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Quantum of Solace (Mark's take) 01/12/2008. Picking up just after where the Casino Royale movie left off, James Bond is involved in trying to find the people behind the death of his beloved Vesper. This is a decent spy thriller on an adult level, says our Mark. The tone is downbeat, but it is still one of the best in the series. Marc Forster's action scenes could be more coherent, but he is better with the dramatic material.

In tune with Close Encounters of The Third Kind 01/12/2008. For Uncle Geoff, re-watching the three versions of the film 'Close Encounters Of The Third Kind' raised some odd questions regarding first contact with an alien species visiting Earth, assuming director/writer Stephen Spielberg isn't too far off the mark with how humans would react. Logistically, an alien species would not be exactly world conquerors nor even wishing to impart their knowledge or wisdom to the primitive apes that populate this planet.

The ruckus about Pluto 01/12/2008. Mark recently got into a discussion with an older science fiction fan about Pluto. He had brought it up jokingly saying the ninth planet was now supposedly no longer a planet.

Nostalgia is always something that appears better than we thought it was 01/12/2008. Something I give some thought to occasionally is how the past can seem better than the present. Granted there is a habit of remembering only the good things not the bad from our childhood. As youngsters, when we're experiencing things the first time around we have nothing to compare it to so its no wonder we feel golden-eyed about it.

Why science fiction needs a little magic 01/12/2008. Mark's wife Evelyn has been reading the book Beyond Star Trek by Lawrence M. Krauss. Krauss is the author of The Physics of Star Trek, in which he looks at the science of Star Trek from the point of view of a physicist. He is not just a physicist...

Upcoming 2009 fantasy and science fiction book releases - part II 01/12/2008. Back in August 2008, the Fantasy Book Critic posted an article that showcased his pick of the best upcoming 2009 book releases. That spotlight really only scratched the surface of what 2009 had to offer though, so now he is back with Part Two, which is a little bigger, and hopefully, better. So enjoy, and please note that all release dates are subject to change and that any covers depicted are not necessarily the final version. 
Upcoming 2009 fantasy and science fiction book releases - part III 01/12/2008. And here's the 3rd and final part of The Fantasy Book Critic's look at the best upcoming 2009 book releases for the scifi and fantasy genre. There's a few SFF novels here that will be on our reading list for next year, that's for sure. 
Gareth L Powell interviewed 01/11/2008. Science fiction and fantasy author Gareth L Powell is interviewed by Gareth D Jones. He talks about his novel Silversands and writing works of short fiction for the likes of UK SFF magazine Interzone.

Seeing Apparitions 01/11/2008. Apparitions is a new BBC fantasy horror drama that looks at priests fighting possession and satanic conspiracy. All out war between good and evil is imminent and it's time to choose sides. British actor Martin Shaw stars as Father Jacob, a Roman Catholic priest who is working to promote candidates for sainthood but is drawn against his will into the world of exorcism. The idea for the series came from Martin as he had long wanted to play an exorcist and it was subsequently picked up by ace SFF writer Joe Ahearne - Ultraviolet, Doctor Who etc. SFcrowsnest looks behind the scenes at Apparitions and interviews Martin Shaw, who is always very Professional(s), as well as others from the cast.

Ghost Town: Mark's take 01/11/2008. A dentist who died for seven minutes on the operating table finds that he now can see dead people. Half of Manhattan has favours they want of him and making matters worse, it is the dead half. Ricky Gervais, popular star of BBC TV's The Office, plays the man who doesn't like living people and now has also to deal with the dead. He is asked by a dead husband to break up his wife's relationship with a new fiancée. The first half has some very good writing, says our Mark, but the film loses its centre and wanders in its second half.

Hallo-Teen 01/11/2008. A really short story of Halloween by: GF Willmetts.

We are Wizards: Mark's take 01/11/2008. The growing phenomenon of fandom of the Harry Potter books and films is examined in several of its manifestations in this documentary, says Mark. From four-year-old Wizard Rock punk rock stars to the Warner Brothers battle to close down the web sites of fans of their own films director Josh Koury looks at the multiple threads of the Potter fandom movement. He goes back and forth among the threads, but he could have used a few more threads and his camera was not always on the most interesting material. 
Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they aren't out to get you 01/11/2008. As you might have noticed in the past couple months of reviews, Uncle Geoff has been looking at the second 'Invasion Of The Bodysnatchers' film and, more recently, the first season of 'The Invaders' 1960s TV series - anyone else having problems getting their DVD player playing this?

Skipped in science fiction 01/11/2008. Last month, says the ex-editor of the Science Fiction Book Club, Andrew Wheeler, it seemed like the whole science fiction and fantasy field was obsessed with skipping. Greg Frost was skipped by Borders. Toby Buckell was skipped by Borders. Pat Cadigan was outraged. Gwenda Bond was more thoughtful. Many other people examined their liberal guilt about buying from a chain store, and were vaguely uncomfortable about the whole thing.

Inside the Blogosphere: Science fiction and fantasy's bedroom antics 01/11/2008. In science fiction and fantasy, should sex be included in the narrative or not? Should there be different standards for its inclusion in young adult or adult literature? John Ottinger throws the thorny question to a panel of leading scifi bloggers. What should those standards be? What are your personal standards and why?

Sarah Jane Adventures returns for second series 01/10/2008. Sarah Jane, Doctor Who's former companion returns to the TV screens in BBC Children's drama adventure series produced by Russell T Davies.

Godzilla after Cloverfield 01/10/2008. Mark R. Leeper was on a panel at Denvention in which the topic of giant monster movies was discussed. It got him thinking about them and how the film Cloverfield will affect them. For most of his life Godzilla has been a cultural icon. Godzilla is today one of the most recognisable fictional characters in the world, perhaps.

The Man From Earth: Mark's take 01/10/2008. Thoughtful and thought provoking, this is a science fiction film with plenty going for it but no special effects. It is really just people sitting and talking. Yet it is full of ideas that will with stick the viewer long after the film is over. The Man From Earth very probably will be one of the best science fiction films of this decade. A group of college professors and friends discuss the history of mankind and find out what they have right and what they have wrong from someone who knows.

The Hands Of Orlac (1924): Mark's take 01/10/2008. One of the nearly forgotten films of the German (actually in this case Austrian) Expressionist period is the Conrad Veidt version of The Hands Of Orlac. This is a seminal horror melodrama about a pianist whose hands are destroyed in a train crash and are replaced by hands taken from an executed murderer. The hands come to have a life of their own. This film was remade as the until- recently also rare Mad Love with Colin Clive as Orlac and with one of Peter Lorre's juiciest roles.

