Voter Packet a Few Bricks Shy of a Load

The 2012 Hugo Voter Packet as of this hour still lacks the samples in four publication categories — Graphic Story, Editor – Short Form, Semiprozine, and Fanzine.

The Chicon 7 committee’s May 21 press release publicizing the 2012 Hugo Voter Packet neglected to address the continuing unavailability of the samples or say when the technical problems are expected to be fixed. Items from all other categories have been online since May 18 or before.

The full press release follows the jump.

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Tarpinian: Kirk Douglas Gets Bradbury Award

Kirk Douglas greets Bo Derek. Photo by John King Tarpinian.

By John King Tarpinian: On Sunday evening, May 20, Woodbury University (Burbank, CA) gave Kirk Douglas the 25th Ray Bradbury Creativity Award.  Giving the tribute to Kirk Douglas was George Schlatter (for you youngsters out there he produced a little program named Laugh-In).  Ray Bradbury was unable to attend so he asked Bo Derek to speak on his behalf.

Among the guests in the audience were Leytes and Katherine Burroughs, granddaughter and great granddaughter of Edgar Rice Burroughs.  Mars connects us all in one way or another.

George Schlatter, Bo Derek, Kirk Douglas. Photo by John King Tarpinian.

Bo Derek and Kirk Douglas. Photo by John King Tarpinian.

Leytes and Katherine Burroughs. Photo by John King Tarpinian.

Ray Bradbury Creativity Award. Photo by John King Tarpinian.

Plaque To The Future

Continuing File 770’s tradition of repeating Internet memes years after everyone else has finished with them, I present from Signs of Life

Jacob-von-Hogflume-1024x848

This is a parody of English Heritage’s historic building markers — just one of hundreds of spoof road signs, warning stickers and council order notices that ad men Dave Askwith and Alex Normanton stuck up around the country. Normanton was pleased to say, “Some lasted several weeks before being nicked, or taken down by disgruntled staff.”

The BBC News supplies more examples.

[Thanks to John King Tarpinian for the story.]

2011 Nebula Award Winners

The Science Fiction & Fantasy Writers of America (SFWA) announced the 2011 Nebula Award winners on May 19, 2012.

Novel: Among Others, Jo Walton (Tor)

Novella: ”The Man Who Bridged the Mist,” Kij Johnson, (Asimov’s Science Fiction, October/November 2011)

Novelette: ”What We Found,” Geoff Ryman

Short Story: ”The Paper Menagerie,” Ken Liu, (The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, March/April 2011)

Ray Bradbury Award for Outstanding Dramatic Presentation: Doctor Who: “The Doctor’s Wife,” Neil Gaiman (writer), Richard Clark (director) (BBC Wales)

Andre Norton Award for Young Adult Science Fiction and Fantasy Book WinnerThe Freedom Maze, Delia Sherman (Big Mouth House)

2011 Damon Knight Grand Master Award: Connie Willis

Solstice Award: Octavia Butler (posthumous) and John Clute

Note about the Solstice Awards: They “acknowledge members who have had a significant impact on the science fiction and fantasy landscape. It is especially meant for those who have made a consistent, positive, major difference in the genre.”

Service to SFWA Award: Bud Webster

2012 SF&F Translation Award Nominees

Finalists for the 2012 Science Fiction and Fantasy Translation Awards (for works published in 2011) were announced at Åcon 5 in Finland over the May 19-20 weekend.

Long Form

  • Good Luck, Yukikaze by Chohei Kambayashi, translated from the Japanese by Neil Nadelman (Haikasoru)
  • Utopia by Ahmed Khaled Towfik, translated from the Arabic by Chip Rossetti (Bloomsbury Qatar)
  • The Dragon Arcana by Pierre Pevel, translated from the French by Tom Clegg (Gollancz)
  • Midnight Palace by Carlos Ruiz Zafón, translated from the Spanish by Lucia Graves (Little, Brown & Company)
  • Zero by Huang Fan, translated from the Chinese by John Balcom (Columbia University Press)

