Steampunk

Some things are always cool, and some things have their moment in the sun. I suspect steampunk is going to sit somewhere in between. Steampunk – that gonzo form of Victoriana which reached its height with Tim Powers’ The Anubis Gates, James P. Blaylock’s Homunculus, and K.W. Jeter’s Infernal Devices (all published within a few years of one another in the 1980s) – holds special appeal for my inner geek, and always will. It’s like the zeppelin thing. Who can resist?

Anyhow, I have the feeling that steampunk is only now going to have its moment in the sun – something that’s underscored by the pending arrival of two new anthologies. Next March Jeff and Ann VanderMeer will edit The Steampunk Anthology for Tachyon Publications. It collects previously published stories by James P. Blaylock, Neal Stephenson and so on, and should provide a pretty clear statement on what steampunk is and has been up till now. The VanderMeers are very smart and skilled editors, and this fourth ‘movement anthology’ for Tachyon should be the best of the lot.

The second book, Nick Gevers’ Extraordinary Engines, is an all-original anthology from Solaris Books that is due in the Fall. The tentative line-up for the book looks terrific and if all of the authors named deliver stories it should be a top notch book that would standard as a perfect complement to the VanderMeer anthology. Nick definitely knows a good story when he sees one, so I can’t wait to see the final book!

LA Times on Eclipse

LA Times critic Ed Parks has published his end-of-year round up for the newspaper, Favorite SciFi Books of 2007, and Eclipse One is the lead-off title! Parks discusses Andy Duncan’s remarkable “Unique Chicken Goes in Reverse” (1) and is enthusiastic about the book as a whole. He also says great things about another Night Shade book, Liz Williams Precious Dragon, which you should all check it immediately.

(1) Entry corrected to change my hamfisted late night conflation of “Ugly Chicken goes in Reverse” to the correct title. Gack.  Thanks Jeff!