Flying Dragon Bookshop Makes Shortlist

Flying Dragon Bookstore logo.

Congratulations to Toronto’s Flying Dragon Bookshop, one of three Specialty bookstores on the 2011 Canadian Booksellers Association CBA Libris Awards shortlist.

Flying Dragon arguably has more than one specialty. While some characterize it as a children’s bookstore, it’s also where people connect with the latest YA fantasy and general fantasy novels.

The store has often been in the news since it opened in 2005. Last year Quill and Quire praised its window display for Guy Gavriel Kay’s new book, Under Heaven:

As you can see, the display includes not only Under Heaven, but other mythologically minded or otherwise thematically linked titles. A new Kay tome lifts all boats, after all.

The CBA Libris Awards will be presented on May 14 in Toronto. The full list of categories and nominees is here [PDF file].

[Thanks to John Mansfield for the story.]

Jane Yolen at Flying Dragon Bookshop.

Sladen, “Sarah Jane” Actress, Dies at 63

Elisabeth Sladen, who played Sarah Jane in Doctor Who and CBBC’s The Sarah Jane Adventures, passed away April 19 from cancer.  

She first appeared as Sarah Jane in a 1973 episode of Doctor Who. Sladen remained with the show for over three seasons, working with Jon Pertwee and then Tom Baker in the lead. She reprised the Sarah Jane role occasionally in following years and, in 2007, was given her own spin-off series on CBBC — The Sarah Jane Adventures — where she worked with Doctors David Tennant and Matt Smith.

David Klaus sent me the story with his comment, “The Doctor is immortal. Human actors are not. I’ve been crying off and on for a couple of hours now.” The BBC must have known this would be many people’s reaction because its online report ends with a link to the CBBC Newsround article “What if the news upsets you”.

New Jeapes E-books

Ben Jeapes and friend.

Two new ebook titles by Ben Jeapes are just out from Cheryl Morgan’s Wizard’s Tower Press: the science fiction novel His Majesty’s Starship, and a short story collection, Jeapes Japes.
 
When His Majesty’s Starship was first published by Scholastic in 1998 the Times Educational Supplement declared, “It is a testament to Jeapes’s skill that the hermaphrodite quadruped, Arm Wild, with its flaky skin and four nostrils, emerges as the most engaging character in the whole novel. But the most glorious conceit is the space station UK-1, last bolt-hole of the exiled House of Windsor, ruled by the entrepreneurial King Richard and his unlovely son, Prince James.”

I felt compelled to post this news item so I could use that quote! Something about this exotic combination makes me eager to read the book.
  
The other release, Jeapes Japes, collects all of the author’s short fiction, a good deal of which originally ran in Interzone or F&SF.
 
The books are available through the Wizard’s Tower bookstore and as an Amazon Kindle edition.

“Teaching SF” Workshop at Renovation

“Teaching SF,” a workshop on how to use science fiction as a teaching tool, will be held in conjunction with the 2011 Worldcon. Full attending members of Renovation may attend at no cost, others may enroll for a fee — but all must sign up in advance as space is limited.

Speakers will include Worldcon Guest of Honor Tim Powers, Peadar Ó Guilín, Mary Robinette Kowal, John DeChancie, Daniel M. Kimmel, Gary K. Wolfe, L. E. Modesitt, Jr. and G. David Nordley. The workshop is a collaborative effort, organized and presented by Reading for the Future, Inc, from a proposal by AboutSF at the University of Kansas.

The workshop will be held in the Reno-Sparks Convention Center on Wednesday, August 17 from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The full press release follows the jump.

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Klingon Language Institute
Leads in to Renovation

Want to hear some buy’ ngop (“Great news!”)?

For three days before the Worldcon, Lawrence M. Schoen will be leading the Klingon Language Institute’s annual summer conference (qep’a’) in Reno. The official verbal battles begin Sunday morning, August 14, and run through Tuesday evening, August 16. Advance registration is $35, or $40 at the door.

The full press release follows the jump.

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Disaster Tourism

Eyjafjallajokull in Iceland.

In these Phil Dick-ian times it’s a coin toss whether an idea will be imagined as an sf story before it really happens and gets reported by journalists.

Take “disaster tourism.” Just the other day MSNBC ran a report by a writer who took a tour of Chernobyl:

Even before the crisis at a Japanese nuclear plant broke out in March, interest in visiting Chernobyl was growing so much that the Ukrainian government started an initiative to bring in more visitors by streamlining procedures for signing up for the tours.

“We want to say ‘come and see for yourselves,'” Emergencies Ministry spokeswoman Yulia Yershova told The Associated Press. Then she added a remark indicating that the meaning of Chernobyl is elusive even for those who live closely with it: “We want to dispel the myth that Chernobyl still remains dangerous for Ukraine and the world.”

But Chernobyl is in fact still a dangerous place, as the rules for visitors make clear. Don’t touch any structures or vegetation, don’t sit on the ground or even put your camera tripod there, don’t take any item out of the zone, don’t eat outdoors. Guides make sure the visitors understand that various spots in the zone are more contaminated than others and insist no one wander off the designated paths.

I was initially going to spin the story of “disaster sightseeing” tours to Chernobyl as more-science-fictional-than-science fiction. But doesn’t this precise combination of morbid curiosity and imagination drives a great many sf stories?