Short Form

  • “The Fish of Lijiang” by Chen Qiufan, translated from the Chinese by Ken Liu (Clarkesworld #59, August 2011)
  • “Spellmaker” by Andrzej Sapkowski, translated from the Polish by Michael Kandel (A Polish Book of Monsters, Michael Kandel, PIASA Books)
  • “Paradiso” by Georges-Olivier Chateaureynaud, translated from the French by Edward Gauvin (Liquid Imagination #9, Summer 2011)
  • “The Boy Who Cast No Shadow” by Thomas Olde Heuvelt, translated from the Dutch by Laura Vroomen (PS Publishing)
  • “The Short Arm of History” by Kenneth Krabat, translated from the Danish by Niels Dalgaard (Sky City: New Science Fiction Stories by Danish Authors, Carl-Eddy Skovgaard ed., Science Fiction Cirklen)
  • “The Green Jacket” by Gudrun Östergaard, self-translated from the Danish (Sky City: New Science Fiction Stories by Danish Authors, Carl-Eddy Skovgaard ed., Science Fiction Cirklen)
  • “Stanlemian” by Wojciech Orli?ski, translated from the Polish by Danusia Stok (Lemistry, Comma Press)

The jury for the awards was Dale Knickerbocker (Chair); Kari Maund, Abhijit Gupta, Hiroko Chiba, Stefan Ekman, Ekaterina Sedia, Felice Beneduce & Irma Hirsjärvi.

The winners will be announced at the 2012 Finncon over the July 21-22 weekend. Each winning author and translator will receive a cash prize of US$350.

[Story liberated from Ansible Links.]

2012 Hugo Voter Packet Posted, Sorta

Chicon 7 has posted Part I of the 2012 Hugo Voter Packet, making digital copies of many award nominees available to Worldcon members.

Part I includes all the fiction categories (Novel, Novella, Novelette, Short Story), plus Pro Artist and Fancast.

There also are samples from writers nominated for the Campbell Award, which is not a Hugo but is voted upon at the same time.

The committee is releasing the Hugo Voter Packet in stages because of technical problems with the downloads for such categories as Best Fanzine. Michael Thomas, who supervises the HVP, explained:

In the final testing before going live, our volunteer IT staff discovered a bug that was preventing consistent downloading of the categories with larger files. They’ve been working around the clock with our ISP to fix the bug or to find a workaround so that these categories can be released to the members.

“Larger files,” eh? So has The Drink Tank #300 proved too big to squeeze through Chicon’s fiber-optic cable and left it looking like an anaconda after breakfast? Or has the Internet failed to decide what to make of an unprecedented digital issue of Banana Wings? Surely my fanzine is behaving itself.

You Worldcon members can get started reading Part I immediately if you have your Chicon 7 PIN and Membership #. Just head over to the login page.

Not everything will be available in multiple e-book formats. The publishers of each work control what file formats Chicon is allowed to provide. Some were unwilling to permit anything other than a watermarked PDF.

If you don’t have your PIN and Membership # handy, you won’t have long to wait until the committee’s e-mail arrives with a copy of this information. They’ve predicted the e-mails will all be sent within 24 hours.

The content on Chicon 7’s special page for Best Fancast nominees is open to all. Those links will take you to the nominees’ websites where you will be able to download a representative 2011 episode by following directions on their website.

Silver: Lost Your Hugo Nominee Pin?

By Steven H Silver: Chicon 7 is running a Hugo Nominee replacement program. Past Hugo nominees who either have lost their nominee pins and want to replace them, or where nominated at Denvention and received the one year alternate Hugo nominee pin who want to replace them with the more traditional pin, may place an order for missing pins by sending an e-mail with the number of pins they need to replace to [email protected]. Please indicate how many pins you need to replace.

Each pin replacement will cost $3.75.  The pins will be available for pickup at Chicon 7 this August.  If you would like to replace pins and won’t be attending Chicon 7, you can either arrange to have someone pick them up for you or we will ship after the convention if you add in the cost of postage (again, contact [email protected] for rates).

Please help us by letting people to whom this program will apply know about it.

Orders for replacement pins must be received by June 15.

Snapshots 82 Chicon IV

Here are 10 developments of interest to fans:

(1) A series of satirical movie posters answers the question — What If The Hunger Games Was Made By Famous Directors?

(In the Peter Jackson version, Orlando Bloom plays Katniss Everdeen…)

(2) Joseph Bentz’ new blog tells Why I Don’t Watch Movies Based On Books I Care About:

I have never seen The Lord of the Rings movies and probably never will. Whenever I have mentioned this to anyone, the most common response is, “But they’re so good.”

The fact that they’re good makes me want to see them even less.

Bentz worries that a movie will displace the memories of what he imagined while reading the text.

I understand that. For example, it’s impossible for me to reread Starship Troopers without first clearing my mind of the movie version’s ridiculous battle scenes of soldiers fighting in massed ranks like the troops at Waterloo.

