Tadao A Flat-Out Success at ConQuest 45

Tadao at ConQuest 45. Photo by Jon Mohning. #whereistadao

Tadao at ConQuest 45. Photo by Jon Mohning. #whereistadao

The skinny on Tadao's appearance at the ConQuest 45 benefit auction. Photo by Ruth Lichtwardt.

The real skinny on Tadao’s appearance at the ConQuest 45 benefit auction. Photo by Ruth Lichtwardt.

They couldn’t bear to hold ConQuest 45 without Tadao Tomomatsu. The con’s original choice for toastmaster was forced to cancel early this year because of family needs. Fans have found a way to let him preside over the weekend’s events anyway. Now that’s true love.

(Comparable tributes have been paid to popular fans from time to time. I remember friends of Vin¢ Clarke made a life-sized icon of him and took it to conventions in 1986.)

Media Notes

batman-v-superman dawn of justice(1) We now know the titleBatman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice.

We already knew the roll call of characters: Superman (Henry Cavill), Batman (Ben Affleck), Wonder Woman (Gal Gadot), and Lex Luthor (Jesse Eisenberg).

And we’ve heard the coming Justice League sequel will feature an as yet unnamed original character played by Holly Hunter.

Meantime, director Zack Snyder tweeted the first photo of Affleck as Batman.

Conclusion: don’t stray too far from your bomb shelter.

(2)  Guillermo del Toro’s The Strain premieres July 13 on FX.

Emphasis on the monster. With their shock white skin, bald heads and talons, not to mention the sharp, retractable stinger used to attack their victims, these vampires are more closely related to Max Schreck’s Count Orlak from the German Expressionist classic “Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens” than the sexy, brooding blood-drinkers from “True Blood” or “The Vampire Diaries.”

“They’re vermin, basically,” said British actor David Bradley, who portrays Abraham Setrakian, the gentleman scholar who functions as the story’s Van Helsing.

Ironically, Del Toro wrote his trilogy of books — The Strain, The Fall, The Night Eternal – only after he was unsuccessful in selling his vision to TV a decade ago.

Past Tense

Isabel Schechter tweeted a comment by N. K. Jemisin from a Wiscon panel

No stories about black folks doing time travel @NKJemisin -why would any sane black person want to go back in time? #SFFWOC #Wiscon

A rhetorical question, naturally. Of just the kind fans can’t resist answering.

There are a number of time travel stories featuring black characters – however, nearly all of them revolve around exactly the dangers Jemisin has in mind. The most famous of these is Octavia Butler’s Kindred.

The authors usually want to explore racism and slavery and pick a historical setting to trigger that issue.

In a few other cases, an author has sent a black protagonist back to a time where the assumptions are more favorable

Averted in S.M. Stirling’s Nantucket series: Capt. Alston, an African-American Coast Guard officer, is assumed, by the Bronze Age people she encounters, to be a respected Nubian warrior chief. Of course, many presume she is a man until convinced otherwise.

Waiting for Online Hugo Voting and the Voter Packet

The 2014 Hugo Award nominees were announced with a flourish 36 days ago. Although Loncon 3 published the voting form in Progress Report 3 on May 18, fans continue to wait for the committee to open online voting and release the Hugo Voter Packet.

How does Loncon 3’s performance compare with recent Worldcons?

Among the last four Worldcons, Renovation (2011) was quickest to open both paper and online voting, within 5 days after the nominee announcement.

LoneStarCon 3 (2013) needed a full 75 days to start online voting.

The average lapse time to open online voting over the past four years is 28 days.

That means Loncon 3 isn’t going to be the quickest, though we can hope it won’t take as long as last year.

What about delivery of the Hugo Voter Packet?

John Scalzi conceived the idea and put together the early packets. Beginning with 2010, each year’s Worldcon committee has been responsible.

The Renovation committee holds the record here, too — they made the Hugo Voter Packet available within 26 days. LoneStarCon took the longest time, 50 days. The average of the last four Worldcons is 36.75 days.

So – on average – tomorrow is the day the Hugo Voter Packet would be ready.

Worldcon

(Year)

Nominees

Announced

Voting

Available

 

Packet

Available

LonCon 3 (2014)

4/19/2014

(***)

???

LoneStarCon 3 (2013)

3/30/2013

6/19/2013 (**)

5/19/2013

Chicon 7 (2012)

4/7/2012

4/9/2012

5/18/2012

Renovation (2011)

4/24/2011

4/29/2011

5/20/2011

Aussiecon 4 (2010)

4/4/2010

5/4/2010?

5/4/2010

Anticipation (2009)

3/19/2009

5/19/2009

4/22/2009 (*)

Denvention 3 (2008)

3/21/2008

4/2008

4/10/2008 (*)

(*) In these years the packet was created by John Scalzi.

