New review up, interview with Matthew Cook

My latest book review, of Blood Magic by Matthew Cook, is now up at Monsters and Critics along with a featured interview with the author. From the interview:

"I think that the 'hidden world' element that you mention is popular because we, as modern human beings, have a yearning for a bit more mystery in our lives. Think about it: we inhabit an ever-shrinking world where the answer to any question, no matter how esoteric or obscure, is no more than a Wikipedia article or Google search away. No wonder people are drawn to the fantasy of a world where things are a bit more mysterious and grand than the everyday reality they inhabit. The sad part is that people have taken so much of the wonder of our everyday situation for granted. For example: when I was a kid, the idea of a phone that would let you access a global information network, or the ability to have parts of your body repaired with artificial replacements, was pretty much the stuff of Sci-Fi. Now, you can buy a disposable web-enabled cell phone at a gas station for $25 or get your joints repaired with surgical steel and plastic replacements." --Matthew Cook

This is my second "countdown" interview, so named because the interviews focus on science fiction and fantasy authors and countdown to what I hope will be an explosion of insight for readers. The title's a little cheesy, but the interview are extremely fun to do and so far readers seem to like them.

Roundup on Context 20

I had a blast at Context this last weekend. I attended a a "Plotting the Novel" workshop with Guest of Honor Tim Powers and it was an amazingly compact yet insightful affair. Putting aside the fact that Powers is deadpan funny--there's nothing like humor to spice up a workshop--his knowledge of novel craft is unsurpassed.

The other workshop I attended focused on world building. Taught by Timons Esaias, this workshop was a three hour affair covering all aspects of creating unique and realistic worlds in fiction. Even though the focus was on SF/F, what Esaias covered actually applies to all fiction genres. Yet again, a wonderful and learning experience.

In all, Context is a great literary-focused convention. The attendance was up again this year and I spoke to people who came from as far away as the Bahamas to attend. I highly recommend this convention to anyone with an interest in either writing or reading science fiction and fantasy.

Context 20 this weekend

I'll be at the Context 20 convention in Columbus this weekend. Context is a small convention focusing on science fiction and fantasy literature. I've signed up for the "World-Building Workshop"with Timons Esaias and the "Plotting The Novel" seminar with Tim Powers. At last year's convention I conducted an interview with Mike Resnick, who will be back this year as the Editor Guest of Honor. Resnick is a really nice guy and a great writer. If anyone hasn't read Santiago: A Myth of the Far Future or Kirinyaga: A Fable of Utopia, surf over to your favorite online bookstore immediately and order them.

In other news, Steve Buchheit mentioned on his blog my science fiction story "Rumspringa," which was recently published in Orson Scott Card's Intergalactic Medicine Show. Glad to know there are other SF/F writers paying homage to the Amish. Buchheit also liked my interview with Tobias Buckell.

Mundane science fiction

The British science fiction magazine Interzone (which accepted one of my stories the other day) is taking submissions for their upcoming mundane science fiction issue. As Wikipedia states, mundane sf focuses on "on stories set on or near the Earth, with a believable useof technology and science as it exists at the time the story is written." This means no faster than light travel, psi power, nanobot technology, extraterrestrial life, computer consciousness, materially profitable space travel, human immortality, brain downloading, teleportation, or time travel. The submission form for the issue even has a checklist to make sure authors avoid those non-scientific items.

Novelist Geoff Ryman, one of the three guest editors of this special issue, published an essay about the mundane sf movement in the June 2007 New York Review of Science Fiction. Titled "Take the Third Star on the Left and on til Morning," the essay gives Ryman's view that too much of science fiction is based on an adolescent desire to run away from our world. While Ryman sees nothing wrong with this desire in and of itself (especially since the desire is rooted in the need of human children to eventually leave their parents' home), he notes that humans are not truly considered grown-up until they create a new home of their own. He says science fiction is big enough to take in both dreams--the dream of leaving home and the dream of making a home and becoming an adult. To Ryman, mundane science fiction focuses on this last aspect.

I'm working on a story to submit for the issue, which has created a good deal of angst in sf quarters. As one commentator stated on the Interzone forum, "I'm amazed people are having trouble with the very simple request by Interzone for no fake science." The sf community's nervousness with the whole mundane concept is probably a sign that there's something exciting going on in the mundane, everyday world of science fiction.

Yes, my site's been redone

I didn't think I needed to mention it, but two people have e-mailed me asking if I've redesigned my website. Yes indeed, that's what happened. After having the old site for about five years, the design was creaking and the functionality was zero. All the info from the old site is here (see the links to my writings at left), but now I also have an integrated blog with the site.

