Pixel Scroll 10/24/18 That’s One Sure Road To Mount Tsundoku Blues, Pixels On The Scrolls Of Your Shoes

(1) HUGO HISTORY BY WALTON. At Locus Online, “Gary K. Wolfe Reviews An Informal History of the Hugos by Jo Walton”.

…So the value of Walton’s book – in some ways a companion piece to her other collection of Tor.com columns, What Makes This Book So Great – lies not in identifying such howlers – in fact, she con­cludes that Hugo voters got it more or less right some 69% of the time – but in the lively and opinionated discussions of the winners and losers, of which books have lasted and which haven’t, and why. Walton includes not only her original columns, but selec­tions from the online comments, and the comments, especially from Locus contributors Gardner Dozois and Rich Horton, are so extensive and thoughtful as to make the book virtually a collaboration….

(2) A GENEROUS SPIRIT. Rachel Swirsky had a great experience at “an unusually good convention, with a lot of space and help for new writers” — “Open-Hearted Generosity at the Surrey International Writers’ Conference”.

The administrators established an atmosphere of open-hearted generosity which reflected through everyone. The agents and editors were eager to find new clients, and also to help nurture new ones. The professional writers treated the new ones like colleagues, not supplicants or intruders who would have to prove themselves worthy before being given respect. The new writers were excited and respectful of the professionals’ time and experience.

I think one thing that really helped foster the positive environment was the expectation that presenters join the attendees for meals and announcements. It got everyone used to being around each other, and reinforced that we were all in it together as people at that conference, sharing the goals of telling stories and making art.

Anyone can have a worthy story to tell. Everyone seemed to have a strong sense of that, and to respect it.

I think the administrators also chose carefully–and wisely–presenters whose native inclination is to come to new people with warmth. My experience of the colleagues I already knew who were there–Cat Rambo, Mary Robinette Kowal, and Nalo Hopkinson–bears that out. They’re all excellent teachers who are thoughtful and kind, and excited by teaching and learning. I can only aspire to match their generosity.

(3) ZICREE WINS INAUGURAL GOLDEN DRAGON. The Cardiff International Film Festival honored Space Command creator Marc “Mr. Sci-Fi” Zicree this past weekend. Wales 247 covered the festival’s award ceremony: “Winners announced for world class cinema in Cardiff”.

The highlights of the ceremony were the lifetime achievement award for Dame Sian Phillips and the naming of American science fiction writer and director Marc Zicree as the first recipient of a Golden Dragon award for excellence in cinema and the arts.

[Zicree said – ] …“The thing that’s wonderful about accepting this award here in Wales is that Elaine and I have received such a warm welcome here this weekend. My own writing career began as a teenager having watched The Prisoner television show, which was filmed in Portmeirion. So Wales is in part responsible for my career as a screenwriter.”

Marc Zicree and his wife Elaine, have sold over 100 teleplays, screenplays and pilots to every major studio and network, including landmark stories for such shows as Star Trek – The Next Generation, Deep Space Nine, The New Twilight Zone, and Babylon Five. Their work has been nominated for the American Book Award, Humanitas Prize, Diane Thomas Award, and Hugo and Nebula Awards, and they’ve won the TV Guide Award, the prestigious Hamptons Prize and 2011 Rondo and Saturn Awards. Their new production, Space Command, premiered at the Cardiff International Film Festival.

(4) STONY END. James Davis Nicoll gives pointers on “How to Destroy Civilization and Not Be Boring”. For example —

Large eruptions like Toba 70,000 years ago or the Yellowstone eruption 640,000 years ago are very sexy: one big boom and half a continent is covered by ash. But why settle for such a brief, small-scale affair? Flood basalt events can last for a million years, each year as bad as or worse than the 18th century Laki eruption that killed a quarter of the human population in Iceland. Flood basalts resurface continental-sized regions to a depth of a kilometer, so it’s not that surprising that about half the flood basalts we know of are associated with extinction events. In terms of the effect on the world, it’s not unreasonable to compare it to a nuclear war. A nuclear war that lasts one million years.

N.K. Jemisin’s Broken Earth series gives some idea what a world in the midst of the formation of a Large Igneous Province might be like.

