Pixel Scroll 4/3/25 Pixels First, Or Multiverse First? Cosmologists Want To Know

(1) ‘WONDERLAND’ SF DOCUMENTARY. [Item by Ersatz Culture.] The UK free-to-air channel Sky Arts is showing the first of a four-part documentary series Wonderland: Science Fiction in the Atomic Age tonight at 8pm UK time. And it will air again on Saturday April 5 at 3:40 p.m.

Unusually, it looks to be focused on literary SF; the episode descriptions only mention film/TV/etc for the final episode.  The trailer shows talking heads clips from a number of well-known UK-based critics, academics and authors, including John Clute, Farah Mendlesohn, Adam Roberts and Tade Thompson.

A description of the four episodes as taken from the Fine Books & Collections website:

  • Episode I – Mary Shelley to Isaac Asimov (April 3)

The creation and detonation of two atomic bombs developed by science fiction reading scientists is followed by an exploration of early science fiction writers including Mary Shelley, Jules Verne, and H.G. Wells. It also features Kurt Vonnegut’s experience of being firebombed in 1944 in a prison in Dresden (Slaughterhouse Five) and J.G. Ballard’s war experiences in the Far East (Empire of the Sun). The fear of nuclear apocalypse is portrayed in a range of work including Nevil Shute’s On the Beach. The episode concludes with the work of Isaac Asimov.

  • Episode II – Arthur C. Clarke to Ray Bradbury (April 10)

The work of Isaac Asimov leads to the sense of wonder that surrounded 1960s’ space exploration, embodied in the work of Arthur C. Clarke such as Childhood’s End and The Nine Billion Names of God. Also included are J.G. Ballard’s concern with “inner space” and apocalyptic events (Crash, The Atrocity Exhibition, The Drowned World), the work of Robert A. Heinlein (The Moon is a Harsh Mistress), and Stanislaw Lem (Solaris). The episode concludes with discussions of the menacing alternative worlds of Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, George Orwell’s 1984 and Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451.

  • Episode III – Margaret Atwood to Ted Chiang (April 17)

Writers like Ursula le Guin and Octavia Butler challenged conventional notions of gender. Margaret Atwood’s A Handmaid’s Tale created a more political, dystopian model to illustrate relations between genders becoming oppressive. Samuel Delaney (Babel-17, Dhalgren) questioned in the late 1960s and 1970s what it meant to be a person as the complexion of science fiction is seen to have changed, becoming less white and straight and American and British than it used to be in the Golden Age or the age of the pulps or even in the New Wave.

  • Episode IV – Quatermass to Christopher Nolan (April 24)

Discussion of the success of John Wyndham’s Day of the Triffids is followed by the long running and immensely successful Dr Who. Science fiction’s prescient concern with cyberspace and artificial intelligence is illustrated through the work of writers like William Gibson, William Burroughs and Philip K. Dick.

A trailer can be seen at the above link, or on the Sci-Fi-London website.  Starburst has a brief Q&A with the creator of the series, and there’s a positive review by someone who’s seen all four episodes.

The first episode is preceded by an apparently-unrelated documentary Douglas Adams: The Man Who Imagined Our Future; the UK comedy site Beyond the Joke has an overview, and there’s an an interview by the Radio Times with Adams’ collaborator John Lloyd.

(2) YEAR’S BEST CANADIAN KICKSTARTER. Stephen Kotowych has launched a Kickstarter to fund “Year’s Best Canadian Fantasy and Science Fiction: Volume 3”.

This year’s cover image is “Repair Station 73” by Pascal Blanché.

After highly successful campaigns for Volume One in 2023 and Volume Two in 2024, Year’s Best Canadian Fantasy & Science Fiction: Volume Three will help us cement the status of this series as the calling card anthology showing readers the powerful fantastical fiction being written by the Canadian F&SF community today.

If this project successfully funds, we’ll publish a reprint anthology made up of 50,000 words of today’s very best Canadian fantasy and science fiction. And, with YOUR help, we can make this a much longer anthology–see the Stretch Goals section below for details on how this could grow to be a 150,000 word anthology.

Stories written by Canadians appear in magazines both at home and abroad, on websites, in anthologies, and in zines. Some markets are well-known; others are smaller and might be missed. Some are free to read; some require subscriptions. And once the next issue of a magazine comes out, or an anthology goes out of print, or a publisher shuts down, these stories become hard to find and risk disappearing.

…And in the spirit of shopping Canadian, for Volume Three, I will be using a local book printer who did a very nice short run of Volume Two for me. Their books look great and their turnaround time is quick, so I’m looking forward to them printing the full run for me this year.

(3) KGB. Fantastic Fiction at KGB reading series hosts Ellen Datlow and Matthew Kressel present Andrea Hairston and Ursula Whitcher on Wednesday, April 9, 2025 beginning at 7:00 p.m. Eastern. Where: KGB Bar, 85 East 4th Street, New York, NY 10003 (Just off 2nd Ave, upstairs).

Andrea Hairston

Novelist, Andrea Hairston ran away from the physics lab to the theatre as a young thing and has been a scientist, artiste, and hoodoo conjurer ever since. Novels: Archangels of FunkWill Do Magic For Small Change, a NYT, (the latter an Editor’s pick & finalist for the Mythopoeic, Lambda, & Otherwise Awards); Redwood and Wildfire, winner of the Otherwise & Carl Brandon Award; Master of Poisons was on the Kirkus Review’s Best SF&F of 2020; and Mindscape, coming from Tordotcom, August, 2025.

Ursula Whitcher

Ursula Whitcher is a writer, poet, and mathematician whose collection of interwoven short stories, North Continent Ribbon, is published by Neon Hemlock Press. Ursula lives in Michigan with a spouse who works on high-voltage outer space experiments and two cats who work on lounging by heating vents. Look for more of Ursula’s writing in magazines such as Asimov’s and Analog or in the American Mathematics Society‘s Feature Column

(4) ALFIES: WHAT IT’S ALL ABOUT. In his report on “A Scottish Worldcon” at Not A Blog, George R.R. Martin recalls why he held the original Alfies ceremony in 2015, the first year the Sad and Rabid Puppies monopolized the Hugo ballot:

…A number of writers and fans who would surely have been nominated for a Hugo Award were squeezed out when the Puppies (Sad and Rabid) stuffed the ballot with their own favorites.   There was no way to rectify that (though various people tried, with everything from wooden asterisks to rules reform to voting No Award).   My own approach was the Alfies; consolation  trophies made of old hood ornaments, like many of the early Hugo Awards, given to writers and fans who missed out on nominations they likely would have gotten in a normal year….

He gave more Alfies in 2016. He skipped 2016 after that the purpose of them changed to just being nice tokens for people he thought should be honored. One Alfie was given in 2018 to John Picacio for the Mexicanx Initiative. At Dublin 2019 he presented Jane Johnson and Malcolm Edwards with Alfie Awards for Editing. But in 2024 they resumed their original purpose of calling attention to people unjustly denied their place on the Hugo Ballot.

Martin details why one of the victims of the Chengdu Worldcon Hugo shenanigans, R.F. Kuang, got an Alfie.

…The final Alfie of the night went to R.F.  KUANG for her novel BABEL, OR THE NECESSITY OF VIOLENCE,, which received 810 nominations, the third highest total.   Nonethelss, there was no place on the ballot her.  That was especially egregious, I thought, since BABEL would have had an excellent chance of coming out on top if the book had been nominated.  The novel had already won the Nebula Award and the Locus Award, among other honors; a Hugo would have given it a rare sweep of SF’s most prestigious awards.  Alas, BABEL never got the chance to contend.

But it did get an Alfie.  And Rebecca herself was there to collect it.

Will there be more Alfies in the years to come?  Only time will tell….

(5) RECOMMENDED READING. The New York Times supplies a whole chart to help you find “The Best Fantasy Novels to Read Right Now” – link bypasses the paywall.

The editors of The New York Times Book Review bring you cross-genre fantasy booksour favorite recent romantasy readsbooks that will transport you to other worldsour latest reviewsthrilling historical fantasiesthe essential Tanith Leenew series fantasy novels and more!

(6) WAYWARD WORMHOLE 2026. Cat Rambo’s Wayward Wormhole workshop will meet in Barbados from February 7-21, 2026. The focus will be on “The Art of the Novella”. Applications close May 15, 2025. Full details at the link.

Novellas are growing in popularity, and we want to help yours stand out.

Structurally, they can get tricky—they’re not mini-novels anymore than children are mini-adults—while still demanding full, fleshy, character arcs and immersive descriptions.

WHERE: Oistins area, Christ Church, Barbados. FEE:  $2,500.00 US (travel, accommodations, and food NOT included)

(7) THROUGH A MIRROR DARKLY. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] The first 15 minutes of BBC Radio 4’s Front Row earlier this week had an interview with Charlie Brooker, the writer behind Black Mirror. You can download it here.

(8) MEMORY LANE.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

April 3, 1999The Lost World series

Twenty-six years ago, something that had been made into a film at least seven times was made into a series. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s The Lost World, often shortened to just The Lost World, premiered this day in syndication in the States. (The first adaptation was made in 1925, and author Doyle appears in a preface to that film, though not all existing prints have him as some were cut, often radically.)

It was based very loosely as you well know on Doyle’s The Lost World novel and includes John Landis among its bevy of executive producers. The actual producer was Darrly Sheen who was the line producer on Time Trax and who did the same on several episodes of the Australian version of Mission: Impossible. The latter is a series that I like a lot which is not streaming anywhere. Did you did every episode used a script that not chosen for an expose during the run of the original series? Well it did. It marked the last appearance of Graves as Phelps as in the films the character goes bad and he wouldn’t do that. 

Guess where this series was produced? It was done at Village Roadshow Studios, Oxenford, Queensland, Australia.  Other productions of note done there include Thor: RagnarokPirates of the Caribbean: Salazar’s Revenge and Aquaman.

The initial cast was Peter McCauley as Professor George Edward Challeger, Rachel Blakely, as Marguerite Krux, Jennifer O’Dell as Veronica Layton, William deVry as Ned Malone and William Snow as Lord John Richard Roxton and Michael Sinelnikoff as Professor Arthur Summerlee. It would have way, way too many guest performers as it had at least or more generally every episode to list here. Suffice it say that if you watched any series that was made in Australia or. New Zealand then, it’s likely one or more of them could well grace this series. 

They lived in a giant tree house, really they did, one with many conveniences that rival what you and I have in a sort of Victorian peusdo-scientific fashion, and had many a fantastical adventure, none of which I’d say had anything to do with The Lost World novel unless there’s reptile people in there that I missed when I read it. It lasted three seasons consisting of sixty-six episodes. It was cancelled when funding for another season fell through. It’s on Amazon Prime right now.

Personal opinion? It was fun and I certainly don’t regret the time that I took to watch it. It was quite pulpy (Doc Savage would have fit right in here) and as long as you don’t expect it to have anything to do with the novel, you will enjoy a Thirties-style concept updated to contemporary standards. 

(9) COMICS SECTION.

(10) PROJECT HAIL MARY. “Ryan Gosling Plays a Nerdy Scientist on a Suicidal Space Mission in ‘Project Hail Mary’ CinemaCon Trailer: ‘I Put the Not in Astronaut’” at Variety.

Ryan Gosling, looking very nerdy and quite un-Ken-like, plays a science teacher turned grudging astronaut in “Project Hail Mary,” a sci-fi adventure that Amazon MGM Studios teased during its presentation to theater owners at CinemaCon on Wednesday.

