- Alas, the recording of the overly masculine panel didn’t work. I do have some notes, though I’m not sure how much sense they’ll make now, and I’ll try to get those typed up.
- Final tally of books bought: North Wind and Phoenix Cafe by Gwyneth Jones (I already have White Queen — not that I’ve read it, but my intentions are good); Breakfast With the Ones You Love by Eliot Fintushel; Memories of the Space Age by JG Ballard (because I’m under-read in Ballard, it’s a beautiful edition and a great title; read one story on the way back, though, and thought interesting the writing was somewhat uneven); Fools by Pat Cadigan; The Darkening Garden by John Clute; King of Morning, Queen of Day and Hearts, Hands and Voices by Ian McDonald; Nearly People by Conrad Williams; a replacement for my lost hardback of The Year of Our War; and back-issues of NYRSF to 2000, or thereabouts. A respectable haul, I think you’ll agree.
- I very much enjoyed the post-BSFA-Awards discussion on Sunday, largely because the three panellists didn’t agree on any of the nominated novels, which always makes things interesting. The vote itself, it turns out, was ridiculously close: Nova Swing and The Last Witchfinder were joint second by one vote.
- No full con reports seen elsewhere yet (well, I guess it’s not technically over yet, even if I’m home, but here are a few photos, plus Paul’s abbreviated update, which unaccountably fails to mention glands.
Torque Control
Notes From A Small Con 2
- The guests of honour for the 2009 Eastercon, LX, have been announced: Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Tim Powers, and Dirk Maggs (with Mary and Bill Burns as fan GoHs)
- This morning’s panel on “Is UK SF publishing overly masculine?” covered a lot of ground, featured some full and frank exchanges of views, and good contributions from panellists Liz Williams, Jo Fletcher, Graham Sleight, Gareth Lyn Powell, and Jaine Fenn, plus various audience members, in spite of thoroughly inept moderation by John Richards. I’m hoping my recording of the panel will come out ok, in which case a transcript will be forthcoming. One note: the selection of future masters mentioned in my previous post was apparently made purely on the basis of previous sales (and there was some debate within Gollancz about whether that was appropriate, given the resulting gender balance).
- A third row posse went to see Sunshine. Opinion is somewhat divided as to whether it’s deeply stupid and quite fun, or just painfully stupid. I tend towards the latter category, although it was quite pretty; this may be because all the pre-film publicity about their physicist consultant had raised my expectations, or it may just be because it starts out as an interesting Cold Equations-style story and turns into a slasher film in space.
- The hotel really is an excellent Eastercon venue. Everything is on one floor, the bar space is large and convivial, the staff are friendly and the food provision is excellent — they serve a good cooked breafast until the thoroughly civilised hour of 11am, and there are hot baps of freshly-carved pork and beef for lunch! I have a feeling it wouldn’t work if the convention was any bigger (the dealer’s room isn’t huge, for instance), but future medium-sized cons should bear it in mind as a potential venue.
BSFA Award Winners
Those were the shortlists. These are the winners:
Best Artwork
Angelbot, Fangorn (Cover of Time Pieces, ed. Ian Whates)Best Short Fiction
The Djinn’s Wife, Ian McDonald (Asimov’s Science Fiction, June)Best Novel
End of the World Blues, Jon Courtenay Grimwood (Gollancz)
Philip K. Dick Award Winner
There’s nothing up on Locus Online, but based on this post it looks like the winner of the Philip K. Dick Award is Spin Control by Chris Moriarty, with a special citation for Carnival by Elizabeth Bear.
(Shortlist; and Nicholas Whyte’s review of the shortlist.)
Notes From A Small Con
- The reviewing panel (which was me, Penny Hill, Jon Courtenay Grimwood, John Jarrold, and Paul doing a fine job of moderating), went well, I think. Lots of contribution from the audience, representing a wide range of opinions and preferences — short reviews, long reviews, spoiler-averse, spoiler-tolerant — and lots of interesting ground covered. I couldn’t summarise it, especially at 1am, but one useful concept that came up was the operation of filters at various stages of the reviews process: what gets reviewed, what the reviews editor publishes, capsule reviews serving as, essentially, notification of publication, then more detailed reviews for those who want more information. Which is to say, what makes a good review depends on who the review is written for.
- Paul Cornell will be writing for Primeval next year.