(5) CARNEGIE MEDAL CONTENDERS. I’m easily spoiled. The Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction 2019 Finalists were announced today. Last year, two of the three novels were of genre interest. This year, none, although Washington Black does include a trip in a hot air balloon. It’d be a shame to waste my research, though, so here’s the shortlist —

Fiction

Esi Edugyan
Washington Black
Knopf

This evocative novel, equally rich in character and adventure, tells the wonderfully strange story of young George Washington Black who goes from Caribbean slavery to Arctic exploration, via hot-air balloon, to search for his mentor in London.

Rebecca Makkai
The Great Believers
(Viking)

Makkai’s ambitious novel explores the complexities of friendship, family, art, fear, and love in meticulously realized settings––WWI-era and present-day Paris, and 1980s Chicago––while insightfully and empathically illuminating the early days of the AIDS epidemic.

Tommy Orange
There There
(Knopf)

Orange’s symphonic tale spans miles and decades to encompass an intricate web of characters, all anticipating the upcoming Big Oakland Powwow. Orange lights a thrilling path through their stories, and leaves readers with a fascinating exploration of what it means to be an Urban Indian.

Nonfiction

Francisco Cantú
The Line Becomes a River: Dispatches from the Border
(Riverhead)

Readers accompany Cantú to parts of Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, as he recounts his years working for the U.S. Border Patrol. Remaining objective without moralizing, he shares a heart-wrenching, discussion-provoking perspective on how a border can tear apart families, lives, and a sense of justice.

Kiese Laymon
Heavy: An American Memoir
(Scribner)

In his artfully crafted and boldly revealing memoir, writing professor Laymon recalls the traumas of his Mississippi youth; the depthless hunger that elevated his weight; his obsessive, corrective regime of diet and exercise; his gambling, teaching, activism, and trust in the power of writing.

Beth Macy
Dopesick: Dealers, Doctors, and the Drug Company that Addicted America
(Little, Brown)

Macy’s years of reporting on the still-unfolding U.S. opioid crisis earned her remarkable access to people whose lives have been upended by these drugs. Hers is a timely, crucial, and many-faceted look at how we got here, giving voice to the far-reaching realities of the addicted and the people who care for them.

(6) CALL ME ISHMAEL. David Brin posted an entertaining collection of “Fabulous First Lines of Science Fiction”.

Behind every man now alive stand thirty ghosts, for that is the ratio by which the dead outnumber the living. – Arthur C. Clarke’s 2001: A Space Odyssey.

(7) TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS.

[Compiled by Cat Eldridge and JJ, with guest appearance by Standback]

