Vonda’s Casting Call

On the Book View Café Blog, Vonda McIntyre has asked readers to recommend performers to be cast in a movie hypothetically being made from her novel Dreamsnake:

Now I have the opportunity to create the fantasy cast of the Dreamsnake movie, and I could use some help.

I have some ideas for Snake, Arevin (you’ll be surprised, but you’ll see I’m right), the Mayor, Jesse, and North.

I haven’t settled on who could play Stavin, Stavin’s three parents, Arevin’s cousin (the leader), Alex, Gabriel, Ras, Silver, Thad, the crazy, or Jesse’s brother.

I believe the cast is meant to be chosen from contemporary actors and actresses – although shouldn’t a science fiction writer know someone with a time machine who can retrieve anyone in movie history?

Silverberg Coverage in LA Times

The Los Angeles Times has published an article about Robert Silverberg, marking the reissue of his novel Dying Inside by Tor:  

Right about then, the Age of Aquarius seemed to be reaching an apocalyptic conclusion: Amid campus riots, a contentious war and political assassinations, it was hard not to feel fatalistic.

And Robert Silverberg, a New York writer who’d recently watched his home burn to the ground and now felt his marriage turning to ash as well, sat down to write one of the darkest books in American literature, as well as one of the most unjustly overlooked.

The reasons “Dying Inside,” published in 1972, is not as well known as “Portnoy’s Complaint” or “Rabbit, Run” are complex. But it didn’t help that this novel — set in a recognizable, crumbling 1970s New York — concerned a gifted, neurotic guy who is also a telepath.

This article, written by Scott Timberg, concludes with the notice that Timberg will moderate a “Science Fiction: The Grand Masters” panel with Silverberg, Harry Harrison and Joe Haldeman on Saturday at 12:30 p.m. in Ackerman Grand Ballroom at UCLA as part of the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books.

[Thanks to Andrew Porter and my mother (!) for the story.]

Out of Phase

Vegas has seen the final Frontier — the hotel blown up in 2007 — but it’s giving that famous 5-(going on 45)-year voyage another lease on life. Just be patient. The revived Star Trek Experience in Downtown Las Vegas will not open the same date as the new movie, as the developer once predicted:

The story is, CBS has essentially taken control of the Star Trek universe (Or is it galaxy? Whichever intergalactic term fits) and will not permit any phaser, I mean phase, of the attraction to open in conjunction with the movie’s release.

[Thanks to David Klaus for the link.]

2005 TAFF Trip Report Now Available

The rest of the world can now own what Corflu Zed members had first chance to buy – a copy of Jerry’s Suzle’s TAFF Report, Trans-Atlantic Fan Fund delegate Suzle Tompkins’ account of her trip to the 2005 Glasgow Worldcon co-written with Jerry Kaufman.

Suzle’s press release follows the jump.

(Somebody should gift Elst Weinstein with a copy of this. For obscure reasons, he’ll appreciate the photo of a warning sign painted in a driveway which a pothole repair has reduced to “Ook Both Ways.”)

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Hugo Voter Packet

The packet of Hugo-nominated works that John Scalzi has organized the last few years, which in 2008 included electronic texts of four novels and an offer to acquire the fifth, has expanded so ambitiously — even to PDF files of fanzines — that a new distribution scheme had to be devised because direct e-mailing would be problematic.

This year’s Worldcon, Anticipation, realized the availability of the material is such a benefit to Hugo voters that the committee volunteered to handle the gatekeeping for members to access the files. Members who provided an e-mail address are receiving a password to login and dowload the material. The full download is 178 MB. Downloading individual files is an option.

See Anticipation’s press release, containing the full table of contents, after the jump.

 Update 04/23/2009: Added press release.

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YA: Bad for the Hugo?

Mark Bartlett’s Mataglap SF publishes interesting, well-written reviews. I would have enjoyed his highly-readable critique of Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book even more if he had not led off with this lightning bolt:

The most disturbing statistic from this year’s Hugo ballot is that 3 of the 5 novel nominees were marketed as YA books, with the voters passing up hard SF heavyweights like Baxter, MacLeod, Bear, Egan, Haldeman and Banks in favor of more lightweight fare. Is this cause for concern?

