So it seems I end my gallop through Interzone as I started it, with a disappointment. “Bone Island” is the overlong, over-digressive tale of a hapless young male protagonist caught between two witchy women. There’s a deal of would-be portentious talk about types of magic, creation myths, and suchlike (“Just as the eggs flow from a woman on a river of blood, so do the futures flow from the world on a river of blood”); its attempt to portray a tight-knit island community rather pales in comparison to Ali Shaw‘s (and at times feels rather ersatz); and it is, most criminally, rather dull. A shame.
Torque Control
“Funny Pages” by Lavie Tidhar
I think Lavie Tidhar had a pretty good year for short fiction; there was “The Dying World” at Clarkesworld, “Spider’s Moon” at Futurismic, and of course “The Shangri-La Affair” at Strange Horizons. All extremely stylish, poised stories, deft with their chosen tropes. This is Tidhar’s best 2009 story, though, for my money.
The polish is still there, but “Funny Pages” feels like it has more going on underneath. It’s a superhero tale, set in Israel — a little like something Jonathan Lethem might have written — and does everything you would expect and hope a modern prose superhero tale set in Israel would do. It’s grounded in the day-to-day mundane, with superheroes facing romantic entanglements and unpaid bills; its superpowers are inventive (“Orchestra is music, Orchestra is a weave of notes: Tank can never see her face, her figure, only hear her, like thousands of pirate radio stations clashing with each other”); it is knowing in its invocation of cliche (the supervillain: “The Doctor, hawk-nosed, white hair combed back, a thick German accent he’d never quite lost […] ‘I will show them! I will show the world!'”); it is often funny; it is political; and it makes good use of comic-script-style back and forth:
The Prime Minister: “You’re a superhero! It’s your job to deal with this stuff!
Solomon2: “Job? I work in hi-tech, with all due respect. Fighting crime doesn’t pay the mortgage. Plus, well …”
PM: “Well what?”
Solomon2: “This is beyond the realm of, well, strictly speaking, crime, now.”
PM: “What are you talking about?”
Solomon2: “It’s become … political.”
PM: “You’re damn right it’s political!”
Solomon2: “Ah, but there lies, as they say, the rub. We’re strictly non-political. Traditional crime only. I don’t think it’s right for us to interfere.”
PM: “But Dr. Meshugeh is!”
Solomon2 shrugs: “Supervillains have different standards.”
“The Killing Streets” by Colin Harvey
I know Colin (he reviews for Strange Horizons), but this is the first of his fiction I’ve read. It piles novum upon change upon invention, seen through a couple of days in the life of an unemployed man in near-future Bristol. One: Snarks, big subterranean bioweapon beasts, infest the country, drawn to the surface by rhythmic vibrations, such as those produced by walking. Two: jobs are scarce, and/or qualifications have been devalued; even the most menial require good degrees, if not doctorates. Three: there’s a deadly, weaponised disease called Blacktongue, that’s almost always fatal and spreads by touch, on the loose. Four: the surveillance state is worse; the narrator’s wife works at the Department of Work and Pensions, referred to as “the Stasi” by some characters; mobile phones are (it is assumed) routinely used to track citizens’ whereabouts. And so on. This is all so vigorously grim that it can’t really be taken entirely seriously, and I’m not wholly sure it coheres; but it’s fun, and bodes well for the proposed Winter Song reading group.
“By Starlight” by Rebecca J Payne
A cool drink of a story, measured and soothing; a story about freedom that itself feels free. Our protagonists are two sky sailors in a world divided into Flyers and Grounders. We learn how they met, and how they ended up where they are now. We see them trade with a merchant, and get out of a sticky situation. Their world, with its living, healing sky-ships, and “Amerika” and “Aysa” and “Europa”, could be a future and, under the skin, sf, or it could be alternate and fantastical. Payne’s story is detailed, and nicely specific, but the nature of her world doesn’t matter, not to her characters (one of whom, the narrator, is I think also casually unspecified; I didn’t notice any specific cues, and they have been read as both male and female) or to us. What matters is flying free.
One night, as we skimmed low over a wide lake, hauling up fresh water, we caught a silvery bird in our bucket. It had slippery skin instead of feathers and small wings that flapped in water as if in the air.
We threw it back over the side and watched it fly away, into the deep.
BSFA Award Nominations — Final Reminder!
Yes, today’s the day: nominations must be sent to Donna Scott, the Awards Administrator by 23.59 GMT today (Saturday). Don’t forget to include your membership number and/or postcode.
The four nomination-list posts have been updated with additional nominations received as of last night:
Me, I’m going to spend most of today reading short stories, I think…
Tender Linksels
- One more day to send in your BSFA Award nominations — they must be received by 23.59 tomorrow (Saturday 16th). And then you could vote in the SF Site Reader’s Choice awards. (You can do that if you’re not a BSFA member, even.)