(**) Date online voting opened. Paper voting began being accepted sometime after 5/1/2013 without official announcement.

(***) Print ballot form available in PR #3, posted online 5/18/2014.

Latest on Jay Lake

A ten day silence on Jay Lake’s blog was broken today. Lake, who is fighting cancer, had surgery in January as part of an NIH trial and doctors have been monitoring the results —

We heard back from the docs at NIH, and the news isn’t good. The treatment is not working, so they’ve released Jay back to the care of his doctors at OHSU.

We are working with his palliative care doc and a team of hospice workers to make Jay as comfortable as possible for as long as he has. We’re still hoping to build up his strength as much as possible, but that’s the most we are trying to accomplish other than comfort.

Snapshots 136 Episodes of Fame

Here are 14 developments of interest to fans.

(1) Andrew Liptak mines the history of the sf field, turning its inside stories into gold for his column in Kirkus Reviews.

The genre has seen its share of slow-pay and no-pay publishers but few lasted as long as Martin Greenberg. Liptak discusses why in “The Meteoric Rise and Fall of Gnome Press”.

Not all authors had such an experience with Gnome: Robert Heinlein, according to The Science-Fantasy Publishers: A Critical and Bibliographic History, was paid on time, due to his own healthy sales and reputation. Despite the problems, Greenberg maintained a charismatic and upbeat attitude, and was described by Asimov as someone you’d go to a convention to beat up, only to talk and end up buying him a drink. Robert Silverberg noted that even as he had trouble getting paid, he “remained on amiable terms with [Greenberg],” but that he also had to retrieve the rights to his books in order to sell them elsewhere. Greenberg’s attitude, despite his issues, was a deciding factor in Gnome Press’s longevity in the face of its financial issues.

(2) Smithsonian Magazine‘s interview with Sir Patrick Stewart is illustrated with a photo of the actor perched in a chair holding a hardback of Amazing Stories. Congratulations, Steve Davidson, on a nifty bit of product placement!

SMITHSONIAN: Is your lifelong passion for human rights part of what attracted you to the role of Professor Xavier in X-Men?

STEWART: Actually, yes. I turned that down when it was first offered to me, and the director, Bryan Singer, whom I had not met, said, “Please meet with me. I want to talk to you, before we move on and talk to someone else.” And he talked to me about what he hoped to achieve with the first of those films; how the subject matter would be examining the rights of those who are different from others and asking, because they were different, did they have the same rights as everybody else. And he said in the film there will be two camps. There will be a camp led by Magneto, who believes that the only way in which the mutant world can protect itself is by fighting and destroying its enemies, and Xavier, who believes that there is, as Captain Picard would have done, another route which is peaceful and involves discussion and exposure and conversation and dialogue. And I saw it, I saw the point. So I happily signed on to be an active voice for the good guys.

(3) The mundane political slugfest that threatens to overshadow the Hugo Awards includes fans who believe it’s not enough to lift up their favorite nominee – they must bury the opposition, too. That’s why you find bloggers like The Weasel King educating readers about the most tactical placement of the “No Award” option.

The point is, voting No Award is a useful tool! But anything you list after No Award is going to get your vote and your support BEFORE things that aren’t listed at all. So don’t do that. If your ballot goes: 1. No Award 2. Chlamydia 3. David Duke and you leave off the rest of the possibilities because you haven’t read them or don’t care, then when No Award is eliminated (it almost always is eliminated first, or second if one of the nominees is L Ron Hubbard), your vote goes to Chlamydia. And when Chlamydia is eliminated, you’ve now voted for the Grand Wizard. So *do not* list people you genuinely do not want to get the award below No Award. List No Award last, and do not list them at all. Things you list under No Award can and possibly *will* get your vote

(4) “[A] BBC-TV show Star Cops had a U. S. space station named after Ronald Reagan,” recalls David Klaus. “I wonder if the Tea Party people will demand such a name change after the Russians remove themselves from contributing to the station?”

A news item about astronauts returning from the International Space Station on May 13 inspired his question.

A Russian Soyuz space capsule carrying three astronauts from the International Space Station has landed in the steppes of Kazakhstan.

…Aboard the capsule are Russian Mikhail Tyurin, American Rick Mastracchio and Koichi Wakata of Japan. They had spent 188 days on the space station.

(5) You can have the same view of Earth those astronauts had when they were aboard the ISS. Click here to see Live Earth from Space.

If the left image is black, it’s night where the ISS is and you need to try in 20 minutes.

If the image is grey, it’s in a dead spot (day or night) for video reception. Try again in 20 minutes.