Count me as one Hugo voter who didn’t get the memo banning “lightweight fare” from competition. A lot of people didn’t get it and have been carelessly nominating things like Little Fuzzy, “The Trouble With Tribbles,” The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy and Don’t Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me The Pliers for years.

Maybe Bartlett doesn’t believe a YA marketing strategy automatically makes a novel an inferior brand of literature, though readers could be pardoned for interpreting his comment in that way. The notion of categorical inferiority in the world of literature isn’t alien to fandom (slash fiction!), though people still blush to admit they have judged a book by its cover – or its advertising.

Advertising especially, because marketing evolves even when the story remains the same. By the time I started reading sf in the mid-1960s, Heinlein’s Have Spacesuit – Will Travel and Andre Norton’s Witch World were being offered as juvenile or YA fare. Yet Heinlein’s Hugo-nominated 1959 novel originally had appeared in F&SF, the raised-pinky literary prozine, and Norton’s 1963 novel, another Hugo nominee, started life as an Ace mass-market paperback.

Does Bartlett really have a problem with YA and so-called “lightweight fare,” or was he reaching for words to express the same complaint Gregory Benford has voiced about Hugo voters who didn’t seem (to him) to be rewarding intellectually challenging science fiction with nominations for the Best Novel Hugo. After counting off the fantasy novels that had recently won the Hugo, Benford’s letter in File 770 #146 continued:

I don’t think it’s an accident that fantasy novels dominate a market that once was plainly that of Heinlein, Clarke, Asimov, and Phil Dick. I think it’s to the detriment of the total society, because science fiction, for decades really, has been the canary in the mine shaft for the advanced nations, to tell us what to worry about up ahead. Phil Dick was a genius at this. He could see the implications of the technologies, and what they would lead to, and people’s responses to them. But now, most of the readership is running away from these problems, perhaps terrified by them, in order to pretend that they’re really wielding swords in defense of the king, or something– which horrified people like Isaac Asimov. He saw this as just an old intellectual cowardice.

I know Benford is disappointed that I don’t share his alarm about the field, even though I do share his lack of enthusiasm for a few of the award nominees. If nobody at all was writing the kind of story he admires, then I’d be alarmed. (I wonder if he liked last year’s Hugo-nominee Halting State, by Charles Stross, which met my need for entertaining cautionary tales.) However, I’d hate to surrender the chief virtue of the Hugos  – that fans give them to works they actually like, rather than works they’re supposed to like. (Isn’t that what the Nebulas are for?)

Listing to the Other Side

The Long List of Hugo Awards site has restored to full Hugo status the 1953 awards given to Forry Ackerman and Willy Ley, the 1956 awards to Ley and Damon Knight, and the 1958 award to Walt Willis. The corrections have been made without public explanation.

It was only this year that the reclassification of the Hugos as “Special Awards” by the FOLLE committee in 2003-2004 came to light and became a source of controversy.  I happened to notice the changes today while researching a post, and I know they are recent because I checked the site before I wrote about the matter in the current File 770.

Taking a Byte Out of Crime

About 10 years ago there was a genre of so-called “useless websites” that did things like relay video of the office coffee pot. But now, in this Dickian age of ubiquitous surveillance, these are tools used against the corruption gnawing at our judicial system. Or, anyway, gnawing at its lunch.

A security guard and cleaning employee working at the Hamilton County Prosecutor’s Office were arrested Wednesday.

Their alleged crime? Taking food that wasn’t theirs.

The thefts were caught on video, according to court records.

“Most people whose break room lunches are stolen have to put up with it,” says David Klaus. “Not in the office of the Hamilton County (Ohio) Prosecuting Attorney, though, where taxpayers paid for a hidden camera so the county Sheriff could catch a janitor and a security guard doing Evil Doings with frozen pizza and soda pop. Nobody steals prosecutorial pizza and gets away with it in Hamilton County!”

The Jedi Is Strong in This Force

You probably never wondered if the Strathclyde Police force is serious about diversity, but the BBC can tell you — they’re not:

Eight police officers serving with Scotland’s largest force listed their official religion as Jedi in voluntary diversity forms, it has emerged. Strathclyde Police said the officers and two of its civilian staff claimed to follow the faith, which features in the Star Wars movies.

Now I ken Scottish jaywalkers get tickets written by constable Obi-Wan MacTavish Dundee…

[Thanks to Peter Sullivan for the story.]