“I put the ‘not’ in astronaut,” Gosling tells the government handler (Sandra Hüller) who has tapped him to undertake a suicidal space mission. “I can’t even moonwalk.”

The film, an adaptation of Andy Weir’s best-selling novel of the same name, follows an ordinary man who is told he has what it takes to go into the outer reaches of the universe. “You have the right stuff,” Gosling tells Hüller. “I have the wrong stuff.”…

(11) NINTENDO’S NEW CONSOLE. [Item by Steven French.] This week’s gaming newsletter from the Guardian:“Everything we learned from Nintendo’s ‘deep dive’ into the Switch 2”.

Sixty minutes – that’s how long Nintendo took on Wednesday afternoon to remind us that no other video game manufacturer creates joy like this one. It was the Nintendo livestream we’ve been waiting for: a deep dive into the new console after so much speculation. Sure, the Switch 2 is the company’s first real hardware sequel – an updated and spruced-up version of its predecessor rather than a radical new piece of kit. But the updates are the intriguing part.

Naturally, we’re getting a larger (7.9-inch, to be precise) screen that displays in full HD at 1080p; but we’re also getting re-thought Joy-Con controllers that now click to the console via strong magnets rather than those fiddly sliders we all put on the wrong way. The buttons are larger, too, so adults will be able to play Mario Kart with some semblance of skill. But the main new feature for the controllers is a new rollerball that enables each one to operate as a mouse. This will allow for new point-and-click features and some interesting control options. I like that they showed this off with a wheelchair basketball game, where you slide the controllers a long a surface to mimic pushing the wheels….

(12) JUSTWATCH QUARTERLIES. JustWatch has released their first quarter 2025 US streaming video on demand market share report — and as always, it’s based on data from over 15 million monthly JustWatch users in the US. The report tracks streaming interest by analyzing user behavior like filtering platforms, engaging with titles, and clicking through to offers.

Highlights from Q1 2025:

  • Prime Video takes the lead at 21%, just ahead of Netflix at 20%.
  • Max (13%) and Disney+ (12%) are neck-and-neck in the second tier.
  • Hulu holds 10%, while Apple TV+ (8%) and Paramount+ (7%) follow.
  • Peacock and Starz both captured 2% of market share.

SVOD Market Shares in Q1 2025. In a highly competitive landscape, Prime Video edged out Netflix to claim the leading position in Q1 2025 with a 21% market share. Netflix followed closely with 20%, making it a tight race at the top. Max secured third place at 13%, narrowly ahead of Disney+ at 12%, while Hulu held 10% of the market, closing the gap between them and the top three.

The remaining platforms—including Apple TV+, Paramount+, and services like Peacock and Starz—collectively accounted for the remaining share of the market. These figures reflect shifting user preferences as viewers navigate an increasingly fragmented streaming landscape.

Market Share Development in Q1 2025. Short-term growth trends between December 2024 and March 2025 showed modest but notable shifts. Disney+ and Starz each gained +1%, signaling increased user interest. In contrast, Paramount+ experienced the most significant drop, falling -2% over the same period. Most major platforms—including Prime Video, Netflix, and Hulu—remained stable throughout the quarter, suggesting consistent user engagement at the top.

Year-over-Year Comparison. Comparing Q1 2025 to Q1 2024, Peacock Premium and Starz demonstrated the strongest growth, each up +1% on average. Disney+ also showed positive momentum, while Paramount+ saw the largest decline at -2% year-over-year. Max and Netflix each slipped slightly with -1%, despite remaining major players in the U.S. streaming ecosystem.

(13) UNIVERSAL UP? [Item by Mark Roth-Whitworth.] Sure looks like this is what this study implies, that there’s a universal up/north. “The distribution of galaxy rotation in JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey” in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society at Oxford Academic.

JWST provides a view of the Universe never seen before, and specifically fine details of galaxies in deep space. JWST Advanced Deep Extragalactic Survey (JADES) is a deep field survey, providing unprecedentedly detailed view of galaxies in the early Universe. The field is also in relatively close proximity to the Galactic pole. Analysis of spiral galaxies by their direction of rotation in JADES shows that the number of galaxies in that field that rotate in the opposite direction relative to the Milky Way galaxy is ∼50  per cent higher than the number of galaxies that rotate in the same direction relative to the Milky Way. The analysis is done using a computer-aided quantitative method, but the difference is so extreme that it can be noticed and inspected even by the unaided human eye. 

(14) VIDEO OF THE DAY. “’Star Wars: Tales of the Underworld’ Drops Trailer ahead of May 4 Premiere”Animation Magazine sets the frame.

Today, Disney+ released the trailer, key art and stills for Lucasfilm Animation’s Star Wars: Tales of the Underworld, an all-new anthology series of animated shorts from creator Dave Filoni, premiering exclusively on Disney+ just in time for the “Star Wars holiday,” May the 4th. Synopsis: The series of animated Star Wars anthologies, which began in 2022 with Tales of the Jedi and continued in 2024 with Tales of the Empire, this time focuses on the criminal underbelly of the galaxy through the experiences of two iconic villains.

Former assassin and bounty hunter Asajj Ventress is given a new chance at life and must go on the run with an unexpected new ally, while outlaw Cad Bane faces his past when he confronts an old friend, now a Marshal on the opposite side of the law.

[Thanks to Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Roger Silverstein, Dann, Mark Roth-Whitworth, Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, Teddy Harvia, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, and John King Tarpinian for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Cat Eldridge.]

Pixel Scroll 1/28/25 One Moon Was A Ghostly Galleon, The Other A Spirited Schooner

(1) CHINESE FANZINE ZERO GRAVITY NEWS PUBLISHES THREE ISSUES. [Item by Ersatz Culture.] Three issues of the Hugo Award-winning fanzine Zero Gravity News have just been published, featuring articles about their personal experiences from a number of Chinese fans. Here is the text of RiverFlow’s two tweets about the issues (slightly edited):

Chinese fanzine Zero Gravity has published a themed special “l With Sci-Fi” across three issues. Issues 25 and 26 contain the views of middle school and college students on science fiction. The 27th issue mainly contains the articles of the memories of working-age Chinese sci-fi fans.  

This comes to a total of 480,000 words across the three issues, which can be said to be another collective voice of Chinese science fiction fans.

The PDFs of the three issues can be downloaded from this Google Drive link – each is around 10MB in size.

(2) EBOOK ALTERNATIVE HELPS INDIE BOOKSTORES. Bookshop.org US now is also selling ebooks.

Every purchase on the site financially supports independent bookstores. Our platform gives independent bookstores tools to compete online and financial support to help them maintain their presence in local communities.

NPR has the story — “Bookshop.org launches new e-book platform that exclusively supports local bookstores”.

…MARTÍNEZ: OK, there are already a lot of online retailers for e-books. I mean, millions of them are sold every year. So why are we focusing on this one?

FADEL: Well, this one exclusively supports local bookstores, and that’s because e-books are a difficult format for smaller booksellers to keep up with, according to Bookshop’s CEO, Andy Hunter.

ANDY HUNTER: Because the publisher requirements are so strict, it requires a huge amount of technical effort to deliver an e-book securely so it can’t be hacked and it can’t be pirated around the web. And that is too much for any individual local bookstore to deal with.

MARTÍNEZ: All right, so that makes sense. So what do indie bookstores think?

FADEL: We checked in with a few owners like Pete Mulvihill of Green Apple Books in San Francisco, and he told us his stores will take all the help they can get.

PETE MULVIHILL: We survive by kind of (laughter) scraping and clawing where we can to find efficiencies or make a little extra income. And this is another significant, if small, stream of income for us. So it’s truly helpful….

(3) ROMANTASY RINGING THE REGISTER. “Bestsellers – Critical Maas: Is this real life? Is this just fantasy?” asks The Bookseller about the UK market. Since the start of the year sff sales are up nearly a third, with fantasy titles driving the train. “Bookshops across the country may soon need to rebalance their space as readers continue to seek to escape from reality.”

You would be forgiven for thinking that bookshops were caught in a landslide of fantasy fiction in 2024 with authors such as Sarah J Maas and Rebecca Yarros dominating the top end of the fiction charts – as seen in our Author Review of the Year in last week’s issue (The Bookseller, 17th January 2025). It was not just the spicy side of the genre represented either, with JRR Tolkien’s sales rising 21.3% year-on-year through Nielsen BookScan’s Total Consumer Market and Brandon Sanderson appearing inside the top 50 authors of the year for the first time. Is this a trend that’s going to continue into 2025 – and, if it is, which series should we be keeping our eye on?

It is timely to start with Rebecca Yarros, as the third book in her Empyrean series – Onyx Storm – is published this week, while Fourth Wing and Iron Flame are sitting atop the Fantasy charts so far for 2025.

First published in hardback in 2023, the first two books in the series were released in paperback in 2024, with Fourth Wing placing 11th in the full-year chart, selling just shy of 250,000 copies. The paperback of Iron Flame was only released in November and has shifted 78,586 copies in its first nine weeks – 7.4% down on the equivalent period for its predecessor….

…While Yarros tops the fantasy chart so far for 2025, it is Sarah J Maas who dominates it, taking five of the top 10 spots. With TCM volume sales of 1.3 million units in 2024, the author of the A Court of Thorns and Roses series rooted herself into second place in our authors of the year chart with sales of £13.2m.

So far this year, Yarros’ value has already reached £483,676 – up 88.9% against the first two weeks of 2024 – and with fans eagerly awaiting the paperback release of last January’s House of Flame and Shadow, as well as the fifth ACOTAR novel, a surprise 2025 release or two could see Maas’ sales increase further still.

The bestselling fantasy hardback title at the moment could be the start of the next big thing. First published at the beginning of December, Quicksilver – the first instalment of Callie Hart’s Fae & Alchemy series – has sold 34,417 copies, with 17.9% of that coming in the past two weeks. A sequel is due later in 2025 but, so far, no date for the paperback edition has emerged. Another author to keep an eye on is Sarah A Parker, whose When the Moon Hatched is one of just three hardbacks inside the fantasy top 20, despite being first published back in June. It has just topped £1m worth of sales and consistently appears in the e-book charts provided by BookStat. The paperback is due in May, while the second book in the Moonfall series will be published in October of this year.

While 19 of the 20 listed here are romantasy – only Gregory Maguire’s Wicked bucks the trend – they are not the only sub-genre of the market on which to keep an eye. The third bestselling fantasy author of the moment is Brandon Sanderson, whose Cosmere universe has delivered £135,763, while Tolkien’s romance-free books have notched up £109,753 – though it is worth noting even when Tolkien and Sanderson’s sales are combined with second-placed Yarros, they still cannot top Maas’ total…..

(4) CHINESE NEW YEAR GALA BROADCAST. [Item by Ersatz Culture and Prograft.] The annual Chinese New Year/Spring Festival Gala was broadcast by state broadcaster CCTV/CMG on Tuesday 28th.  The full (nearly 5 hour) show can be seen on YouTube, but the links below jump directly a couple of performances that may be the ones of most relevance to File 770:

A folk dance performed by robots and human dancers.  Per this news article, this is “a traditional Yangko dance, a vibrant folk art form from northeast China” where “the robots showcased their ability to manipulate handkerchiefs, a signature element of Yangko dance“.

A friend sent me a link to the Taobao sales page for what seems to be the robots used in this performance.  The link wouldn’t show me the full product list as I don’t have a user account there, but he also sent me a screenshot, which is below, along with a Google Translation.  The prices per unit convert to approximately $69k and $90k USD.