Sword and Sandal Films 01/10/2008. Our Mark asks whatever happened to old Steve Reeves movies?

Media Tie-ins: A Little More 01/10/2008. A lot more discussion have been going on regarding media tie-ins, making SM Duke realise how big an issue this really is in the genre world. Lou Anders wrote a fascinating post and in it he quoted someone else who likened the bias in genre fiction against media tie-ins to the bias of non-genre folks against genre.

Jeff Carlson interviewed: A plague on both your houses 01/10/2008. John Ottinger chats with science fiction author Jeff Carlson about his Plague trilogy, a series of scifi novels concerning a nanotechnology-based plague driving humanity to the edge of existence - and a very high one at that: mankind retreats to the tops of mountains to survive.

Meeting the Marauder: an interview with Casper Van Dien - Starship Troopers 3: Marauder 01/10/2008. Casper Van Dien, star of Starship Troopers 3: Marauder, chats about why his Johnny Rico has failed to be promoted in the military, Ed Neumier's directorial debut, Casper's role in Mask Of The Ninja, and kicking some bug butt in fighting-mean power armour.

Mapping science fiction and fantasy 01/10/2008. Is the map the territory? This issue, John Ottinger asks a panel of SFF bloggers to discuss their opinions on the use of genre maps in science fiction and fantasy novels. Is cartography only for directionally-challenged readers, and do they ever add to a novel, or simply dumb it down? 
An Interview with Joely Sue Burkhart 01/10/2008. Conducted by Kelly Jensen. Author of four books, Joely Sue Burkhart is quite the reader herself, her tastes ranging from mythology to romance. She lives with her husband and three children in Missouri. By day, she's a computer programmer with a Masters of Science degree in Mathematics. By night, she conjures tales of romantic fantasy.

Nanny State 01/10/2008. A Psi-Kicks story by: GF Willmetts. Mary Travers hazel eyes flashed open, sparkling and full of life. There was also a sudden flash of anger mixed with sadness immediately followed by the sensation of solution. So many emotions but only one decision. The right one in every way.

There is always a way to find money to spend 01/10/2008. If anything, Geoff thinks that we in the Science Fiction community have a greater awareness than we are credited with. Not that he necessarily wants to be gloomy, more from the point of view of some positive aspects that puts us in a better light.

The wizardry of Merlin 01/09/2008. Merlin is a new thirteen part fantasy drama series on BBC One that aims to update the tale of the infamous sorcerer of Arthurian legend for a family audience. The mythical city of Camelot, in a time before history began. A fantastical realm of legendary beasts and mysterious peoples. A dangerous world in which the ruthless tyrant, Uther Pendragon, has banned magic. When Merlin, a young man gifted with extraordinary magical powers, arrives in the kingdom, he quickly makes enemies, including the heir to Uther's crown, the headstrong Prince Arthur. They aim to do for fantasy what Smallville did for Superman.

The Merlin interviews 01/09/2008. SFcrowsnest looks at the actors who appear in the new Merlin TV series, including John Hurt who plays a dragon (little-known fact: he also did the voice work for Watership Down), and Buffy the Vampire Slayer's own Anthony Head who plays evil-type Uther Pendragon.

Meet the Bloodheir: Brian Ruckley interviewed 01/09/2008. Brian Ruckley talks to our Aidan Moher about his fantasy novels Bloodheir and Winterbirth, about how he came to the internet late but has now fully embraced it, and his involvement in the publishing process of his books.

The best science fiction and fantasy novels of 2009: Part One 01/09/2008. Robert Thompson, aka The Fantasy Book Critic, brings SFcrowsnest a round-up of his pick of the best up-coming fantasy and science fiction novels for 2009. Part two is promised soon as soon as more catalogue details are sent in to him. Get to it, Rob.

B-Day 01/09/2008. A short story by: GF Willmetts. In the future you have to use your loaf. In fact, the kinder people in the population might just invite you to one of their bread parties...

Humans beware! 01/09/2008. A species' survival really depends on two things. The speed of propagation and making a niche in the ecology. Sometimes they can both work together, especially if you can evict or even eat your competitors. Saying that, creatures that prey on you aren't that big a problem cos its possible for a species to evade and propagate wildly to out-live the deadliest carnivore.

WALL-E - Mark's take 02/08/2008. Pixar Animation is known for making good kids' films that even adults can enjoy. But now they really have crossed over the line to make an adult science fiction film that even kids can enjoy, says our Mark. WALL-E is a light fun scifi comedy set against a very grim background.

Hellboy II: The Golden Army - Mark's take 02/08/2008. Guillermo del Toro makes great horror films like Cronos and Pan's Labyrinth, says Mark. His graphic novel films are just not his best work. Hellboy II's visual images are spectacular and the film is full of fights and action, but there is only a bit of plot and that involves an epic fantasy premise that would have taken multiple films to do well. The characters are flat and the film has no centre. This is a film to watch, but there is not much to think about. The conclusion holds no surprises.

Journey To The Center Of The Earth 3D: Mark's take 02/08/2008. Fun as a thrill ride, says Mark, but surprisingly poor as film, this is a story of three modern reluctant explorers who find out that the center of the Earth is just as Jules Verne described it with a lot of fast theme-park-like rides. It has even less logic than Verne gave it. Rent the 1959 version.

The Dark Knight (Mark's take) 02/08/2008. In a year in which one film after another is based on comic books this, says Mark, is a super-hero film whose depth is like no other. It plays with the whole philosophy of the superhero and the whole nature of superhero battles. It manages to bring together an action film and a thought piece.

Doctor Wow! 02/08/2008. An appraisal of the fourth season of Doctor Who by GF Willmetts. How, asks Geoff, to write a review of season four of Doctor Who without spoiling it for everyone who hasn't seen it across the world?

Robots and Slaves 02/08/2008. Our science fiction reading group is discussing a shorter work this month, says Mark. It is Jack Williamson's novelette With Folded Hands, which appeared first in Astounding Stories in 1947. In the story a man who sells in mechanicals - basically robots - finds his business dying when new superior robots come along to compete. The new robots, streamlined black humanoids - are in every way superior to the robots he had been selling. But the new robots have more than superior technology; they have an ideology.

Bugbears Of The Grammatical Kind 02/08/2008. We all have bugbears, says Uncle Geoff. Things that crawl under your skin and nag at you to say something when something is clearly wrong. They can range from simple to complex things and you often wonder why they don't bother other people or if they do why aren't there more complaints. One of his tends to be grammar and punctuation, an occupational hazard mostly because I deal with it all the time.

