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Tachyon tidbits featuring Nancy Kress, Kameron Hurley, Cory Doctorow, Brandon Sanderson, Andrew Fox, and Kate Elliott
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The latest reviews and mentions of Tachyon titles and authors from around the web.
Nancy Kress
Photo by Liza TrombiKameron Hurley Cory Doctorow
Photo by Jonathan Worth, Creative Commons Attribution 3.0Brandon Sanderson
(Ceridwen via Wikimedia Commons)Andrew Fox Kate Elliott
Photo by April Quintanilla
At FANTASY LITERATURE, Jana Nyman praises Nancy Kress’ SEA CHANGE.
Ever read a book and immediately wish that you’d been able to read it in school, rather than [insert inaccessible book of choice]? For me, Nancy Kress’s 2020 novella SEA CHANGE, with its gutsy-yet-conflicted heroine and all-too-real near-future global catastrophes, is exactly the kind of book I wish I’d been handed way back when.
[…]
I enjoyed SEA CHANGE tremendously, not only for the strength of Kress’s character work but for the ways in which she tackles difficult subjects like environmental collapse, the fraught legal status of people living on reservations in America, grief and the different ways people cope with loss, and the often-surprising ways people express their hope for a better future. SEA CHANGE is a short novel with a powerful impact, and I highly recommend it.
THE CURIOUS SFF READER enjoys Kameron Hurley’s MEET ME IN THE FUTURE.
Before reading this anthology, I had only read one of Hurley’s novels The Stars are Legion and one of her short stories, The Red Secretary (included in this short collection but first published in Uncanny Magazine). I didn’t have the best experience with the former, however, I really enjoyed the latter, which is why I decided to give MEET ME IN THE FUTURE a try. And I’m glad I did because it’s an amazing collection!
Hurley’s stories are bloody, complex and deal with hard issues so, if dark fiction isn’t your thing, I don’t think you will enjoy this one. However, if you want to read from the perspectives of morally grey characters who don’t take shit from anybody, I would definitely recommend this anthology.
Design by Elizabeth Story
If you enjoy dark and unsettling reads exploring fascinating themes, MEET ME IN THE FUTURE is a must. The collection doesn’t contain a single bad story and they were varied enough that I didn’t feel burn-out by the end.
Four stars.
Cover design by Elizabeth Story
The “reading list” included in the appendix of the Apolitical Cocktail Party: 2020 Handbook contains Cory Doctorow’s CONTEXT: FURTHER SELECTED ESSAYS ON PRODUCTIVITY, CREATIVITY, PARENTING, AND POLITICS IN THE 21ST CENTURY and With A Little Help.
Brandon Sanderson answers Where Should I Start With Your Books?
SMASHWORDS offers a free read of Andrew Fox’s “The Man Who Would Be Kong.”
An elderly man, Max Strauss, retired in Miami Beach, visits an entrepreneur who is about to open a King Kong-themed restaurant. Max claims to have portrayed the giant gorilla in the 1933 classic film. But everyone knows that King Kong was actually an 18″ tall animated model, don’t they? So is Max an attention-seeking fraud? Or is he something far greater?
TOR.COM announces Kate Elliot’s a new two fantasy novella series comprised of Lamplighter in early 2022 and Hex in 2023.
Fellion is a Lamplighter, able to provide illumination through magic. A group of rebel Monarchists free her from indentured servitude and take her on a journey to rescue trapped compatriots from an underground complex of mines.
Along the way they get caught up in a conspiracy to kill the latest royal child and wipe out the Monarchist movement for good.
But Fellian has more than just her lamplighting skills up her sleeve…
2020 Le Guin Feminist Science Fiction Fellow R. B. Lemberg’s amazing THE FOUR PROFOUND WEAVES is a beautifully articulated exploration of queer identity and transformation
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R. B. Lemberg and their debut book THE FOUR PROFOUND WEAVES continue to attract effusive attention.
LOCUS reports that Lemberg has been chosen as the 2020 Le Guin Feminist Science Fiction Fellow.
The $2,000 fellowship, sponsored by the University of Oregon Libraries Special Collections and University Archives (SCUA), is awarded “to encourage research within collections in the area of feminist science fiction.”
SCUA houses the papers of Suzette Haden Elgin, Kate Elliot, Sally Miller Gearhart, Molly Gloss, Damon Knight, Ursula K. Le Guin, Laurie Marks, Joanna Russ, Jessica Salmonson, James Tiptree, Jr., and Kate Wilhelm, and is in the process of acquiring the papers of other feminist science fiction authors.
