It begins here… The Road to Denvention Part 1

Well, barring something unexpected coming up at tomorrow’s doctor’s appointment I head off on Friday for Oakland and Denver. Every year when I make a trip like this I intend to blog a lot about it. I fail roundly, mostly because I get distracted. Attending a big convention takes all of your time and attention. Writing a summary of the day at 1.00am when you have a 7.00am breakfast just seems impossible. Still, I intend to try. I’ll probably fail, but I hope you’ll bear with me.

There are a lot of things I’m looking forward to. On the way to Oakland I should be seeing Simon and Ally at Sydney Airport. They’re off to Phuket at the same time I’m headed to the US, so it was too good an opportunity to miss. Oakland is always good. It’ll be great to see Charles, Liza, Amelia, Kirsten, Tim, Carolyn, Fran, and everyone else, and to spend a little time sitting on the back deck relaxing. Not so much drinking this year, but a quiet time will be good. I’m also hoping to see Karen and Bob while I’m in town, and Jeremy too. The only thing I have to do is get to a T-Mobile store for ten minutes and that shouldn’t be too hard to arrange. As for WorldCon, the people, the dealers’ room, the art show – lots to do. I can’t wait. And I’ll be hanging with Sean Williams, who is one of my best buddies, so that’s cool. Again, though, I’ll perhaps take it all a bit slower this year. It should be fun though. See you there?

On the function of time…

Time is what happens between one thing and the next, when you’re not looking.  In 95 minutes I have a job interview.  I will never remember what happened in those 95 minutes.  They are just ‘time’.  Approximately 90 minutes later the job interview will be over. I will clearly remember every one of those 90 minutes.  I am as prepared as I’m going to be. Many thanks to everyone who helped, and for all of the kind wishes.  Breaktime soon!

Today I:

  • sold a new book;
  • joined the SFWA;
  • completed my final job interview prep.;
  • bought new trousers;
  • consumed five cups of coffee;
  • edited two review columns;
  • found an unexpected bruise;
  • read one short story; and
  • considered, briefly, the nature of the universe.

It was a busy day.  The sand is pouring through the hourglass.  By this time tomorrow I’ll be on holidays.  In just over a week I’ll be in California.  Do you want to see me while I’m there, or in Denver – email me. I’d love to catch up.

Today

I’m tired. Another long day, but I wanted to check in with you fun internet kids, just to keep you up to date on the world. I’ve calmed down and am quietly preparing for my interview on Friday. I’m taking solace in the fact that I’ll be on holidays in less than 48 hrs. I’m not googling ‘symptoms +’ to find out what the pain in my chest is – most likely it’s a strained muscle between two ribs, and I’ll know that for sure come Saturday when I see the doctor. I’m not editing this month’s Locus columns yet, either. That can wait till the weekend. I also should have some project news round then too.

So, what am I doing? Well, I’m reading Jay Lake’s Escapement, which is swell. I think Jay is getting better and better as a writer, and this is his best book length work yet. I am wondering how changing around from one type of book to another will affect his profile with readers, but I am seriously interested in reading Green. I’m also reading Ken Scholes’ collection. This guy is not so well known right now, but I think he will be. In between reading those, I’m just now beginning to work my way through the collected short fiction of Peter Beagle so that I’ll be ready to do his ‘Best of’. It’s a fun task to be faced with.

Oh, and I’ve been meaning to comment on the launch of Tor.com. I drafted and redrafted something that commented on the mini-blogstorm that showed up, and then realised it wasn’t necessary. I like the site. It’s not a killer app for SF folk, but then I don’t think it was ever intended to be and I’m not sure we live in the age of killer apps anymore. What it is, though, is an interesting blog site with good fiction. I wish they published more fiction (Patrick Nielsen Hayden edited the only original antho series of the past 20 years that I wish I’d edited – Starlight – so his editing more short fiction is very welcome news to me), and I wish they organised the blog posts regularly, but I’m very happy it exists, will be checking it regularly, and would recommend it to you. It’s at www.tor.com.

…unavoidable stuff from jonathan strahan…