Some people are born with a silver spoon in their mouth. Others are born with a Bruce Sterling-silver spoon… #brucesterling #pirateutopia #puns #spoon #silver #books #bookstagram #author
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Tachyon tidbits featuring Nalo Hopkinson, Tim Powers, Brandon Sanderson, and John Picacio
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized b&n sci-fi & fantasy blog, brandon sanderson, ceridwen christensen, jeff somers, John Picacio, kaladin, medusa's web, mia araujo, midnight robber, nalo hopkinson, the way of the kings, Tim Powers, tor.com, weston ochse
The latest reviews and mentions of Tachyon titles and authors from around the web.
Nalo Hopkinson (photo: David Findlay), Tim Powers (Matt Gush), Brandon Sanderson ((Ceridwen via Wikimedia Commons) , and John Picacio
At B&N SCI-FI & FANTASY BLOG, Ceridwen Christensen includes Nalo Hopkinson in 13 Essential #Ownvoices Science Fiction & Fantasy Novels.
The #ownvoices hashtagseeks to remedy this experience gap, pointing out fictions about and from the identities in question. They are, in other words, stories from inside looking out. Heretofore, this hashtag has been largely used to classify young adult fiction. While I can see the pedagogical reasons for this, maybe us olds would be well served by identifying #ownvoices in narratives written for us as well. Science fiction often deals with the alien—the discovery and slow understanding of other cultures, civilizations, and peoples. As such, science fictional or fantastic fiction can be a rich canvas on which to explore the differences that already mark us, stretching our understandings and misunderstandings that much farther. For people who have been marked as other within their own lives, this fictional extremity can be the sort of alienating canvass that resonates.
To that end, here are 13 works that tell stories from the intimacy of cultural identity and the extremity of the SFFnal.
The backstory for Jamaican-born Naolo Hopkinson’s beautifully textured Midnight Robber is almost too complex to sum: a young girl, Tan-Tan, is taken by her disgraced mayor father from the Caribbean-colonized world of Toussaint to the planet’s strange, alternate-universe twin, peopled largely by criminals from Toussaint (like her father). Tan-Tan matriculates under her dad’s rough care in a place where reality is stretchy. There, creatures of Caribbean myth are real, and Tan-Tan grows into a person of lore herself—the Midnight Robber, a sort of Robin Hood who spouts the poetry of the Carib. The language of the novel is a complex patois, something you must lower yourself into slowly, even while it roils. It is a heady mix of the SFFnal and the folkloric.
Jeff Somers, also at B&N SCI-FI & FANTASY BLOG, mentions Tim Powers in 10 of the Scariest Haunted House Books Ever.
There’s something primal about a haunted house story—stories in which a structure that’s supposed to shelter you turns against you. It’s a trope that we keep returning to—this week, Netflix launched a new series based on the classic Shirley Jackson novel The Haunting of Hill House, and the results are truly terrifying (if at a bit of a remove from the book).
Medusa’s Web, by Tim Powers
When their aunt dies, orphans Scott and Madeline return to Caveat, the rotting house they were raised in. Their cousins Ariel and Claimayne still live in the old Hollywood Hills mansion, and still guard the family’s secret—that they are part of a network of old Los Angeles families that use magical, rune-like drawings known as Spiders to travel freely between 1920s Hollywood and the present day, switching bodies with people in the earlier era. Part sci-fi, part the photo at the end of Kubrick’s The Shining, the story explores addiction in ways no one else has ever tried, revving up a horrifying tale of seduction as Madeline slowly falls under the spell of Caveat and the strange, intense pleasures that the Spiders offer, even as Scott becomes increasingly desperate to get them away.
For TOR.COM, Weston Ochse list Five Books About Heroes Who Shouldn’t Babysit Your Kitten includes mentions of Brandon Sanderson’s Kaladin.
Who doesn’t like kittens? Kittens are what cats used to be before the irony of a two-legged universe got to them, making them the moody judgmental purring balls of fur they are today. Kittens are fun. Kittens are daring. Kittens are little evil feline ninjas with razor teeth and spikey claws. Kittens wake up every morning and treat the world like it’s their own personal frat house and the air is spiked with catnip. I love kittens. I also love me righteous protagonists in books and comics. So, I was wondering the other day—I’d trust these folks to save the world, but would I trust them to babysit a kitten?