  • Born October 24, 1893 – Merian Cooper, Aviator, Writer, Director and Producer. After spending WWI in the Air Force, Cooper became a writer and researcher for The New York Times and later the American Geographic Society, traveling the world, and writing stories and giving lectures about his travels. He then turned some of his writing into documentary films. He had helped David Selznick get a job at RKO Pictures, and later Selznick hired him to make movies. He developed one of his story ideas into a movie featuring a giant gorilla which is terrorizing New York City. King Kong was released in 1933, and for reasons which are utterly unfathomable to JJ, the story has been sequeled, remade, comicbooked, and rebooted innumerable times in the last 85 years.
  • Born October 24, 1915 – Bob Kane, Writer and Artist who co-created, along with Bill Finger, the DC character Batman. Multiple sources report that “Kane said his influences for the character included actor Douglas Fairbanks’ movie portrayal of the swashbuckler Zorro, Leonardo da Vinci’s diagram of the ornithopter, a flying machine with huge bat-like wings; and the 1930 film The Bat Whispers, based on Mary Roberts Rinehart’s mystery novel The Circular Staircase.” He was inducted into Jack Kirby Hall of Fame and the Will Eisner Hall of Fame. The character he created has been featured in countless comic books, stories, movies, TV series, animated features, videogames, and action figures in the last eight decades.The 1989 movie based on his creation, featuring Michael Keaton in the title role, was a finalist for both Hugo and British Science Fiction Association Awards.
  • Born October 24, 1948 – Margaret “Peggy” Ranson, Artist, Illustrator, and Fan, who became involved with fandom when she co-edited the program book for the 1988 Worldcon in New Orleans. She went on to provide art for many fanzines and conventions, and was a finalist for the Best Fan Artist Hugo every one of the eight years from 1991 to 1998, winning once. She was Guest of Honor at several conventions, including a DeepSouthCon. Sadly, she died of cancer in 2016; Mike Glyer’s lovely tribute to her can be read here.
  • Born October 24, 1952 – David Weber, 66, Writer of numerous novels and short works in several science fiction series, most notably the popular Honor Harrington series, which has spawned spinoff series and numerous anthologies bearing contributions from other well-known SFF authors. He has been Guest of Honor at more than two dozen conventions, including the 2011 UK Natcon, and received the Phoenix Award for lifetime achievement from Southern Fandom.
  • Born October 24, 1952 – Jane Fancher, 66, Writer and Artist. In the early 80s, she was an art assistant on Elfquest, providing inking assistance on the black and white comics and coloring of the original graphic novel reprints. She adapted portions of C.J. Cherryh’s first Morgaine novel into a black and white comic book, which prompted her to begin writing novels herself. Her first novel, Groundties, was a finalist for the Compton Crook Award, and she has been Guest of Honor and Toastmaster at several conventions.
  • Born October 24, 1954 – Wendy Neuss, 64, Emmy-nominated Producer. As an associate producer for Star Trek: The Next Generation, her responsibilities included post-production sound, including music and effects spots, scoring sessions and sound mixes, insertion of location footage, and re-recording of dialogue (which is usually done when lines are muffed or the audio recording was subpar). She was also the producer of Star Trek: Voyager. With her husband at the time, Patrick Stewart, she was executive producer of three movies in which he starred, including a version of A Christmas Carol which JJ says is absolutely fantastic.
  • Born October 24, 1956 – Dr. Jordin Kare, Physicist, Filker, and Fan who was known for his scientific research on laser propulsion. A graduate of MIT and Berkeley, he said that he chose MIT because of the hero in Heinlein’s Have Spacesuit, Will Travel. He was a regular attendee and science and filk program participant at conventions, from 1975 until his untimely death last year. He met his wife, Mary Kay Kare, at the 1981 Worldcon. He should be remembered and honored as being an editor of The Westerfilk Collection: Songs of Fantasy and Science Fiction, a crucial filksong collection, and later as a partner in Off Centaur Publications, the very first commercial publisher specializing in filk songbooks and recordings. Shortly after the shuttle Columbia tragedy, astronaut Buzz Aldrin, on live TV, attempted to read the lyrics to Jordin’s Pegasus Award-winning song “Fire in the Sky”, which celebrates manned space exploration. He was Guest of Honor at numerous conventions, and was named to the Filk Hall of Fame. Mike Glyer’s tribute to him can be read here.
  • Born October 24, 1960 – B.D. Wong, 58, Tony-winning Actor of Stage and Screen who has appeared in the Hugo-winning Jurassic Park films and The Space Between Us, had main roles in Mr. Robot and Gotham, had guest roles in episodes of The X-Files and American Horror Story, and voiced a main character in Disney’s Mulan films. He was also in Executive Decision, which is only borderline genre, but holds a special place in JJ’s heart for killing off Steven Seagal, and JJ feels that all of its cast members should be heartily applauded for that.
  • Born October 24, 1971 – Dr. Sofia Samatar, 47, Teacher, Writer, and Poet who speaks several languages and started out as a language instructor, a job which took her to Egypt for nine years. She won the Campbell Award for Best New Writer, and is the author of two wonderful novels to date, both of which I highly recommend: Stranger in Olondria (which won World Fantasy and British Fantasy Awards and was nominated for a Nebula) and The Winged Histories. Her short story “Selkie Stories are for Losers” was nominated for Hugo, Nebula, BSFA, and BFA Awards. She has written enough short fiction in just six years that Small Beer Press put out Tender, a collection which is a twenty-six stories strong. And she has a most splendid website.