- Last year Gollancz did round-cornered masterworks; this year they’ll be doing eight “future masterworks”, and the innovation will be no titles on the cover. (Don’t know about the corners.) The included books: Evolution, Stephen Baxter; Blood Music, Greg Bear; Schild’s Ladder, Greg Egan; Fairyland, Paul McAuley; Altered Carbon, Richard Morgan; The Separation, Christopher Priest; Revelation Space, Alastair Reynolds; and Hyperion, Dan Simmons. Commence arguing now. (Personally I think it’s a good selection — particularly Evolution — except I’d have gone for Distress over Schild’s Ladder.)
Checking In
Safely arrived at Contemplation and the really quite nice Crown Plaza Hotel. May be online intermittently over the weekend, or this may be the last you hear from me until Monday: who knows? I suspect Paul and Shaun will do a better job of liveblogging than me, at any rate. And the newsletter team would like you to send submissions as plain text to locs@plokta.com. Now, where’s the dealers’ room?
Eastercon Highlights
Following in the footsteps of Paul and Shaun, here are the bits of the Eastercon programme I’m particularly looking forward to. Of course, no plan survives contact with the convention, so I’ll undoubtedly miss some of these, and end up going to others.
Friday
What makes a good book review?
What makes a good book review? Do you read book reviews? Do you take any notice of them? Do writers and publishers take notice of them? Do they serve the reader, the industry, or no one at all? Do you give a flying squid? (18:30 to 20:00, Edward 1)
Should be a lively way to get things started.
The Great Clomping Foot of Nerdism
M John Harrison sparked debate with his statement that “Every moment of a science fiction story must represent the triumph of writing over worldbuilding”, that “…worldbuilding is not technically neccessary. It is the great clomping foot of nerdism. It is the attempt to exhaustively survey a place that isn’t there. A good writer would never try to do that, even with a place that is there.” (20:00 to 21:00 Charles 1)
Alas, I will be having dinner during this panel. But I’ll be there in spirit.
Current SF, a Fireside Chat
Paul Cornell, author and scriptwriter, chats with Dave Bradley, editor of SFX magazine, about the current world of British SF.’ [And from Cornell’s blog: We’ll have to build that fire. And isn’t it a bit warm for that? We’re planning to cover everything and offer a kind of overview, and give an insight into SFX itself. Really pleased we got this together.] (22:00 to 23:00, Edward 1)Saturday
Universal Donor
Is it time for science fiction to stop bleeding? Other genres – fantasy, technothriller, historical – have been recently reinvigorated by taking a science-fictional approach: the New Weird in fantasy, the recent work of (e.g.) Greg Bear, the resurgence of alternate history and time travel. Authors identified with SF have ‘bled’ towards the mainstream or other genres. Science fiction has become the default multimedia landscape. Is SF making a blood donation – or bleeding to death? (15:00 to 16:30 Kings)
Again via Paul Cornell’s blog, apparently the full panel for this is Jo Fletcher, Freda Warrington, Graham Sleight, and Ian Watson, with Cornell moderating.
Un-American Futures
SF has traditionally had a white western bias, in literature and in the fanbase. That’s changing rapidly. British SF has been described as “the most dynamic movement in global science fiction of the past decade and arguably one of the most important forces in world culture during that period” – why us and not the Americans?(16:30 to 18:00, Kings)
This panel description looks a bit odd to me — I have to wonder where that quote comes from, and the way it’s written makes it sound like they’re claiming British sf isn’t white and Western, which is clearly daft. So I assume the panel will be about debates like this.
BSFA Awards
Presentation of the BSFA Awards (21:00 to 22:00, Kings)
Those of you not going to Eastercon have all voted, right?
Sunday
Is UK SF publishing overly masculine?
“I hear that a number of women writers have felt that the atmosphere in the UK is very hard science, hard men at present — not that all the editors of male or whatever, but that the culture seems to be be for quite macho type books.” True? (11:00 to 12:00, Kings)
Again with the unsourced quote. But again an interesting issue.
Post-BSFA Awards discussion. The panel look at the results of yesterday’s vote. (15:30 to 17:00, Charles 1)
And I heckle from the crowd. Possibly.
Artetypes
There are many conventional images of artists (in whatever medium they work). For example, there is the iconoclast, the rebel, the self-absorbed and so on. To what extent are these archtypes reflected in SF and fantasy? Are there different archetypes that are unique to these genres? (17:00 to 18:30, Edward 1)
Potentially fascinating, potentially rubbish.