Rolling some thunder with John Varley 02/08/2008. SFF author John Varley talks to Shaun Duke about how writing science fiction is all he knows how to do, why the core of SF is concepts that you get by reading in science and other SF stories, and how all John's ideas just come out of the blue.

Cheap pleasures and cheaper thrills... and Jane Austen 02/08/2008. Science fiction in particular, says SF author L.E. Modesitt, has tended to mix a combination of elements - a sense of transition from where we've been as a society, a commentary on the present, and an extrapolation depicting one of any number of possible futures. Given the current popularity and market place domination of the F&SF genres by fantasy, it's often hard, especially for new readers, to realize that for almost a century, science fiction was certainly far more prevalent and dominant than fantasy.

A PostScripts with Pete Crowther 02/08/2008. SFcrowsnest book reviewer Gareth D Jones sits down with editor Pete Crowther and chats about his genre magazine, PostScripts, about why Pete looks for writers and stories that can create a sense of wonder and awe, and why the science fiction and fantasy scene needs more magazines and not fewer.

Geek Confidential with Rick Klaw 02/08/2008. Author Rick Klaw talks to Matt Staggs about why geek isn't a dirty word and there is nothing wrong with it, his novel Geek Confidential: Echoes from the 21st Century, and why, for years, Rick refused to discuss his grandfather with anyone.

Warrior and Witch: Marie Brennan interviewed 02/08/2008. Fantasy writer Marie Brennan talks to the Fantasy Book Critic about her Warrior/Witch duology, writing a historical fantasy novel set in the Elizabethan Age, the joys of faerie fiction, and why she's tinkering with some YA experiments.

Avoiding real and fantasy taxes 02/08/2008. While I may not be the only writer to do so, I'm certainly one of the very few to present the taxation problem from the viewpoint of a ruler in a fantasy novel. For those interested, the character is Creslin, in The Towers of the Sunset. The entire issue of taxation, both in fantasy worlds and in real worlds, seems to be stereotyped in terms of "taxes are bad for the poor and too low for the rich."

The Stross Formula 02/08/2008. Another in Jonathan McCalmont's series of genre and mainstream criticism essays. This piece began as a review of Saturn’s Children (2008), but as I began to write, I came to realise that many of the things I did not like about the book were not flaws in the individual text but actual patterns, present in many of Stross’ works that have started to grate upon me due to their repetition. Therefore, rather than simply write a review and claim that Saturn’s Children feels overly familiar, I thought it better to write about what I think is an increasingly formulaic writing style that has come not only to characterise Charlie Stross’ work, but also to confine it within a state of arrested development.

The Incredible Hulk (Mark's take) 01/07/2008. The Army created but cannot control Bruce Banner, the Hulk. Banner's anger has the power to turn him into a bouncing ten-foot monster as hard as rock. Edward Norton (who plays Banner) is one of the finest actors of his generation. This, believes Mark, may not be the best film for him, but he is an asset to the film. The Incredible Hulk is a darker and grimmer superhero film with a more tragic hero than we have seen of late from the Marvel films.

In memory of Stan Winston (1946-2008) 01/07/2008. Stan Winston brought Visual Imagination to the Screen. Mark's original article for this week, the fourth part of series of four, had to be postponed a week so that Mark can note the following milestone in the field of artistic expression of fantasy and science fiction.

Fantasy and science fiction writers: popularity and influence 01/07/2008. Literary critics, says SF author L.E. Modesitt, like to write about the importance of an author and his/her work, but many of them seldom put it quite that way. They write about themes and styles and relationships and relevance, but, most of the time, when they write about an author, they're only guessing as to whether an author will really have a lasting influence over readers and culture and whether anything written by that author will resonate or last beyond the author's lifespan.

A little more visceral: Jacqueline Carey interviewed 01/07/2008. Rob - aka The Fantasy Book Critic - reviews Jacqueline Carey's novel Kushiel's Mercy, then gets Jacqueline in the interview chair to chat about her epic fantasy writing, going to China to research her latest tome, Naamah's Blessing, and her love of the sheer escapism and the sense of wonder fantasy evokes.

All Cannes-ed out 01/07/2008. SF author Philip Palmer, creator of such great novels as Debatable Space, reports about what it's like to be a shy(ish) science fiction writer at the Cannes Film Festival. True to the code of the geek, he was surrounded by glamour and beautiful women and gorgeous men and beautiful Mediterranean skies ... but he sat and read SFF novels instead.

Emperor of the Malazan: Steven Erikson interviewed 01/07/2008. Fantasy author Steven Erikson gamely sits down with the Fantasy Book Critic to discuss his works, including Tales of the Malazan Book of the Fallen and Reaper's Gale, why the latter featured more humour and tragedy than any other book in the series so far, and why his ninth novel will be a cliffhanger.

Science fiction, literature, and the haters 01/07/2008. Jake Seliger asks why so little science fiction rises to the standards of literary fiction. Most novels expend all their ideas at once, and to keep going would be like wearing a shirt that fades from too many washes. Even in science fiction, very few if any series maintain their momentum over time.

Decadent urbanism: Jay Lake interviewed 01/07/2008. Rob, aka The Fantasy Book Critic, gets his teeth into SFF author's Jay Lake's Mainspring, while Jay sits down in the interviewee's chair to discuss the lateralisation of the Renaissance idea of God the watchmaker, how his childhood was spent in Southeast Asia and West Africa, and steampunk.

Keeping between the hedges: Paul Kearney interviewed 01/07/2008. Fantasy author Paul Kearney talks with Aidan Moher about the need to write, his shocking breakup with publisher Bantam, the joy of working with Solaris, why writers like Alan Garner knock Philip Pullman into a cocked hat, and his love of a good fantasy map at the start of a novel.

The unblemished novellist: Conrad Williams interviewed 01/07/2008. Our Rob talks with horror and fantasy author Conrad Williams about his short stories, writing what occurs to him, coping with self-confidence problems, and getting Virgin Books to publish his novel The Unblemished as a mass market paperback.

Running with the Dogs: Nancy Kress interviewed 01/07/2008. Science fiction author Nancy Kress is interviewed by fellow SF writer Mike Brotherton about why she is fascinated by the way viruses and bacteria can mutate, loving the works of Ursula LeGuin, and waking up early and usually spending the whole morning writing.

It rains when it shines 01/07/2008. In this month's editorial, Uncle Geoff asks have you ever noticed how your perception of the world is determined by the condition of the weather? After all, we are very much weather dependent for mood swings and perception on what we see and feel around us to the world even before the rest of the universe hits us.