A girls choir performed a folk song with elements relating to the Chinese space program, such as the moon, an astronaut and a space station, which were overlaid onto the broadcast.  This news article has more information about the performers, although it does not really mention the space aspects.

(5) YOUNG ADULTS WRITE NOW. The Horror Writers Association blog today announced the 2024 recipients of the YAWN Endowment — Young Adults Write Now (YAWN).

This endowment is provided by the Horror Writers Association and is aimed at supporting teen writing programs in libraries as part of its ongoing dedication to furthering young adult literacy. We received a large number of excellent applications last year and are heartened by the number of libraries currently prioritizing teen writing programs. 

The YAWN application period runs from August 1st to October 1st, with five recipients selected in October. Each recipient is awarded $250, to be put toward developing or supporting a teen writing program in their library. More about the endowment can be found on the Horror Writers Association’s website, via the Horror Scholarships page

Libraries receiving funding will be able to use the monies for anything relating to their proposed or currently active writing program, including but not limited to: books (specifically young adult horror and books on writing), supplies, special events, publishing costs, guest speakers and instructors, additions to the collection, and operating expenses.

The recipients of the 2024 Young Adults Write Now Endowment are:

  • South Fayette Township Library (Pennsylvania)
  • San Benito County Free Library (California)
  • Wharton County Library (Texas)
  • Cuyahoga County Public Library, Garfield Heights Branch (Ohio)
  • Public Library of New London (Connecticut)

(6) KASEY AND JOE LANSDALE Q&A. The Horror Writers Association blog’s “Nuts & Bolts” series has added an “Interview With Kasey and Joe R. Lansdale”.

KASEY LANSDALE

Q: What marketing advice do you have for authors, especially in light of the changing social media landscape?

A: I’ve said it before, I’ll say it again. Mailing list. Social platforms are too erratic. It doesn’t matter if you have a million followers if, let’s say for example, they ban your audience …

Q: Can you share any insights about publishing that many authors don’t know, but would benefit from knowing?

A: The cream does not rise to the top. The publishers in most cases pick their lead title and put most of their juice behind it, and if something else gets out, it’s by pure magic. There’s no formula or we would all be doing it. There are two kinds of publicists. The ones who shoot out to their mailing list and hope someone answers, and the ones who beat down doors and hope for answers. Unfortunately, the results are usually pretty on par with one another. But that’s not a defeat, that’s a call to action. That means that the author must tell the world about their books, and take the opportunities given to share it and themselves with the world.

(7) LAUREL AMBERDINE (1970-2025). Writer and editor Laurel Amberdine died January 21 at the age of 54. The SFWA Blog has published a tribute: “In Memoriam: Laurel Amberdine”.

Laurel Amberdine (1970–21 January 2025) was a writer, interviewer, and genre editor. She worked for Locus Magazine for ten years, and was an assistant editor for Lightspeed magazine.

Amberdine was known for her kind and thoughtful interviews, yet she also loved to write, both prose and poetry. Her short fiction story, “Airship Hope” was published by Daily Science Fiction in 2013, and in her 2018 essay “Science Fiction Saved My Life” (Uncanny Magazine), she discussed how her chronic illness and disability had affected her, how finding writing gave her purpose, and how privilege inherent in the industry limits voices that readers may need to hear. Amberdine wrote a young adult novel, Luminator, which made it far along in the publication process, as well as an adult science-fiction novel.

Amberdine was known for her kindness and warmth, rooted in her Catholic faith, and extended to all who she encountered….

(8) AL SARRANTONIO (1952-2025). Sff/h writer, editor and publisher Al Sarrantonio has died reported Chet Williamson on Facebook. Wikipedia has a detailed article about his career.

Al Sarrantonio in the Seventies. Photo by and copyright © Andrew Porter.

He began an editing career at a major New York publishing house in 1976. His first short fiction, “Ahead of the Joneses,” appeared in Isaac Asimov’s Science Fiction Magazine in 1979, and the following year he published 14 short stories. In 1982 he left publishing to become a full-time writer.

He established himself in the horror field with such much-anthologized stories as “Pumpkin Head”, “The Man With Legs”, “Father Dear,” “Wish”, and “Richard’s Head,” (all of which appear in his first short story collection, Toybox). “Richard’s Head” brought him his first Bram Stoker Award nomination.

Sarrantonio won a Bram Stoker Award in 2000 for his anthology 999: New Stories of Horror and Suspense, and a Shirley Jackson Award in 2011 for the anthology Stories: All-New Tales (co-edited with Neil Gaiman; it also won an Audie). Both books also were finalists for the World Fantasy Award.

(9) JEANNOT SZWARC (1940-2025). The Guardian’s writeup about movie/TV director Jeannot Szwarc is almost harshly frank: “Jeannot Szwarc obituary”. “Director whose big screen credits include Jaws 2, Supergirl and Santa Claus: The Movie alongside a 50-year career in television.” He also directed Somewhere in Time.

…His blockbusters, though, were among the most maligned films of their age. When asked about Jaws 2, Szwarc said: “I do believe I deserve some credit for just pulling it off.”

The odds were not in his favour. He had less than a month to prepare when the picture’s original director, John Hancock, quit three weeks into production. Only 90 seconds of what Hancock had shot proved usable. At that point, Szwarc said, “It was the biggest disaster in the history of Universal. They had spent $10m, and they had nothing.”

An unfinished script, bad weather and a malfunctioning mechanical shark only added to Szwarc’s woes as an immovable release date loomed. He was under no illusions about the task at hand. “I knew it wasn’t going to be a cinematic masterpiece. All I went in with was knowing I had to make it scary, and that I had to finish it.”

The film, which features a scene in which a shark chomps on a sea rescue helicopter as it attempts to take off from water, was met with dismay by critics. Riding the wave of Steven Spielberg’s 1975 predecessor, however, it was still a hit, grossing $187m….

…His TV credits in the early 70s included Columbo, The Six Million Dollar Man and more than a fifth of the episodes of the long-running macabre suspense series Night Gallery.

Among his television films was The Small Miracle (1973), which starred one of his heroes, the Italian neo-realist director Vittorio De Sica. “I told him I felt like an art student who had to instruct Michelangelo,” he said.

Szwarc made his big-screen debut in the same year with the Michael Crichton-scripted thriller Extreme Close-Up. He followed this with Bug (1975), a horror film about pyromaniac cockroaches, which became the swansong of the ingenious horror producer William Castle….

…Between 2003 and 2011, he returned to the Supergirl/DC Comics milieu by directing 14 episodes of Smallville, the television series about Superman’s younger years…

(10) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Paul Weimer.]

January 28, 1973Carrie Vaughn, 52.

By Paul Weimer: Carrie Vaughn’s urban fantasy series, the Kitty Norville series, is probably very well known to you. A radio DJ turned accidental radio talk show host who is (at first secretly) a werewolf gets involved with other aspects of the slowly revealed supernatural community, bringing them out into the open and having the United States and the world come to terms with them. It’s as if the Masquerade (from White Wolf) was being slowly and steadily lifted, and for everyone all at once.  

Even then and even now, that goes against the grain of a lot of Urban fantasy, which either has the supernatural always out and open, or following the Masquerade model. But a series that considers the problems werewolves, vampires and others have adapting to modern society–and modern society adapting to others? That’s a lovely sociological and anthropological twist.  Those first few novels, as Kitty herself comes to terms with her secret coming out, are really strong and I think they hold up to this day. 

And Norville is and was willing to expand the playground and consider–if supernatural creatures have always been around, what does that, what did that actually mean in historical terms. There’s some really lovely worldbuilding in her nuanced explorations of the idea. 

But a reason why the Norville books also hold a strong place in my heart is that they are, again, some of the earliest books I was given ARCs to read for review (the first three as a matter of fact). Although urban fantasy (except for, say, Seanan McGuire) is not my power chord of reading SFF, the idea that a publisher would give me books if I would review them was a pretty heady feeling.  

Still is. 

I’ve read a couple of novels and work by Vaughn outside of the Kitty Norville books (After the Golden Age, written in that heady period where authors were writing original superhero novels not tied to Marvel or DC). But for me, it may be unfair, Vaughn’s work begins and ends with a DJ turned accidental social heroine.

Carrie Vaughn

(11) COMICS SECTION.

  • Jerry King knows why the monsters aren’t in their old hiding place.
  • Reality Check has a Dickens update.
  • Cornered misses a friend. [Warning for amazing bad taste.]
  • Thatababy has DIY special effects.
  • The Argyle Sweater should not practice medicine. Even in Hyperborea.
  • Wumo witnesses – different planet, same complaint.

(12) INSIDE DOCTOR WHO. Russell T Davies and Steven Moffat tell what it’s like writing a different Doctor. Watch video at X.com.

(13) STOP THAT GARBAGE TRUCK! “Scans for the memories: why old games magazines are a vital source of cultural history – and nostalgia” explains the Guardian.

Before the internet, if you were an avid gamer then you were very likely to be an avid reader of games magazines. From the early 1980s, the likes of Crash, Mega, PC Gamer and the Official PlayStation Magazine were your connection with the industry, providing news, reviews and interviews as well as lively letters pages that fostered a sense of community. Very rarely, however, did anyone keep hold of their magazine collections. Lacking the cultural gravitas of music or movie publications, they were mostly thrown away. While working at Future Publishing as a games journalist in the 1990s, I watched many times as hundreds of old issues of SuperPlay, Edge and GamesMaster were tipped into skips for pulping. I feel queasy just thinking about it.

Because now, of course, I and thousands of other video game veterans have realised these magazines are a vital historical resource as well as a source of nostalgic joy. Surviving copies of classic mags are selling at a vast premium on eBay, and while the Internet Archive does contain patchy collections of scanned magazines, it is vulnerable to legal challenges from copyright holders.

Thankfully, there are institutions taking the preservation of games magazines seriously. Last week, the Video Game History Foundation, a non-profit organisation dedicated to the preservation of games and their history, announced that from 30 January, it would be opening up its digital archive of out-of-print magazines to read and study online. So far 1,500 issues of mostly American games mags are available, as well as art books and other printed ephemera, but the organisation is busy scanning its entire collection. The digitised content will be fully tagged and searchable by word or phrase, so you’ll be able to easily track down the first mentions of, say, Minecraft, John Romero, or the survival horror genre….

(14) OH, THAT’S DIFFERENT. NEVER MIND. “An asteroid got deleted because it was actually Elon Musk’s Tesla Roadster” says Astronomy.com.

On Jan. 2, the Minor Planet Center at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, announced the discovery of an unusual asteroid, designated 2018 CN41. First identified and submitted by a citizen scientist, the object’s orbit was notable: It came less than 150,000 miles (240,000 km) from Earth, closer than the orbit of the Moon. That qualified it as a near-Earth object (NEO) — one worth monitoring for its potential to someday slam into Earth.

But less than 17 hours later, the Minor Planet Center (MPC) issued an editorial notice: It was deleting 2018 CN41 from its records because, it turned out, the object was not an asteroid.

It was a car.

To be precise, it was Elon Musk’s Tesla Roadster mounted to a Falcon Heavy upper stage, which boosted into orbit around the Sun on Feb. 6, 2018. The car — which had been owned and driven by Musk — was a test payload for the Falcon Heavy’s first flight….