One example that comes to mind is Kage Baker’s “Company” story, “Son, Observe the Time,” set on the eve of the San Francisco Earthquake. Baker’s story involves much more than the quake – because a lot of smash and crash, without more, doesn’t add up to a story. And that fact is one of the ironic distinctions between fiction and reality. Loads of people want to visit real life scenes of wreckage and ruin, and no character development or plot resolution is needed.    

There are guided bus tours to New Orleans neighborhoods that were severely damaged by Hurricane Katrina. Discover The World, a British tour operator, runs a “volcano hotline” and calls travellers as soon as a volcano erupts, offering them a trip to see it. Tourists left for Eyjafjallajökull in Iceland within 48 hours after the eruption began:

From a couple of miles away, we first catch sight of the crater, spewing fire into the darkening sky, and we stop to take photos. This is dramatic enough, but our guide motions at us to start up the snowmobiles again and we head closer. Suddenly, we crest a rise, the ice turns from white to ashen black, and the fiery crater is there before us, no more than 500m away. The sight is mesmerising, but oddly familiar from films and TV – you have to remind yourself this is for real. The sound is thrilling and unexpected though, a succession of low booms as the lava explodes up 100 metres into the air, then comes crashing to earth.

Where science fiction writers have the edge on travel agents is that they can send people to the edge of jeopardy in cosmic environments that can only be reached in the imagination, like Poul Anderson’s Flandry, stranded on the surface of a Jovian world and trying to imagine how to attract the attention of alien rescuers, or Niven’s Beowulf Schaeffer snared in the tidal pull of a black hole.

Benefit Auction to Name Character
in Sanderson Novel

Right now on EBay, Brandon Sanderson is auctioning off the right to name a character in his upcoming sequel to The Way of Kings. Proceeds benefit “Life, the Universe, and Everything” (LTUE), the science fiction and fantasy symposium held in Provo, UT and now in its 30th year. The high bid is $1525 at this writing.

As Sanderson explains on his blog:

LTUE [as it was held at my university] was one of the science fiction and fantasy conventions that I attended regularly while trying to break in, and it was always an invaluable experience. Now that my books are published and available worldwide, I like to take opportunities to give back to the community that fostered my development as a fan and as a writer.

Sanderson specifically is offering one person the opportunity to get his or her name (or most likely a variation thereof) used for a significant second-tier character in the next Stormlight Archive book. There’s also a bit of wryly-phrased fine print…

Finally, we hope it doesn’t have to be mentioned but the submitted name will be rejected if Brandon feels that it is in any way offensive, mischievous, or ill-intentioned, or if it is disruptive to the story. This auction is for the name only. The winning bidder may not dictate the character’s personality,  description, or role in the story. If the winner supplies any of these things as part of the name submission, Brandon may or may not draw from that when implementing the character in the novel as the story demands.

The auction ends Saturday, April 16 at 9:30 p.m. Mountain time.

[Thanks to Dave Doering for the story.]

China Bans Time Travel Films

Having decided that time travel stories are guilty of “treating serious history in a frivolous way,” China’s State Administration of Radio, Film and Television (SARFT) has issued guidance that critics predict will stifle future productions of that kind. A story in The Hollywood Reporter explains:    

This sort of guidance, while not a black-and-white ban, commonly acts as an effective catalyst for filmmakers’ self-censorship.  In a country that has no film law on the books, what SARFT says often goes…

Since China’s ruling party bases much of its doctrine and strict media management on scientific Marxism, the fantasy of time travel – which potentially gives the individual the freedom to reorder reality – conflicts with politically correct thought completely ruled by the CPC.

Journalist Raymond Zhou Liming is quoted in the article as saying:

Most time travel content that I’ve seen (in literature and theater, that is) is actually not heavy on science, but an excuse to comment on current affairs.

Which is by no means an unfamiliar concept to fans, many of whom agree with the axiom that “science fiction is never about the future, it is always about the present.” Or as Ray Bradbury expressed the idea in poetic imagery – “Perseus, looking forward into his mirrored shield, reaches behind and decapitates Medusa.”

[Thanks to Craig Miller for the link.]

WFC Chooses Brighton as 2013 Venue

The World Fantasy Convention is coming back to the UK in 2013, when it will be held at the Hilton Brighton Metropole Hotel.

For fans who want to join immediately, WFC is offering a £75.00 “Early Bird” Attending Membership rate.

The press release stresses there will be a “firm membership limit” but does not say what that limit will be. The Guests of Honor also have yet to be named.

The WFC 2013 concommittee is led by Amanda Foubister, Chairperson and Hotel Liaison, previous chair of Toronto’s Ad Astra and the 2007 and 2010 World Horror Conventions. Stephen Jones, renowned British anthologist, is a Co-Chairperson working on Programming and Publications. He helped led the 1988 and 1997 World Fantasy Conventions and the 2007 and 2010 World Horror Conventions. Novelist Michael Marshall Smith is a Co-Chairperson working on Publications.

Among the familiar names on the committee list is London Worldcon bidder James Bacon, who will be responsible for Dealers’ Room, Hospitality and Events. Good times!  

All of this sounds so promising I will skip the usual blogly attempt to force a connection between this story and my experiences at a con years ago in that same hotel in Brighton.

More information about WFC can be found on the www.wfc2013.org website.

The full press release follows the jump.

[Thanks to Andrew Porter for the story.]

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