Mindscanned: an interview with Robert J. Sawyer 01/07/2008. Our glorious editor GF Willmetts sits down with Canadian science fiction author Robert J. Sawyer to chat about whether aliens visiting Earth are likely to be friendly or aggressive, dropping pop-cultural references into his books, why Rob's turning down offers to write short fiction for $1.25 a word, and why what really attracts people to scifi is the need to be amazed.

Algis Budrys (1931-2008): a remembrance by GF Willmetts 01/07/2008. Algirdas Jonas Budrys, the Prussian-born science fiction author more commonly known as Algis Budrys was a rare talent and died on 9th June 2008. Very little of his material was released in the UK and the odd books of his that our Geoff has in his collection ended up being lucky finds.

Not With A Bang 01/06/2008. Short fiction from the pen of GF Willmetts. The perils of FTL space flight prove just a little more dangerous than anyone had predicted...

All I ask is...a...little...cooperation!!! 01/06/2008. With the disasters in Burma and China compounded by the regimes reluctance for international help in times of crisis, it's sad, says Geoff, to report paranoia and mistrust still survives in this century. Then again, as with the case of Burma, as the country rarely enters the news, outside of some of the charity organisations, how many of you knew about its political regime until recently?

Sound and fury, signifying ...? 01/06/2008. When it comes to the manners and quality of debate in science fiction fandom, SFF author Richard K Morgan has a question that won't go away, that must just, indeed be asked. Just what the hell is wrong with us? Yes, it's time for When Fans Attack II!

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (Mark's take) 01/06/2008. Indiana Jones is back, says Mark, and looking for the secrets of a lost civilization in Central or South America (and the script seems not sure what the difference is). This film is a compendium of geographic misinformation as well as solid collection of action sequences. Rather than being an adventure centered on religious folklore, this time Indy is involved with aliens and New Age ideas. As expected the thrills just keep coming, but like its hero the action is getting a little old and little stiff.

Godspeaker: An interview with Karen Miller 01/06/2008. Fantasy author Karen Miller talks about why the writing style in her novel Empress is different from her other work, how the research for her world involved looking at ancient cultures such as the Hittites, Sumer, Mesopotamia, Persia, Babylon and Sparta, and why she entwined her magic system so closely with religion.

Iron Man (Mark's take) 01/06/2008. A weapons manufacturer decides that the making of weapons is immoral, so turns himself into a weapon to combat bad weapons users. If you can get past the irony (or hypocrisy) of the central concept, says Mark, Jon Favreau's adaptation of the Marvel Comic is reasonably entertaining and uses its digital effects energetically.

Hidden Reality: Michelle Sagara West interviewed 01/06/2008. Fantasy author Michelle Sagara West talks with John about her latest novel, The Hidden City, a prequel to the other novels she has written set in the same world, writing reviews for The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, and her other life as a bookseller. Wow, that's a lot to pack in.

Chronicles of an Exorcism (Mark's take) 01/06/2008. Chronicles Of An Exorcism, discovers Mark, is a low-budget, direct-to-DVD, pseudo-documentary horror thriller. The title tells most of the story; the film shows an exorcism. Not surprisingly the style is much influenced by The Exorcist but is done in a crude Blair Witch Project filming style. The roughness of the filming style works for the film, but cut corners undermine the effort frequently.

Greg Keyes interviewed 01/06/2008. Fantasy author Greg Keyes chats with Rob about his Kingdoms of Thorn & Bone series, why he deviated from his original outline for the books, and the fun he takes in twisting fantasy tropes.

A cold look at The Cold Equations 01/06/2008. One of the best-remembered and often-discussed science fiction stories, says Mark, is The Cold Equations by Tom Godwin from the August, 1954 issue of Astounding Stories. In itself it is a poignant little short story that simply presents a lamentable and unromantic fact.

Human, understand thyself: Scott Mackay interviewed 01/06/2008. Canadian speculative fiction author Scott Mackay chats with John about Ihis new book, Omega Sol, where he explores a basic human theme, that of belief in a higher power, and why he takes it one science fictional step further and postulates a hyperdimensional part of the universe that in many respects operates on a spiritual plane.

The Faerie Queene: Marie Brennan interviewed 31/05/2008. Fantasy author Marie Brennan chats with Chris about her new novel Midnight Never Come from Orbit, writing about the faerie court of London, and how she gets her fodder from archaeology, anthropology, and folklore.

Sword, Sorcery, and Small White Dogs: An Interview with Rosemary Jones 01/05/2008. Rosemary Jones is the author of the Forgotten Realms novel Crypt of the Moaning Diamond as well as several short stories. she answered a few of John's questions about shared world fiction, humor in fantasy, and children's books.

Writers and societal illusions 01/05/2008. Last week, my editor, his assistant, and I were discussing some elements of a book I'd turned in. I use the word discussing in very loose terms. My editor was having a hard time with the situation in the book. I won't go into the specifics here, because some of you might read the book, but both my editor and I did agree on the facts, on the credibility of the situation, and the culture. 
Blood is Deeper than Water: An Interview with Pamela Freeman 01/05/2008. Pamela Freeman is a noted Australian author of children's fiction. Her first adult novel, Blood Ties, is set for release in April 2008, with the sequel, Deep Water, in September or October of the same year. The final book in The Castings Trilogy, Full Circle, does not yet have a release date. As well as being a skilled epic fantasy writer, she is a mom, wife, and educator. She is also fastest responder our John has ever interviewed.

Thoughts on writing success 01/05/2008. Jim Baen and Eric Flint, as well as other fiction writers and editors, have both made statements to the effect that every writer and publisher is competing for a reader's "beer and movie money." While not always literally true, their underlying point is all too accurate. A successful fiction writer has to leave his or her readers feeling that their time and funds were well-spent.

From the Polity to Crete: Neal Asher interviewed 01/05/2008. Neal Asher chats to our Robert Thompson about his Polity universe, his new novel, Line War, writing a follow-up novel to The Voyage of the Sable Keech, and why Neal's now moved - at least part of the year - to Crete.

Meeting Melko 01/05/2008. Paul Melko, author of a book of short stories, Ten Sigmas, chats to SM Duke about how he had to use the short form to explore a variety of different technological avenues (including one about superheroes) from the dangers of fiddling with the past to the dangers of traversing between universes/dimensions. He also talks about why his characters have to make bad decisions.

The SF Future: More of the same - except better or worse? 01/05/2008. Recently, in his column about Arthur C. Clarke in the New York Times, Dave Iztkoff explored whether present and future writers would be as successful as Clarke had been in envisioning future technologies. Over the years, various writers and academics have attempted to quantify in a rough fashion just how accurate SF has been in predicting the future.