Guest birthday bio from Filer Standback:

  • Born October 24, 1970 – Vered Tochterman, 48, Israeli Writer, Editor, and Translator. From 2002-2006, she was the founding editor of Chalomot Be’Aspamia (“Pipe Dreams”), a science fiction and fantasy magazine for original Israeli fiction which has been massively influential on Israeli fandom and writing community. Her short story collection Sometimes It’s Different won the first Geffen Award for original Hebrew fiction; more recently, her novels Blue Blood and Moonstone depict vampires in modern-day Tel Aviv. As a translator, she has brought major English novels — from Tim Powers to Susannah Clarke to Terry Pratchett — to Israeli readers. One of her more eclectic contributions was a fan production she co-wrote, which is a mashup between Midsummer Night’s Dream, the Rocky Horror Picture Show, and the Buffy musical episode. She has been, and remains, one of the most prominent figures in Israeli fandom.

(8) COMICS SECTION.

(9) BANDERSNATCH. See video of Diana Glyer’s talk at Vanguard University last evening here on Facebook. (Warning — the image looks sideways.)

(10) NEXT YEAR’S MYTHCON. Mythcon 50 has announced its dates — August 2-5, 2019, in San Diego, California.

Theme: Looking Back, Moving Forward

Our theme is a head-nod to Roman mythology’s Janus, the god of beginnings and endings, gates and doorways, transitions and passages and duality. So we are moving forward into the future while also, at least for this Mythcon, looking backward toward the place from where we’ve come.

(11) TIM MOONLIGHTS. Timothy the Talking Cat takes his show to Amazing Stories: “timTalk: Tonight’s Episode – Schroedinger’s Cat”.

TimTALK: Tonight’s Episode – Schrodinger’s Cat.

[Theme music fades out and the title fade out to reveal a small studio. Two cats sit in comfortable chairs with a coffee table between them. Timothy the Talking Cat (for it is he) is looking at the camera, while his guest sits opposite.]

Timothy the Talking Cat: Good evening, hello and welcome to another edition of timTALK where I, Timothy the Talking Cat, ask the tough question of the day of the great, the good and the feline. Tonight, I’m talking to one of the Twentieth Century’s most notable thought leaders. A cat who has done more for surprisingly cruel thought experiments in physics than any animal since Zeno made a tortoise race Achilles. I am, of course, talking to Schrödinger’s Cat.

[Timothy turns to his guest]
Good evening. You’ll be eighty-three years old this November, shouldn’t you be dead already?

Schrödinger’s Cat: Ha, ha, let me just say that reports of my death have been exaggerated. No, wait…they haven’t been exaggerated at all.

(12) OCTOCON REPORT. Sara (“Not Another Book Blogger”) has written up Octocon, the Irish National Convention, held last weekend in Dublin –

(13) RUINING FANDOM. free to fanfic purports to show “how web 2.0 (and especially tumblr) is ruining fandom”.

how does the structure of web 2.0 socmed harm fandom?

in aggregate: it forces fandom[$], a diverse space where people go to indulge niche interests and specific tastes, into overexposure to outsiders and to one another, and exacerbates the situation by removing all semi-private interaction spaces, all moderation tools, all content-limiting tools, and all abuse protection.

(14) SHORT ON SENSE OF WONDER. Abigail Nussbaum reviews “First Man” at Asking the Wrong Questions.

…I have to admit that I approached First Man in genuine puzzlement as to why it had even been attempted. 2016’s Hidden Figures, it seemed to me, provided a much better template for future fiction about the Apollo program, shining a light on little-known corners of the endeavor, and on the people who took part in it who were not white men. Why go back to Armstrong and Apollo 11, whose story has surely been covered from every possible angle?

First Man doesn’t really give you a satisfying answer to this question. It’s a fantastic piece of filmmaking, with some stunning visuals and set-pieces—particularly the long final sequence on the moon itself, though I couldn’t shake the sneaking suspicion that in shooting these scenes Chazelle was driven primarily by his crushing disappointment that none of the real moon landing footage is in HD. And there are moments in Josh Singer’s script where you can almost sense a unique approach to the material. Where, instead of Right Stuff hyper-competence, or even Apollo 13 improvisation, the film highlights the ricketiness of the edifice NASA built to take men into space, the flimsiness of the technology that Armstrong and his fellow astronauts trusted with their lives, and the danger and uncertainty they met when they left the earth’s atmosphere….

