mirrlees
Okrent, A., In the Land of Invented languages
Vint, S (Ed). Extrapolation, Volume 50, no 2 Summer 2009: The China Mieville
Merrick, H.: The Secret Feminist Cabal: A Cultural History of Science Fiction Feminisms
Jones, G: Imagination/Space: Essays and Talks on Fiction, Feminism, Technology and Politics
Mendlesohn, On Joanna Russ
Duncan, H.: http://notesfromthegeekshow.blogspot.com/2008/08/notes-on-strange-fiction-seams.html
Henry, Liz, The Wiscon Chronicles
Peter Bramwell: Pagan Themes in Modern Children’s Fiction
Reid, R. (ed.) Women in Science Fiction and Fantasy
Robinson, KS, Introduction to The Very Best of Gene Wolfe
Ruddick, N., Fire in the Stone: Pre-Historic Fiction from Charles Darwin to Jean M. Auel

[info]desperance

Chaz and/or Daniel, and the parodic instinct

Take a dying man and his younger lover. Add a reckless, ambiguous boy. Already it sounds like a parody of What I Do.

Further add a chain that binds them all, and now it's like a parody of me and Daniel Fox together. Which is kind of apt, I guess...

Anyway. We have a story. More: we have more than one story, and so does Gail. Sean may not make it in tonight, being snowed up in snowy Forest Hall. No matter: we will fill an evening somehow. Don't know how much of an audience we'll get; the Lit & Phil was booked full yesterday, eighty willing bods, but some are starting to cancel. Snowpocalypse! Eight and a half inches out there, according to my trusty ruler thrust in where it's deep and crisp and even in the centre of the park. It's kinda like a parody of winter, in these global-warming days...

[info]fjm

Book blog '10: Vickery, A. (2009). Behind Closed Doors: At Home in Georgian England. New Haven and L

A while back I tried to write a short piece for Banana Wings about how nineteenth century feminists prejudiced their successors against "women's accomplishments" ie playing the harp/piano, embroidery, etc. My basic thesis was that in an age of growing consumerism, where recorded music, printed pictures and commercial embroidery was becoming available, it was easy to forget that without women's "accomplishments" homes would have no decoration and no music.

I failed to write the article because it really isn't quite my area of expertise.

It is Amanda Vickery's.

In _Behind Closed Doors_ she uses court records, men and women's diaries and letters and fiction, to explore who made homes, how they were made, theories of authority and practice of authority, considers the changing role of accomplishments, and what they were and the values placed on marriage.

It's a fascinating book: Vickery points out how very important marriage was for men if they wanted either social status or comfort, that for women being a housekeeper was so important that finding out what kind of house they woud get to keep was a vital part of courtship, and that as far as what an attractive woman was, "sexy battleaxe" seems to have summed it up.

Highly recommended.
Tags:

[info]fjm

Fellowship Opportunity (writing for children, rather specific)

The PEN/Phyllis Naylor Working Writer Fellowship of $5,000 is offered annually to an author of children's or young-adult fiction, who has written two books of high literary caliber but who has not yet attracted a broad readership. The Fellowship is designed to assist a writer at a crucial moment in his or her career, when monetary support is particularly needed to complete a book-length work-in-progress.

Note the change in the entry rules: There is no longer an upper limit to the number of novels that entrants have written, or a time limit on when they were published. Letters of nomination must be received before January 14, 2010. For detailed information on how to apply, please go to:

http://www.pen.org/page.php/prmID/281

Thanks!