(15) PREPARE FOR THE ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE? [Item by Mike Kennedy.] See the Orchard Machinery Corporation’s imposing Hedgehog tree trimming machine hacking along to Zombie as covered by Bad Wolves. Could this be a subtle hint that we should prepare for the zombie apocalypse?  If so, such a machine might come in handy. 

[Thanks to Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, Teddy Harvia, Ersatz Culture, Prograft, Daniel Dern, Jim Janney, Mark Roth-Whitworth, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, and SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Daniel Dern.]

Official from Henan Province Moots a Chinese Worldcon Bid

By Ersatz Culture: Reports have surfaced today on various Chinese media sites, about an official from Henan province who is mooting a bid for a future Worldcon, as part of another regional “SF industry” push.  However, it seems to me that there are a number of issues with his proposal, at least going from the minimal information disclosed thus far, making it unclear how serious this proposed bid is, at present at least.

The original source for these reports is an article published on Friday 17th by Liu Ruichao on dahe.cn, which seems to be a regional news outlet.  However, for me at least, viewing from a UK IP address, there are sidebars (possibly broken advertisements?) stating “Your current behavior is detected as abnormal, Please try again later…”.  This makes me wonder if access to this article may be flaky, in which case the following pages, which seem to be syndicated versions of the original article, might be useful as backup sources: difang.gmw.cnnews.qq.comtoutiao.comWeChat/Weixin account of the Henan Democratic Construction Association

There is another WeChat/Weixin article, published by the Henan Cartoonists Association, but written by Ma Qianhua, which has slightly different text, but covers broadly the same ground.

Zhang Guoxiao

The proposal comes from one Zhang Guoxiao (张国晓), who is reported as being (via Google Translate):

a member of the [Henan] Provincial CPPCC and chairman of Henan Little Cherry Animation Group Co., Ltd

with the proposal apparently being made at a provincial “Two Sessions” meeting.  This would seem to be a regional version of the similarly named national conference which takes place in Beijing in March. 

The proposal seems primarily concerned with the “science fiction industry” and creating a “Chinese Science Fiction Capital”, seemingly inspired by the fact that two of the “Four Kings” of Chinese SF (Liu Cixin and Wang Jinkang) were born or raised in Henan province.  The plans include (via Google Translate):

Implement the “Homecoming Plan for Famous Science Fiction Writers and Masters” and hire Liu Cixin and Wang Jinkang as Henan’s chief science fiction officers. Promote Xinyang, Nanyang, and Zhengzhou to work together to create the “China Science Fiction Capital”. Support Luoshan County, Xinyang City in planning and building the Liu Cixin Science Fiction Museum, the Three-Body Science Fiction Theme Park, and the Wandering Earth Science Fiction Theme Park; support Zhenping County, Nanyang City in planning and building the Wang Jinkang Science Fiction Museum and the Jinkang Science Fiction Theme Park; support Zhengzhou High-tech Zone to give full play to the platform advantages of the National Animation Industry Development Base (Henan Base) and plan and build an international science fiction industry cluster.

(Note: as previously covered by Locus and China Daily, a museum dedicated to Liu Cixin already opened in Shanxi province last year.  It is unknown if either of the mentioned authors have any current involvement in this project – Wang Jinkang’s Weibo account has no mention of it.)

The closing section of the article goes on to reference a Worldcon bid (again via Google Translate, with minor manual edits):

On this basis, apply to host the World Science Fiction Convention. The Worldcon is hosted by the World Science Fiction Association. Every year, the convention stages the Hugo Award, which is known as the “Nobel Prize of Science Fiction”. To this end, [Zhang] suggested that Zhengzhou, Xinyang and Nanyang jointly apply to host the 84th Worldcon in 2026. This will have great significance and far-reaching impact on continuously polishing the international brand of “Henan Science Fiction”, promoting “the importing of world science fiction, exporting Henan science fiction”, and building a global science fiction industry highland.

There are a couple of issues here.  My initial reaction was probably the same as many File 770 readers, as well as members of Chinese fandom — namely that the location of the 2026 Worldcon was already decided last year.  I did wonder if it instead meant that they intended to put forward a bid that would contest the site selection vote to be held in 2026, but that doesn’t seem to be the case based on the mention of hosting the 84th Worldcon.

The idea of sharing a Worldcon between three cities also seems problematic.  Per Google, Zhengzhou is very roughly 300km from both Xinyang and Nanyang, with the latter pair being about 200km apart.  Whilst Wikipedia states that “Henan has some of the most advanced transportation system in China” and “Zhengzhou is also an important hub of China’s high-speed railway network with railway lines connecting the city from 8 directions with all prefecture-level cities in Henan”, how a Worldcon would be run over such large distances is very unclear to me.  And to the best of my knowledge, Henan – unlike Chengdu – has no experience with running science fiction conventions.

Acknowledgements to SF Lightyear for the original reporting of this on Weibo.

Google Map showing the distances between Zhengzhou, Xinyang and Nanyang within Henan province

Chinese SF Responds to Influx of Foreigners on Xiaohongshu

By Ersatz Culture: As covered in various English language media (e.g. BBCThe GuardianCNN) a large number of westerners have been showing up on the Xiaohongshu (aka “REDnote”) social media app, ahead of the possible imminent closure of TikTok in the US.  Below is a selection of some members of the Chinese SF scene have responded.  (The links should work in a browser without having to create an account on that app, although you might have to solve a CAPTCHA first, and it looks like any replies to the post are hidden.)

Science Fiction World (magazine and book publisher)

8 Light Minutes (book publisher)

I don’t think this is quite the trolling it might initially appear to be; the text of the post is mostly a Chinese-language promo for a translation of Allen Steele’s Coyote, although there is also some English language outreach at the bottom of the post.  Via Google Translate:

When was the last time Americans fled en masse?

Not only did they flee silently, they also stole a spaceship, the USS Alabama, which was built with all the efforts of the United States! This is known as the “horse stealing” incident.

I’m not making this up, there is a Hugo Award nomination certification to check!  (Editorial note: this seems to refer the “Stealing Alabama” novella that was part of this fixup novel)

On July 5, 2070, the spaceship successfully took off, escaped from the United States, and headed for a planet full of infinite hope – Coyote.

????️ The Coyote in the book is a new home for humans to seek spiritual refuge. It is an extremely realistic planet with vast wastelands, gurgling streams, and tens of thousands of mountains, which comforts people’s hearts.

???? But the creatures here are not very friendly. The American scientists who went to Coyote were like Link entering the Hyrule Continent. While exploring freely, they were surrounded by dangers…

????️ However, there are more dangerous things than indigenous creatures: the deepest desires, darkness, and struggles of human nature.

In this set of books, you can see the shadows of great writers such as Nietzsche, Jack London, Heinlein, Mark Twain, Hemingway, etc.!

Author Alan Steele once said that “Coyote” is a work that retells American history in the form of science fiction. If you understand “Coyote”, you will understand the struggle and dignity of Americans. This science fiction masterpiece completed many years ago still has extraordinary significance today.

????From ancient times to the present, human beings’ desire for a free world has never changed.

Yan Ru (fan who attended Chengdu and Glasgow Worldcons)

Apart from the hashtags, this post is entirely in English:

Whovian ?Welcome!

I’m so glad to meet whovian from all over the world!

Who’s your Doctor?

Doctor Who is my beloved TV episodes. Because of this episode, I became a Sci- Fi activist. Now I’m still trying to introduce it to Chinese friends, go to the globe Sci-Fi Con and want to meet all Doctors.

Hope to find a TARDIS with you!

[Click for larger images.]

Samantha Harvey’s Orbital and Goodreads Review Bombing/Locking

By Ersatz Culture: Goodreads users attempting to rate Samantha Harvey’s Orbitalthe recent winner of the 2024 Booker Prize are seeing the following error message:

Rating this book temporarily unavailable

This book has temporary limitations on submitting ratings and reviews. This may be because we’ve detected unusual behavior that doesn’t follow our review guidelines.

Social media posts (BlueskyTwitter) indicate that this has been the case for at least a couple of days, with negative reviews due to the fact that the book has Russian characters apparently the cause.

From Bluesky:

From Twitter:

Examples of such reviews are below.

A glance at the statistics page for this book shows that the ratings and reviews (third and fourth columns in the table) for this book stopped incrementing for the most part around the 14th, with the preceding two days having greater than normal activity, but not massively so, especially given that both the Booker winner and Goodreads Choice nominee announcements occurred on the 12th.

[Thanks to Prograft on Weibo, the source of this story.]

Yao Haijun, Three-Body Problem Editor and Double Hugo Finalist, Under Investigation in China

Yao Haijun in the Science Fiction World office in 2021; Photo by Zou Qiong; Source: chinawriter.com.cn

By Ersatz Culture: An announcement was published today stating that Science Fiction World director, double Hugo finalist, and member of the Chengdu Worldcon committee Yao Haijun (姚海军) is “suspected of serious violations of discipline and law” and under investigation by a “Discipline Inspection and Supervision Group”.  The original Chinese text of the announcement is below, followed by an unedited machine translation.


权威发布丨四川科幻世界杂志社有限公司董事、副总编辑姚海军 接受纪律审查和监察调查

廉洁四川 2024年10月23日 10:31

四川科幻世界杂志社有限公司董事、副总编辑姚海军涉嫌严重违纪违法,目前四川省纪委监委驻科技厅纪检监察组正对其进行纪律审查,经四川省监委指定泸州市监委管辖,泸州市监委正对其进行监察调查。

姚海军简历

姚海军,男,汉族,1966年5月生,黑龙江伊春人,省委党校在职大学学历。1988年11月参加工作,2006年6月加入中国共产党。

1988年11月至2005年6月,先后在黑龙江省伊春市伊敏林场、山西省太原市《科幻大王》杂志社、四川省科学技术协会《科幻世界》杂志社工作;

2005年6月至2018年12月,任四川省科学技术协会《科幻世界》杂志社副总编辑;

2018年12月至今,任四川科幻世界杂志社有限公司董事、副总编辑。

来源:泸州市监委

编辑:丁冠男


Authoritative release: Yao Haijun, director and deputy editor-in-chief of Sichuan Science Fiction World Magazine Co., Ltd., is subject to disciplinary review and supervisory investigation

Clean Sichuan October 23, 2024 10:31

Yao Haijun, director and deputy editor-in-chief of Sichuan Science Fiction World Magazine Co., Ltd., is suspected of serious violations of discipline and law. He is currently undergoing a disciplinary review by the Discipline Inspection and Supervision Group of the Sichuan Provincial Commission for Discipline Inspection and Supervision stationed in the Department of Science and Technology. The Luzhou Municipal Supervision Commission, designated by the Sichuan Provincial Supervision Commission as having jurisdiction, is conducting a supervisory investigation into him.

Yao Haijun’s resume

Yao Haijun, male, Han nationality, was born in May 1966 in Yichun, Heilongjiang Province. He has an on-the-job university degree from the Party School of the Provincial Party Committee. He started working in November 1988 and joined the Communist Party of China in June 2006.

From November 1988 to June 2005, he worked successively at Yimin Forest Farm in Yichun City, Heilongjiang Province, Science Fiction King Magazine in Taiyuan City, Shanxi Province, and Science Fiction World Magazine of Sichuan Provincial Association for Science and Technology;

From June 2005 to December 2018, he served as deputy editor-in-chief of Science Fiction World magazine of Sichuan Association for Science and Technology;

From December 2018 to present, he has served as director and deputy editor-in-chief of Sichuan Science Fiction World Magazine Co., Ltd.