(15) WORLDS WITHOUT END. Mylifemybooksmyescape interviews Dave, administrator of the Worlds Without End sff book site.

DJ: Which feature or aspect of WorldsWithoutEnd.com do you actually like most/sets its apart from other sites in the community?

Dave: One of the things that we have tried to do is replicate the brick and mortar bookstore experience online.  We have set up the site to be browse-able in a way that sites like Amazon or other online bookstores just aren’t.  On those sites you go in already knowing what you want. You can’t really browse like you’re wandering around in a bookstore.  On WWEnd we present you with shelves of books in different categories that you can easily browse through.

You might start off looking through the Nebula shelves for something to read.  You spot a great looking cover, just like you might in a store, and click over to read about The Three-Body Problem.  You read the synopsis, just as you would flip the book over to read the back blurb. Then you read the excerpt as if you held the book in your hands.  Then you skim through the reviews to see what other folks are saying about that book as if there was someone else on the isle in the store you could talk to.  Then you notice that the book is also on the WWEnd Most Read Books of All-Time list so you wander over there to see what else is on that shelf. Then you see an author like N. K. Jemisin that everyone is talking about so you click her name and see what’s on her shelf.

And as you go you’re tagging books to put them on your to-read list for later examination or marking the ones you’ve already read and slowly but surely the site is getting color-coded to your reading history — suddenly you realize you’re only six books away from reading all the Campbell Award winners.  Or you find out that you haven’t read as many books by women as you thought you had. The experience is fun and intuitive and we provide an abundance of information so you can make more informed choices before you plunk down your hard-earned money.

(16) CLEANUP THE DEAD ON AISLE THREE. Gizmodo peeked behind the Wall Street Journal’s paywall and discovered “The Urban Legend About Scattering Human Ashes at Disney Is True, and It’s Worse Than We Thought”. There’s even a special code to call for cleanup.

The Journal report continues with more specific details:

Human ashes have been spread in flower beds, on bushes and on Magic Kingdom lawns; outside the park gates and during fireworks displays; on Pirates of the Caribbean and in the moat underneath the flying elephants of the Dumbo ride. Most frequently of all, according to custodians and park workers, they’ve been dispersed throughout the Haunted Mansion, the 49-year-old attraction featuring an eerie old estate full of imaginary ghosts.

“The Haunted Mansion probably has so much human ashes in it that it’s not even funny,” said one Disneyland custodian.

(17) PYTHON TRIBUTE. BBC finds that “Dutch ‘silly walks’ crossing is a hit”.

The people of Spijkenisse have taken to the idea with great enthusiasm, and filled social media with clips of pedestrians crossing with a variety of outlandish gaits.

Aloys Bijl was also on hand to show passers-by the 12 steps of the traditional John Cleese silly walk.

(18) JOHN WILLIAMS SICK. He’s had to miss an engagement — “John Williams: Composer pulls out of concerts due to illness”.

The 86-year-old had been due to appear with the London Symphony Orchestra at the Royal Albert Hall on Friday.

But the venue said he had pulled out because of a “last-minute illness”.

(19) CONGRATULATIONS, YOU’RE A BOOKSELLER. One moment he was a customer, the next moment…. “Dutchman’s ‘pure shock’ after winning Cardigan bookshop”

Paul Morris and his wife Leila, owners of Bookends in Cardigan, are giving their beloved bookshop away.

The couple will now fulfil a lifetime ambition by travelling the world.

The winner of that draw, Dutchman Ceisjan Van Heerden, known as CJ, will run the shop with his Icelandic friend Svaen Bjorn, 23, who he had never met….

When he told CJ, who is from Vrij Bij Duurstede and a “regular customer” at the bookshop, Paul said “there was a lot of silence” and he could tell he was “stunned”.

“It was pure shock initially,” said CJ. “Then I thought ‘this is an amazing opportunity, let’s do it’.”

But CJ did not want to run the shop alone and called around some of his friends, one of whom had already shown an interest.