Fran Manushkin and Susanna Reich,

Co-Chairs, PEN's Children's/Young Adult Writers Committee

[info]fjm

Non Fiction Nominations for BSFA and Hugos

If people send me more things that are eligible, I'll repost the list. This is what's caught my attention this year (and at this stage, happy to have listed my own work, as these aren't recommendations as such)

Deepad: I Didn't Dream of Dragons: http://deepad.livejournal.com/29656.html?view=278744
Routledge Companion to Science Fiction: Butler, Bould, Roberts, Vint.
Neil Easterbrook, Alterity and Ethics, in The Routledge Companion.
Istvan Csisceray Ronay Jr. The Seven Beauties of Science Fiction.
James and Mendlesohn, A Short History of Fantasy
Mendlesohn: The Inter-Galactic Playground
Swanwick: Hope Mirlees
Okrent, In the Land of Invented languages
Vint, special issue of Extrapolation on China Mieville.
*Merrick: The Secret Feminist Cabal: A Cultural History of Science Fiction Feminisms
*Gwyneth Jones: Imagination/Space: Essays and Talks on Fiction, Feminism, Technology and Politics
Mendlesohn, On Joanna Russ
Hal Duncan: http://notesfromthegeekshow.blogspot.com/2008/08/notes-on-strange-fiction-seams.html

*Haven't read these, or seen reviews as yet.

5th Jan, 2010


[info]desperance

These are not the customs of my people

An LJ-friend diverted my attention to a list of US state beverages. Apart from being slightly gobsmacked at the whole notion of state beverages - well, just run your eye down that list. Two of them I had to look up; only two (and no, not those two) are alcoholic.

You guys. Sheesh.

4th Jan, 2010


[info]fjm

2006 and 2007 Carl Brandon Awards

The Carl Brandon Society is pleased to announce the winners of our 2006 and 2007 awards.

The winner of the 2006 Carl Brandon Parallax Award is Mindscape by Andrea Hairston. [Note: No work will receive the 2006 Carl Brandon Kindred Award.]

The 2007 Carl Brandon Parallax Award winner is The Shadow Speaker by Nnedi Okorafor. The 2007 Carl Brandon Kindred Award winner is From the Notebooks of Doctor Brain by Minister Faust.

[info]desperance

Coo

Sometimes, though, things get suddenly better, y'know?

As when the telephone-machine stridulates, and the voice at the other end belongs to someone whom you have known since she was a bump, and whom you had hitherto believed to be either in Spain or else in Germany, but who declares herself now to be in Newcastle and available for lunching on the morrow, yay!

I may break my leg in getting there, but get there yet I shall. Ruth is ... special to me.

And in other news: I could finish this story tonight. But Ladyhawke is on TV in half an hour. But I saw it only a couple of months ago. But it is my favourite movie. But every moment of it is yet fresh in my mind. But it is my birthday, and indulgence is legit. But...

*is torn*

[info]desperance

I can't tell if it's cloudy or bright...

Thank you all for the birthday wishes. If I were a better person, I would be better able to express how much they mean to me.

Being as I am, stymied for lack of substance (which is a most bizarrely mixed metaphor - look up "stymied" if you don't believe me - but I don't care tonight), I have nothing to offer but a vague wave from the bottom of the pit here, and good news for somebody else. PW have somehow failed to scatter stars before [info]moshui's feet this time around, but they said, inter alia, this about Jade Man's Skin:

Building on the brilliantly subtle groundwork laid in 2009's Dragon in Chains, Daniel Fox's Chinese fantasy series continues with [spoilers and plotstuff]. Readers who enjoyed Fox's delicate descriptions and leisurely prose will be thrilled to find more of the same, along with greater depth of story as the numerous characters are pulled together by schemes and destiny.

So Dan's having a good birthday, anyway. Me, the best I've managed so far is to break the spout off my white tea pot. Happily, I have a spare (along with a green tea pot and a black tea pot, obviously: doesn't everyone?), but even so. Life is meaningless and full of pain. Don't nobody kick my door in, though. Helen's got the key, 'k?

3rd Jan, 2010


[info]desperance

Unh

This? Is like chiselling mist out of fog, this story. All it does is slither through my fingers. And I have an immovable deadline in three days' time, when I have to read it live to an audience at the Lit & Phil. (In striking-distance of Newcastle? Come to the Lit & Phil! Twelfth Night! Ghost stories! Mulled wine! Mince pies! etc. You know the routine.)

Right now I am so tempted to abandon it till morning, take the rest of this wine downstairs and slug in front of the fire with a book that somebody else had to write. The only thing keeping me up here is the comfort of the cats, whom I would disturb if I left now.