Source: Luzhou Municipal Supervisory Committee

Editor: Ding Guannan

(The above translation is via Google Translate; DeepL produces similar results.)


I have no idea of the nature of this investigation, but it may have been under way for several weeks, given that up until early September, he had been posting to his Weibo account a couple of times a day, but went silent without warning.  (A few replies to his later posts asking how he was haven’t received a response.)  To the best of my knowledge, he does not appear in any of the photos or videos from the recent Galaxy (Yinhe) or Tianwen Award events that have been held in Chengdu in the past month.

Who is Yao Haijun? Although he has pages on Wikipedia and Fancyclopedia, both are a bit out-of-date.  Anyone who still has a copy of the 2023 Hugo Voter packet will find a chapter about him — with a brief English language section — in the Best Related Work Chinese SF: An Oral History: Volume 1 from page 331 onwards, from which I’ve taken a couple of the photos below.

Yao Haijun with Frederik Pohl, Robert Silverberg and Robert Sheckley at the 2004 Worldcon.  Source: Chinese SF: An Oral History: Volume 1

He is probably most notable as the original editor of The Three-Body Problem, first published in serialized form in Science Fiction World magazine.

He was a Best Editor (Long Form) Hugo finalist in 2023 and 2024, probably for the “World Science Fiction Masters” series of translated books, which feature his name on the cover, and for which he is credited as Series Editor. Recent(ish) titles include Mary Robinette Kowal’s first two Lady Astronaut books and a Connie Willis collection; there were samples of various works from this series in the last two Hugo voter packets. He is also the co-editor of the anthology that included three of this year’s Hugo Best Novella and Best Short Story finalists. 

He was a member of the Chengdu Worldcon bid team, and went on to be one of two Honorary Co-Chairs of the con. A flyer distributed at DisCon III shortly after the site selection vote also listed him as one of two “Head[s] of Hugo administration division”, although by the time of a May 2022 update, others were listed in these roles.

In the 1980s he was the editor of the Nebula (Xingyun) fanzine, which I believe may have been the first in China.  He was also one of the co-founders in 2010 of the similarly named award.

Issues of Nebula/Xingyun from the 1990s.  Source: Chinese SF: An Oral History: Volume 1

More recently, a Weibo post by Science Fiction World stated that Yao Haijun would take on additional responsibilities.  As of today, that post seems to be no longer available, but the File 770 coverage is here.

Pixel Scroll 10/22/24 Now We See The Scrollence Inherent In The Pixels

(1) BEAR NECESSITY. “Paddington Bear given UK passport by Home Office” reports the Guardian.

He has been one of the UK’s favourite and most prominent refugees for two-thirds of a century. Now Paddington Bear – official name Paddington Brown – has been granted a British passport.

The co-producer of the latest Paddington film said the Home Office had issued the specimen document to the fictional Peruvian-born character – listing for completeness the official observation that he is, in fact, a bear.

“We wrote to the Home Office asking if we could get a replica, and they actually issued Paddington with an official passport – there’s only one of these,” Rob Silva told Radio Times….

(2) TIANWEN AWARDS CEREMONY. Ersatz Culture reported the winners of the Tianwen Awards 2024 in a File 770 post today.

And last week the award’s official website promoted the forthcoming ceremony with an article that quoted many sf figures including Ben Yalow: “Nebulae are twinkling! More than 100 science fiction celebrities gathered in Chengdu, and the countdown to the release of the “Tianwen” results has begun”

…Ben Yalow , a senior American science fiction activist who served as co-chair of the 2023 Chengdu World Science Fiction Convention, will come to Chengdu again as vice chairman of the “Tianwen” judging committee. This is the first time that Ben Yalow has served as a judge for the Chinese Science Fiction Literature Competition. “Although the judging schedule is relatively tight, in addition to focusing on browsing, this process also brings me a lot of enjoyment.” He said, “The Tianwen Chinese Science Fiction Literature Competition has set up a number of creative awards, hoping to further broaden the breadth of China’s science fiction field. At the same time, I also hope that this competition will allow more readers to understand and fall in love with science fiction-this is a literary genre that is very helpful for readers to think about the possibilities of the future. No matter how far technology goes, its charm will not disappear.”…

Ben Yalow on stage. Source: HELLO Chengdu’s Twitter”

(3) HIS LIFE IN COMICS. Scott Edelman has launched a new podcast, “Why Not Say What Happened?” in which he talks about his early experiences in comics and writing. The fourth episode just went live.

It’s time for another trip back to when teen me strode through the Marvel Bullpen like, well, a big teenager, as I share what I remember (and what I’ve forgotten) about writing the Avengers, what Marvel’s paying Assistant Editors these days vs. what I was paid in 1975, why Steve Gerber called me the most violent man on Earth, the way Conan caused me to write my first short story, the embarrassing cover letter I wrote at age 16 to accompany my first short story submission, how I unwittingly destroyed my comic book collection, what Dennis Etchison wrote in an acceptance letter which made me cry, and more.

(4) AS TOLD BY JIM BROADBENT. [Item by Steven French.] In 1976, Ken Campbell, who had a career-long involvement with science fiction (subsequently putting on the first stage version of A Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy) decided to launch a theatrical production of The Illuminatus Trilogy by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson, in the form of a nine hour cycle of five plays (the production eventually transferred from Liverpool to London’s National Theatre). Here Jim Broadbent, who’s appeared in everything from the Harry Potter series to Game of Thrones (and more!) described how Campbell’s play changed his life: “The play that changed my life: Jim Broadbent on Ken Campbell’s electrifying epic Illuminatus!” in the Guardian.

…The Illuminatus! Trilogy [by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson] is a sort of science fiction piece, drawing together an awful lot of the then current conspiracy theories. It’s a huge thing that spreads over lots of different stories and characters.

It was the hot summer of 76, and the play was going to start in Liverpool. There was a character in the books of Illuminatus! called Fission Chips. I think he was sort of based on James Bond, And so I went along and quoted from the book in my Sean Connery accent.

If you wanted to be in it, you could be. I mean I don’t think he turned anyone away….

(5) A ROOMBA WITH THEOLOGY. Muse from the Orb wants to know: “Are We Ready for a Robot Pope?”

Awhile ago, I made a Note in which I quipped about the dearth of robot pope stories these days. I included a panel from a comic I was reading — a looming robot crowned with the triregnum, draped in gem-encrusted robes. Reaction was positive, so I figured that I’d devote a post to the extended lore behind the Robot Pope….

…His official name is Sixtus the Seventh, and he’s the central focus of Robert Silverberg’s classic short story “Good News from the Vatican,” in which the Catholic Church elects its first — is this a spoiler? — robot pope. The story first appeared in Universe 1 (1971), an anthology commissioned by the influential Ace editor Terry Carr, and it won the Nebula Award that next year. In 1975, it was adapted into comics form in the magazine Unknown Worlds of Science Fiction, which I purchased at Worldcon and whence I got the photo. Silverberg has called “Good News” a “lighthearted little item,” and it’s a fun approach to classic questions of humanity, technology, and religion….

(6) REMEMBER: MONEY SHOULD FLOW TO THE CREATOR. [Item by Steve Green.] I know there’s a Writers Beware website, but maybe there needs to one for artists? This publication sounds somewhat sketchy, as Ron signals. A warning about “Narrative Magazine” by Ron Coleman at Colemantoons.

I’m writing to discuss Narrative Magazine. This magazine pays $50 for cartoons, but there is a catch all cartoonists should be aware of. They request a submissions fee to review your cartoons and they don’t guarantee that they will buy anything.  I understand this submission fee does include a subscription to their magazine, however. One cartoonist told me they had to pay a $20 submission fee but the magazine did buy a cartoon from them for $50.  To test how this worked I tried to submit a few cartoons to them and they were asking me for a $60 fee.  I didn’t go for it….

…In my 60 years of cartooning this is the first time I’ve ever come across a publisher requiring a submission fee to consider cartoons….

(7) BREVITY, ALWAYS BREVITY. Or something like that. The Hollywood Reporter announces a “New Shorter Version of ‘Harry Potter and the Cursed Child’ on Broadway”.

A revised, shortened version of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child will come to Broadway in November. 

The new version of the play clocks in at under three hours, including intermission, compared to the current running time of three-and-a-half hours. The new version will premiere on Broadway when new cast members take over and begin performances at Lyric Theatre on Nov. 12, 2024.

This marks the second time the play has been shortened while on Broadway. The original production, which opened on Broadway in April 2018, was shown in two parts which ran five hours and 15 minutes in total…. 

(8) IT’S FROM AN OLD FAMILIAR SCORE. Speaking of brevity, the amount of rollover Dune music to the sequel seems to have been too much. “Hans Zimmer’s ‘Dune 2’ Score Ruled Ineligible for Oscars”.

One of the year’s most anticipated and epic musical scores won’t be in the running for an Academy Award.

Warner Bros.’ “Dune: Part Two,” directed by Denis Villeneuve, was met with critical acclaim when it hit theaters in March. Both critics and audiences lauded the film’s visuals, storytelling, and, most notably, the music score by Academy Award-winning composer Hans Zimmer. However, Zimmer’s powerful and evocative score for the sci-fi epic is not eligible to be submitted for this year’s Oscars due to surpassing the Academy’s limit on pre-existing music; therefore, it cannot be nominated in the best original score category.

The Academy’s rule states: “In cases such as sequels and franchises from any media, the score must not use more than 20% of pre-existing themes and music borrowed from previous scores in the franchise.” Since Zimmer’s composition for “Dune: Part Two” incorporates substantial elements from his work on 2021’s “Dune,” it falls outside of the eligibility criteria….

… However, Zimmer’s work on “Dune 2” remains in contention to be recognized by other awards bodies, including the Critics Choice Awards, Golden Globes, BAFTA, and even the Grammys….

(9) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

Born October 22, 1938Derek Jacobi, 86. 

Derek Jacobi

Remember I’m not covering everything here, just what I find find interesting.

I first fondly remember Derek Jacobi from the Cadfael series where he played Brother Cadfael, the monk mystery solver. He had an edge to him that belied his supposed monkness. 

 It lasted for a much shorter period than I thought as the series only went thirteen episodes. There were twenty-one novels, not all of which were filmed, and there are many differences between the plots and characters in the novels. 

(Neat note here: Sean Pertwee was Sheriff Hugh Beringar in four episodes (not all).)

Much earlier and certainly less gentle was I, Claudius in which he played Claudius who was considered rather sane after Caligula, who didn’t survive assassination, and before Nero who succeeded him. He plays the role brilliantly over the twelve episodes and I recommend it to anyone who hasn’t yet seen it. 

By no means a major character in it, but he is Probert, Sir William’s valet in Gosford Park. He, in his scenes, is spot on. And this film is of my favorite of the Manor House mysteries. 

He was in The Golden Compass film as Magisterial Emissary which according to the film wiki “was a man from Lyra’s world who worked for the Magisterium. He talked to Pavel Rasek about Bolvangar and how it should be protected. He said that Marisa Coulter was going to demonstrate the intercision process on Lyra Belacqua. His dæmon was a black panther.” Now if you read the series and don’t recognize him that’s because they invented his character for the film. 

I just discovered he was in Tolkien, a biography of, well, you can guess who. He played as Joseph Wright, Professor of Comparative Philology at the University of Oxford. Tolkien himself was played by Nicholas Hoult, with a younger one performed by Harry Gilby as he would been at eighteen, so presumably during the War. 

I’m going to finish off with his performance as Professor Yanna the Tenth Doctor’s “Utopia” episode. 