Flying with iron angels: Alan Campbell interviewed 01/05/2008. Alan Campbell talks to Robert Thompson about his Deepgate Codex books. A former designer and programmer of the video game series Grand Theft Auto, Alan made his writing debut in 2006 with the fantasy novel Scar Night.

Modest revision 01/05/2008. Mark R. Leeper is getting up a petition to rearrange the titles of Jules Verne's best-known (in other words filmed) novels. Now what do he mean by that?

TV Heaven - Battlestar Galactica 01/05/2008. What with fantasy author Joe Abercrombie's tornado of excitement created by his own releases, reviews, signings, and convention attendances in March, and the tidal wave of resulting reviews, he's realised that he's utterly neglected his important duties as far as slagging off other people's hard work goes. Time to put that right...

Interview with Kate Elliott 01/05/2008. Fantasy novellist Kate Elliott - aka Alis A. Rasmussen - author of Shadow Gate, chats to our Rob about writing lurid adventure fiction, and her ideas on HBO-style characterization and detail with a big canvas and complex narrative.

Meet the Empress: an interview with Karen Miller... 01/05/2008. Author Karen Miller yacks with Chris H. about the joys of writing the first novel in her new Godspeaker trilogy, why the magic system in Godspeaker is quite different to her Kingmaker/Kingbreaker duology, and how she likes to cocoon herself in a kind of warm, dark bubble so the outside world doesn't intrude on her writing.

The theoretical man: Michael Swanwick interviewed 01/05/2008. SFF author Michael Swanwick talks to Aidan about taking conventions of the genre and spinning them on their head, his novel The Dragons of Babel, why four hundred pages appears to be his natural length, and Darger and Surplus, - his post-Utopian con men.

One heckuva turn: Lois McMaster Bujold interviewed 01/05/2008. Fantasy comes in all forms, notes Robert Thompson. Epic fantasy. Dark fantasy. Contemporary fantasy. Historical fantasy. Erotic fantasy. Then there’s The Sharing Knife series by award-winning author Lois McMaster Bujold (The Vorkosigan Saga, The Spirit Ring, the Chalion novels) which is an altogether different kind of fantasy…

They're steaming: Ann and Jeff Vandermeer interviewed 01/05/2008. Rod Lott of the excellent Bookgasm blog dons his brass goggles for a chat with Jeff and Ann Vandermeer about their latest book, Steampunk. Bring on the airships and Captain Nemo.

Torchwood: Season Two 01/05/2008. An appraisal of Torchwood by: GF Willmetts.

Bionic Not 01/05/2008. An appraisal of the Bionic Woman by GF Willmetts.

What constitutes freedom? 01/05/2008. A common theme used in Science Fiction is that of the oppressed fighting against tyranny often on a wider scale than a single country. Most SF tends to present the picture in black and white than shades of grey. At ground level in the 'Star Wars' films, the planets in the Empire don't seem that badly off, providing you don't annoy the stormtroopers or their nice Emperor or his henchman.

Arthur C. Clarke (1918-2008) a remembrance by GF Willmetts 01/04/2008. With the death of Arthur C. Clarke, we've lost another of the original Grand Masters of Science Fiction. A former denizen of my home county Somerset in Great Britain, Arthur C. Clarke made his mark on the world that I doubt if few Science Fiction authors will do so under similar conditions again. He'll be sorely missed.

Free ebooks, three points, and a whole lot of rambling 01/04/2008. Author Tobias Buckell looks at the curious matter of science fiction and fantasy authors giving their novels away as free e-books, then snaffling the increased sales of their print titles. We're not at the Napster stage yet, it seems, when it comes to works of fiction.

Standing under the Tower of Shadows 01/04/2008. Fantasy author Drew Bowling talks to our Aidan about how a 21 year old college student found himself with a publishing deal with one of the biggest publishers of fantasy novels on the planet, having his friends poke fun at him for writing about castles and dragons, and having fun playing with the English language.

My Arthur C. Clarke memory 01/04/2008. There are probably few readers of this notice who do not know that Sir Arthur C. Clarke died in Sri Lanka recently, says Mark. He has seen Heinlein die and Asimov die. Clarke was the last of the three writers he grew up thinking of as the giants. But he felt he had a special connection to Clarke.

American Zombie: Mark's take 01/04/2008. This film is badly paced, but has a rewarding last half-hour if the viewer can wait it out. Grace Lee looks at the lives of zombies living in the Los Angeles area, examining them like any minority community. The film satirizes well-intentioned socially conscious documentaries, examining how zombies have been (or failed to be) integrated into the general population.

Science fiction as a literature of discontent 01/04/2008. Back when I was in college at the University of Massachusetts I was a member of the science fiction club. At the same time the school had a university-wide art magazine called Spectrum, paid for as part of our tuition. It had poetry and fiction and experimental art. One day an issue came out and it had a piece of art with the title A Meeting of the Science Fiction Club. It was just a picture of some bizarre-looking people. I doubt that the artist had ever been to the real club. He was just trying his style at drawing people who looked just a little off kilter.

By Any Other Name 01/04/2008. (Very) short fiction from the pen of author Ray Tabler. The Hestolian captain was just entering the compartment when his first contact specialist burst in from the tunnel connecting the two ships... 
What, other than my omnipotence, scares you about me? 01/04/2008. In recent months Uncle Geoff has been asked a couple times the rather odd question as to who he actually writes for here at SFCrowsnest? Well, he doesn't know your name and the only common denominator he does know is you're sitting facing a computer monitor and have a passion for science fiction and fantasy.

UK sci-fi: 2008 Arthur C. Clarke Award nominees announced 10/03/2008. Science fiction authors Matthew de Abaitua, Stephen Baxter, Sarah Hall, Steven Hall, Ken MacLeod and Richard Morgan are the six authors shortlisted for the Arthur C. Clarke Award 2008, the UK's main prize for science fiction literature.

Arthur C. Clarke Award - Long-list Figures 2008 10/03/2008. Who made the cut for this year's Arthur C. Clarke Award, who was submitted (and who was submitted and excused their own work), plus lots of sports facts for scifi, fantasy and science fiction fans everywhere.

Indistinguishable from Magic: Tom Hunter, Arthur C. Clarke Awards, interviewed 10/03/2008. On the day of the shortlist announcement for the 2008 Arthur C. Clarke Award, SF Crowsnest's own Jessica talks to award administrator Tom Hunter about how the Clarke awards are perceived by readers and science fiction fans, being compared to the Man Booker Prize, and promoting UK literary science fiction.