What would you like to see at Orbital?
Come along with programme suggestions for next year’s Eastercon. (18:30 to 20:00, Roodee)
Because I am a minion on the literary programme for next year, and my boss will be elsewhere, watching …
Not the Clarke Awards.
A discussion of the 2006 Clarke shortlist. (18:30 to 20:00, Edward 1)
.. Which is always one of the highlights of Eastercon for me, except that this year I can’t go.
Monday
Politics and Ethics in Battlestar Galactica
Spoiler Alert – this discussion will be wide-ranging, and may well cover episodes of Season 3 you might not have seen on Sky, even if you can get Sky any more, who knows. (12:00 to 13:00, Edward 1)
Of course, this assumes I manage to watch the finale between now and then.
And that’s it. My train back is mid-afternoon on Monday, so I won’t be around for the Dead Dog. But hopefully there will be plenty of hanging out in the bar and in the dealer’s room over the course of the weekend, maybe even an expedition to the cinema to see Sunshine. See you there?
Bookslut Seeks Columnist
Bookslut is looking for another sf columnist, which might be of interest to some people reading this. Email Jessa Crispin for details.
Eastercon and Reviews
It’s Eastercon this weekend, and I am on one programme item:
What makes a good book review? What makes a good book review? Do you read book reviews? Do you take any notice of them? Do writers and publishers take notice of them? Do they serve the reader, the industry, or no one at all? Do you give a flying squid? (Friday, 18:30–20:00, Edward 1)
The website doesn’t list the other participants, but I know Paul is moderating.
I mention this in part because, with impeccable timing, Jetse de Vries (one of the current Interzone editorial team) has posted in defence of Interzone‘s policy of using 350-word reviews, instead of the longer, column-review format favoured in the Pringle era, thus giving us at least one starting point for discussion. The criticisms of the current reviews policy that he links to can be seen on Urban Drift, and specifically (though he doesn’t attribute them), they’re comments made by me and by Jonathan. So I feel obliged to expand on my thoughts a bit.
I think Jetse’s post raises some valid issues, but hides them behind smokescreens. He asks:
Maybe people could wonder why there is such a 350-word limit on book reviews. It is, after all, the industry standard. Not only SFX is using it, but the utmost majority of professional publishers. Like, in the UK: New Statesman, Spectator, and the Independent. Or, for reference, check out this overview of the National Union of Journalist, where most reviews mentioned are also 350 words or less.
Looking at the linked overview, I see a wide range of word counts; there are indeed several that give a 350-word limit, but it doesn’t leap out as an obvious standard, since there are also plenty of publications that use other lengths. The Scotsman, for instance, has entries for both 200 and 1600 word reviews. And if we look at what the Independent, say, actually publishes, the “latest book reviews” at the moment include 400 words on The Red Princess, 800 on On Chesil Beach, and 900 on Welcome to Everytown. I’d also query Jetse’s use of “professional”, since (a) it implies that SFX isn’t a professional venue which, for all its faults, seems a little harsh, and (b) I’m not sure what criteria are going into his definition — it can’t be payment, since Interzone doesn’t pay for reviews. Later Jetse mentions Sci Fi Wire as an online venue that enforces word limits — which they do, not to mention enforcing a strict formula of summary in the first half of the review, value judgement in the second half. But even Sci Fi Wire allots 700 words to a book, twice what Interzone allows.
Of the two guides to reviewing that Jetse links, one doesn’t mention length at all (though it does recommend noting effective passages for quoting, which would seem to be a bit of a squeeze in 350 words), while the other notes that “in newspapers and academic journals, [reviews] rarely exceed 1000 words”. Both guides emphasise the need to give a full response to the book at hand, which is as it should be. So my first objection to 350-word reviews is, as you might expect, not that they are short but that they are too short. Too often they end up being little more than glorified blurb. Sad to say, I think the review Jetse offers in his post, of Peter Watts’ Blindsight, fails on this level: there is almost no context for the book (Jetse tells us that Watts is a biologist, but nothing about what sort of biologist or how that might be relevant to the book at hand; and Blindsight itself is treated in a vacuum), and precious little evidence to back up the value-judgements he makes (saying that Blindsight is “Definitely not a novel for escapists or the occasional reader” comes across, to me at least, as somewhat patronising, in part because I get no clear idea of why that might be the case).