SPOILERS  FOLLOW. THERE’S A NICE CUP OF TEA IN THE TADRIS AS LONG YOU’RE POLITE TO HER. 

Derek Jacobi here plays the fifth version of the Master whom the Doctor will encounter on screen, and John Simm will the sixth of eight to be so far. This will be the first of three episodes that form a single story along with “The Sound of Drums” and “Last of the Time Lords”.

The episode serves to re-introduce the Master (John Simm), a Time Lord villain of the show’s original run who last appeared in the 1996 television movie Doctor Who.”

SPOLIERS ARE FINISHED. ENJOY THAT CUPOF TEA? SHE MAKES A GOOD ONE, DOESN’T SHE? 

Those are my choices. I’m sure yours might be different. 

P.S. Cadfael is available on BritBox;  I, Claudius is on Acorn; Gosford Park is available to rent on Amazon Prime, as is The Golden CompassTolkien’s on Hulu; the new Doctor Who is on Disney+.

(10) COMICS SECTION.

(11) STICK-TO-ITIVENESS. “At Comic Con, Emergency Tailors Keep Cosplayers in Character” – behind a New York Times paywall.

When cosplayers descend on New York Comic Con, they’re looking to meet their favorite creators and show off their outfits — but they often end up in need of costume triage. Armed with glue guns, zip ties, Popsicle sticks and safety pins, the Paladins of Cosplay come ready to fix wardrobe malfunctions — like a dangling shoulder pad, an imploding jetpack or any number of hazards that costumed fans face.

“I really love helping people,” said Law Asuncion, 46, who founded the Paladins in 2017. The group is named after the pilots of the robotic hero Voltron, and the term is also an olden-days word for champion. Asuncion and the repair team will be at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center, home of New York Comic Con, through Sunday….

…The Paladins set up their first table in 2021, the year New York Comic Con returned to in-person attendance after going virtual in 2020 because of the coronavirus pandemic.

At that show, they came to the aid of Boba Fett, the “Star Wars” bounty hunter. “He looked immaculate,” Asuncion said. But his jetpack, which was created using 3-D printing, was problematic, he recalled.

When someone in the crowd bumped into Boba Fett, the jetpack shattered. Boba Pfft. “We were able to Humpty Dumpty, piece it back together and locate areas where it needed additional structure and support,” Asuncion said. On average, about 500 cosplayers visit the group daily at the convention, he said, and the amount doubles on Saturday, the most popular day of the event….

(12) MORE LIKE FROM THE HEAD OF ZEUS. It’s hard to think of Miss Marple as a baby – which is just as well, since this article doesn’t mean it that way: “The Birth of Miss Marple—the Perpetual Spinster Detective at the Heart of Agatha Christie’s Works” at CrimeReads.

…However, by the time that Miss Marple made her debut in December 1927, Christie’s life had been turned upside down. In 1926, she had a breakdown following the death of her mother and [her husband] Archie’s decision to leave her for another woman. Both this breakdown and the subsequent well-publicised disappearance took some time to recover from, and yet these difficult events also coincided with the publication of The Murder of Roger Ackroyd, a novel that has since taken pride of place as one of Christie’s masterpieces….

…Agatha Christie’s career was flourishing just as her life seemed to be falling apart. So it is notable that it was shortly after these events that she created a new character, whose entire raison d’être was to be a calm point in a stormy sea. Miss Jane Marple is an unmarried older lady who has spent most of her life in the small village of St Mary Mead, and her quiet observations of people and relationships give her great insight into character….

(13) IN YOUR EYE. [Item by Chris Barkley.] File Under “I Think We’ve Seen This Movie Already… NO Thanks!” “Sam Altman’s Worldcoin becomes World and shows new iris-scanning Orb to prove your humanity” at TeleCrunch.

Worldcoin, the Sam Altman co-founded “proof of personhood” crypto project that scans people’s eyeballs, announced on Thursday that it dropped the “coin” from its name and is now just “World.” The startup behind the World project, Tools for Humanity, also unveiled its next generation of iris-scanning “Orbs” and other tools at a live event in San Francisco….

…The World project is predicated on the idea that advanced AI systems — like the one Altman’s OpenAI is trying to build — will one day make it impossible to tell whether you are talking to a human online. Its solution is “human verification services” based around blockchain…

(14) INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF DISNEY STUDIES CALL FOR NEW CO-EDITORS. “The International Journal of Disney Studies is looking for new co-editors! IJDS examines the Walt Disney Company, an international media conglomerate that impacts our global culture.” They will begin reviewing applications on December 1.

This international, peer-reviewed journal draws from a variety of academic and industrial lenses, perspectives, methods and fields, while providing a space for scholars to present new research, review current research and comment on wider Disney commodities. IJDS currently publishes two issues a year (with issues due to the publisher approximately in March and September) with a special issue every other year (for more information, see our webpage: https://www.intellectbooks.com/ijds). Join current co-editor Rebecca Rowe and the rest of our associate editor team to help IJDS keep moving forward!

Co-editor responsibilities include (and can take 2-10 hours a week):
● Timely and professional communication with contributors during different stages of the publishing process, including but not limited to legal document signing, editing and proofreading;
● Coordinating peer reviews for all submissions, including recruiting subject matter experts as peer reviewers;
● Recruitment and training of members of the editorial team and board;
● Preparing and implementing a style guide specific to the study of Disney across many disciplines and countries;
● Soliciting contributions (articles, book reviews, and commentaries) and special issues, including reaching out to organizations and/or specific authors;
● Relaying communication between the publisher (Intellect), the editorial team and board, and contributors;
● Delegating additional duties and responsibilities as necessary.
Financial compensation: co-editors split 10% of the royalty based on Intellect’s net receipts from sales of the journal.

We are recruiting two new co-editors who will serve for three years, with an option for renewal.

We are looking for:
● Ideally, one person from within our current editorial team or board who already knows how the journal works and one person currently unassociated with the journal who can bring new ideas and perspectives to the journal.
● We hope to hear from scholars from a variety of perspectives, positionalities, and backgrounds in order to reflect the global, multivocal engagement with the journal’s stated scope. We are especially looking to support leadership opportunities from historically institutionally marginalized scholars.
● People with a terminal graduate degree in their field (e.g., PhD, EdD, MLS, MBA, MFA, etc.), preferably with previous experience with journal management/editorship. We do not require that you be in a tenure-track position nor even directly involved with academia as long as you regularly engage with research.
● People who are:

○ Motivated, detail-oriented, and organized with experience with the moving parts of publication flows;

○ Strong and compassionate in their verbal and written communication skills in English (preferably in the professional context of editing for a peer-reviewed journal or academic book) and dealing with scholars, co-editors, and publishers;

○ Experienced with team management and working in collaborative settings across languages and time zones;

○ Effective at offering constructive (positive and helpful) feedback to writing projects and at suggesting informed workarounds or concrete alternatives during the revision process;

○ Knowledgeable about Disney (you don’t have to know everything, but a basic understanding helps in the editing process);

○ Practiced in interdisciplinary approaches to cinema and media studies, popular culture studies, and reception, including literacy and fan studies, along with awareness of globally situated scholarship and methodologies.

Selection Process:
● While we will continue accepting applications until the positions are filled, we will begin reviewing applications 1 December. If you are interested, email the following materials (or any questions) to IJoDS@intellectbooks.com with the subject heading “IJoDS Co-Editor Application”:

○ 1-page single-spaced cover letter explaining what skills, knowledge, and experience you hope to bring to the editorial team

○ Curriculum Vitae or resume

● December: finalists will be notified and interviews will be scheduled for December/January with Rebecca, an associate editor, and a representative from the publisher
● Late January: decision will be communicated

(15) TOP SHOWRUNNER’S NEW PROJECT. “’God Of War’: Ronald D. Moore Boards Amazon Series As New Showrunner” reports Deadline.

With Ronald D. Moore back in the Sony Pictures TV Studios fold, the prolific creator/showrunner is taking on a high-profile IP for the studio. He has been tapped as writer, executive producer and showrunner of Sony TV and Amazon MGM Studios’ Prime Video series God Of War, based on PlayStation‘s hugely popular ancient mythology-themed video game.

Moore’s involvement with God Of War follows the recent exit of the project’s original creative team, showrunner/executive producer Rafe Judkins and exec producers Hawk Ostby and Mark Fergus, who had been with the show since its inception two and a half years ago. As Deadline reported, they had completed multiple scripts prior to the changeover, which marks a shift in the creative direction of the series adaptation.

…Since its 2005 launch on the PlayStation 2, the God of War franchise from Sony’s Santa Monica Studio has spanned a total of seven games across four PlayStation consoles. At the center of the story is ex-Spartan warrior Kratos and his perilous journey to exact revenge on the Ares, the Greek God of War, after killing his loved ones under the deity’s influence. After becoming the ruthless God of War himself, Kratos finds himself constantly looking for a chance to change his fate…

(16) THIS SUCKS. Malwarebytes reports “Robot vacuum cleaners hacked to spy on, insult owners”.

Multiple robot vacuum cleaners in the US were hacked to yell obscenities and insults through the onboard speakers.

ABC news was able to confirm reports of this hack in robot vacuum cleaners of the type Ecovacs Deebot X2, which are manufactured in China. Ecovacs is considered the leading service robotics brand, and is a market leader in robot vacuums.

One of the victims, Minnesota lawyer Daniel Swenson, said he heard sound snippets that seemed similar to a voice coming from his vacuum cleaner. Through the Ecovacs app, he then saw someone not in his household accessing the live camera feed of the vacuum, as well as the remote control feature.

Thinking it was a glitch, he rebooted the vacuum cleaner and reset the password, just to be on the safe side. But that didn’t help for long. Almost instantly, the vacuum cleaner started to move again.

Only this time, the voice coming from the vacuum cleaner was loud and clear, and it was yelling racist obscenities at Swenson and his family. The voice sounded like a teenager according to Swenson.

Swenson said he turned off the vacuum and dumped it in the garage, never to be turned on again….

(17) VIDEO OF THE DAY. Ryan George takes us inside the “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice Pitch Meeting”. Whether we want to be there or not….

[Thanks to Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, Teddy Harvia, N., Ersatz Culture, Scott Edelman, Steve Green, John A Arkansawyer, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, and SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Jim Janney.]

Tianwen Awards 2024

Source: Zhao Enzhe on Xiaohongshu

By Ersatz Culture: The inaugural Tianwen Awards were presented on Friday October 18, as part of a two-day event at the Chengdu SF Museum.

Source: Andy on Xiaohongshu

Nine categories were based on the decisions of judging panels, with a tenth category selected by a public vote of people who had applied to be Tianwen members, as previously covered in this post.  The official Tianwen website is somewhat lacking in details, especially regarding the conference and the events there, so this coverage is assembled from a variety of news articles and social media posts.

Note: names and titles are mostly via Google Translate; apologies for any errors in translation or transcription.