CJ had known Svaen Bjorn, a 23-year-old from Reykjavik in Iceland, for eight years through online gaming but the pair had never met in person.

“He got back to me and said ‘yeah, let’s do it’,” CJ recalled ahead of the official handover on 5 November.

(20) SOMETHING NEW AT THE BAR. Unlike Pohl and Kornbluth (Gladiator-at-Law), J.K. Rowling’s work has put down roots in the legal profession: “Harry Potter to ‘inspire’ budding India lawyers”.

A top Indian law university in the eastern state of West Bengal has introduced a course based on the fictional world of Harry Potter.

The course uses the role of law in the series to draw parallels between the stories and real-life situations.

Professor Shouvik Kumar Guha, who designed it, says it is an “experiment” to “encourage creative thinking.”

Several universities in the US and at least one in the UK also offer courses inspired by the famous series.

The course in India, which is entitled “An interface between Fantasy Fiction Literature and Law: Special focus on Rowling’s Potterverse”, is expected to include a total of 45 hours of discussion-based teachin

Some of the topics mentioned in the course module point out how social and class rights in India can be equated with the “enslavement of house-elves and the marginalisation of werewolves” in the fantasy series.

(21) ALT-FLIGHT. There was a strange addition to the commute in the San Fernando Valley yesterday…. (Although marked as a WWII German fighter, the plane was a vintage U.S. Army trainer.)

The pilot, who flies for Alaska Airlines, walked away from the crash with minor injuries, according to AP News.

He told KTLA in a previous interview that he was interested in vintage airplanes because his father had flown in World War II. The single-engine model that crashed was a North American Aviation T-6 Texan, which was first developed in the 1930s and used by U.S. pilots to train during World War II, according to AP News.

 

[Thanks to JJ, John King Tarpinian, Cat Eldridge, Mike Kennedy, Chip Hitchcock, Martin Morse Wooster, Carl Slaughter, and Andrew Porter for some of these stories. Title credit goes to File 770 contributing editor of the day Kurt Busiek.]


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33 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 10/24/18 That’s One Sure Road To Mount Tsundoku Blues, Pixels On The Scrolls Of Your Shoes

  1. (1) I’ve got this one on my Christmas list.

    “I been Pixeled, Filed, First and Fifth-ed, Been Ron Hubbar-d and Art C. Clarke-ed. I just discovered somebody’s found my Clone”

  2. Looks as though you’re having a worse day than I am, if you’ve lost 13 days of your life. 😉

  3. @21: that’s gotta hurt — even a trainer (of which there would have been many made and few shot down) has to be getting thin on the ground this long after they were built.

    Edit: fifth!

  4. I’ve just started a listopia list on Goodreads for Hugo 2019 Eligible Series.

    Many, MANY thanks to JJ for creating the original list, which I totally cribbed from.

    JJ’s File 770 list is here: Best Series Hugo

    The new Goodreads list is here: Hugo 2019 Eligible Series

    I couldn’t add every series from JJ’s list to the GR list, because each user can only add a maximum of 100 books to any given list. Feel free to add more, vote on what’s already there, or let me know of any mistakes in the comments.

    Thanks!

  5. (1) Related: in August, Walton was a guest on The Coode Street Podcast, so that’s a different interaction between Walton, her book, and Gary K. Wolfe (and Jonothan Strahan!). Mentioning it just because it was a really delightful episode; I heartily recommend, and most particularly to Filers.

    (7) Happy birthday, Vered! (and ok all the others also I guess)

  6. In 3319, we still dont have perfect information retrieval in our own brains.

    Other people’s brains, however….

  7. 6) That Clarke sentence has stuck in my mind for many years since I read it. But now I’m not so sure I like it. It seems like the first part, or some variant of it, should be able to stand on its own. As it is, it seems the second part is necessary just to explain the first. We have the same thing stated twice: once obscurely and in ‘poetic’ language, and then again prosaically.

    Looking forward to reading the rest of that article, because I used to have quite a fascination with opening sentences.

  8. 16) I can’t read items like this without flashing back to a scene in the BBC oil-rig drama Roughnecks, where an exasperated manager explains why the relatives can’t scatter someone’s ashes from the top of a rig: “Because the winds can change! You would not believe how many North Sea hard men there are, whose last resting place is Sketchley’s of Aberdeen!”

