Author name: Skiffy Fanty

Announcements and Errata

Top 10 Episodes and Blog Posts for August 2014

In case you missed a few things, here’s what was popular last month! Episodes: 215. Kim Stanley Robinson (a.k.a. The Ethnographer) — Shaman (An Interview) 214. Dutch SF Roundtable w/ Tiemen Zwaan, Marieke Nijkamp, Martijn Lindeboom, and Thomas Olde Heuvelt 219. Kameron Hurley (a.k.a. The Patriarchy Smarsher) — The Mirror Empire (An Interview at CONvergence) 213. Corinne Duyvis (a.k.a. Mindsweeper) — Otherbound (An Interview) 218. Live at CONvergence w/ Martha Wells and Carrie Patel Episode 4.2 — Torture Cinema Meets The Wicker Man 216. Max Gladstone (a.k.a. the Soul Merchant) — The Craft Sequence (An Interview at ICFA) 212. Lynne and Michael Damian Thomas (a.k.a. Ood-les of Fun) at CONvergence 220. Wesley Chu (a.k.a. Spymaster 1000) — The Rebirths of Tao (An Interview at CONvergence) 211. Yor, the Hunter from the Future (1983) — A Torture Cinema “Adventure” Blog Posts: Announcement: Our 2015 Theme “Hard and Soft Alternate Histories: The Time Roads by Beth Bernobich, The Shadow Master by Craig Cormick and Rod Duncan’s The Bullet Catcher’s Daughter” by Paul Weimer “When Calls for Diversity Are Not Enough” by Charles Tan “A (World) SFF Film Odyssey: Mutant Girls Squad (2010) and Anime’s Excesses” by Shaun Duke My Superpower: LJ Cohen “English as the Center and Its Privileges” by Charles Tan “The Disquieting Guest — Bava’s Centenary” by David Annandale My Superpower: Tim Lees “Book Review: Through the Woods by Emily Carroll” by Paul Weimer “Book Review: Nice Dragons Finish Last by Rachel Aaron” by Paul Weimer Enjoy!

Blog Posts

My Superpower: Kameron Hurley

My Superpower is a regular guest column on the Skiffy and Fanty blog where authors and creators tell us about one weird skill, neat trick, highly specialized cybernetic upgrade, or other superpower they have, and how it helped (or hindered!) their creative process as they built their project. Today we welcome Kameron Hurley to talk about how the power of preternatural calm relates to The Mirror Empire. —————————————– My mom and I share a similar superpower – the ability to stay preternaturally calm during times of great stress and turmoil. Grievous injury, car accidents, difficult births… if something horrible happens, we’ll calmly bind wounds, give the injured a soothing pep talk, call 911 and do the shit that needs to get done, with no shaking or screaming or crying or fuss. This response to times of great stress has made nearly every movie where folks scream and seize up and flail in the face of terror difficult for me to watch; I never find it terribly believable. Yes, of course, you startle for a minute, but then you center yourself, you go cold, right? You move through it. Breakdown later, when you have the time. In truth, this calm in the face of extreme stress has gotten me called all sorts of names over the years:  unfeeling, inhuman, monstrous. What many folks don’t understand about this stress response is that it’s not that I don’t feel things – it’s that I simply delay feeling them. When the stressor has passed and everyone is cared for and there is nothing more to do, I crash. I’ve used this response to trauma a few times in building characters in my novels, too, most notably in the character of Lilia, the protagonist of my novel The Mirror Empire, whose ability to push through horror makes her one of the few people in her country who can adjust to the coming war of attrition thrust upon her pacifist people.

Blog Posts

Tobias Buckell on the (New) Art of The Xenowealth Saga

In 2006, I came out with my first novel in the US, a somewhat hard-to-categorize (I’m told, I think it makes perfect sense, I wrote it after all) science fiction novel with Caribbean peoples settled on an alien world that have long since lost touch with their home world. That was Crystal Rain. I alternated between calling it Caribbean steampunk (a few years early, I think, for steampunk) and Caribbean SF. It had a cover I adored — created by the amazing Todd Lockwood, a well known fantasy artist who’s work is amazing. I have a print of the art framed on my wall:  an airship above a verdant forest being chased by another distant ship. But when the novel came out, booksellers emailed me to say that the cover looked like the book was a fantasy, creating confusion among casual browsers. Core SF readers didn’t want to pick up the book. Fantasy readers put it down when they realized what it was.

The Skiffy and Fanty Show Podcasts

220. Wesley Chu (a.k.a. Spymaster 1000) — The Rebirths of Tao (An Interview at CONvergence)

http://media.blubrry.com/skiffyandfanty/dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/archive.org/download/SandFEpisode220InterviewWWesleyChu/SandF%20–%20Episode%20220%20–%20Interview%20w%20Wesley%20Chu.mp3Podcast: Play in new window | DownloadSubscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Android | iHeartRadio | Podchaser | Podcast Index | Email | TuneIn | Deezer | RSSSymbiotic organisms, trilogy monsters, and gear switching, oh my!  The always humorous Wesley Chu joins the crew at CONvergence to talk about writing a trilogy, his upcoming novel, The Rebirths of Tao, and much more! We hope you enjoy the episode! Note:  If you have iTunes and like this show, please give us a review on our iTunes page, or feel free to email us with your thoughts about the show! Here’s the episode (show notes are below): Episode 220 — Download (MP3)  Show Notes: Wes’ Website Wes’ Books Wes’ Twitter Press Release for The Rebirths of Tao. Our new intro music is “Time Flux” by Revolution Void (CC BY 3.0). That’s all, folks!  Thanks for listening.  See you next week.

Announcements and Errata

Write101x: University of Queensland Free Writing Course!

Marianne de Pierres recently brought this course to our attention.  Run by Dr. Roslyn Petelin, the course aims to provide an introduction to grammar, syntax, and style in the English language.  Anyone can audit the course for free, meaning you can get access to all of the course’s materials.  If you’re interested in improving your writing, this is a great way to do it from the safety of your home! Full details about the course can be found here. If you do take the course, let us know how it goes!

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