BEST NOVEL

  • Liu Yang – City in the Well

BEST NOVELLA

  • Fenxing Chengzi (“Fractal Orange”) – Descartes Demon

BEST SHORT STORY

  • Hai Ya – The Spring Outside the Tulou

BEST SF VIDEO GAME SCRIPT

  • Honor of Kings: Amber Age

BEST SF COMIC BOOK

  • The Three-Body Problem: Part 1

BEST YOUNG SF WRITER(S)

  • He Shan
  • Liu Ziheng
  • Pang Yujie
  • Long Teng
  • Ren Keye

BEST SF FILM AND TV SCRIPT

  • The Wandering Earth 2 

BEST SF LITERATURE ORGANIZATION

  • Science Fiction World

BEST NEW SF WRITER

  • Liu Maijia

TOP 10 MOST POPULAR TRANSLATED SF WORKS OF THE DECADE (special award based on public vote)

  • Greg Egan – The Best Of Greg Egan (collection)
  • Ray Bradbury – Selected Short Stories (collection)
  • Robert L. Forward – Dragon’s Egg
  • Ted Chiang – The Life Cycle of Software Objects
  • Frank Herbert – Dune
  • Robert Sheckley – Store of the Worlds (collection)
  • Andy Weir – Project Hail Mary
  • Ursula K. Le Guin – The Found and the Lost (collection)
  • Arthur C. Clarke – Rendezvous with Rama
  • Olaf Stapledon – Star Maker

(Note; only the original authors were credited in the announcement, not the translators)

There is an 18-minute video embedded at the top of this page containing part of the ceremony, including Ben Yalow introducing the translated works award, and Hugo winners Hai Ya and Zhao Enzhe respectively presenting the Best New Writer and Best Comic awards.

OTHER ACTIVITIES. The event schedules show around 15 panels and presentations over the course of the two days.  These included:

Three musical items on the stage (links are to news articles with embedded videos of the performances): 

Prerecorded video messages from Richard Taylor (WETA special effects), Bill Lawhorn, and Pablo Vazquez were played — a video can be found embedded at the top of this page.

“[T]he second Science Fiction Industry Development Promotion Conference to industrialize science fiction”, the first such conference being part of the 2023 Chengdu Worldcon. Chen Shi (subject of  Worldcon Intellectual Property censure in January) was also on an industry-related panel. 

Source: Yang Feng’s Weibo

The N Universe Conference was also held for the first time at this event, although this included the fourth iteration of the associated awards.  The latter is a competition for original works on the theme of nuclear science, and is organized by the China National Nuclear Corporation.  The linked article also states (via Google Translate with minor edits):

As one of the official major events of the “Tianwen” Chinese Science Fiction Literature Competition, this year’s N Universe Conference has joined forces with the “Tianwen” Chinese Science Fiction Literature Award, reflecting the deep integration and mutual promotion of the two major fields of nuclear technology and science fiction literature. It is reported that writers who won the N Universe Science Fiction Award will also join the “Tianwen” Youth Writers Training Camp, and the two brands will cooperate deeply. In the future, N Universe and “Tianwen” will also jointly carry out overseas plans, grow together and create prosperity in the global science fiction wave, demonstrate cultural confidence supported by nuclear technology, and contribute hard-core strength to the development of China’s science fiction industry.

Note: although it may appear that Tianwen is using the same panda logo as the Chengdu Worldcon, the two logos are similar but not identical.  Per an earlier article from Red Star News (via Google Translate with minor edits):

“With the authorization of the copyright owner of the 81st Worldcon’s logo and mascot, the logo of this competition has made bold innovations and tributes to the spirit of the Chengdu Worldcon.” At the meeting, Yang Xiaoyang, Secretary of the Party Leadership Group and Chairman of the Chengdu Federation of Literary and Art Circles and Vice Chairman of the Competition Organizing Committee, announced the design of the competition’s logo, mascot and trophy.  Starting from oracle bone inscriptions, writing has been the medium for ancient people to ask questions to the heavens, and also the ancient people’s pursuit of the universe and nature. This kind of thinking is reflected in the design of the logo of the “Tianwen” Chinese Science Fiction Literature Competition. “We deeply integrated the logo of the 81st Worldcon with traditional Chinese calligraphy to create a unique logo for this competition. The ears, arms and golden star rings around the giant panda are outlined by the strokes of Chinese calligraphy, and the flying white part at the end of the star ring is composed of scattered stardust, symbolizing the boundless imagination of mankind.” Yang Xiaoyang said.

Pixel Scroll 9/29/24 When You Cross The Pixels, Take Care To Avoid Making Any Rhythmical Noises That Attract Giant Earworms

(1) CHINA’S 2024 GALAXY AWARDS. [Item by Ersatz Culture.] The 35th Galaxy (“Yinhe”) Awards were presented in Chengdu on Saturday September 28.  There doesn’t appear to be a video of the ceremony officially available, but a screen capture of the livestream has been posted to Bilibili.  A fuller translated list of the winners may follow later, but here is a brief summary of the winners that Anglophone fandom might recognize:

  • Best Novel was won by Yan Xi’s Age of the Gods, which appeared in the 2023 Hugo nominations below the cutoff point.  (This was originally published online in 2022, and in print in 2023, which I assume is why it appeared for two different years.)
  • 2023 Hugo Best Short Story finalist Jiang Bo was one of three Best Novella winners here
  • 2024 Hugo Best Short Story finalist Baoshu was one of five winners in the same category here
  • The Cyberpunk 2077: Big City Dreams comic and R. F. Kuang’s Babel shared the Best Imported Book category
  • Adrian Tchaikovsky won Most Popular Foreign Writer, presumably based on the serialization of City of Last Chances (and possibly Cage of Souls, although that was serialized in 2024)
  • Robert Silverberg’s Dying Inside, as translated by Feng Xinyi, shared the Best Translation category.

Click for larger images.

(2) TOYPLOSION AND BACK AGAIN. Cora Buhlert has a three-part report about her trip to Toyplosion, a vintage toy convention, and the sights coming and going. Lots of photos, toy commentary, local history, and family stories.

…As I ventured further into the city center, I had to stop at a pedestrian crossing where the pedestrian traffic light symbol was not the regular stick figure, but a little miner with a lantern. Apparently, this is a thing in the Ruhrgebiet. Coal mining may be dead, but the miners are still around, immortalised as “Ampelmännchen”. In many ways, this is very illustrative of how the Ruhrgebiet has turned its industrial history into a tourist attraction….

…The same stall also had several vintage Strawberry Shortcake dolls as well as other girl-aimed toylines of the 1980s on display. I chatted a bit with the owner and reminisced about how my Grandma bought me the entire first wave of Strawberry Shortcake dolls in January 1982, when my parents were on a cruise (my Dad had co-designed the ship, so it was work for him and he apparently spent most of his time running around and fixing problems, while my Mom was terribly seasick) and I was sent to stay with my grandparents. Grandma took me shopping in the city center and after spending an inordinate amount of time trying on clothes, she took me to what was then the best toyshop in town, where they had just gotten Strawberry Shortcake dolls in stock. And because I couldn’t decide in which one I wanted, Grandma – bless her – bought me the entire first wave. I don’t even want to think about how much that would have cost her – US toys were expensive in the 1980s because of the high exchange rate. What makes this even more remarkable is that my Aunt and to a lesser degree my Mom always referred to Grandma as “stingy” (she was their stepmother – my biological grandmother died young and I never met her), yet my supposedly “stingy” Grandma spent what must have been a lot of money just to buy me Strawberry Shortcake dolls. Grandma had actually worked as a dollmaker for a while in the difficult years after WWII, so she had an affinity for toys and always got me nice ones. Grandma and Grandpa even gave me handmade doll beds – Grandpa, who was a carpenter by trade, built them and Grandma sewed the pillows and blankets. I’m not sure if I ever told Grandma how much those Strawberry Shortcake dolls meant to me (she died in 1996 and has dementia for the last five years or so), though I suspect the fact that I promptly turned her kitchen floor into Strawberry Land and appropriated Grandpa’s footstool as a house for the dolls told them how much I loved their gift. I still have the dolls BTW – packed away in a box – and they still smell….

…Now it’s quite common for German coalmines to have names. However, German coalmines are have names like Germania or Teutonia or Concordia or Zollverein or St. Bonifacius or Zollverein or Monopol or Heinrich Robert or Count Friedrich or Queen Elisabeth or Victoria Auguste or Sophia Jacoba or Ottilia or – if the mine was in former East Germany – Karl Liebknecht or Ernst Thälmann. Erin, however, sounds much more like an Irish maiden than a coalmine in the Ruhrgebiet.

Turns out that there is a reason for this, for the coalmine Erin was established in 1867 by William Thomas Mulvany, an Irish geologist and entrepreneur who came to the Ruhrgebiet in the 1850s in search of business opportunities that were difficult for a Catholic Irishman to access in Ireland under British rule. He wound up founding and operating several mines in the Ruhrgebiet and gave them all names relating to Ireland such as Hibernia, Shamrock and of course Erin. …

(3) LATINX HERITAGE IN HORROR. The Horror Writers Association blog continues its salute to “Latinx Heritage in Horror Month 2024: An Interview with Jessica R. Brynarsky”.

What inspired you to start writing?

I’ve dreamed of being a writer since I could form sentences but what really ignited me was a Halloween short story I did back in the 5th grade. As I advanced through middle school, high school, and college, my passion for writing increased into an obsession almost. I truly felt that I would cease to breathe if I could not put pen to paper and bleed out my imagination all over the page. Writing is my sanctuary; it always has been a way for me to deal with my living nightmares.

Tell us about your work in 25 words or less.

I craft Puerto Rican Gothic tales, eerie thrillers, and soulful poetry that blends my Afro-Boriquena roots with cultural magic and folk tales…

(4) PERIOD STYLES DRAPE MODERN ANGST. Maya St. Clair looks at coded fashion commentary in “Escaping Affirmation: Historical Fiction and the Femcel Dress Fitting” at Muse From the Orb.

This is a corollary to my recent post about historical fantasy set in the Renaissance, and it discusses the extent to which historical settings free women writers to write honestly and brutally about anxieties of beauty. Basically, evaluating the book My Lady Jane in tandem with The Familiar got me thinking about a recurring beat in historical fiction, and what it says about our media environment and repressed emotions surrounding beauty. As the late Harold Bloom was fond of remarking, “period pieces” often tell us much more about contemporary anxieties than they do about whatever history they purport to depict, and one could add that the anxieties of women — the primary creators and audiences of historical dramas and fiction — are especially likely to seep through the period trappings.

In particular, I’ve recently been fascinated with a cliche beat we could call the “wardrobe humiliation scene.” It’s a fixture in the first act of a standard historical book/drama, along the lines of: whilst getting fitted for a dress, the heroine — usually preparing for some ball or arranged marriage — gets told by various assessors that she’s plain, unfashionable, ill-groomed, or fucking busted (or they insinuate as much); various forms of historical looksmaxxing are often utilized (fabrics, powders, jewelry) to conform her to the norms. It’s a masochistic, often weirdly humorous scene — as repetitious as it is, the needs it satisfies are multifaceted and often not as straightforward as one would think….

(5) STUDIO GHIBLI Q&A. “‘Howl’s Moving Castle’ Turns 20: Supervising Animator Akihiko Yamashita Reflects on His Relationship With Hayao Miyazaki and Bringing the Studio Ghibli Classic to Life” in Variety.

Howl’s castle has such an intricate and detailed design. Could you describe the castle’s animation process? How many people were involved?

I’m not sure I can count. There were many, many people who worked on it. In terms of drawing such a large item like that castle, there would usually be a base design for it, and then various animators could draw from that base design. But in this case, there was no such initial base design. So there might be one scene where it was drawn one way and then another scene where the little house wasn’t in the same place. But somehow, even with these angle changes that may show different things, it looked like one castle in the end.

There may be different things stuck onto the castle, but as long as there’s the mouth and the eyes and the chimneys, then people just perceive it as the same thing. So, we take advantage of that sort of misconception on the part of the audience to draw slightly different things.