Arthur C Clarke Award short profiles: Matthew de Abaitua 10/03/2008. Snowbooks first published Matthew de Abaitua's debut novel The Red Men in October 2007.

Arthur C Clarke Award short profiles: Stephen Baxter 10/03/2008. Coming out of the Interzone stable of authors, Stephen Baxter's first published science fiction novel all the way back in 1991 was Raft. The same year SFcrowsnest started online on AppleWorld, in fact.

Arthur C Clarke Award short profiles: Sarah Hall 10/03/2008. Sarah's Arthur C Clarke award-nominated novel, The Carhullan Army, features near-future nastiness with an overpopulated UK broken on the back of runaway climate change, living on the breadline as a Cuban-style client state of the USA - fed wheat and oil by a fascist US fundamentalist Christian junta.

Arthur C Clarke Award short profiles: Steven Hall 10/03/2008. The Raw Shark Texts is Steven Hall's first work and was published in the UK, US, Canada and Australia.

Arthur C Clarke Award short profiles: Ken MacLeod 10/03/2008. Ken MacLeod is a Scottish science fiction writer with strong socialist leanings based near Edinburgh - and he is a good friend with fellow SF jock Iain M Banks.

Arthur C Clarke Award short profiles: Richard Morgan 10/03/2008. In 2002 Morgan's published his first book Altered Carbon, a cyberpunkish tale with war hero PI Takeshi Kovacs swapping his mind through various clone bodies. The movie rights for Altered Carbon were sold for $1 million big ones to Joel Silver, allowing Morgan to give up his English-teaching day job. 
Influences, ideas, and A Game of Thrones 01/03/2008. Fantasy author Joe Abercrombie writes about the development of his work, playing RPGs, a diet of reading the Grey Mouser and Moorcock, and his dark yearnings for all that lies on the grittier side of epic fantasy.

King of the Croppers: Kevin J. Anderson 01/03/2008. SFF author Kevin J. Anderson talks to Robert Thompson (aka the Fantasy Book Critic) on why his Saga of Seven Suns series sums up sums up everything he loves about the science fiction genre, continuing the Dune franchise with Brian Herbert, authoring The Last Days of Krypton, and the success of his Star Wars tie-novels.

Redhound 01/03/2008. A Psi-Kicks story by GF Willmetts. Another piece of Psi-Kicking short fiction from Uncle Geoff in the style of all those great 1960s TV series such as The Avengers, The Challengers, The Prisoner et al.

From his pen comes thunder: Felix Gilman interviewed 01/03/2008. Genre author Felix Gilman chats about his debut novel Thunderer, why getting the book sold was a close thing, and why he doesn't read a huge amount of fantasy himself.

The Spiderwick Chronicles (Mark's take) 01/03/2008. A family being torn by divorce moves into an old family house--a dark mansion miles from anywhere. It seems the surrounding area is infested with invisible creatures of Celtic faerie including an ogre who has designs on ruling the world. One by one the whole family is drawn into the battle against the invisible forces that would destroy the world. The film is an adaptation of five popular children's books by Tony DiTerlizzi and Holly Black.

A fool for world building: David Keck interviewed 01/03/2008. The fantasy author of In the Eye of the Heaven talks to Robert Thompson about his life and works, why he can’t tell you how complex the capitalisation of silly invented clergyman’s titles gets, and juggling his job as a middle school teacher with writing.

How Sputnik changed your life 01/03/2008. Scottish science fiction novellist of some reknown, Ken Macleod, chats about the impact of the Sputnik launch - a potted version of the talk he gave at the Satellite 1 con. Oh, and he's thinking of getting a t-shirt printed to read 'Fandom is where people contradict you just to be polite'. Sounds like a slogan to live by!

The forces of Strange Fiction 01/03/2008. It's a tricky thing, all this genre and sub-genre. Luckily, we have Scottish author Hal 'Vellum' Duncan on hand to throw some light on the twisty subject. Our various genres have more in common than they have against each other. Much of that faith is founded on Hal having come up through science fiction as a fan, being transferred to fantasy as a writer, and realising as a critic (of sorts) that many of the techniques he was using were horror!

Sailing the wide fanta-sea: Robert V.S. Redick interviewed 01/03/2008. Chris Hyland, aka the Book Swede, sits down with fantasy author Robert V.S. Redick to chat about his début novel, The Chathrand Voyage. He's all at sea with this one! Six hundred sailors. One hundred Imperial marines. Sixty tarboys. Fifty passengers. Twenty languages. Eleven blood vendettas. Ten festering centuries of black magic. 429 years of global war. One enchanted ship. Three months to seal the peace or lose it forever to a madman’s conspiracy, in fact!

Why Fantasy isn’t crap, and SF isn’t better 01/03/2008. Hal Duncan’s been writing very interestingly about genre divides lately - and he’s made Al Robertson think about distinctions between Fantasy and Science Fiction, and in particular the way in which genre critics can position Fantasy writing as being innately conservative, and Science Fiction as being innately radical.

The Eye (Frank's take) 01/03/2008. The cornea-deprived caper The Eye, notes Frank, definitely sports a blurry vision in the meager horror B-movie sweepstakes. Co-directors David Moreau and Xavier Palud ("Them") oversee this flaccid fright fest that is a rudimentary remake of the twin Pang Brothers' Hong Kong blistering horror show of the same name. Although the Pangs displayed a convincing eerie atmosphere in their original nail-biter about sadistic senses, the Moreau-Palud combo merely scratches the bare surface and never revisits the mouth-watering chill factor that manifests so potently in the Asian original.

Never challenge a Goblin to a game of Rakachak: Jim C. Hines interviewed 01/03/2008. Fantasy writer Jim C. Hines - author of Goblin Quest, Goblin Hero etc - tells John about why goblin books could get awfully depressing, doing the local science fiction and fantasy conventions, and on writing a mashup of fairy tale princesses and Charlie's Angels!

The Physiognomy of Jeffrey Ford 01/03/2008. Genre writer Jeffrey Ford interviewed by our Charles on winning a World Fantasy Award, plotting nothing in advance, the value of a good editor and creating novels while battling dyslexia.

Science and Science Fiction are class-mates not rivals 01/03/2008. December might be a long time back now but allows for a different and still pertinent perspective. Yuletide in Great Britain brought its usual spate of lectures shown on TV. One for our home-market, named the Richard Dimbleby Lecture named after the father of another pair of famous TV journalists, had the speaker, scientist entrepreneur Dr. J. Craig Venter, attributing a couple things as only seen in Science Fiction as if they were never expected to happen in real life.