Jetse also says, of what he learned from a reviewing workshop:
The gist of it is that a 350-word book review is more challenging to write than a lengthy one, and if done well is – in general – better for both the reviewer and the reader, and also better from a publicity point of view.
This strikes me as being about as fallacious as saying that a short story is more challenging to write than a novel. Writing short and writing long are different skills. I’m not saying that it’s impossible to write a useful 350-word review — indeed, the review Interzone actually published of Blindsight (IZ207, by Graham Sleight), does a perfectly reasonable job. The first paragraph (you’ll have to take my word for this, since I’m not going to quote the whole thing online without permission) sets up what’s distinctive about Watts as a writer; the second paragraph establishes how Blindsight fits into Watts’ canon, as well as into the larger sf canon; the third describes what’s interesting about the book’s subjects, and how Watts makes it interesting; and the fourth sums up, relating the value-judgement of Blindsight back to Watts’ other works and other sf. Jetse argues that “We expect fiction writers to be sharp and concise, and not waste a single word,” and suggests that we should expect the same from reviewers — which is, of course, absolutely true. But it’s a principle that applies as much to a 2,000-word review or a 10,000-word critical essay as it does to a 350-word summary. As for this:
When limited to a 350 wordcount, reviewers must write only about the essentials. It forces them to concentrate on what they really need to say, to get to the heart of the matter. No roundabout reasoning, no self-important side remarks, no bloated blathering, no snarky references for the incrowd. No excess baggage, not a single gram of it. It compels reviewers to develop and hone their craft to perfection. First learn the ropes, the basics before one is allowed to do lengthier essays. Show that you’re a professional, build a track record and an outstanding oeuvre before you’re allowed more leeway. As mentioned, we expect the same of fiction writers, so why should non-fiction writers be exempt to this?
I can only say that I like reviewers to have a personality. As in fiction, I find voice incredibly important in non-fiction, including reviews. I’m all for tightening up arguments, and cutting bloat, and keeping the focus on the reviewee and not the reviewer; but the very last thing I want to read (or, let’s be honest, write) is a review that aspires to some perceived “default” tone.
There is another issue, though, and that’s the question of who the reviews are for and what they’re trying to achieve — which brings us back to the Eastercon panel. Audience, in fact, is probably a more important consideration than length. Interzone reviews, Jetse makes pretty clear, are aimed at the casual reader, intended to quickly give them an idea of whether they would like to check out the book. That’s a valid choice, in the abstract; but I think it’s a shame that Interzone has chosen to go down that route. Interzone used to do something different and, I think, valuable — and note that I’m not talking about the words-per-book specifically. What my original comment on Urban Drift was arguing for was a return to review-columns, covering maybe four books in three thousand words. That, it seems to me, would achieve the best of both worlds, giving Interzone‘s non-fiction contributors (who are, more often than not, a knowledgeable, articulate bunch — although Clute seems to have gone AWOL recently) room to say something meaningful without the reviews section becoming a home for the “prolonged protractions from a geeky pedestal” Jetse is so critical of. Aiming for the lowest common denominator is all very well, but SFX already exists; there’s no need to re-invent it.
In The Link Garden
- Pirates are out, Fauns are in: Pan’s Labyrinth replaces The Pirates of the Caribbean 2 on the Hugo ballot
- Two views of The Road at Strange Horizons, by Victoria Hoyle and Paul Kincaid. And a third, dissenting view by Levi Asher (via)
- Not unrelatedly, “In my eyes, the [Clarke Award has lost its] credibility this year, and I would encourage those interested to boycott the award“. Martin asks if Oprah now has more credibility than the Clarke. Tony has another response.
- Nic reviews River of Gods and inadvertently starts a slapfight about Ian McDonald’s portrayal of India
- Abigail on the Battlestar Galactica season finale (which I haven’t seen yet)
- Nicholas Whyte rounds up reactions to the first episode of Doctor Who‘s third season
- Faren Miller on The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss
- Scott Esposito on The Yiddish Policemen’s Union and other Jewish alternate histories (via)
- An early review of Sunshine in The Scotsman
- Jeff VanderMeer interviews Jonathan Strahan
- And I’m not going to claim it’s the best April’s Fool I saw yesterday, but as an old Angel fan, this gave me a nostalgic glow. (via)
(One day there will be substantive content here again. But probably not this week, alas.)