(6) MEGALOPOLIS B.O. STINKS; WILD ROBOT MUCH SWEETER. [Item by Mike Kennedy.] Going into Sunday, Francis Ford Coppola’s self-financed $120M epic Megalopolis is projected to open in 6th place domestically this weekend, with a disappointing $4M box office. It is also received a low score (D+) from movie viewers according to rating firm CinemaScore.com. 

The Wild Robot (DreamWorks), meanwhile, is opening 1st domestically with an estimated $35M weekend box office and an A audience rating from CinemaScore. Final box office totals may change for either film. “’Megalopolis’ Bombs at Box Office, ‘Wild Robot’ Soars to No. 1” in The Hollywood Reporter.

DreamWorks Animaton and Universal’s family film The Wild Robot is charming moviegoers and audiences alike, boasting both a stellar 98 percent Rotten Tomatoes critics score and a 98 percent audience score, not to mention an A CinemaScore from moviegoers. Thanks to great word of mouth, Wild Robot came in No. 1 with an estimated $35 million.

If only the love were being spread around.

Francis Ford Coppola — in one of the low points of his long and illustrious career — is watching his new movie Megalopolis get almost utterly rejected by moviegoers (it was likewise maligned by many critics). The film received a disastrous D+ CinemaScore from audiences and only cleared an estimated $4 million in its domestic debut (many rivals predict final numbers will be lower). Heading into the weekend, tracking and Lionsgate expected it to do at least $5 million to $7 million.

(7) TOBIAS TAITT DIES. Tobias Taitt, writer of the autobiographical comic Black, passed away September 16. James Bacon toured the Cartoon Museum’s exhibit about the comic (artwork by Anthony Smith) in 2021: BLACK: The Story Of Tobias Taitt”.

(8) KRIS KRISTOFFERSON (1936-2024). Actor and country singer-songwriter Kris Kristofferson died September 28 at the age of 88. In 2004, he was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. His performance in the film A Star Is Born (1975) earned him a Golden Globe for best actor in 1977.

In the sff/h genres he is best known for his appearances in the Blade movies (Blade, Blade II, Blade: Trinity) opposite Wesley Snipes. Also in Planet of the Apes (2001) as Karubi.

His music appeared in another half dozen sfff/h titles including Watchmen (2009)

(9) MEMORY LANE.

[Written by Paul Weimer.]

Anniversary, September 29, 2005 –The debut of XKCD

By Paul Weimer: It started off innocently enough, with some random sketches by its creator Randall Munroe. A girl in his class. Excitement at the debut of SERENITY. It was mildly amusing but would never have had its cultural impact if it stayed that way.  A few months in, the webcomic got geekier, the artwork better, and then there was the secret sauce. The thing that made, I think, the webcomic really take off.

The alt text. 

Alt text gets a bad rap. On Mastodon, you get hated if you don’t put it on your photos. Other sites don’t allow it at all. But in XKCD, the creator made alt text an art form, instead of describing his drawings, but coming up with the idea of footnoting them, often with some very funny, if sometimes mordant comedy and observations.

Why wouldn’t a comic that blends science, technology, history, popular culture and more not be utterly popular, especially one that works on several levels, in and out of the text itself?

The intellectual curiosity (as seen in his two books, What If and What if 2) and his ability to just make that into a simple and amusing image on a regular basis makes XKCD something to enjoy time and again and again. 

My favorite XKCD strip is going to be an obvious one. He won a Hugo for a 3000 image strip that Munroe updated over five months, telling a grand story set millennia in the future as the waters of the Mediterranean rise…but it is not the story of that rise. It’s the story of the relationships and the people who watch it inexorably happen.

I give you… “Time”.

(10) COMICS SECTION.

  • I’m sure everyone recognizes the scene in the first panel of Thatababy.
  • The Argyle Sweater has strange ideas about musical groups.
  • Heathcliff learns that landing on Earth is a relief for some.

(11) SOMETHING WICKED ON THE STAGE. Just outside of LA in the town of Newhall, the “Eclipse Theatre LA Presents Ray Bradbury’s ‘Something Wicked’” in October.

…The play follows two inseparable friends, Will and Jim, on the verge of adulthood. As contrasting as night and day, one yearns for adventure beyond their small town, while the other finds comfort in familiarity. 

Their lives take a thrillingly unsettling turn when a mysterious carnival, led by the enigmatic Mr. Dark, rolls into town under the cloak of darkness. 

The carnival offers irresistible promises, but at a sinister cost. Will and Jim must confront their deepest desires and grapple with the consequences of wishing for things better left untouched….

Performances run on weekends from October 11th to 13th and October 18th to 20th. 

General admission tickets are only $22 and can be purchased online by clicking here

For more information about the play, visit the website by clicking here 

(12) SINNERS TRAILER. ‘Sinners’ first-look trailer unleashes Michael B. Jordan’s horror movie (ew.com)Entertainment Weekly provides an introduction.

As promised by a creepy social media campaign that emerged online this week, “Sinners are coming.”

Michael B. Jordan appears in the new Sinners trailer, marking the first look at his buzzed about but until now very mysterious horror movie with Ryan Coogler, his director on Fruitvale Station (2013), Creed (2015), Black Panther (2018), and Black Panther: Wakanda Forever (2022).

Jordan stars as twins in this period piece set in the South. A cryptic logline explains the brothers tried to leave their troubled lives behind but return to their hometown for a fresh start, only to discover that “an even greater evil” is waiting to welcome them back. Early reports described the project as a vampire film…

(13) HONEST ABOUT THE ROBBERY. “California’s new law forces digital stores to admit you’re just licensing content, not buying it” reports The Verge.

California Governor Gavin Newsom has signed a law (AB 2426) to combat “disappearing” purchases of digital games, movies, music, and ebooks. The legislation will force digital storefronts to tell customers they’re just getting a license to use the digital media, rather than suggesting they actually own it.

When the law comes into effect next year, it will ban digital storefronts from using terms like “buy” or “purchase,” unless they inform customers that they’re not getting unrestricted access to whatever they’re buying. Storefronts will have to tell customers they’re getting a license that can be revoked as well as provide a list of all the restrictions that come along with it. Companies that break the rule could be fined for false advertising.

The new law won’t apply to stores that offer “permanent offline” downloads and comes as a direct response to companies like PlayStation and Ubisoft. In April, Ubisoft started deleting The Crew from players’ accounts after shutting down servers for the online-only game. And last year, Sony said it would remove purchased Discovery content from users’ PlayStation libraries before walking back the move.

(14) BETTING ON ALIEN LIFE. Dave Eggers on extra-terrestrial life (courtesy of Longreads): “Dave Eggers: NASA’s Jet Propulsion Lab works to discover life in space” in the Washington Post.

In all likelihood, in the next 25 years, we’ll find evidence of life on another planet. I’m willing to say this because I’m not a scientist and I don’t work in media relations for NASA. But all evidence points to us getting closer, every year, to identifying moons in our solar system, or exoplanets beyond it, that can sustain life. And if we don’t find conditions for life on the moons near us, we’ll find it on exoplanets — that is, planets outside our solar system. Within the next few decades, we’ll likely find an exoplanet that has an atmosphere, that has water, that has carbon and methane and oxygen. Or some combination of those things….

… But at the moment, much of the work at JPL is devoted to finding and examining exoplanets, and there is an urgency to the work that is palpable. In more than a dozen conversations with some of the best minds in astrophysics, I did not meet anyone who was doubtful about finding evidence of life elsewhere — most likely on an exoplanet beyond our solar system. It was not a matter of if. It was a matter of when. And if there’s going to be one scientist to bet on being part of the team that does it, it will be Vanessa Bailey. To date, only 82 exoplanets have been directly imaged, and Bailey found one of them….

(15) CRAIG MILLER Q&A. “Fanbase Feature: An Interview with Author Craig Miller on More Movie Memories (2024)”.

In this Fanbase Feature, THE FANBASE WEEKLY podcast co-host Bryant Dillon participates in a one-on-one interview with special guest Craig Miller (writer – STAR WARS MEMORIES, MORE MOVIE MEMORIES / original Director of Fan Relations at Lucasfilm / marketing consultant on THE LAST STARFIGHTER, THE DARK CRYSTAL, & more) regarding his recently released book, MORE MOVIE MEMORIES (2024), the origins of his career, his thoughts on his own place in pop culture history, his love for and approach to being both a creator and part of fandom, and more.

[Thanks to John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, Ersatz Culture, Paul Weimer, James Bacon, Lise Andreasen, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, Teddy Harvia, Mike Kennedy, and Andrew Porter for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Jim Janney.]

China SF News Roundup 8/29/24 by Ersatz Culture

By Ersatz Culture:

(1) Glasgow con reports – 8 Light Minutes and Arthur Liu (part 1)

Publisher 8 Light Minutes Culture has put out a fairly long Chinese-language con report on WeChat/Weixin.  (There’s also a version on Weibo, but the content is truncated part-way through due to a login prompt.)  A lot of the content had previously been posted as individual posts on their Weibo account, but I think this report has some previously unseen material.  It focusses on the dealer area and the stand they had there.

The report also notes that the English translation of Hai Ya’s “The Space-Time Painter”, last year’s Hugo Best Novelette, will be appearing in an upcoming Galaxy’s Edge anthology, which I don’t recall seeing previously reported.

Hugo finalist Arthur Liu previously wrote a 5-part report on the Chengdu Worldcon, and has just started documenting his attendance at Glasgow.  The first part (Chinese language) covers what he did prior to setting off for the UK, in particular his contributions as a volunteer on the Hugo team, to the In Memoriam list, and the Xanadu project to promote Chinese SF.  Disclaimer: I am briefly namechecked.

(2) Photos of the play staged at the Chengdu SF Museum on Tuesday

Further to the Chinese SF coverage posted last week, the “China Orbit (Spring)” play was staged at the Chengdu SF Museum on Tuesday 27th.  A selection of photos are below, but more can be seen in the following Weibo posts: 123456.

(3) Tianwen opens up memberships to in-person attendees of the Chengdu Worldcon

Also following up earlier coverage the Tianwen Literature Contest published a Chinese-language announcement on Sunday 25th that memberships are available.  Via Google Translate (with minor manual edits):

1. The Secretariat of the Competition Jury invites in-person attendees of the 2023 Chengdu Worldcon (including single-day ticket members) to become “Tianwen” members.  You can become a member by providing attendance credentials, which include but are not limited to: member purchase receipts, member attendance nameplates, or attendance check-in photos.

2. Newly registered members who were not in-person attendees of the 2023 Chengdu Worldcon need to complete a questionnaire.  Fans who pass this can become “Tianwen” members.

I don’t know what the questionnaire entails – registration seems to involve providing a phone number to get a validation code via an SMS message, and my experience with other Chinese registration systems is that these often refuse to send a code to my UK phone number.

That Tianwen appears to have access to Chengdu Worldcon membership details isn’t perhaps quite the data privacy fail that it might appear at first glance.  The copyright message in the footer of the tianwensf.com website (which seems to have just been launched) indicates that the Chengdu Science Fiction Society is the entity behind the award – corroborated by the authorship of this latest announcement – and that organization was also the one responsible for the Chengdu Worldcon, so the membership details probably haven’t been passed onto a third party.

Right now, all that membership seems to give is the ability to nominate for a single award category, the best work translated into Chinese in the past decade.  (As far as I can tell, all the other award categories are determined by judging panels.)  Nominations close on September 19th.