2010 Older Writers Grant

As I noted over at Suite 101, The Speculative Literature Foundation has announced that its seventh annual Older Writers Grant is to be awarded to Mario Milosevic, for his ‘Untied States of America’ which appeared in Interzone 228. It’s particularly interesting for three reasons:

First, this is the first time since 2007 that I’m familiar with the winning entry, and for all my reservations, it’s a worthy winner.

Secondly, I judge the awards myself in 2007, and it was a tough call then to pick just one winner, so I understand perfectly Malon Edwards comments of  “Honorable Mentions for the Older Writers Grant go to Michele Cashmore, April Grey, Lynne MacLean, Ada Milenkovic Brown, and J.A. Huets for their entertaining submissions, which made the selection of the winner a difficult but enjoyable process.”

Yep, not much has changed there, then.  Come the deadline, there’s usually much tearing of hair. 🙂

Lastly, and most selfishly, in five months time I’ll be eligible for the award myself. Not that I think that I have a prayer of winning it, but I have to have a go…it’s nice to see what benchmark’s been set.

• June 29th, 2010 • Posted in Awards, General, Reviews, Writing • Comments: 0

Monday Morning

It’s been a productive morning — I’m now 20% of the way through Ultramassive, 21000 words in, and I’ve critiqued a short story for Critters to keep membership of that that particular group ticking over.  Plus the review of Black Static 17 is posted.

So now –since it’s 23c in the shade and it feels criminal to be inddors on such a nice day, I’m going to sit under a tree and catch up on some z’s for an hour. There have to be some benefits to being a writer, after all….

• June 28th, 2010 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

New Review

Since those nice people at Alt.fiction gave us all a copy of The Mammoth Book of Extreme Fantasy, the least I could do was read it. And having enjoyed it a lot, I ought to review it.  So I have.

• June 27th, 2010 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

An Orgy of Flash Fiction

A new blog post over at Suite101 about the frenzy of writing and critiquing at SFFEditors.  I was determined to get the word ‘orgy’ in there somewhere; it might yet play the viagra-peddlers at their own game! (They’ll be so disappointed when they read what it’s actually about…)

• June 2nd, 2010 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

Update on The Portal

About five weeks ago, I mentioned a new online review zine.  Since then The Portal (that’s the zine) has been gradually booting itself up for a launch. They now have a website, which I promised to pass on. So here it is.

Enjoy.

• June 1st, 2010 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

Sleepy Saturday Afternoon

It’s a warm, damp Saturday afternoon that doesn’t seem to be able to make up it’s mind what to do.

Since I’m on holiday I’m not doing much work, although I’ve critiqued one piece of flash today. Instead Kate and I did a little shopping and lunching in Bath (the all-you-can-eat Lebanese mezze is highly recommended), and this afternoon has been spent watching rugby league and listening to cricket — when there’s some play.

And catching up on other people’s blogs. One of my new favourites is Madeline Ashby, who I first read in Shine. Her blog is as elegant as her fiction, and makes me grind my teeth with envy at the apparent ease with which she posts. Her latest entries muse about Stanley Kubrick, Playboy magazine and avocadoes. Head over there and enjoy.

• May 29th, 2010 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

Sale to Fearology

I’ve sold a short story, ‘Dark’ to the original anthology Fearology: Terrifying Tales of Phobias.

The ToC is:

Stephanie Kincaid  –  Bursting With Nutty Goodness
Colin Harvey  –  Dark
C. C. Blake  –  I Own My Fears

Val Muller  –  Horrible Harry
Mark Souza  –  Relative Undertow
F. J. R. Titchenell  –  Gravity
Robert Guffey  –  Birth Of A Nation
Camille Alexa  –  Things From Things
Jonathan Moon  –  The Fear vs The Need
Merrill Catharine Hodnefield  –  Isobel And The Machine
Ken Goldman  –  Donny Doesn’t Live Here Anymore
Joe Nazare  –  Bash
Quinn Hernandez  –  The Hell Behind Her Eyes
J. T. Seat  –  The Cock Collection
Gustavo Bondoni  –  Back In The Fold
Kody Boye  –  DJ Skippy Says Life Goes On

The only writers whose names I’m familiar with are Gustavo Bondoni and Camille Alexa, so I’ll be very interested to read all the other stories in the anthology.

On a very selfish note, it ends a dry spell that runs back to the start of the year. 

More details to follow at a later date.

• May 17th, 2010 • Posted in General • Comments: 1

2009 Nebula Awards

Together with (probably) the rest of the blogosphere I’ve posted the 2009 Nebula Award award winners over at Suite101, along with a few stats and thoughts.

I hadn’t realized that it had been quite so long (23 days) between posts, but with all but one of my assignments now delivered, normal service should be resumed shortly.

• May 16th, 2010 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

Lectures

I thought I ought to start getting back toward at least a semi-regular blog.  Even though this morning’s lie-in to a decadent 7.30, plus (food) shopping and fitting the new TV rather rather blew that out of the water, I’m determined to say a few words about yesterday, which was hectic and hinged around two very different experiences of lectures.

The day was terrific but exhausting; Ashley Pharoah gave the 9am script lecture, then I spent the day with friends before heading back to uni to give the 5pm guest lecture with Gareth L Powell.

In the morning Pharoah talked about the bizaare genesis of Life on Mars, the rare pleasure of actually ending a series ( Spin-off Ashes to Ashes finishes on the 21st) rather than handing it over to someone else, as Russell T Davies did with Doctor Who, or just having it axed by the network.  He also talked about his agent, and the fact that scripwriters cost their agencies an average of £10,000 per client. I’m sure that that’s less for literary agencies, and perhaps comes down the more clients an agency has, although conversely, the less they can do for an individual client, but it’s an interesting insight into the pressures on an agent. That’s something that most writers rarely think about.

Co-hosting the 5pm lecture with Gareth was a very, very different experience.  

In actual terms there were only about 30 people there (Gareth estimated 20 to 30, I thought 30 to 40, so let’s go with the middle figure) but the shape of the auditorium, which rises away from one makes even that low number pretty formidable. I suspect that not all of the audience were SF fans, since attendance is theoretically mandatory — though it was the end of the academic year — so I wanted to give them a flavour of proper SF. Gareth went for a lighter approach, and read a short story which went down well, while I read an extract from Winter Song which is perhaps -with hindsight- a little tech heavy, although perfect for a con. There’s a moral there; think about the nature of your audience. But it showed them just how diverse SF is. 

Gareth gave them some very tips on writing, which you can read about here, while I talked a little about a typical day, and both of us fielded the ‘where did that story come from?’ which is still a good question to ask.

The whole experience  was pretty draining, and offered an insight how it feels to be a lecturer. Some of the questions were tough ones to answer on the hoof, and there were several occasions when I wished afterwards that I’d just had a few more seconds to think before answering — but I felt that I had to keep one eye on the time.

It would be profoundly interesting to go back in a year’s time and repeat the experience, to see whether the experience feels any less overwhelming, and whether any of the students have gotten into SF and/or fantasy.

• May 14th, 2010 • Posted in General • Comments: 0

Interzone Poll Result

I’m delighted to report that my short story ‘The Killing Streets’ finished a respectable joint 9th in the Interzone poll, out of  32 stories.

Cogratulations to Jason Sanford, whose ‘Sublimation Angels’ narrowly beat Eugie Foster’s ‘Sinner, Baker, Fabulist, etc.’

And thanks to everyone who voted for me.

• May 9th, 2010 • Posted in General • Comments: 0