The Tech of Trek 01/03/2008. Blogger Pat Molloy considers the weighty matter of why the technology of Star Trek must be updated. Hmmm. Warp factor 1960s, anyone?

The Joe Himself: Joe Abercrombie interviewed 01/03/2008. Aidan interviews that rising legend in the fantasy novel field, Joe Abercrombie (himself). His book The Blade Itself has won praise from both fans and critics - but beware, fantasy fans, for he admits he will continue to try and sabotage the careers of his contemporaries. That Brian Ruckley, he's going to be Joe's bee-itch!

Fangs for the memories: Being Human 01/03/2008. Being Human is a TV tale of a regular flatshare … at least, it is if you are a vampire, a werewolf or a ghost. This new BBC Three drama stars a cast of actors – Guy Flanagan (Totally Frank), Andrea Riseborough (Margaret Thatcher: The Long Walk to Finchley) and Russell Tovey (The History Boys) – alongside Adrian Lester (Hustle). Being Human explores what it's like trying to find where you fit into the grand scheme of things when you live with an unusual affliction: like being undead, yah-ha-ha!

Ashes To Ashes 01/02/2008. It's 1981 in the UK: the year of the royal wedding, the Brixton riots, Bucks Fizz winning the Eurovision Song Contest – and the year that Gene Hunt (actor Philip Glenister) takes London's police force by storm in the fab time travelling cop drama Ashes To Ashes. The creators of the BBC's weirdest cop show talk to SFcrowsnest.com about the new series. We're on it, guv.

Philip Glenister interview 01/02/2008. Actor Philip Glenister who plays DCI Gene Hunt in the surreal time travelling cop drama Ashes To Ashes talks to SFcrowsnest.com about high-speed chases, how scum is scum wherever you are, and riding a speed boat going under Tower Bridge carrying a very big machine gun. He's the Guv!

Cast interviews: Ashes to Ashes 01/02/2008. Keeley 'Spooks' Hawes talks about her lead role in Ashes to Ashes and what it's like to be haunted by an evil-looking clown, Dean Andrews chats about his role as DS Ray Carling (he's as hard as nails), DC Chris Skelton (played by Marshall Lancaster) is now a tech geek, while Montserrat Lombard talks about her role as the new girl on the WPC block.

Phoo Action 01/02/2008. Car chases, superhero kung-fu and crime-fighting comedy collide in the warped world of Phoo Action – a new 60-minute drama special for BBC Three. Based on characters created by Jamie Hewlett (aka creator of the Gorillaz and Tank Girl) for comic strip Get The Freebies, Phoo Action is set in 2012, when London is in the grip of mutant criminals, The Freebies. Only Terry Phoo, a hapless Buddhist kung-fu cop, and unruly teenage heroine Whitey Action, the daughter of Police Chief Benjamin Benson, can save the UK. Phoo Action is directed by Euros Lyn whose credits include the episode of Doctor Who: The Girl In The Fireplace. Creator Jamie Hewlett and the cast talk to SFcrowsnest.com about what it takes to beat Britain's evil mutant villains.

Intelligence isn't the highest point of evolution merely a facet being explored. 01/02/2008. Let's talk evolution, suggests Uncle Geoff. The natural selection variety not that intelligent design malarky and how it applies to the human race.

Speculative fiction and the value of the formula 01/02/2008. In book reviewing and literary analysis the term formula or formulaic has become something of a mild pejorative. To have your novel or short story deemed formulaic is to have your novel be dismissed as not a worthwhile read, you are seen as being commercially motivated, and usually as lacking any creativity in your writing.

The science fiction event horizon 01/02/2008. Science fiction has always been about speculation, says James Wallace Harris, and some old SF writers even called it speculative fiction. Humans have always speculated about what’s possible, with what if scenarios, so even though the word science had not been invented, I believe there were science fiction writers since the dawn of time.

Weaving the colors: Jeffrey Overstreet interviewed 01/02/2008. Author Jeffrey Overstreet talks to our John about writing fantasy that is whimsical and wild, finding echoes of the great fairy tales in his works, and how he ended up marrying the woman who first recommended the novel Winter’s Tale to him.

The science in my science fiction: books versus movies 01/02/2008. Hard SF author Mike Brotherton, the author of Star Dragon, writes about the suspension of disbelief in genre books and movies and the fine art of keeping a science fiction story real. As far as film producers are concerned, minor problems - what they call refrigerator door problems - are okay.

Melanie Tem and Steve Rasnic Tem interviewed 01/02/2008. Charles Tan interviews the writing team of Melanie and Steve Rasnic Tem. They chat about writing dark fantasy/horror and magical realism, expanding their novella The Man on the Ceiling into a full novel, and looking at rewriting as a path to a better story.

F&SF fiction as an Arthouse relic? 01/02/2008. Author LE Modesitt looks at the state of US science fiction publishing as it stands today, with its ever-decreasing midlist print runs, how F&SF publishers have been devoured by large multinationals, and why the kids are more interested in taking their daily dose of SFF on a Nintendo handheld rather than a piece of a dead tree.

The Automatic Author: A. Lee Martinez interviewed 01/02/2008. Genre writer A. Lee Martinez chats with our Charles about his novel The Automatic Detective - a retro-scifi crime noir novel. ALM tells us why Edgar Rice Burroughs was one of his biggest influences, why writing visually probably comes from his comic book-reading background, and how his novel Gil's All Fright Dinner got optioned by New Line Cinema for a movie.

Procrastination, stupidity, or species suicide? 01/02/2008. An asteroid appears likely to hit the planet Mars, says author science fiction LE Modesitt. Several years ago, a large comet impacted Jupiter, and its fragments created disturbances in the Jovian atmosphere that could have encompassed much of earth. Geologists have discovered the remnants of massive craters on earth itself, most of which totally restructured the environment and the atmosphere, not to mention life itself.

Robin Hobb interviewed 01/02/2008. Fantasy author Robin Hobb talks to Robert Thomspon (aka the Fantasy Book Critic) about her new novel, Renegade's Magic, why writing a fantasy trilogy is a single task, why character building is as important as world building, and why her favourite readers are the ones that say: I trust you. Take me for a ride!

The fall of a Crystal Rain 01/02/2008. Genre author Tobias Buckell talks about his long and painful journey trying to get his science fiction novel Crystal Rain - where the alien Satrapy confine and marginalize humanity to the fringes of a galactic confederation - produced as a graphic novel.

