Category Archives: Science fiction
Subterranean Sale!
I’ve just seen that Subterranean Press is offering 40% off a whole bunch of their forthcoming titles. And yes, it includes The Jack Vance Treasury! This means if you order in the next 48 hours it’ll only cost you $22.80 plus postage. That’s for a 220,000 word book. It’s an amazing price. You’d be made not to! There’s also a full list of sale titles.
Ellen Klages – Portable Childhoods
I think the first time that I read a story of Ellen Klages‘s was when Gordon Van Gelder published her novelette “Basement Magic” a few years ago. It went on to win the Nebula Award, and I started to hunt out her older stories and look for new ones.
One of my favorite stories of Ellen’s, and one my favorite stories published last year, was “In the House of the Seven Librarians”. I read it sitting on a plane flying from Chicago to Oakland while listening to Sufjan Stevens Greetings from Illinoise. I remember clearly that it was bright and sunny outside and that Charles was already asleep. I’d been given a galley of Sharyn November‘s Firebirds Rising (one of the top three anthologies of the year), and was working my way through it. Ellen’s tale of a young girl raised by feral librarians was charming, delightful and heartwarming. I loved it so much I’m reprinting it (along with a Kelly Link story from the same book) in my Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year.
And then Sharyn sent me a copy of Ellen’s novel, The Green Glass Sea. It’s a smart, insightful story about a young girl growing up at Los Alamos in the 1940s. There’s a great review of the book by Gary Wolfe in Locus which sums up what I think pretty well. It’d easily sit in the top ten books I’ve read in 2006, and I think it stands a great chance of still being read in twenty years time.
Jacob Weisman’s Tachyon Publications, who get my pick for the most improved independent press of the last five years, are going to publish a collection of Ellen’s short fiction, Portable Childhoods in April of 2007. When I saw Ellen in Oakland in August she said there’d be at least one, if not two, original stories in the book. I can’t wait for it. Klages is one of our best short story writers, and the book promises to be a real highlight of 2007.
Jack Williamson 1908 – 2006
I’ve not seen confirmation, but the word is that Jack Williamson has died. If so, we’ve lost both one of the greats and one of the most amazing links with out own past: from covered wagons to men on the moon, from electricity on streets to the internet, he saw it all. A sad moment indeed. Vale.
Edit: Confirmed by Locus.
NSO again
My editor at HarperEos, the wonderful classy and stylish Diana Gill, just blogged about reading The New Space Opera. I’m delighted she liked it at much as Gardner and I did, and can’t wait to see it get out into the world. Keep your eyes out for a chance to win a special sneek peek copy.