(6) It seems every couple of months scientists announce a definitive victory for one of the rival theories about what wiped out the dinosaurs. This month it’s an asteroid impact that’s certainly to blame. Wait around and the volcanologists soon will be back on top. (Wasn’t there a Frank Sinatra song about  that sort of thing?)

It’s a compelling story, but one that has been difficult to prove — until now. Writing in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, a team of scientists from the Netherlands say they have found the first hard evidence of the hypothesized impact winter, buried deep in the geological record.

To take the temperature of the Earth 66 million years ago, the researchers looked at lipids produced by an ocean-dwelling microorganism called Thaumarchaeota, preserved in sediment rocks near the Brazos River in Texas.

Thaumarchaeota adjust the composition of the lipids in their cell membranes to the temperature of the sea water. When the organism dies, it sinks to the sea floor, and the lipids in its membrane are preserved in sandy ocean sediments.

(7) The US Navy is about to start distributing  Navy eReader Devices (NeRDs) in their submarine fleet. There will be five NeRDs per boat.

An article on DefenseSystems.com adds:

The NeRD library will include a fixed selection of titles from a variety of genres, including fiction, nonfiction, best-sellers, history books and classics, according to CNN. For instance, popular books such as Game of Thrones series, Ender’s Game and The Lord of the Rings trilogy will be included. The device’s 300-book selection is only a small fraction of the Navy’s digital library, which contains 108,000 titles.

(8) Through June 8 at the Getty Center in LA, see “A Royal Passion: Queen Victoria and Photography”.

In 1839, just two years after Victoria became queen of Great Britain and Ireland, the medium of photography was announced to the world. This exhibition explores the relationship between the new art form and the queen, whose passion for collecting photographs began in the 1840s. On display are rare daguerreotypes, private portraits of the Royal Family, and a selection of prints by early masters of photography.

(9) Lecturer Ray Bradbury once was interrupted by someone shouting he was wrong about the theme of Fahrenheit 451

The thing is, according to Bradbury, you know, the guy who wrote the book in the first place, it isn’t about censorship, like at all. Though Bradbury did indeed write the book during an era when actual book burning were a thing that totally could have happened at any moment, he has always insisted that the main theme of the book is the role of the mass media and its effect on the populace, in particular television and how it makes people less able to digest more complex forms of media, like books.

However, virtually nobody accepts this as the true theme of the novel, even though it’s an exact-ish quote from the guy who wrote the bloody thing. The perfect example of this was a time when Bradbury himself was giving a lecture on the novel to a class of college students and upon casually mentioning that the theme of the novel was the dangers of television, he was stopped in his tracks by someone loudly exclaiming “no, it’s about censorship!“.

(10) James H. Burns asks, “Would you snort a Wild Mojito?” You may soon get the chance due to the increasing availability of powdered alcoholic beverages.

Just add water. It works for instant coffee, tea and juice mix. Might it also work for your favorite cocktail? Powdered alcohol hasn’t gotten much of a foothold in the U.S. even though the idea has been around for decades. An Arizona company thinks that Americans are ready for the convenience of mojitos and margaritas that come from a small foil packet. The U.S. government thought so, too, at least for a couple of weeks earlier this month.   Makers of the new powdered alcohol drink mix Palcohol have to put the cork back in their champagne, for now anyway. The Alcohol and Tobacco Tax and Trade Bureau (TTB), part of the Department of the Treasury, earlier this week told the Associated Press that it had on April 8 issued “in error” the federal approvals….

(11) Scientific American has assembled a list of YouTube links to Sixties films that forecasting the shape of technology in times to come.

It seems unfair that the worse the prediction was, the more entertaining the video is to watch.

Asimov wasn’t the only person to look into the technological crystal ball. Fifty and 60 years ago gee-whiz films depicting life today were a staple—a sure way to wow audiences. Today these fanciful visions of the future live on, on YouTube. Let them be a warning to anyone today who’s inclined to make a prediction about life in 2064.

(12) Earlier this year NASA renamed Southern California’s Dryden Flight Research Center after Neil Armstrong. The Neil A. Armstrong Flight Research Center honors both his exploits as an astronaut and his incredible career as a test pilot at this very facility.

Armstrong had significant ties to the center, both before and after his days as a NASA astronaut. He served as a research test pilot at the center from 1955 to 1962, amassing more than 2,400 flight hours in 48 different models of aircraft at the center, including seven flights in the rocket-powered hypersonic X-15. Armstrong was part of a team that conceptualized the Lunar Landing Research Vehicle, a flight test craft that evolved into the Lunar Landing Training Vehicle.  Armstrong and the other commanders of Apollo lunar landing missions trained in that vehicle for their descents from lunar orbit down to the surface of the moon.