[info]desperance

Done that, then

Excellent. Thank you all for the suggestions and advices. My marmalade turns out to be almost entirely lumpy bits, and very reluctant to liquefy; but I mixed what I could extract with a little of the ginger syrup (ginger marmalade! om-nom-nom...), and the result is not at all displeasing and seems to be doing the job. Tho' it has to be said that the cake was pretty sticky anyway, largely I suspect on account of the quantities of brandy applied since baking...

Anyway. The cake is marzipan'd, and no one will ever see the patchy mess I made of it, on account of the terrible mess I will make of the royal icing in a day or two. If I had remembered earlier that I had this still to do, I might have had cake on my birthday. As it is, not. But no matter. I shall have yummies enough, and not need cake.

[info]desperance

Help me, internets, you're my only hope!

I have a post-Xmas fruitcake to marzipan and ice. I have all the makings for the marzipan - but I have no apricot jam to stick the layers together. I always use apricot jam. Is there anything else I can use instead? Anything I might possibly have in the house? I have been looking at Vin Santo jelly, and at ginger syrup, and... Well. Like that. Am a bit stuck...

[info]desperance

Cat-toys redux

Grumpy-cat who can't get at the SuperCatNip Toy of Heavenly Perfection has decided that my desk-medications make an adequate substitute. The codeine bottle, particularly - it shakes! it rattles! it rolls!

*chases medicines across the office floor, scoldingly*

[info]desperance

Survivor-type

S'okay, you-all are excused cats (tho' [info]mantichore had better not show his face around here for a while; the boys are sweet but vengeful). I counted me out and I counted me back, safe and sound. Unfrozed, unfallen. So long as the fresh snow keeps on coming, it's actually okay out there (for values of "okay" that include "bitter cold", obviously - minus seventeen in bits of Scotland last night, apparently. Brr). It'll be tomorrow when it's iced over that I shall die if I don't stay in; and tomorrow is my birthday, and there are retail opportunities a-begging...

Anyways. Isn't soup supposed to be a one-pot wonder? What with the slow cooker that worked its magic overnight, and the giant saucepan that I sauteed the veggies in and then added the stock and the split peas and realised wasn't big enough to take that-all and the ham and the hambone too, and the stockpot that I transferred everything into, and the frying pan that will produce croutons later... Well. Washing-up r us. But I have a vat of soup simmering itself into loveliness now. A positive vat: 5.5 litres, according to the convenient measuring-scale on the inside of the stockpot. That'll see me through, alongside the chicken curry I made last night and the bread that I shall bake tomorrow. Whoo, yeah.

Oh, and also, I have perfected the crispy salty beetroot straw. I thought you-all should know that.

[info]desperance

Ice Follies 2010

Late last night, I was smitten with a brilliant idea. I snuck downstairs and set a ham hock in the small slow cooker to stew all through the hours of darkness.

This morning I have stewed ham hock and stock in salty quantities. Which are the basic makings of a London Particular, or pea-and-ham soup.

The tragedy of all this is that they are not the only makings of a London Particular. Yellow split peas are in the store cupboard as a matter of course, but I still need carrots! And leeks! And celery! And bacon! And breadflour!!

All of which is a long way of saying that having initiated the soup-making process during a moment of madness last night, I now have to go out into the snow to shop.

It is possible that I may freeze before I fall over; it is far more likely that I will fall first, and freeze afterwards. I think the first would be preferable, but at least if the latter pertains I shall have time to ponder on why we say afterwards but never beforewards, before I die.

You may want to thaw me out before you cremate me.

By all that you hold holy, look after the boys...

1st Jan, 2010


[info]desperance

The same part of another wood

My new NHS physio? Used to be my bank manager. How weird is that?

Barry disapproves of my new exercises. I sit here rocking my head back and forth in curious ways, and this distracts me from attending to Himself.

In other news, I am halfway through this story that I need to have finished by Twelfth Night, and am not stuck exactly, but my thoughts have coagulated. It's just too cold to work. I am going to take the day off, I think...

