Fans, Favors, Finance & Fur.

Category: misc, writing news

Evidently Starfish has sold in Russia.  I know this because I’ve just received a bunch of questions from a Russian translator.  You might think that I might have heard earlier — at the offer stage, perhaps, or during contract negotiations — but Tor retains the overseas rights to that title, and they tend to leave […]

Continue reading » 20 Comments

Ghosts with Shit Jobs.

Category: ink on art

Jim Munroe could squeeze lymph out of granite. You may remember me going on a few years ago about “Infest Wisely”, a “low-fi sci-fi” movie made on a budget of about $700.  It was uneven, it was coarse, it had production values two steps up from those of a backyard puppet show.  But it rocked […]

Continue reading » 7 Comments

Bright Eyes.

Category: Dumbspeech, fiblet

It was a window in the crudest possible sense: a solid pane of transparent alloy, set into the rear bulkhead.  You couldn’t zoom it or resize it or lay a tactical false-color overlay across its surface.  You couldn’t even turn it off, unless someone on the other side brought down the blast shield.  It was […]

Continue reading » 45 Comments

Cops, Control, and KoolAid: some thoughts on Madeline Ashby’s “Loss Prevention”

Category: misc, Squidgate

Madeline Ashby and I have a history.   We’ve known each other for years, attended the same writing workshop, stood by each other in times of personal distress.  We bonded over that time, not least over the fact that each of us has experienced misfortune at the hands of border officials:  Madeline, a US citizen, at […]

Continue reading » 28 Comments

Maybe Bart Simpson was Wrong

Category: Uncategorized

Maybe you should have a cow.  Or at least, maybe someone else should have one at your expense. Today marks a departure for the ‘crawl:  its very first Guest Blogger.  You should check out what he has to say; it might just help delay that inevitable moment when the angry underclass rise up to kill […]

Continue reading » 2 Comments

You guys have a blast, though…

Category: On the Road, public interface

So, the second iteration of SFContario is underway just down the street.  A few people asked if I was attending this year.  Then they asked why not. It’s a good question.   The con is local.  A lot of my friends are going.  If the inaugural edition is anything to go by, the panels will be […]

Continue reading » 17 Comments

Falkon.

Category: On the Road, public interface

So. Poland again. Only this time, leaving the Warsaw Arrivals lounge I turned east instead of west to find myself confronted with two guys holding up a sign that reads Giant Squid. Already I like the place. They put me in — well, a monastery, maybe. At least it’s attached to a church of some […]

Continue reading » 43 Comments

Pictures, Post-Haste.

Category: art on ink, On the Road, public interface

Mere moments from leaving for Poland again, and too frazzled for pithy commentary. So here, to keep you all occupied, are some miscellaneous pictures. The first is Marek Madej’s cover for Ars Machina‘s translation of Maelstrom, which I believe gets its official launch this weekend. (Google tells me that “Wir” translates as “Vortex”, which is […]

Continue reading » 7 Comments

Douchebags in Deutschland

Category: rant, scilitics

“Dismay, Confusion Greet Human Stem Cell Patent Ban“, wails Gretchen Vogel’s headline in the October 28th issue of Science. The news item itself begins with a question: “Has the environmental group Greenpeace dealt a major blow to the medical use of human embryonic stem cells in Europe? That’s what biologists, patent specialists, and lawyers are […]

Continue reading » 29 Comments

The Point at Which We Start to Lower Our Expectations

Category: Dumbspeech, writing news

I handed in Echopraxia (aka Dumbspeech) yesterday. Hold your applause; I still don’t think it’s ready. I am very happy with parts of it. Other parts are so clunky I’d have to kill you if you saw them. A couple of elements have become gratuitous in light of recent changes to the story; they’re still […]

Continue reading » 35 Comments