…The late Hugh L. Dryden, the center’s namesake since 1976, will continue to be memorialized in the renaming of the center’s 12,000-square-mile Western Aeronautical Test Range as the Dryden Aeronautical Test Range.

(13) Episodes of Alcoa Premiere and The Alfred Hitchcock Hour written by Ray Bradbury will be among the offerings at UCLA’s Billy Wilder Theater on June 8 when it celebrates the illustrious career of Norman Lloyd. All three shows on the docket were directed by Lloyd and first aired in the 1960s.

(14) It’s not a typo. And it’s not named after anyone in my family. It’s the Flobal Glyer.

[Thanks for these links goes out to R. Laurraine Tutihasi, Andrew Porter, Michael J. Walsh, David Klaus, John King Tarpinian and James H. Burns.]

Skyboat Media at NYRSF Readings 5/30

The New York Review of SF Readings crew is taking advantage of the arrival in town of BEA and the Audie Awards by adding a special event on May 30 featuring the talents of Skyboat Media. Skyboat’s Stefan Rudnicki and Gabrielle de Cuir will present and Amy Goldschlager will lead a discussion. It all begins at 7 p.m. in Studio 440, “The White Box” room (4th Floor) at 440 Lafayette Street.

Skyboat Media is a Grammy winning audiobook production company based in Los Angeles. Skyboat has produced the full works of Orson Scott Card and Ben Bova, and selected works of John Scalzi, Gregory Benford, Ursula Le Guin, Arthur C. Clarke, Cory Doctorow, Ru Emerson, Alex Bledsoe, Lewis Shiner, Fredric Brown, and Harlan Ellison. Skyboat produces all podcasts for the Hugo nominated Lightspeed Magazine.

Stefan Rudnicki has produced, directed and/or executive produced nearly 3,000 audiobooks for Skyboat Audio and major publishers including Audible, Inc., He has narrated hundreds of audiobooks, won two Grammy Awards, the Ray Bradbury Award, the Bram Stoker Prize and multiple Audie Awards for works by Harlan Ellison, Orson Scott Card and others. His solo narration of Alex Bledsoe’s Wisp of a Thing is an Audie finalist this year, in addition to Skyboat Media’s Ender’s Game Alive, a finalist in three categories including Distinguished Achievement in Production. Stefan is a 3-time Hugo nominee.

Gabrielle de Cuir has narrated over 100 titles specializing in fantasy, humor, and titles requiring extensive foreign language and accent skills. She just completed directing Wil Wheaton narrating Cory Doctorow’s Homelanad. She is producing all the podcasts in the Women Destroy Science Fiction Anniversary Issue of Lightspeed Magazine, with Christie Yant and Mur Lafferty.

Amy Goldschlager writes the audiobook column for Locus. She has also written audiobook reviews for Publishers Weekly and AudioFile magazine.

The regular NYRSF Readings follows a few days later on Tuesday, June 3rd (with Gregory Frost and Tom Doyle)

The full press release follows the jump.

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Mike Farren (1949-2014)

By Lucy Huntzinger: Mike Farren, a long time Bay Area fan, died at 10:30 p.m. on May 22, 2014. His heart gave out, but he had other serious health issues and was in decline most of this year. He did not regain consciousness after the collapse that saw him admitted to the hospital last week, but those of us who kept him company there felt he was aware of our presence and knew he was not alone.

I have taken charge of his cat Millie as he requested earlier this year and she has a new fannish home where she will be greatly cherished. Mike loved her dearly as he loved all his cats.

He was estranged from his family, though I assume the county or state will eventually locate them. At this time I am liaising with his social worker to coordinate between the VA, the hospital, the coroner’s office and his friends. There will be a funeral for him provided by the Veterans Administration. I will post the service information when it’s available.

More details at SF Site News.

Libertarian Futurist Society Makes Retro Hugo Endorsement

Yet another group has put its shoulder to the wheel in the effort to get Hugo voters to consider their political views first.

The Libertarian Futurist Society issued a press release today with recommendations for the 1939 Retro Hugos, to be given this year at Loncon 3.

Several classic works of fiction of interest to libertarians – from Ayn Rand’s Anthem to C. S. Lewis’ Out of the Silent Planet and T. H. White’s The Sword in the Stone – are on the just-announced ballot for the Retro Hugo Awards….

The release tells how to join the con and vote, with this encouragement:

Rand’s Anthem – the other well-known finalist in this category – may have a good chance to win – especially if more of her fans find out about the retro Hugos and decide to join the Worldcon as voting members in the Hugos and retro Hugos.

The Lewis and White books are up for Best Novel, while Rand’s story is a Best Novella nominee.

The full press release follows the jump.

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