[info]fjm

Writing Mentorships with Nalo Hopkinson

Beginning in February 2010:



One on One Advanced Level Fiction Writing Mentorships in the Literature of the Fantastic (fantasy, science fiction, magical realism, etc.)



with Nalo Hopkinson



Seaworthy w crater bkgr



The first term of writing mentorships I offered is going well, (November 2009 to January 2010) and is coming to an end, so I've decided to undertake a second term. Via email, I'll be conducting one-on-one mentorships in writing fantasy and science fiction. These are independent mentorships (i.e. offered privately by me, not through an educational institution).



I live with a number of chronic conditions that can affect my physical and mental stamina and my ability to focus, so I'm going to be as selective as possible about who I take on. As rewarding as mentoring is, I can't let it become so challenging that I can't meet my own writing obligations. You and I might be a good match for a mentor relationship if you:


# are writing some form of the literature of the fantastic, such as fantasy, science fiction, or magical realism;
# are passionate about the reading, writing, and theory of fiction;
# are working on a specific book-length project, probably a novel or a collection of short stories;
# are accustomed to having your writing critiqued and won't freak out just because I say something isn't working;
# have a humanistic, egalitarian, socially conscious approach to writing and life;
# have a decent grasp of the basic tools of sentence construction such as grammar, spelling, verb tenses. When you need aids such as spelling and grammar checkers, you use those without needing to be prompted (if you need specific disability accommodations, please let me know);
# are interested in a professional career as a working writer;
# are patient. I experience blips in my physical and mental energy, so the deadlines I set are not hard and fast.



Ideally, your writing strikes a chord with me. If I don't find that, I'll look for writing that seems strong or promising. Those are largely subjective judgments, so I can't tell you in advance what will or won't be a successful application.



Note: There's always the possibility that the material we deal with will contain some explicit sexual content, so you must be of legal age in your jurisdiction with respect to sexually explicit material.



I AM:
# a writer, editor, and fiction writing instructor in the genres of fantasy, science fiction, and whatever else you want to call it. (I'd rather write the stuff than get into arguments about definition.) I also write erotica, or porn, or whatever you want to call it;
# one of the founding members of the Carl Brandon Society, which exists to further discussion on race and ethnicity in speculative fiction writing and community;
# a polymath whose perceptions are weighted towards the kinetic and the verbal;
# a bit of biology geek;
# a lot of language geek (in undergrad, I majored in Russian and French and audited German);
# a craftsperson fascinated with historical design, fashion and imagery, altered art, sea glass, collage;
# an excellent communicator, a respectful and forthright instructor;
# a big ol' lefty queer pierced shaved tattooed disabled middle-aged third world Caribbean-born Canadian woman of colour with a belly laugh, fibromyalgia, ADHD, trifocals, a mild learning disorder, and funny hair.



MY QUALIFICATIONS:
# professionally published since 1995; four novels, one collection of short fiction, and three more novels under contract;
# recipient of the World Fantasy Award, the John W. Campbell Award, the Sunburst Award for Canadian Literature of the Fantastic, the Spectrum Award for the portrayal of GLBTQ characters in speculative fiction; shortlisted for the Hugo and Nebula Awards, the Philip K. Dick Award, the James R. Tiptree Jr. award for speculative fiction that examines gender and gender roles, and Honourable Mention in Cuba's Casa de las Americas Prize for Fiction;
# editor and co-editor of four anthologies of fiction, one of which received Canada's reader-voted Aurora Award;
# graduate of and past instructor with the Seton Hill University Master's program in Writing Popular Fiction;
# instructor in the Correspondence Program in Creative Writing through Humber College, Canada;
# past mentor at all three Clarion Science Fiction and Fantasy Writing Workshops (Seattle and San Diego, USA and Brisbane, Australia).



