One Down, One to Go

The Toronto Public Library’s Big Honking Series On Speculative Fiction kicked off last night, as promised, with a panel discussion between Jim Gardiner, Karl Schroeder, and myself, with Mike Skeet proving more than up to the task as moderator. It was pretty well-attended, if I do say so myself. And it was fun. We kicked around many ideas, we took many questions from the audience, and — best of all — we did it all at the expense of the Canada Council, whose disdain (nay, even hatred) for skiffy is the stuff of legend. I don’t know how the TPL managed to slip this one under their radar — maybe the Council was lulled by the strategic use of the word “heritage” in the series title — but when they find out I bet they’ll be spinning in their elbow-patched tweeds.

Afterwards a bunch of us adjourned to a nearby faux-Irish pub that had a Monday special on hamburgers and karaoke (although when challenged, they could not provide the track for Thick as a Brick. I sang it anyway.) I reconnected with some folks I’d met at SciBarCamp the month before (although, sadly, not Leona Lutterodt, who took this picture:)


It was a good night, and I shall cling to its memory, for my next appearance is unlikely to be quite so popular. It is way out in the boonies, you see (“The Bitches”, as we in TO refer to them), and it is not a Grand Opening but only a reading, and the stage will not be festooned with four skiffy authors but only with me. I shall read. (The vampire-domestication talk is off the table, because it’s been a couple of years since I’ve given it and I’ve been too busy to dust it off and rehearse.)

Just what I end up reading is up to the audience. I have a meaty little excerpt from a novel-in-progress, never before posted, never before seen by human eyes. I could premiere it out in the Beaches, if enough people in the audience already know my other stuff and want to hear something new. Or, in the more likely event that the audience is only there because they mistakenly thought that Avril Lavigne was going to be signing autographs and who is this Watts doofus anyway, I might just stick with old standards from my other novels because it’ll all be new to them anyway. In either case I’ll probably round out the evening with a recent short story or two.

So, for those of you who are a) local, and b) suckers for the obvious low-status manipulation I went for in the previous paragraph, here are the details:

Thursday, April 24, 7pm
Beaches Branch, Toronto Public Library
2161 Queen St. East, Toronto, ON, M4L 1J1
(northeast corner of Kew Gardens: map and further details here)

Come. There will be cake.

But we all know what that means.



This entry was posted on Tuesday, April 22nd, 2008 at 6:45 am and is filed under public interface. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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Keippernicus
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Keippernicus
16 years ago

The cake is a lie!!

[/obligatory portal]

You started it. I feel like making this post would cost me 3 IQ points in a just world.

Luckily this is earth. If you don’t like it get some meat and eat it after a week in the sun.

Michael F Bergmann
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Michael F Bergmann
16 years ago

Couldn’t make it yesterday, but I’ll be there Thursday. I’m looking forward to hearing some new stuff.

Daniel
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Daniel
16 years ago

It would be awesome to hear something from your novel-in-progress tonight…

bec_87rb
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bec_87rb
16 years ago

I just think it’s weird that I could see the liberry from the air, and know exactly where you guys are gonna be tonight – the red brick building, ball field out back, then the lake in the distance. This Google Earth thing is disturbing on some level.

Mac
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Mac
16 years ago

Damnit, Peter, you need to get your PR people to send you to Kansas City. Jesus country. You’d love it.