Anna Burke at NEW YORK JOURNAL OF BOOKS praises the book.
THE FOUR PROFOUND WEAVES is a beautifully articulated exploration of queer identity and transformation. Lemberg’s prose is rhythmic and haunting. They do not flinch from truth, but neither do they dwell too long in darkness. “It is only in stories that change is easily found,” says Uiziya e Lali, but Lemberg’s first Birdverse novel is a testimony to how stories can do just that. The inventiveness of this world and its systems of magic reflects our own but does not mirror it; the possibilities presented offer hope for different ways and modes of being.
MI BOOK REVIEWS feels much the same.
THE FOUR PROFOUND WEAVES is AMAZING. The two MCs are trans and are totally the sort of heroes I needed to read.
In advance of forthcoming (Nov. 16) first issue, REVUU teases coverage of the acclaimed debut.
We also cover the debut of an up-and-coming writer who creates a fictional world based on the LGBTQ+ society in Kris van der Voorn’s review of THE FOUR PROFOUND WEAVES.
INSECTOID REVIEWS reveals Why You Should Read Birdverse.
I strongly urge everyone to read Birdverse, it is truly one of the hidden gems in today’s science fiction. I only scratched the surface of why these stories are great. Birdverse is shaped by R. B. Lemberg’s queerness, neurodivergence, and Jewishness creating a rich tapestry of immersive narratives full of hope and comfort for the othered and marginalized. Don’t know where to start? Start with “Grandmother-nai-Leyit’s Cloth of Winds”. You can find the entire bibliography of Birdverse at R. B. Lemberg’s website with many of the stories free to read.
In the REDDIT r/Fantasy discussion Why should I write fantasies? The struggle of a writer, eriophora of Black Forest Basilisks suggests THE FOUR PROFOUND WEAVES, Marie Brennan’s DRIFTWOOD, and several others.
Some books that I think are stand-outs when it comes to exploring philosophy, humanity, and getting into “deeper” ideas:
Deerskin by Robin McKinley
My Heart Struck Sorrow by John Hornor Jacobs
Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer (fantasy/sci-fi)
The Vanished Birds by Simon Jimenez (fantasy/sci-fi)
Silently and Very Fast by Caitlin Starling (fantasy/sci-fi)
The Winged Histories by Sofia Samatar
THE FOUR PROFOUND WEAVES by RB Lemberg
The Seventh Perfection by Daniel Polansky
The Pursuit of William Abbey by Claire North
DRIFTWOOD by Marie Brennan
Ringshout by P Djeli Clark
With solid writing and compelling ideas, Bruce Sterling’s ROBOT ARTISTS & BLACK SWANS is entertaining and thought provoking
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Bruce Sterling’s forthcoming ROBOT ARTISTS & BLACK SWANS: THE ITALIAN FANTASCIENZA STORIES is already generating some excitement. Though not due until March 2021, it is currently available for pre-order from your favorite bookseller or direct from Tachyon.
The first reviews for collection appeared on GOODREADS.
Although I have enjoyed many of the scifi sub-genres over the year, Bruce Sterling’s ROBOT ARTISTS & BLACK SWANS was my first solid encounter with Italian “Fantascienza” stories. Having enjoyed earlier works by Bruce Sterling, I naively anticipated that this latest collection would simply be cyberpunk with an Italian flair. After reading each of the stories and rereading the introduction, I learned that I had it backward. These are first-and-foremost stories about Italy. Secondly, they are examples of creative genius. Thirdly, they tend to have some aspect of historical fantasy (in Italy) or future history (in Italy) with a seasoning of scifi and/or cyberpunk ideas. Each story was entertaining and thought provoking.
WorldconReader
[…]
In conclusion, I am glad that I could expand my understanding of international science fiction, and look forward to learning more about Italy and reading more stories by either Bruce Sterling or his alter ego Bruno Argento.
In the current collection, Sterling writes Italian-style short stories (think Italo Calvino, whom Sterling invokes often), under the alter-ego Bruno Argento. It’s a cute conceit, one that escapes being too cute through solid writing and compelling ideas.
Rick
SFF188 is looking forward to the book.
On the Tachyon Publications Channel, watch both the ROBOT ARTISTS & BLACK SWANS book trailer and the galley unboxing video starring Zeppo. If you enjoy the videos, please like and subscribe.
