Archive for the ‘Rambling’ Category

My special New Weird

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

After postal troubles (again), my New Weird is finally here. With the special dedication Horia was telling me about.
(Since I couldn’t be there at the launch, Horia got the autograph for me and then mailed me the book. Two times even, because the first attempt was thwarted by the idiots at my post office.)

It’s going to be read and written about at some point, but not quite now as I just started two books (Vellum and Snow Crash, for the curious).

Anyway, here’s my book and its adorable “new weird” kitty.

Jeff & Ann Vandermeer - New Weird

Jeff & Ann Vandermeer - New Weird

Back home, still with Vellum

Wednesday, October 8th, 2008

Still alive. Read a lot while on holiday (though only one spec fic - Duma Key - and one slightly related - On Writing - both my Stephen King).

Back home, lazy as hell and continuing to be blown away by Vellum. I’m reminded everyday of how many things I’m missing. I was researching a “today in history” column for work and I found out that 10 years ago today Matthew Shepard was attacked and left for dead. Who the hell is he? An inspiration? Parallel? Alter-ego? of Thomas/Puck, mentioned in a brief scene that stuck with me for its cruelty. I suspected he was a real person, but I didn’t know the events were exactly as described in the book.

This thing needs a dictionary, a glossary, a companion book, something. I get so many things and yet the full picture escapes me. I’m hoping it will make more sense after Ink, but I’m not really counting on it. The review/thoughts on this will be extremely messed up.

I’m seriously envying Horia for getting to meet Hal Duncan. When I grow up I’m going to have the time & money to go to all the conventions I want.

Bits and pieces, the first of many

Monday, September 8th, 2008

I’ve been reading lately (as usual), but it’s slow. It’s a breakthrough, though: I’m reading Ursula Le Guin and liking it. Or something like that. I am understanding it, anyway, which is a first.

On Saturday I didn’t feel like playing WoW (it happens from once in a while.. rarely, but it does) so I watched Battlestar Galactica. Many hours later, after the last episode, I found out the season resumes in freaking January 2009! Gah.
(Yes, a “frakking” would have been in order here, but I hate that fucking - ha! - word.)

I am very much looking forward to my copy of the Romanian New Weird. Jeff and Horia tell me I have a special autograph and illustration and I want it now!

It looks like I am going to Vienna in October, which has nothing to do with books but makes me very excited.

A couple of podcasts

Tuesday, September 2nd, 2008

Thanks to the lovely BoingBoing and Cory Doctorow, I occasionally end up on a podcast/audiobooks website and download all the cool-sounding fiction I can get my grubby virtual hands on. I’m not really into podcasts, but I’ve found a couple of nice places - StarShipSofa and EscapePod, plus SFFAudio which has links to many places. And, for someone who loves accents, listening to Starship’s Tony Smith is very fun (like a puzzle! “now what did he say here?”)

So yesterday, finding myself without a bus book, I listened to stories - one from EscapePod, several from StarShipSofa.

First up was Elizabeth Bear’s Tideline. It’s about death and mourning and new life. And a robot and a kid. Chalcedony is the last of her (human) plutoon, a broken down battle robot that devotes the rest of her existence to creating a memorial to her dead companions and, unexpectedly, protecting a young boy. Another story of the robot-that-develops-a-heart? Yes and no. Every action can be explained by the laws of robotics - Bear’s, if not Asimov’s. A robot protects humans. A robot learned how humans honor their dead. A robot learned about the importance of remembering.

I wasn’t expecting to like a robot story so much, but I did. And although Arthurian myth might sound out of place, it fits right in.

Second, the SSS podcast.

Poetry: Greg Betty - Bottles
I didn’t even realize this was a poem, I thought it was a very short story. A bit of a different take on the “ships in bottles” idea.

Flash Fiction: Atalanta Pendragonne - Moon Over Baton Rouge
Another different take, this time dealing with vampires. A fun little story I enjoyed a lot. (But, really, that name?! Why?)

Article: Matthew Sanborn Smith - Jim Sawgrass
I never had any particular interest in genealogy or genetics, but this guy has a lot of free time on his hands and the short overview of how we’re all really related and how no family is really older than each other and how migration influences genealogy was really fascinating. He’s also funny, which made it even better.

Main Fiction: Paul Di Filippo - Bad Beliefs
I’d heard about Paul Di Filippo, never read anything by him as far as I can recall, and I got this podcast for the Jeff Carlson bit, so I had no particular interest in the fiction. But… boy was it cool. I never got what memes were (except for those annoying tags on blogs), but in here they’re personifications of… ideas? There’s “Drunk driving is safe” and “I’ll never die” and “Fuck the police” and another dozen or so embodiments of good and bad beliefs. Mostly bad, like the title says. The idea might be old, but it was new and exciting for me. I hope I’ll be able to track down a text copy of this, because I kept drifting off and I missed some parts, which is too bad for such an interesting and fun story.

On The Sofa With Jeff Carlson
This actually wasn’t as interesting as I was hoping. I’m sort of currently reading Carlson’s Plague Year and I was curious about the author, but I’d already read his bio so there was nothing really new. I might listen to it once I finish the book(s), because it might be better learning about his sources of inspiration after I finish reading.

And since we’re on internet stuff, Afterworld is an awesome post-apocalyptic animated series which can be watched online (on on AXN if they have it in your country).

To finish off on a positive note, my boyfriend informs me that Big Bang will happen again in 9 days and I should read Forever Peace. Plus: we won’t have to go to work anymore. Minus: we won’t get to go on holiday. I really want to go to Spain, so I hope the Large Hadron Collider doesn’t kill us all. At least not before October 4th.

What I’ve been up to

Monday, August 25th, 2008

(Beside not writing on this blog, that is.)
Working, traveling (beach!), reading. Reading books I need to write about but really, I know I won’t, so I’ll just make a bunch of posts with very short opinions. Someday. For now I have a couple of posts scheduled with some Nemira books for a contest which ends August 31st.

I’m reading The Year’s Best Fantasy & Horror 2006 and loving it (more or less expected; first part review is up already); I’m reading A Fire Upon the Deep and liking it (amazing; who’d have thought I’d like space opera?!); I’m sort of reading Jeff Carlson’s Plague Year (but haven’t touched it in 2 weeks or so, for some reason) and sort of reading Rama II (which, like people have told me, is not like Rendez-vous with Rama, therefore kind of sucks so I’m temporarily abandoning it).

I’ve also been fiddling with a blog a bit - due to a WoW overdose… I decided I can’t just play for one whole weekend so I needed to do something else - and only broke it once. I added a couple more things in the sidebar and this morning I managed to convince the boyfriend to help me with the more complicated stuff. From once in a while it pays to have a programmer boyfriend :P I still have big plans, i.e. interconnecting this with my Romanian blog so I only have to update my Now Reading plugin (bottom left) and Reading list once, not separately for each blog.

The fern is going to go away too. Eventually. When I find/take the perfect picture and convince one of my friends to help me with the Photoshop part.

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