Who can I trust, then? Having just read Brandon Sanderson’s book The Way of Kings about shards and monsters and bright eyes, his hero Kaladin came to mind. He was a decent warrior and a pretty solid bloke. Except of course for his deep emotional scars and his desire to protect and serve a Tinkerbell-like creature—an Honorspren named Syl. That’s sort of like a kitten, I suppose, except it flies through the air and does some magical stuff, which means it’s really nothing like a kitten. In fact, I could see that damned Spren becoming Butt-Hurt-Spren because of Kaladin’s attention on a new kitten. After all, it’s Syl’s connection to Kaladin that grounds her and makes her able to think clearly, unlike her Windspren cousins, which would definitely make the kitten a threat. One moment Kaladin is petting the kitten, listening to it purr as it rests on a cushion beside him, the next the kitten is being carried to ten thousand feet by the spren who then returns it by dropping it from an impossible height
Mia Araujo interviews John Picacio as part their Artists of Color series.
3). When did you first fall in love with art, and realize that you wanted to pursue it as a career? Did your parents approve or disapprove?
I can’t remember not loving it. Comic books are amongst my earliest memories, dating back to first grade. When I was a kid, I don’t think I let my mother take a grocery trip without me buying a comic off the spinner rack. Back then, my friend Eddie Moody had this tattered hardcover book called The Great Comic Book Heroes by Jules Feiffer. It featured the original first-issue origin stories of Superman, Batman, The Human Torch, The Flash, The Spectre, Captain America, and so on. I couldn’t get enough of that book. Comics led to Star Trek, led to Star Wars, led to more sf/f films and magazines. I’ve always loved anything related to science fiction and fantasy.
Fast forward to college – I did a semester in Europe during my third year of architecture school. The first stop of the trip was in London, and one day, I played hooky from the rest of the group and went to Gosh! Comics – back when it used to be across from the British Museum. The shop owner saw me looking at a poster rack containing original comics art. I stopped cold when I saw a page of original Dave McKean art from Arkham Asylum. There were several more in there, and he took out the pages and let me spread them out on the floor. I just stared at them for a very long time. There was ink, graphite, acrylic and layers of collage everywhere. It was a revelation. At the time I had been discovering graphic novels like Violent Cases and Watchmen – and the more I kept visiting museums across Europe, the more I knew architecture was not enough for me.
I got my degree and started working as an intern architect out of school, but by night, I wrote, drew, and self-published my own comics stories. Those comics led a publisher called Mojo Press to ask if I would be interested in doing cover art for a Michael Moorcock book. Doing that job was the hook that changed my life. I fell in love with the business and with the process of being a cover illustrator, and my days in the architecture biz were officially numbered. I started living, eating, breathing the business of illustration and kept working to score art jobs, building my portfolio in my off-hours. Five years later, I went full-time as a science fiction / fantasy cover illustrator and I’ve never looked back.
Meet the acclaimed Nick Mamatas
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized elizabeth story, literary speakeasy, martuni's, Nick Mamatas, san francisco
As part of Literary Speakeasy Presents: Ghosts, Spirits & Martinis, Nick Mamatas will be appearing TONIGHT October 25 at Martuni’s, 4 Valencia Street, San Francisco.