Real-world, real-time science fiction? 01/02/2008. When retail sales levels for the United States were recently announced, says US author LE Modesitt, stock prices in the USA immediately dropped, and a number of large retailers immediately announced plans to close down "unprofitable" outlets. His initial reaction was to think that, well, if sales were down, that would be understandable. Except sales weren't down. They were up. three percent! SFF authors couldn't make this stuff up. 
Jennifer Rahn interviewed 01/02/2008. SM Duke, creator of the The World in the Satin Bag blog, talks to scifi author Jennifer Rahn about why a small press will keep you in their catalogue indefinitely, getting a huge kick out of the weirdness of Tanith Lee, her work on a companion novel to The Longevity Thesis, and why the easy type of magic doesn't seem very interesting to her.

I Am Legend (Mark's take) 01/01/2008. Richard Matheson's classic horror novel I Am Legend comes to the screen with CGI and lots of guns, most of which - says Mark - work against rather than for the story. Will Smith plays Robert Neville robbed of most of his anguish and his advancing madness. Some of the visual images are nice, but this is a story that needs to be made on a low budget to really work.

Not quite human 01/01/2008. With the release of Beowulf, says Mark, we got a chance to see how far the film industry has gotten in the realistic depiction of humans in animation. I thought it was just a little off of being realistic and they reminded me of the way humans looked in Shrek.

Sweeny Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street (Mark's take) 01/01/2008. Sweeny Razorhands. One of Broadway's best and most controversial musicals comes to the screen as a vehicle for the Tim Burton and Johnny Depp team. This version glories in the gory, says Mark. Depp's singing limitations rob the character of Sweeney of his all-important contagious savage fury. Burton shows the audience a lot that could not be shown on stage, not all of which was a good idea to show.

The Orphanage (Mark's take) 01/01/2008. Juan Antonio Bayona's Spanish-language film The Orphanage is a very intense ghost story, says Mark, expertly filmed, but the writing lets down the rest of the film. There are bits from several successful horror films, especially Poltergeist, rehashed here. Guillermo del Toro's name is shown prominently as presenter and producer, but The Orphanage is really not in his class. The film is competently made, but it just does not have enough that will not be already familiar to the viewer.

The Shadow In The North 01/01/2008. Philip Pullman and Billie Piper talk about the Sally Lockhart books and the BBC TV series based on them. In The Shadow In The North, an elderly lady loses her money on an investment, a conjuror is pursued by thugs, a clairvoyant sees a brutal murder in a forest, a glass coffin then whispers the name of the richest man in Europe. These seemingly unconnected events set Sally Lockhart on the trail of an evil far more awful than she could ever imagine – the Hopkinson Self-Regulator – a super-weapon in the hands of a Scandinavian madman Axel Bellmann.

Fantastic Women: Rachel Caine 01/01/2008. Author Rachel Caine on why speculative fiction has always been her first love, the lousy hours and stress of being a writer, and her Weather Warden series of novels. Rachel is interviewed by fantasy writer Karen Miller, author of works such as Kingmaker and Kingbreaker.

Fantastic Women: Lois McMaster Bujold (Part I) 01/01/2008. Author Lois McMaster Bujold on the universe and times of Miles Vorkosigan, her start as a writer, and how for her, making up the story and writing down the story are two separate activities. Lois is interviewed by fab fantasy writer Karen Miller.

Fantastic Women: Glenda Larke 01/01/2008. Author Glenda Larke on her exotic life, the Random Rain Quartet, reading Guy Gavriel Kay for atmosphere and story skills, and having a slap-up feed before starting work. Glenda is interviewed by Karen Miller, herself a fantasy author of works such as Kingmaker and Kingbreaker.

Bloggers of the SFFphere Part II 01/01/2008. The second part of the roundtable where Aidan Moher, the creator of A Dribble of Ink, goes ahead and gathers several his favourite bloggers, ties them up in a room, and picks their brains. SFF bloggers spend so much time putting the minds of authors under the knife that Aidan thought it would be interesting to take a look at another side of the industry that doesn’t get examined.

Science fiction: the other god that failed 01/01/2008. Science fiction, it is often plausibly argued, is a literature about technology and what it does to humans. But what if this view of the genre is wrong? What if science fiction (SF) is not really about technology at all but something else. What if SF is at its core a religious genre, a literature about the search for transcendent meaning in a post-Christian world?

I am not Legend 01/01/2008. I am Legend was a brilliant book says fantasy author Joe Abercrombie, but you really need to forget all about it if you watch the new Will Smith movie based on that novel. The studio seems intent on simplifying, schmaltzifying, and dumbing this film down more than ever.

Terry Goodkind interviewed 01/01/2008. Why the earliest memories of fantasy writer Terry Goodkind are telling himself stories, why he will sometimes spend half a day on one paragraph, the tight schedule for his last book in the Sword of Truth series, and why the fantasy elements of his books are no more important than the romance, the intrigue, the political maneuvering and the historical fiction elements.

God of the Slushpile: John Joseph Adams interviewed 01/01/2008. John Ottinger, best known for his great blog Grasping for the Wind, was fortunate enough to strike up a correspondence with John Joseph Adams slush editor with The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction (F&SF). Well known for his ability to find gems in piles of slush, Adams was recently guest editor of the Pirate Issue of Shimmer Magazine, and will be publishing his first anthology, Wastelands, with Night Shade Books in January 2008. In the following interview he discusses these two works as well as recommends some of his favorite short fiction authors.

Magic engines 01/01/2008. Blogger and owner of The Shape of Days, Jeff Harrell, is not going to mince words here: this article is nerdy. It’s incredibly nerdy. You know all those web sites out there that are really, really nerdy? With the exception of the ones about Japanese cartoons, this post is nerdier than all of them combined. Jeff looks at the magic engines of the Battlestar Galactica and finds all sorts of implausibilities.

The Wright stuff 01/01/2008. Science Fiction & Fantasy writer John C. Wright is well-known for his epic space opera trilogy, and more recently, for his fantasy adventure novels. Avi Abrams, ace blogger at Dark Roasted Blend, was curious about John's take on the state of fantastic adventure fiction today and asked him a few questions about his life, work and appearance in the original anthology of military science fiction Breach the Hull.

The SF community & black kettles 01/01/2008. Science fiction, says Uncle Geoff, is a genre to be proud to say you belong to and a measure of eccentricity to be healthy with than to be without. It doesn’t bite or scare or hurt anyone except in the content of what you watch or read and there are so many more of us today that it no longer a dirty word. Be proud.

Libertine Rush - Domino Dynamo 01/01/2008. A new Psi-Kicks story introducing Libertine Rush – the lady from Haiti with the interesting dead brother. From the pen and twisted imagination of one G.F. Willmetts.

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