May and on anon…

It’s the first day of a new month and I’m going to try to use that as a kick-off for a bit of a fresh start. I need to exercise, organise, and work more if 2022 is going to work out. I also need to read more, watch less, and just do things. Today is a Sunday and it’s a slow-ish start. I’ve had my first and only coffee of the day and it’s still only 7.30 am.  Soon, shower, breakfast, out to Yahava to pick up some stuff, then back to work on taxes and edits while the family is out.

As to my intentions for the day – actually work on things. I’m reading some things for Tordotcom right now, working on The Book of Witches, looking at proposals, and more. I’m busy, but not as busy as I should be.

Yesterday, Saturday, was an odd day. With the pandemic still far from over, just moving into ever more different phases of itself, yesterday (Saturday) I attended my first convention of 2022. Swancon Not-A-Con was a very small placeholder event run to make sure Swancons didn’t disappear from the earth and to give people a good time. I would guess somewhere between 80 to 120 people, and most of them seemed busy gaming. I had no plans to attend originally, but in the end spent a couple of hours there.

Everyone was masked, which was fine, but made it impossible for me to function, really. My hearing has deteriorated to the point where masks are enough to make it very difficult to make out what anyone is saying, which is a concern for Chicago. We’ll see how that goes, though. I had an enjoyable time. Saw a few old friends (Gina, Dave, Russell and Liz, Stephen), went to a book launch, an informal memorial for Jeremy) and then home.  All quite pleasant.

We continue to watch more TV than is probably a good idea. Last night was the ninth episode of the second season of Star Trek: Picard, which continues it’s long slide from interesting to ST:NG spinoff. So be it. It was ok.

Since this is the first post in a long time, really, I’ll make note that it is now four months since my last Meniere’s attack. I don’t have an exact date, but it was at the end of December, or very early January. There seems to be a direct correlation between exercise and diet, and having attacks. This is both good and bad news, depending on how you look at it.

I am not reading enough, or what I should. I want to read some William Gibson, but should be reading something new. Will see what happens there, and maybe say something here.  In the meantime, Kathleen Jennings is writing interesting things about short fiction over here. Check it out.

Episode 577: Books, classics, and collecting

It’s only been a week since Jonathan and Gary sat down to chat with Nicola Griffith about her new book, Spear, but in a bid to get back on schedule, they took a moment to record a new episode for the coming long weekend.

They kick off chatting about travel during the pandemic and the coming WorldCon, before Jonathan admits he’s only just read Ursula K. Le Guin’s A Wizard of Earthsea, and then they go on to talk about Le Guin’s work, the oddities of book buying and collecting, and then our hosts attempt to answer the age-old questions: do you need to read a book? if so, why? do you need to keep book? which ones can you get rid of, and how?  Really, it’s a ramble that kicks off with Earthsea and ends up chatting about books. It’s a Coode Street podcast.

As always, our thanks for your patience with our rambles. We hope you enjoy the episode, and see you again pretty soon!

Episode 576: Nicola Griffith and Spear

spear.jpegThis time out, Jonathan and Gary are joined by the brilliant Nicola Griffith, whose Spear, out this month, revisits Arthurian tales from an entirely new perspective. We chat about how the novel came about, Arthurian literature as fan fiction, the wonderful illustrations by Rovina Cai, and what it was like to record the audiobook. We also discuss its similarities to and differences from her well-received historical novel Hild and its forthcoming sequel Menewood, as well as Nicola’s classic early novels Ammonite and Slow River, her recent So Lucky, and forthcoming reissues of her Aud Torvingen novels, beginning with The Blue Place.

Episode 575: New books, old readers, and such

With Gary just back from ICFA in Florida, he discussed whether this will really be the year of re-emergence, with both the World Science Fiction Convention in Chicago and World Fantasy Convention in New Orleans in the offing. This led, as it does, to discussion of the Hugos, whether small categories with few nominations should be dropped, whether other categories should be added, and whether major historical studies such as Mike Ashley’s five-volume The History of the Science-Fiction Magazines really have a chance of being seen because of availability issues, as compared to the increasingly broad definition of “related work.”

Inevitably, we chatted about new or forthcoming books we’re excited about. We both liked Guy Gavriel Kay’s All the Seas of the World, Alix E. Harrow’s A Mirror Mended, and Christopher Rowe’s These Prisoning Hills, while Jonathan is tempted by Karen Joy Fowler’s new novel Booth and Gary’s about to start Samit Basu’s The City Inside. 

Of course, there are lots of digressions in between, including the nature of historical fiction and nostalgia for printed books in the age of e-books (at least for reviewers and critics).

…unavoidable stuff from jonathan strahan…