For all sorts of good reasons, I try to keep this blog completely divorced from my day job. I don’t blog from there, and I don’t talk about what goes on within it’s secretive halls here. Still, today I thought a public acknowledgement was appropriate. I’ve been failing to find the motivation to update my skills to properly use both div-based layouts and cascading style sheets. This hasn’t really been a problem, but my colleague Nick has been a little irritated this past week that, while working together on a big project, some of my coding got a bit too rough around the edges. So, herewith: Nick, who knows and blogs about such things, is right, and I’m wrong. I must learn and use div layouts and .css just as soon as they current crazy times are past. And I will.
Category Archives: Imported
Catching up…
So, I didn’t blog about World Fantasy in Madison, where the International Society of the Little Pink Drink was convened, with at least one member in absentia. We’ll reconvene in Brisbane at Easter, hopefully with all members present. In the meantime, it occurs to me that there are some of you out there celebrating (hi USAians), some of you I owe manuscripts / proposals / emails / gifts / phone calls / other good stuff. I’m doing what I can, and you will get it soon. In the meantime, I’ve completed my share of the work on Fantasy: Best of 2005 and Science Fiction: Best of 2005. If all goes as it has in previous years, I’ll see nothing more till January, when copies will start to appear. This is the final year I’ll be co-editing those books with Karen Haber. It’s been fun, and I’ll miss sharing opinions with her. I also signed and returned the contracts for Best Short Novels: 2006, the third year’s best novellas book. I was interested (I think that’s the polite word) to see that the ms. is due on 15 February, so I guess you can all imagine one of the main things I’ll be doing in the best six or eight weeks.
I’m also a little taken aback to see if we’ve started the runup to the festive season already. Parties and ‘graduations’ at the girls’ schools, Christmas parties and such. I think it should be calmer this year (fingers crossed), and I’m determined to relax. It should be fun.
The Future of Short Fiction
I know that I go on and on about things that Coode Street’s faithful readers should check out and maybe buy, but I don’t run advertising and I don’t accept any enducements to mention things in this space. Instead, I rabbit on and on about things I am genuinely enthusiastic about, and hope that it proves of interest to you, my readers.
The reason I mention this has, peripherally, to do with World Fantasy. As you know, I was in Madison for the annual WFC a couple weeks back. It had been my intention to sit down at the bar with Deb Layne, proprietor of Wheatland Press, but time and circumstance conspired against that happening. Instead, we had a couple of glancing conversations and promised to catch up in email.
The one thing Deb did get to do was give me a copy of her latest publishing endeavour, a new Bruce Holland Rogers collection, The Keyhole Opera. Rogers has won the World Fantasy Award for his short fiction, has written some very cool stories over the past few years, and is one of the best of the regular contributors to Shawna McCarthy’s Realms of Fantasy magazine. The Keyhole Opera collects a bunch of short-shorts, along with an introduction by Michael Bishop. I’ve only started dipping into the collection since I’ve got home, but I think you should check it out.
All of which segues into a missive from Bruce that I received this morning. For the past four years now, Rogers has been making his short fiction available in a pretty unique way. For just a tiny amount of money, you can subscribe and receive short-short stories by email. Stories go out three times a month, and range from literary fiction, science fiction, fairy tales, and mysteries, to work that is pretty much unclassifiable. You get thirty-six stories for five dollars, and the stories range in length from 200 to 2,500 words.
I don’t know if this is the future of short fiction distribution, or not. Right now, I don’t think anyone knows the answer to that. I do know, though, if you go to www.shortshortshort.com you can try before you buy, sample a bunch of short stories, and maybe even decide to order his new collection.
Review
The Best Short Novels: 2005 is reviewed over at Strange Horizons. Just as soon as I’ve completed work on Fantasy: Best of 2005 and Science Fiction: Best of 2005 (both are a week late, but should be done by Monday), I’ll be starting work on Best Short Novels: 2006.
On young adult fiction…
What is so moving about the Narnia stories is that, though Lewis began with a number of haunted images … he never wrote down to, or even for, children, except to use them as characters, and to make his sentences one shade simpler than usual. He never tries to engineer an entertainment for kids. He writes, instead, as real writers must, a real book for a circle of readers large and small…
— Adam Gopnik, ‘Prisoner of Narnia’, The New Yorker
I’ve spent a lot of time reading, and some time thinking about, the kind of fiction that is sold as ‘young adult fiction’ at the moment. The above quote, which comes from a New Yorker article about C.S. Lewis, is as good an explanation about writing ‘young adult’ fiction that I’ve heard.