MY APPROACH TO TEACHING:

Your joy in writing is important to me. I cannot predict whether you will be a successful writer. I can't even reliably tell you whether you have talent or not; those are puddings that are very hard to prove. But I love it when a light goes on behind a student's eyes because they've perceived something new about the craft of writing that they can't wait to try out. My goals are: to help you write the story you want to write, not the one I would write; to help you develop an intuitive, body-based sense of the rhythm, structure and movement of a story. (I've discovered that when it comes to art, content and container are the same thing.) At the same time, I'm committed to challenging your skills and your understanding of what fiction does and how it works. I won't dish out empty flattery. I will be honest with you about what I perceive the strengths and weaknesses of your writing to be, and I aim to do so as one peer addressing another.



DATES:

The mentorships run from February 1, 2010 to April 30, 2010.

COST:

$2,000 in U.S. funds, payable upon acceptance (credit card or Paypal preferred).

REFUND POLICY:

This part, frankly, scares me. I am a frequently broke writer, not a corporation with funds to spare. The money I earn from mentoring is necessary cash which will go immediately and directly towards my subsistence. I can't offer refunds.

HOW IT'LL WORK:
# You'll send me monthly excerpts from a single, coherent project. That could be a novel, a collection of short stories, or even a novella or novelette.
# There will be three monthly deadlines between February 1, 2010 and April 1, 2010. On the deadlines, you will send me a package of up to 40 pages double-spaced, 12-point type. I will respond to you within a few days.
# I won't evaluate rewrites of material I've already seen; it's really difficult to see the departures in the rewritten work and even more difficult to have a fresh response to them, so it's hard to know whether the rewrite has been successful or not.



DEADLINE: January 15, 2010. Yes, only a few days left!

TO APPLY, email me:
# a one to two-page cover letter that provides your name, contact information (correct snail and email addresses, phone number) and age. Tell me a bit about yourself and give me a sense of your publishing history if you have one, along with a description of the project on which you'd like to work and why you think a mentorship with me will be useful for you;
# an attachment containing a five-page fiction sample of your writing in English (double-spaced, one inch margins, twelve point type, font Courier New or Times New Roman).

SEND YOUR APPLICATION HERE

nalohopkinson@gmail.com

I'll select the writers with whom I want to work, and advise you in a few days whether you've been accepted. If you are, payment is due in full as soon as I invoice you.

31st Dec, 2009


[info]desperance

Ho Ho Ho

Now I know why Father Christmas laughs like that; it is because he is mean and mocking. Mean and Mocking. The boys have been gifted (via [info]la_marquise_de_) with the Best Toy Evar, and I keep it shut away and laugh at them. Ho ho ho.

It is drugs, it is a cigar of super-strong catnip, which is skunk to these boys. They will not share, and if I let either of them run off with it either it would be slobbered to death by Barry, or else torn apart with rabbit-kicks by Mac. They both adore it, and they get it for about a minute each, and then have to content themselves with adoring the carpet upon which it so briefly lay.

Between them and the utter cold and utter dark and so forth, I'm not getting much work done. About a paragraph and a half, today. My brain is fritzed.

But I have been in Suffolk, and if any of you are ever in Suffolk and need the Best Ham Ever, go to Emmetts of Peasenhall. They also do mail order. Also Richardson's Smokehouse in Orford is worth your time. Also I spend ninety minutes on the platform at Peterborough Station, and after ninety minutes on the platform at Peterborough Station even Newcastle in the snow seems warm. (Not to the boys, you understand, they cannot believe how cold we are; but they weren't with me in Peterborough.)

I dunno what to do now. I was gonna see the new year in with a hot bath and a bottle of whisky - I had one ready - but I've been in town with friends until forced to come home by the shocking discovery that the pubs of Newcastle were closed (whatever happened? I swear this used to be a party city...), and that bottle of whisky turned into a pot of white tea and a bit of fine chocolate (whatever happened? I swear I used to be a party person...) and I guess I'll probably just go to bed. With a cat or two, most likely. I am the only warmth on their horizon.

[info]esmeraldus_neo

whoaaa

( You are about to view content that may not be appropriate for minors. )

Previous 20

Advertisement

Customise