Happy birthday to the fantastical Andrew Fox
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A steady childhood diet of Marvel Comics, Planet of the Apes movies, and Ray Bradbury novels informed the acclaimed literary romps of Andrew Fox. Best known for his trio of Fat Vampire Chronicles (Fat Vampire Blues [2003; winner of Ruthven Award for Best Vampire Fiction], Bride of the Fat White Vampire [2004], and Fat White Vampire Otaku [2014]), he also penned THE GOOD HUMOR MAN (2009), selected by Booklist as one of the Ten Best SF/Fantasy Novels of the Year and was nominated for a Prometheus Award, and the Civil War steampunk suspense novel Fire of Iron (2013). Hazardous Imaginings: The Mondo Book of Politically Incorrect Science Fiction (2020) collects two short novels and five short stories, which push the boundaries of taboo in science fiction. The Fox-edited anthology Again, Hazardous Imaginings: More Politically Incorrect Science Fiction is slated for a December release.
The multi-faceted Fox has been employed as a mime, public-safety advocate, playwright, and, after Hurricane Katrina, a part of FEMA’s Gulf Coast Recovery Office. He’s also bagged groceries, sold Saturn cars, taught musical theater to summer campers, worked as an adjunct to a rabbi at a Hillel Center, done mindless data entry, sung in a choir, and collected more than 250 vintage laptop and palmtop computers. In 2009 after many years in New Orleans, Fox relocated with his family to Northern Virginia to take a job with a federal crime prevention agency.
All of us at Tachyon wish Andy a geektastic birthday!
With a well-rounded and very human protagonist, Kimberly Unger’s impressive NUCLEATION is engaging
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With the imminent book birthday on November 13, excitement builds for Kimberly Unger’s NUCLEATION.
At A GREEN MAN REVIEW, Warner Holme enjoys the debut novel.
NUCLEATION by Kimberly Unger is a science fiction novel that attempts to deal with everything from possible first contact, to nanomachines, to corporate espionage and personal rivalries. This would make the book seem overpacked in other hands, yet is quite effective overall. Indeed, the iclusion of many scientific concepts in this book is impressive.
[…]
Overall, NUCLEATION is an intelligently written story that manages to combine a number of serious scientific concepts with sociological ones as well. The fact that the Helen is engaging enough to keep the reader invested contributes well.
As does Paul Weimer for NERDS OF A FEATHER, FLOCK TOGETHER.
The novel provides a well rounded and very human protagonist in Helen. She’s our sole point of view, which can be a bit awkward at times and the author goes through some pains to make sure she is witness to some important events and there is just the slightest bit of shoehorning. It’s not a real defect of the novel, merely a consequence of that tight on person point of view. The author leverages this in all sorts of ways in putting us in Helen’s head and giving us a perspective for us to try and “figure out” along with Helen just what machinations, aside from the potential alien contact, are going on. She makes for an appealing and immersive character whose triumphs, successes, and boundary pushing all feel very natural and real.
[…]
NUCLEATION ends most satisfactorily and with a good solid ending, but there are clear lines for potential sequels and follow ups. First Contact, after all, is just the beginning of a story involving human-alien relations. I am interested in seeing where the author goes with the story from the ending of this novel, and hope the strengths here can be leveraged further on with more of Helen’s story.
For AMAZING STORIES, Ernest Lilley includes the book among Science Fiction to Look for November 2020.
Closer to Earth, you’ve got NUCLEATION, Kimberly Unger’s debut, a hardcore space procedural with some very interesting ideas about micro wormholes, nanomachines, and entangled communications, set in a first contact situation and a conspiracy.
Similarly, Andrew Liptak in TRANSFER ORBIT mentions NUCLEATION as one of the 17 sci-fi and fantasy books to check out this November.
Lavie Tidhar has written some weird, wonderful novels like THE VIOLENT CENTURY, UNHOLY LAND, and CENTRAL STATION
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BOOKSHELF FANTASIES is excited about Lavie Tidhar’s CENTRAL STATION.
UNHOLY LAND was my first encounter with Israeli science fiction. CENTRAL STATION, published two years earlier, looks like another strange and fantastical trip to a futuristic world. The story includes space exploration and other dimensions, but is also set in that world’s version of Tel Aviv, and honestly, I can’t wait to see what it’s like.
