Clute and Macleod on SF

I was going to suggest that everyone should go read John Clute’s really quite interesting review of Andreas Eschbach’s The Carpet Makers, and you still should. But…I’ve just read the latest post from Ken Macleod over at Early Days of a Better Nation, where he queries the accuracy of his own recollections about the history of SF. It’s a subject I find fascinating because I think we are subject to the ‘collective wisdom’, do sign up for the consensus view of things, and don’t usually have time to go back and check that our facts are straight. Read it.

Oh, and another fascinating piece here, which ties up with the Macleod piece above, from Charlie Stross, about sf and the cultural zietgeist.

Waldropspotting

I’ve known Michael Walsh for a couple years now, and he’s a very cool guy. He has chaired a truly ridiculous number of conventions, including my all time favourite con (the Washington World Fantasy). This year, in amongst working a day job, publishing terrific books and so on, he is also the chair for Capclave 2005. All well and good you say. I’m living in Perth and you’re probably not in the Washington area either, so why should you care?

Well, turns out that one of the guests is the all-time, best ever Swancon guest, Howard Waldrop. This is nifty enough, but he’s committed to provide two never-before-published stories to be published in a free booklet that will be available only to Capclave members (limit one per membership). Now, anyone who knows the history of Howard knows that the best way to get him to write stories is to get him to be a guest at a convention where he has to do a reading (it worked at Swancon), so this is going to happen.

Because you are a scion of good taste (as am I), you are no doubt groaning and thinking how am I ever going to get one of these books? Well, simple. Memberships seem to be only $US30. You may not be able to go to the Con, but it’s cheap for two Howard stories and, hey, the Con might be able to put the money toward getting Howard a better class of fishing rod or somesuch.

eidolon again

I honestly never thought you’d see the eidolon name in print again, but here we go again. After a lot of conversation, and nearly three years in limbo, Jeremy Byrne and I have decided to dust off eidolon, give it a fresh coat of paint, and put it out as an original anthology series. It’s not limited to Australian folk or to any particular kind of story. We’re hoping to get something wonderful for the first volume, and then to really grow it over time. It’ll probably always be on a modest scale, but we hope it’ll have real impact, and give a slightly more internationally-focussed stage for Australian writers. The announcement, with submission details etc is over on my NightShade board and on the Eidolon Books website.