  9. @Steve Wright

    I’d forgotten about Roughnecks! I’m now wondering how many of its actors ended up in Game of Thrones, because I can think of at least three. There’s clearly a crossover in your ability to play a tough Scottish rigger and look like someone who can survive GoT…

  10. (7) Perhaps a slight typo in the entry on Sofia Samatar — her collection TENDER has 20 stories, not 26.

    It’s a great great collection, though, and both her novels are wonderful as well.

  11. Just got a notification for this Humble Bundle, and I’d like some Filer feedback. I like a good fantasy novel… but the only author on this list that I’ve read is Kevin J. Anderson, and, frankly, that was The Dark Between The Pages Stars which I did not finish with extreme prejudice. TDBTS was the single most boring Hugo nominee that I’ve attempted to read. It wasn’t even worth the effort of throwing it against the wall….

    So. Anyone know any of these authors/books? Is it a worthwhile bundle?

  12. Cassy, when I get a Bundle e-mail and I see that the curator is KJA, I just delete it; he’s curated a lot of bundles now, and I’ve looked through the included titles every time, and eventually came to the conclusion that they are Not My Thing.

  13. TBH, I’m kind of getting to the point where I won’t buy any book bundles any more, even if they contain stuff I want, because they’re entirely too likely to just kind of vanish, forgotten, into my own personal digital ether.

  14. I’m not quite at the point of never, but it has to be an AMAZING bundle.

    My online TBR pile includes Janet Kagan, Diane Duane, T. Kingfisher (I still haven’t read Nine Goblins), Zen Cho, and Paul Cornell, among others. A bundle would just about have to be at that level of interesting to draw me in now. I’m okay with not getting to some books in a bundle because they happened not to be that interesting, but I won’t buy one that isn’t about half enticing.

  15. (17) To the tune of Oh Christmas Tree (or the Red Flag if you are feeling lefty)

    Dutch silly walk, Dutch silly walk,
    At Spijkenisse cross like a dork

    Walk as you please,
    Like a John Cleese,
    On your hands,
    Or on your knees,

    Dutch silly walk, Dutch silly walk,
    Cross the road like a drunken stork

  16. Yeah, I’ve pretty much given up on bundles as well.

    The appeal is usually along the lines of “well, here’s one book I want, but I’ll also get another four books I’ve never heard of!”
    …in which case I’m kind of better off just going and buying the one title I actually want.

    I general, since I read several orders of magnitude below the quantities I want to read, buying “in bulk” and pouncing on low, low prices just doesn’t make any sense. My rule is I can buy pretty much anything, as long as it’s basically the next thing I plan to read. Pretty sure I save a pretty penny buying what I want when I want, over hoarding a metric ton of inexpensive “it’ll be cool if I get around to this” titles.

  17. I would like to add to the Jane Fancher birthday bio, co-author with C,J, Cherryh of Alliance Rising coming January 8 2019.

  18. JJ says Cassy, when I get a Bundle e-mail and I see that the curator is KJA, I just delete it; he’s curated a lot of bundles now, and I’ve looked through the included titles every time, and eventually came to the conclusion that they are Not My Thing.

    The only thing I see here of interest is the CE Murphy work and I know I’ve some digital galley she sent me on the iPad now that I need to least see if warrants reading… H’h… what was it? Redeemer was it, a a Kickstarter project.

    The closet thing I’ve ever had to a bundle I suppose is when Will recently sent me everything that he and Emma had put up in digital form, so I could decide which first chapters were going up on Green Man Review. I hadn’t realised much fiction they’d done!

  19. @Cassy B.

    Just got a notification for this Humble Bundle, and I’d like some Filer feedback. I like a good fantasy novel… but the only author on this list that I’ve read is Kevin J. Anderson, and, frankly, that was The Dark Between The Pages Stars which I did not finish with extreme prejudice. TDBTS was the single most boring Hugo nominee that I’ve attempted to read. It wasn’t even worth the effort of throwing it against the wall….

    So. Anyone know any of these authors/books? Is it a worthwhile bundle?