Interzone accepts one of my science fiction stories

Interzone has just accepted my science fiction short story "The Ships Like Clouds, Risen by Their Rain." I don't know which issue the story will be in, but as a long-time admirer (and now subscriber) of the British magazine, I'm really excited about this.

In case anyone is interested in how the submission process works, in this case I submitted the story during Interzone's May e-mail submission period. Editor Jetse de Vries kept a running dialogue on how the submission process was going on Interzone's forum and in his blog. Evidently 500 stories were submitted, of which he sent 17 to the other editors. I'm not sure how many of those 17 will be accepted, but it's likely less than half or a third. If I'd known those numbers beforehand, I think I'd have been too intimidated to submit anything. Who says ignorance isn't bliss. :-) A big thanks to Jetse, Andy and the other Interzone editors for accepting my story. Coming on the heels of Orson Scott Card's Intergalactic Medicine Show publishing my story "Rumspringa,"  2007 is shaping up to be a decent publication year.

Nonfiction and essays

 

Quick links


Note:
If a publication isn't given for an essay, that means it was originally published on my website.

Essays on Literature and Writing

Essays on Science Fiction and Fantasy

Author Interviews

Book and Magazine Reviews

General Essays

Selected Nonfiction Articles

Short Stories

Quick links

"Interzone is really spoiling me when it publishes Jason Sanford so regularly. As far as I'm concerned, they couldn't publish too much of this author if they named it Jason Sanford's Science Fiction Magazine." — Sam Tomaino at SFRevu

 

Science fiction and fantasy

"What Is Sand but Earth Purified?"

"We Eat the Hearts that Come for You"

"Paprika"

  • Novelette in issue 249 (Nov./Dec. 2013) of Interzone.

"Monday's Monk"

"Mirrorblink"

"Heaven's Touch"

"The Ever-Dreaming Verdict of Plagues"

"Her Scientifiction, Far Future, Medieval Fantasy"

  • Novelette in issue 234 (May/June 2011) of Interzone.

"The Blue Room"

"The Never Never Wizard of Apalachicola"

"Memoria"

"Peacemaker, Peacemaker, Little Bo Peep"

"Millisent Ka Plays in Realtime"

  • Originally published in issue 231 (Nov./Dec. 2010) of Interzone.
  • Reprinted in the Russian magazine ESLI (IF).

"Plague Birds"

"A Twenty-First Century Fairy Love Story"

  • Originally published in Tales of the Unanticipated, issue 30, spring 2010.
  •  

"Cwazy"

  • Originally published in OCHO #28, the print companion to the literary and arts magazine MiPOesias. This special issue was edited by Kirk Curnutt. Fall 2009.

"Into the Depths of Illuminated Seas"

  • Originally published in Interzone, issue 226 (Jan./Feb. 2010).
  • Placed third in the 2010 Interzone Readers' Poll.
  • An earlier version of the story was published in issue 2 of Tales of Moreauvia
  • Reprinted in StarShipSofa Stories, Volume 2.
  • Reprinted in the Czech SF magazine XB-1.

"Here We Are, Falling Through Shadows"

  • Originally published in issue 225 (Nov./Dec. 2009) of Interzone.
  • Reprinted in Apex Magazine, Czech SF magazine Ikarie and the French book anthology Ténèbres.

"Sublimation Angels"

"When Thorns Are The Tips Of Trees"

"The Ships Like Clouds, Risen By Their Rain"

"Where Away You Fall"

"Book Scouts of the Galactic Rim"

"Freelanga"

"Rumspringa"

  • Originally published in Orson Scott Card's Intergalactic Medicine Show, Issue 5, July 2007.
  • Reprinted in the anthology Beyond the Sun.

"For Aging Kids Who Dream of Star Treks"

  • Originally published in Tales of the Unanticipated, April 2002

Podcasts

Jeremiah (a short novel in four parts):

 

Asimov's March 2013
XB-1 April 2013
Interzone 243
XB-1 December 2012
Asimov's Science Fiction August 2012
Interzone 236
IGMS
XB-1
XB-1
Interzone 231 (Special Jason Sanford fiction issue)
Ikarie November 2010
Apex Magazine July 2010
Ikarie June 2010
TOTU30
TOTU30
Ikarie235
IZ226
Cover of Russian SF magazine ESLI
IZ225
IZ224coversm
IZ219
IZ217
YearsBEstSF14
AnalogDec2008
TOTU23