eels

I have found, by trial and error, that I do not really pick my favorite albums of the year. It seems more like they pick me. The year before last it was The White Stripes Elephant, and last year it was Belle and Sebastian’s Dear Catastrophe Waitress. There was a lot to like, and enough not to, with both albums. They both passed a key test, though. When I thought back across the year, it was the sound of those albums that I could best remember amongst all of the thousands of things I’d listened to.

This trip around the sun the prize goes to the latest set from Mark E and his various cohorts who form Eels for the odd, double cd extravaganza that is Blinking Lights and Other Revelations. For all that I’ve loved the Magic Numbers debut, I haven’t been able to escape the beautiful, mournful music that fill up these two cds. The refrain from “Suicide Life” – ‘I’ll go none too bravely, Into the night, I’m so tired of living, The suicide life” – while not very cheery, goes round and round in my head. Superb.

Opening lines…

Just yesterday, Chris Rowe posted a bunch of opening lines from some short fiction on this blog, and asked people to name the stories. Well, here’s just ten opening lines from some SF and F novels. How well do you know this stuff…

  1. A beginning is the time for taking the most delicate care that the balances are correct.
  2. Once upon a time there was a Martian named Valentine Michael Smith.
  3. Five hours’ New York jet lag and Cayce Pollard wakes in Camden Town to the dire and ever-circling wolves of disrupted circadian rhythms.
  4. Everyone knows how to find the meaning of life within himself. But mankind wasn’t always so lucky. Less than a century ago men and women did not have the easy access to the puzzle boxes within them.
  5. I did not see my first “zombie” until my second day at Tulane when Ezawa permitted me to witness an interview.
  6. Coming into New York City from the north, off the New England thruway, Oliver drove as usual. Tireless, relaxed, his window half open, long blond hair whipping in the chilly breeze.
  7. Milena boiled things. She was frightened of disease. She would boil other people’s knives and forks before using them. Other people found this insulting.
  8. My name is Robinette Broadhead, in spite of which I am male. My analyst (whom I call Sigfrid von Shrink, although that isn’t his name; he hasn’t got a name, being a machine) has a lot of electronic fun with this fact.
  9. Throughout the past thousand years of history it has been traditional to regard the Alderson Drive as an unmixed blessing.
  10. It was the day my grandmother exploded.

World Fantasy: Clarification

A clarification about the World Fantasy booklet. If you would like your book(s) listed in our free booklet, then you need to provide the following information, as requested below:

Title:
Author:
Blurb (inc. quotes, advance review extracts etc.):
Jacket Pic: a 150 dpi image in jpeg format ( 75 mm x 105 mm)
Extent (no. pages):
Publication Date:
Publisher(s) and Territories:
Agent or rights holder contacts:

If you can’t provide an image, that’s ok, but the information must be provided in this format if it’s to be included. Because we intend this to be similar to a catalogue, a simple list of titles won’t be sufficient. Also, because of limited time, I’m not able to follow up with someone else for this information. I’ll need it sent, ready to use, to jstrahan (at) iinet (dot) net (dot) (au).

A sample of what you could send would look like this:

Title: Eidolon I
Author: Jonathan Strahan & Jeremy G Byrne eds.
Blurb (inc. quotes, advance review extracts etc.): An exciting new anthology from Eidolon editors Strahan & Byrne, with classic new stories from Simon Brown, Chris Lawson, and others.
Jacket Pic: eidolon.jpg (attached)
Extent (no. pages): 420pp
Publication Date: November 2005
Publisher(s) and Territories: Eidolon Books (Australia), Prime Books (USA). Other world English language rights available.
Agent or rights holder contacts: Contact Jonathan Strahan at jstrahan (at) iinet (dot) net (dot) au.

If you have any queries about what you should provide, please don’t hesitate to email me. We want this to be a success, and to help promote Australian writers and their work.

The Waldrop Bibliography

A while back I put together a list of Howard Waldrop’s short fiction, along with all of the first publication information. Recently I needed that information again, but couldn’t find it elsewhere on the web. With that in mind, I’m adding The Howard Waldrop Bibliography semi-permanently to this blog. I’ll do my best to keep it up to date, and will add the info from it to the Waldrop Wikipedia entry, when I get the chance.