For more info on THE PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF EVERYTHING, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover by Elizabeth Story
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized books, bookstagram, darylgregory, Halloween, horror, horrorbooks, novella, octoberreads, publishing, scarystories, sff, spooky, tachyon, tachyonpublications, weareallcompletelyfine
One week until Halloween! That’s more than enough time to read this spooky novella. We Are All Completely Fine is a World Fantasy and Shirley Jackson Award-winning tale of Final Girls (and Guys) going to group therapy
#weareallcompletelyfine #darylgregory #halloween #scarystories #horrorbooks #novella #sff #bookstagram #books #octoberreads #publishing #tachyon #tachyonpublications #horror #spooky
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Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized anthology, asianwriter, authorsofinstagram, bestamericansciencefictionandfantasy, bestof2018, books, bookstagram, fantasybooks, jaymeegoh, johnjosephadams, newbooks, nkjemisin, ownvoices, scifibooks, sff, shortstories, womenwriters
Tachyonite @jhameiagoh has a story in The Best American Science Fiction and Fantasy 2018! Check out “The Last Cheng Beng Gift” in this fantastic anthology edited by N.K. Jemisin and John Joseph Adams
#jaymeegoh #bestamericansciencefictionandfantasy #sff #nkjemisin #johnjosephadams #anthology #shortstories #womenwriters #asianwriter #ownvoices #fantasybooks #scifibooks #bestof2018 #books #bookstagram #newbooks #authorsofinstagram
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Jane Yolen’s HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY TALE alters the classic tales in fun, creepy, and imaginative ways
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized avalinah's books, ebma, educational book and media association, finding baba yaga, how to fracture a fairy tale, Jane Yolen, jeremiah ludington memorial award, margo kelly, review
Margo Kelly on her eponymous site praises Jane Yolen’s HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY TALE.
HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY TALE, by Jane Yolen, is a collection of short stories and poems based on familiar fairy tales–but altered in fun, creepy, and imaginative ways. Yolen explains, “A fracture is a break … [it] can hurt like a sprain or reveal like a geode being split apart to show the jewels within.”
Yolen takes well-known fairy tales and splits them apart, sometimes leaving them still quite familiar and other times shining a light from an unfamiliar angle to reveal new truths and possibilities.
This collection is a perfect choice to read when you have only a few minutes at a time to devote to the book. Read it while you’re waiting at the doctor’s office, or waiting in line to pick up your kids, or waiting anywhere!
Photo: Jason Stemple
Educational Book and Media Association (EBMA) names Jane Yolen winner Of the 40th Annual Jeremiah Ludington Memorial Award.
In 1975, Jeremiah Ludington, owner of Ludington News Company in Detroit, Michigan, founded the Educational Paperback Association, now known as the Educational Book and Media Association. To honor his dedication and commitment to the educational paperback market, the EPA in 1979 established the Jeremiah Ludington Memorial Award.
The Ludington award is presented annually to an individual who has made a significant contribution to the educational paperback business, and is the EBMA version of a “Lifetime Achievement Award.” Recipients receive a framed certificate and EBMA presents a $2,500 check to the charity of their choice. Past winners of the award have included illustrators, authors, educators, and librarians such as John Scieszka, Lois Lowry, Beverly Cleary and Judy Blume
AVALINAH’S BOOKS enjoys Finding Baba Yaga.
I absolutely adored Finding Baba Yaga. It surprised me! Because I have never read a novel in verse before, and let me tell you, I am not a fan of poetry. It’s very hard to make me read poetry!
Despite that, I didn’t find this book to be pretentious or hard to understand. The verse didn’t feel complicated, instead, it made it a quick read that was easy to connect to. It’s about struggling with being understood and too controlled by your family – religious parents and being a woman in society in general. Not having any say in your life, and making a stand about it. As well as actually finding your own self, as well as your new place, your new family. It’s also about disappointment, love and being understood. It was a beautiful story, laced with modernized Russian mythology that was really a delight to read about. Very recommended!
For more info on HOW TO FRACTURE A FAIRY TALE, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover design by Elizabeth Story
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized aclu, booklife, books, booksale, charityevent, civilliberties, civilrights, donate, ebooks, election, fundraiser, getthevoteout, humblebookbundle, humblebundle, vote, votevotevote
Get some great reads while promoting civil liberties with The Humble Charity Book Bundle: Get the Vote Out! Humble Bundle is a pay-what-you-want donation service. No matter how much you pay for this bundle, you’ll get some amazing books and 100% of proceeds will go the ACLU! Check out the full book list here: https://www.humblebundle.com/books/get-the-vote-out-books
#humblebundle #humblebookbundle #aclu #vote #votevotevote #ebooks #charityevent #fundraiser #donate #books #booklife #civilrights #booksale #getthevoteout #civilliberties #election
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Get some great reads while promoting civil liberties with The Humble Charity Book Bundle: Get the Vote Out 100% supporting the ACLU
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized aclu, bruce sterling, eileen gunn, humble bundle, john coulthart, John D. Berry, pirate utopia, stable strategies and others
The Humble Charity Book Bundle: Get the Vote Out 100% supporting the ACLU includes the Tachyon titles PIRATE UTOPIA by Bruce Sterling and STABLE STRATEGIES AND OTHERS by Eileen Gunn.