The only reason that I haven’t read this yet is the perpetual problem of having way too many books to read and always finding something else that’s a higher priority. I really do want to get to CENTRAL STATION!
REDDIT r/fantasy offers two Lavie Tidhar mentions.
Lavie Tidhar has written some weird wonderful novels like THE VIOLENT CENTURY, Osama, and A Man Lies Dreaming. They’re all genre mashups to one degree or another.
Adult Fantasy recommendations for…an adult.
Lavie Tidhar’s UNHOLY LAND, and Victor LaValle’s Big Machine and The Changeling all might count. Even more of a stretch, The Library at Mount Char by Scott Hawkins, which is even more horror-y than the ones above, and super weird, which may make it hard to seem “literary” for some people, but has a lot going for it.
Is there any urban fantasy, series or standalone books, that can be considered “literary”?
Tachyon tidbits featuring Daniel Pinkwater, Jane Yolen, Adam Stemple, Jill Roberts, David G. Hartwell, Jacob Weisman, Cory Doctorow, and Joe R. Lansdale
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The latest reviews and mentions of Tachyon titles and authors from around the web.
Daniel Pinkwater Adam Stemple & Jane Yolen Jill Roberts David Hartwell and Jacob & Rina Weisman at James Cummins Bookseller
Photo by Ellen Datlow)Cory Doctorow
Photo by Jonathan Worth, Creative Commons Attribution 3.0Joe R. Lansdale
Photo by Karen Lansdale
Publishers Weekly praises Daniel Pinkwater’s ADVENTURES OF A DWERGISH GIRL.
The comically absurd ending is an enjoyable wrap-up to this fast-paced, unexpected adventure that combines history, folklore, and nonsensical fun.
Design by Elizabeth Story
The Sándor Bródy Library (Budapest, Hungary) includes THE LAST TSAR’S DRAGONS by Jane Yolen and Adam Stemple among the October e-book recommendations.
Design by Elizabeth Story
On the Tachyon Publications Channel, meet Tachyon Managing Editor Jill Roberts.
At REDDIT r/Fantasy in the conversation Looking for Sword and Sorcery Short Story Anthology recommendations, snowlock27 suggests THE SWORD & SORCERY ANTHOLOGY.
THE SWORD & SORCERY ANTHOLOGY, edited by David G Hartwell and Jacob Weisman. Has the classics by Robert E Howard, Michael Moorcock, and CL Moore, as well as newer writers, like Caitlyn Kiernan, George RR Martin, and Gene Wolfe.
For TOR.COM, Cory Doctorow pens Beyond Cyberpunk: The Intersection of Technology and Science Fiction.
People with established careers are terrible sources of advice on how to break into their chosen field. When I was a baby writer, I attended numerous panels about getting established, where writers a generation or two older than me explained how to charm John W Campbell into buying a story for Astounding Stories. This was not useful advice. Not only had Campbell died six days before I was born, but he was also a fascist.
I have two careers, one in tech and the other in SF, a peanut-butter-and-chocolate combo that’s got a long history in the field, and I am often asked how to break into both fields. I know an awful lot about how to sell a story to Gardner Dozois, who stopped editing Asimov’s sixteen years ago and died two years ago, but I know nothing about pitching contemporary SF editors.
Likewise: I know an awful lot about breaking into the tech industry circa 1990: first, be born in 1971. Next, be raised in a house with a succession of primitive computers and modems. Enter the field in the midst of a massive investment bubble that creates jobs faster than they can be filled, when credentials are irrelevant.
Another advantage we had in the 1990s tech industry: cyberpunk. Cyberpunk, a literary genre that ruled sf for about two decades, was primarily written by people who knew very little about the inner workings of computers, and who were often barely able to use them.
In THE NEW YORK TIMES, Tina Jordan’s Texas selection in “50 States, 50 Scares” comes unsurprisingly from Joe R. Lansdale.
Ah, October — crisp nights, apple-picking, leaf-peeping, Halloween. To celebrate the spookiest season, we’ve made a list of the scariest novel set in every state.
[…]
Texas
Joe R. Lansdale, “The Drive-In”
A crowded drive-in movie marathon turns into a B-movie horror-fest all its own, splattering the patrons in a blood-and-gore nightmare.
Wicked and creative, Jane Yolen’s THE MIDNIGHT CIRCUS is a satisfying and, at times, an unsettling read
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As Halloween draws near, the 2021 Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award candidate Jane Yolen’s scary THE MIDNIGHT CIRCUS continues to impress.