- An open letter to fans, authors and critics of the male sex, and a related post by Liz Williams
- Sad news: the Internet Review of SF will be suspending publication after the February issue; so enjoy the January issue
- David Ketterer’s introduction to Plan for Chaos by John Wyndham
- China Mieville is blogging
- Kristin Cashore on writing fantasy
- Kari Sperring reviews The Cardinal’s Blades and L’Alchimiste des Ombres by Pierre Pevel
- My review of The Other Lands by David Anthony Durham
- L. Timmel Duchamp on Total Oblivion, More or Less by Alan DeNiro
- Graham Sleight interviews Farah Mendlesohn about On Joanna Russ
- A discussion about difficulty at The Valve
- Patrick Ness reviews Chronic City by Jonathan Lethem
- Adam Roberts on Shades of Grey by Jasper Fforde
- A round table on Australian sf at the World SF blog
- Discussion of cover art, with reference to Lauren Beukes’ forthcoming fantasy Zoo City
- Tony Keen and Tim Phipps on “The End of Time” (and the end of a Doctor Who era)
- More Avatar links: a round-up by Abigail Nussbaum; elsewhere, Roz Kaveney; Caleb Crain; Jonah Lehrer; Andres du Toit
- David Hebblethwaite on Galileo’s Dream by Kim Stanley Robinson
- Nic Clarke on The Road (the book)
- Mark Charan Newton asks: what do people mean when they say “clunky”?
- Realms of Fantasy is having an all-woman issue, which has attracted much comment
- Dan Hartland on Gardens of the Sun by Paul McAuley, and The Girl With Glass Feet by Ali Shaw; on the latter I echo much of his ambivalence, though I was more won over by the book in the end. Also over at Strange Horizons with a review of Sherlock Holmes, with further thoughts back on his blog here.
- New Peter Watts story at Clarkesworld: “The Things“; see Jonathan Strahan’s account of how this didn’t end up in Eclipse 3
- Books-of-2009 lists from Martin Lewis (and films), David Hebblethwaite, Abigail Nussbaum (and worst reads of the year, and best short stories).
- Science fiction is annoying Bruce
SterlingEverett - Guardian books podcast on sf, including interview with China Mieville.
- And finally: so at Worldcon, I was on a panel about the Terminator franchise with Abigail, and James Zavaglia. After the panel, we were approached by a chap from Electric Playground asking if he could interview us. We said yes, and they’ve used the material for this segment. (Also including coments from Russell Blackford.)
BSFA Award Nominations Update
I’ve updated the list for each category to reflect nominations received between Friday and yesterday evening:
Note also that of the existing nominations, “The Beloved Time of their Lives” by Roberto Quaglia and Ian Watson has been made available as a pdf.
EDIT: More stories! Lavie Tidhar has released four of the tales included in The Apex Book of World SF into the wild, as pdfs:
- “The Levantine Experiments” by Guy Hasson
- “The Wheel of Samsara” by Han Song
- “Wizard World” by Yang Ping
- “Cinderers” by Nir Yaniv
FURTHER EDIT: And Kim Lakin-Smith’s story, “Johnny and Emmie-Lou Get Married“, has also appeared.
“Here We Are, Falling Through Shadows” by Jason Sanford
“After all, why rippers kidnapped people was the only question worth asking in today’s world.” This is how Jason Sanford’s tales work, it seems: strip the world down so that the sfnal intervention demands an answer. Like “When Thorns are the Tips of Trees”, “Here We Are …” is set in a near-future crippled by disaster. The rippers are aliens that live in darkness (“light can’t remove every shdaow”) and prey on humans, either killing them, or taking them to a terrible fate Elsewhere. Its characters are, as ever, well-sketched but cast in familiar roles, even as they are defined by Sanford’s world: the firefighter (narrator) who must go out at night, the wife who has been killed or taken by the rippers, the teenage daughter alienated (ha) as a result. In “Thorns” these elements balanced each other quite nicely; here, I think, the trick is less successful. Understanding can cast its own shadow.
“Sublimation Angels” by Jason Sanford
A nugget of New all swaddled in Old, that’s what this story is [pdf link]. Much of the pleasure in “Sublimation Angels” — as in Sanford’s two previous Interzone tales [more pdfs] — comes from the gentle unwinding of a satisfyingly odd setting, in thise case constructed in explicit homage to Leiber’s “A Pail of Air” (1951). Like that story, the narration is straightforward, more transparent even than Leiber (it lacks his folksiness); and, as in that story, the characters live, with very basic technology, on a wandering planet whose atmosphere has frozen. Unlike in that story, a repressive hierarchical society has arisen, based around access to oxygen.
Omare and I were born in the highest level of the cave in as much heat and good air as our expedition could give. While low kids raised their children in the lower cave’s cold, Omare and I never knew this deprivation when we were young. We only knew that our mother and father loved us, and if we climbed down the cave’s spiral tunnels we wore clumsy pails of frozen oxymix around our neck. The insulated pails contained a tiny tick-tock heater, and you cranked them every few minutes to smoke out the extra air needed to live.
What follows is about learning the world, rebelling against it, and becoming master of your own destiny. Heartwarmingly conventional stuff, if perhaps a bit stretched beyond its ideal length. But wait! There’s an ironic twist (arguably revealed very early on). It’s not just Sanford who has (like Karl Schroeder with his Virga) engineered his setting to allow its retro feel, protecting his colonists from the raw tech-dream that is the twenty-first century space opera future: one of the agents in his story has done the same thing.
So much for freedom.
Deborah Biancotti stories available to BSFA members
Deborah Biancotti has spotted that two of her stories have been nominated in the Best Short Story category, and has this offer:
If you are a kind British person &/or a member of BSFA & you’d like to read these stories, feel free to drop me a line (
deborahb AT livejournal DOT comrous AT deborahbiancotti DOT net) & I will cheerfully — very cheerfully — forward you an electronic copy of said stories. I may get a bit carried away & send you more than those two, but you’ll at least get those two stories & you can read ‘em or use ‘em for your electronic bird cages as is your wont.
So why don’t you?