Well, the reading is done, and the class starts tomorrow, which means I’ll be offline for the weekend and it’s time for a long-overdue links post.
- Abigail Nussbaum’s fascinating review-essay on With Both Feet in the Clouds: Fantasy in Hebrew Literature, edited by Hagar Yanai and Danielle Gurevitch
- A talk by William Gibson given at Book Expo America: “For the past decade or so, the only critics of science fiction I pay any attention to, all three of them, have been slyly declaring that the Future is over.”
- Laura Miller on YA dystopias, in particular The Hunger Games
- Alastair Reynolds has had an excellent stint blogging at Babel Clash, with posts on optimism (… and spaceflight, and plotting), as well as challenging reads, colonisation, and representation
- Mary Anne Mohanraj’s Wiscon Guest of Honor speech
- Graham Sleight’s talk “Excellent Foppery“, on the use of history in the fantastic (and note the shiny new website)
- Helen Oyeyemi on the Library of America Shirley Jackson collection
- John Clute’s latest Scores tackles two books by Michal Ajvaz
- Splice seems to be dividing opinion: the case for, and the case against
- Paul Kincaid on language and science fiction; and on Red Planets: Marxism and Science Fiction, with some further discussion of Marxist criticism
- Some older books considered: Capek’s The War With the Newts at The Asylum; Greenland’s Take Back Plenty at Follow the Thread; Wolfe’s The Fifth Head of Cerberus at Number 71; Vonarburg’s The Silent City at Eve’s Alexandria; and an overview of the first four volumes of Kate Elliott’s Crown of Stars series
- The first half of Lara Buckerton’s review-essay Fauxplexity, examining Jon Courtenay Grimwood’s Lucifer’s Dragon
- Some newer books considered: Steven Amsterdam’s Things We Didn’t See Coming; China Mieville’s Kraken; Joanna Kavenna’s The Birth of Love (and more positively); Matt Cheney enthuses about Nnedi Okorafor’s Who Fears Death; and Ken MacLeod really knows how to make me want to get stuck in to Francis Spufford’s Red Plenty: “It’s a bit like reading a novel by Kim Stanley Robinson, Neal Stephenson, or Ursula Le Guin – or maybe a mashup of all them”
- Some reviews of short story collections at Strange Horizons: Holly Black’s The Poison Eaters reviewed by L Timmel Duchamp, Kelly Link’s Pretty Monsters reviewed by Abigail Nussbuam, and Douglas Smith’s Chimerascope, reviewed by TS Miller
- Interviews with literary review sites: The Quarterly Conversation, The Rumpus and The Millions
- The finalists for this year’s Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award for best short fiction of 2009
The Sturgeon Award list is interesting, not least for its divergence from all the other best short SF lists around. I just checked the TOC for the Dozois, Horton and Strahan Best SF volumes, none of whom select more than 4 of the 11 stories and 5 stories are omitted by all three of these representative anthologies.
Presumably Morrow’s novella was too long , but that still leaves Lee, Pratt, Reed and Shiner uncollected. Sign of a strong year?
Nial,
Did you give permission to abooksblog.com to repost your feed without linkbacks? They’re doing it to MANY of us. I did manage to get them to remove mine AND the list of “contributors” which was essentially a list of all the blogs they were stealing from. Here’s where your blog entry is reposted. http://abooksblog.com/2010/06/10/how-to-link-safely-in-a-science-fictional-universe/
Ann: thanks for the heads-up, and no, I didn’t. I’ll look into it.