With the US midterm elections just around the corner, Humble Bundle has just launched a fun and informative selection of curated titles in support of a more perfect union. The Humble Charity Book Bundle: Get the Vote Out 100% supporting the ACLU focuses on civics, volunteerism, and positive resistance – with one cookbook, an angry bear, Cory Doctorow, and a few dystopian novels and comics in the mix too.
Participating publishers coming together for this project include IDW, Image Comics, Lonely Planet, Microcosm Publishing, No Starch Press, Oni Press, Quirk, Skyhorse, and Tachyon.
Working in conjunction with the ACLU and writer Gary Whitta (Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, The Book of Eli), this promotion will be the first to offer the new science fiction anthology, RESIST: Tales From a Future Worth Fighting Against, featuring some of today’s most celebrated SF writers.
100% of all proceeds from this promotion will be donated to the ACLU.
The Humble Charity Book Bundle: Get the Vote Out 100% supporting the ACLU will run from October 22 through November 5 at 11 a.m. Pacific time.
For more info on PIRATE UTOPIA, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover and illustration by John Coulthart
For more info about STABLE STRATEGIES AND OTHERS, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover by John D. Berry
Happy birthday to the essential, award-winning Suzy McKee Charnas
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized birthday, John Picacio, stagestruck vampires and other phantasms, suzy mckee charnas
Hugo, Nebula, and Tiptree award–winning author Suzy McKee Charnas is best known for her groundbreaking Holdfast Chronicles, a four-volume story written over the course of almost thirty years (1974-1999) which addressed the oft-controversial topics of feminist dystopia, separatist societies, war, and reintegration, and her critically acclaimed exploration of the vampire mythos, The Vampire Tapestry.
The first and second volumes of the Holdfast Chronicles, Walk to the End of the World (1974) and Motherlines (1978), each won a 1996 Retrospective James Tiptree, Jr. Award. The final volume The Conqueror’s Child (1999) won the James Tiptree, Jr. Award. The series as a whole which also included The Furies (1994) was given the 2003 Gaylactic Spectrum Hall of Fame Award. Her young adult novel The Kingdom of Kevin Malone earned the Aslan Award for Best Children’s Book of 1993. The novella “The Unicorn Tapestry,” that was part of The Vampire Tapestry, won a 1980 Nebula.
Other works include The Sorcery Hall trilogy– the Bronze King (1985), The Silver Glove (1988), and The Golden Thread (1989) – and the short story collections Moonstone and the Tiger-Eye (1992), Music of the Night (2001), and STAGESTRUCK VAMPIRES AND OTHER PHANTASMS (2004). Charnas adapted The Vampire Tapestry into the two-act play Vampire Dreams. It enjoyed runs in both San Francisco and New York, debuting as part of Springfest in San Francisco in 1990.
All of us at Tachyon wish the sensational Suzy a happy birthday!
For more information on STAGESTRUCK VAMPIRES AND OTHER PHANTASMS, visit the Tachyon page.
Cover by John Picacio
Alec Checkerfield Uncategorized anthology, bookobsessed, books, bookstagram, darkfantasy, ellendatlow, flashbackfriday, ghoststories, Halloween, hauntings, horror, horrorbooks, joycecaroloates, kellylink, neilgaiman, publishing, scarystories, shortstories, spooky, tachyon, tachyonpublications
Tis the season for scary stories! The backlist pick for this week’s #FlashbackFriday is 2013’s Hauntings, an anthology of ghost stories edited by THE horror expert Ellen Datlow. With authors Peter Straub, Lucius Shepard, Caitlín R. Kiernan, Joyce Carol Oats, Neil Gaiman, Kelly Link, and many more!
#books #bookstagram #shortstories #ghoststories #scarystories #horror #horrorbooks #darkfantasy #shortstories #hauntings #ellendatlow #halloween #anthology #bookobsessed #spooky #neilgaiman #kellylink #joycecaroloates #publishing #tachyon #tachyonpublications
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