For WASHINGTON INDEPENDENT REVIEW OF BOOKS, Tara Campbell enjoys the collection.
Yolen is often dubbed “the Hans Christian Andersen of America,” but that should not be misunderstood. Her work is not Andersen Americanized: sanitized, watered-down, Disney-fied. It is true to the real tradition of Andersen: mesmerizing, haunting, and often not for the faint of heart.
This collection teems with Yolen’s weird, folkloric verve. Her menagerie of stories is distilled from a cauldron of fairytales, legends, and history, featuring everything from selkies to shapeshifters; witches, weavers, and warriors; and angels murderous to ravenous. Her foreword and endnotes offer additional context for the work, creating a satisfying — if often unsettling — reading experience.
Jacob Olson at REALMS & ROBOTS agrees.
Of her most recent collection of stories, THE MIDNIGHT CIRCUS, I can say that her storytelling ability remains stronger than ever. It’s a wonderful collection of little tales that both enchant and teach valuable lessons with each conclusion.
[…]
Overall, I’m as impressed with THE MIDNIGHT CIRCUS as I expected to be. Seeing a writer continue to perfect their form is always exciting, and with Yolen, you know you’ll be thrust into worlds known and unknown, leaving the pages a little wiser and a bit further removed from the humdrum happenings of real life.
ENFNTS TERRIBLES recommends the book.
THE MIDNIGHT CIRCUS is a collection of dark, haunting tales. These sixteen short stories, each accompanied by a poem, are all very different from each other, for instance, in one story the South Pole becomes hell on earth, in another, The Red Sea becomes deadly due to a plague of evil angels. Some stories are scarier than others, but all are wicked and creative.
As does ADJECTIVE+NOUN.
One thing that really brought this collection of stories to life was the commentary at the end from Jane Yolen about when each story was published or written, with a poem as accompaniment. I almost wish these snippets had been included after each story, however, while the details were still fresh in my mind. Nevertheless, they were enjoyable, and it was fun to learn the inspiration behind each story.
Fans of Jane Yolen’s work will likely find plenty to enjoy in this anthology, and I’d also recommend it to fans of horror, fairytales or folklore.
CAPTAIN’S QUARTERS praises the work.
I have always loved reading Jane Yolen’s novels but as I have gotten older I have loved her short stories just as much. I have read all four of the Tachyon Publications of Jane Yolen’s works and I love them. This fifth one deals with dark themes though the book is set up along the lines of her previous collection, THE EMERALD CIRCUS, which dealt with fairytales.
This collection has 16 varied tales. Like any collection, I liked some better than others. I also very much enjoyed Yolen’s “Story Notes and Poems” at the end of the book which gives background on the short stories in the collection.
BEAS AND BOOKS feels much the same.
I recommend this if you love reading short stories, especially, fairytales and folklore but I warn you, it gets dark.
Through INSTAGRAM, Theodora Goss, who penned the introduction to THE MIDNIGHT CIRCUS, expresses her thoughts on the book.
It was such an honor to write the introduction for Jane Yolen’s THE MIDNIGHT CIRCUS. Do pick up this book . . . It’s filled with Jane’s dark magic (she also has bright magic, sharp magic, dinosaur magic, all sorts of magic). 🙂 Just out from Tachyon!
Happy 85th birthday to the award-winning Sheila Finch
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Sheila Finch is best known for her many stories about members of the Guild of Xenolinguists, the translators for the languages in the worlds we will explore in the future. In 1998, she won the Nebula Award for her novella set in the Xenolinguists universe, “Reading The Bones,” which she later expanded to a novel of the same name. Finch’s first novel, Infinity’s Web (1985), received the Compton Crook award and her young adult book, Tiger in the Sky (1999; Book 2 of David Brin’s Out of Time), won the San Diego Book award for best juvenile fiction. Other novels include Triad (1986), The Shaper Exile trilogy (The Garden of the Shaped [1987], Shaper’s Legacy [1989], Shaping the Dawn [1989]), and Birds (2004). She also penned the acclaimed Myths, Metaphors, and Science Fiction: Ancient Roots of the Literature of the Future (2014) and most recently A Villa Far From Rome (2016).
Now retired, she spent many years as a teacher of college creative writing in southern California as well as at conferences and conventions around the world. Many of her students became published authors.
All of us at Tachyon wish the extraordinary Sheila a fabulous birthday!