(3) Remember:

Don’t judge a book by its cover, unless you think the cover is awesome.

Mark Titus, author of Don’t Put Me In Coach

(4) Shouldn’t Jack Kirby have made a lot more money off the work he did for Marvel? That’s why Alex Pappademas is troubled by a guilty conscience as he waits to interview Stan Lee, in “On the (surprisingly complicated) legacy of Stan Lee” posted at Grantland

I’m sitting in a hotel conference room waiting for Stan Lee. Outside, in the spring haze, other reporters and invited guests are enjoying what I’m sure is a really nice luncheon. Not me, man. I feel guilty about covering a Stan-centric meet-and-greet and contributing to the celebration of Stan as the lovable grandpa of the Marvel Universe, and so I’m taking a stand. Waiters come by my table with perfectly formed olives on little silver spoons and I say no thank you. Is anybody bringing Jack Kirby’s heirs perfectly formed olives on little silver spoons? I am reasonably sure that no one is.

(5) Imagine Harlan Ellison writing a comic book about a roller-skating, disco singer! Or don’t, because Marvel never offered him the job, certain Harlan wouldn’t accept their ridiculous terms. Jim Shooter takes you inside “The Debut of the Dazzler”

(6) A paralyzed woman wearing a bionic suit ran a marathon and David Klaus observes, “The technology isn’t yet at the level of Martin Caidin’s Steve Austin/The Six Million Dollar Man, but it shows how much progress we’ve made toward that. As someone who has worked in stroke/traumatic brain injury rehab and spinal/orthopedic rehab wards, this is literally a great stride forward.”

So how exactly was a woman paralyzed from the chest down able to finish a 26.2-mile race? Enter the ReWalk (see photo), a bionic suit invented by Israeli entrepreneur Amit Goffer. The suit functions as an exoskeleton of sorts and allows paraplegics to stand, walk and even climb stairs.

Wearers strap the suit to their legs and waist, use crutches for balance and don a four-pound backpack battery that powers the ReWalk. Buttons on the suit’s wrist straps allow the wearer to indicate whether they plan to stand, walk or climb stairs. Then motion sensors and an in-suit computer system combine to detect movements and weight shifts.

(7) Designed by nature as the appetizer course at caveman banquets, this undersized mammoth once roamed Crete:

Scientists can now add a ‘dwarf mammoth’ to the list of biological oxymorons that includes the jumbo shrimp and pygmy whale. Studies of fossils discovered last year on the island of Crete in the Mediterranean Sea reveal that an extinct species once thought to be a diminutive elephant was actually the smallest mammoth known to have existed — which, as an adult, stood no taller than a modern newborn elephant.

(8) Here’s the real reason they are called “thunder lizards”

In a major new climate finding, researchers have calculated that dinosaur flatulence could have put enough methane into the atmosphere to warm the planet during the hot, wet Mesozoic era…

Methane is a potent greenhouse gas, with as much as 25 times the climate-warming potential as carbon dioxide….

(9) Hunter S. Thompson was surprised that his account of the Kentucky Derby, an early foray into gonzo journalism, didn’t get him fired – and even more surprised when other writers praised the article. He told an interviewer:

It was like falling down an elevator shaft and landing in a pool full of mermaids.

(10) Now this is faannish! While in Seattle for a convention Tom Becker joined the throngs installing a totem pole near the Science Fiction Museum. Tom tells about it in Science Fiction/San Francisco #128 [PDF file]:

The totem pole… is in honor of John T. Williams, who was killed by a police officer because he was carrying a tool of his trade, a carving knife. The shooting was ruled unjustified. As part of a healing process, the city contributed space for working on a totem pole. Local tribes contributed their labor and donated the pole to the city (thejtwproject.org). And so the first totem pole went up in Seattle in over 100 years. And I’m proud to say I helped to raise it. That was me on one of the ropes, right behind Jerry Kaufman.

[Thanks for these links goes out to David Klaus and Joseph Bentz.]

Harry Potter’s Sales Wizardry

Pottermore.com sold £3 million worth of Harry Potter books in its first month reports The Bookseller.com. The store went online March 27 and rang up £1 million of sales in its first three days of operation.

The books are sold DRM-free. A spokesman for Pottermore said piracy has diminished since an initial increase because “the community had rejected these illegal versions.” Translation: Piracy hasn’t been stopped, but customers will buy from the legitimate source if they like the price and the platform is easy to use.

[Thanks to Andrew Porter for the story.]