    Simon Haynes writes SFF with a lot of humor and is best known for his Hal Spacejock series. We featured A Portion of Dragons and Chips at the Speculative Fiction Showcase last month, where you can read an excerpt.

    I quite like Lindsay Buroker’s space opera and fantasy novels, though I haven’t read the one in the bundle.

    C.E. Murphy I know mainly for her urban fantasy (which I like), though this book seems to be historical fantasy.

    My feelings about Kevin J. Anderson mirror those of other Filers subjected to The Dark Between the Stars. I’ve no experience with any of the others.

    Simon Haynes and Lindsay Buroker are both self-published authors, so their books are fairly inexpensive. And since both are series starters, you can probably get them for free or 99 cents.

  20. @Anthony: @Lis: The date on the BBC story is 8th September… This story is 23 October; there’s a reference at the end to a previous story in September. I did have some vague recollection of running into the story somewhere, but I didn’t send in the previous link when it happened and so wasn’t sure where I’d heard/seen it.
    I’m surprised they were able to just give the store away and still be able to afford to travel the world, but I don’t know how much experience they have with seriously roughing it.

    @Cassy B: I don’t have @JJ’s experience with Anderson’s bundles, but the only other name I even think I recognize in that set is C. E. Murphy; it could easily be the sort of scrapings you’d decide you want to be paid to have read.

  21. Meredith Moment: Chasm City (the second Revelation Space) is currently $1.99.

    While I’m currently not in the market for bundles, apparently, I’m not capable of resisting a good deal on something that I do think I’ll read someday.

    (TBH, I think part of the problem with the bundles is that because I’m getting the files directly, rather than via the Amazon store, they’re not actually linked to an account or anything, and so I’m more likely to lose track of them. But that’s probably just me.)

  22. @Chip–They’ve likely been saving for the travel for years, and it took a £20 purchase to be entered. I suspect their accountant was involved in doing careful math.

  23. @Lis: my point was that running a bookstore tends to make saving for anything very difficult; I’d have thought the bookstore itself was their retirement “plan”. (I note the Guardian story you originally linked to said the store could have sold for ~$40,000.) I wouldn’t have thought that giving a ticket to anyone who merely spent ~$26 (one regular-size hardcover book in the US) would yield much more money, but it might have moved old stock. I think you’re right that they had a lot of math to do.

  24. @Standback

    Yeah, I’ve pretty much given up on bundles as well.

    I think we’re seeing a broad pattern here. People don’t mind paying for stories they want to read, but they object to “buying” stories they’re aren’t interested in. Look at how successful stand-alone novellas are, even though they’re rarely free. I’ll bet novelettes would sell at $1 if someone tried to promote them. But magazines and anthologies languish.

    In the past, I think it was unusual to come to a magazine or anthology with a particular story in mind. At most, you were attracted by one or more authors on cover. But today, I think it’s more common to go looking for a particular story, and then you’re upset when you have to buy all those other stories you don’t really want.

    I’ve found myself (irrationally) feeling that way when downloading a huge omnibus for only $0.99!

    A do-it-yourself bundle might be popular. “Pick any ten of these 1,000 stories for just $3.99” Otherwise, I think the future is going to be with systems that find a way to let readers purchase only the content they want.

  25. I’ve heard people are approaching contemporary music that way now — that they’d rather put together a set that suits them than buy what somebody else has organized. The problem with that approach is that it makes running into the unexpectedly good (or at least unusual rather than just meh) much more difficult. I still read anthologies (and I bought them when I was still buying books rather than trying to squeeze our collection through the eye of a needle), but I have some idea what the signs are of a bad one (who’s the editor, what’s the premise, how many of the authors do I know are good vs the ones that I know are ordinary on their good days), and I pick them individually; I gave up my last magazine subscription a while ago because it seemed that the requirement to fill X pages Y times a year was getting beyond their ability to get work averaging above a certain minimum level. I suppose I would have had less trouble if I’d been willing to pay almost the price of a paperback and just quit partway through a good chunk of the material, but I hate quitting; I’ve skimmed some at-best-debatable books not because I cared about the characters but because I wanted to see how the author worked out what had been gotten into.

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