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Mining the Genre Asteroid: The Big Time by Fritz Leiber

Mining the Genre Asteroid is Paul Weimer’s look at the history of the science fiction and fantasy field, bringing to light important, interesting and entertaining books from science fiction and fantasy’s past to you. The Snakes and the Spiders continually alter and change history in an unclear conflict in order to control the flow of human history. Soldiers from ghostly timelines that have been destroyed are recruited to change history again and again until they make the history where one of these two forces will be triumphant. Russian soldiers from a Czarist American Empire can fight alongside warriors from the Khanate of Spain and Confederate soldiers from World War II. All of them were snatched up at the time of their death, and now fight for a new purpose. Help the Russians defeat Napoleon’s Grand Army. Aid the Persians at Marathon to defeat those perfidious Greeks. Push the results of a battle between the Indian Malwa Empire and the Chinese Sui Dynasty. Change the timeline again and again, everywhere,  to win once and for all and with the mass of humanity none the wiser. And other species, too, far-future Venusians and far-past inhabitants of the Moon also play roles in changing history. Between battles in The Change War, though, soldiers need a location outside of space and time, unaffected by what the War does,  to recuperate and prepare themselves for the next conflict.  The Place is such a location for soldiers on the side of The Spiders. A motley set of warriors from very different original backgrounds are currently recovering there. There’s drink, there’s companionship of the opposite sex, there is healing, there is brief rest. However, all is not placid in The Place. These very different warriors do not always get along very well. Old grudges from now destroyed countries and timelines put those in The Place at odds with each other. There may be one of those sneaky Snake spies among the staff or the warriors in The Place.  Add in a locked room mystery and (most ironically) a race against time before The Place and all in it is destroyed. I present to you The Big Time. I could and eventually will spend a month of columns on Fritz Leiber’s wide oeuvre of work. While best known and best remembered for his sword and sorcery in Fafhrd and the Grey Mouser, his reach extends much farther. Leiber’s influence ranges from literary criticism of H.P. Lovecraft, to proto-urban fantasy, and his science fiction stories. The influence of Leiber on multiple strands of science fiction and fantasy cannot be underestimated. Fritz Leiber was the child of two Shakespearean actors.  One can think of The Big Time as his attempt to do a Shakespeare play as a novel. While the subject matter does not sound immediately Shakespearean, the setup and style definitely are. The Place is an enclosed, closed space, containing a limited set of characters, allusions and references that sketch out and imply a world far beyond the space that we actually see.   One can think of it as a large theater (and the dimensions of the Place are, roughly, that of a large theater house). The novel is heavy on dialogue and a lot of wordplay,  and short on action.  There is even a character from the ancient past who only speaks in meter.  Another character is a contemporary of Shakespeare’s, and knew him. I am not aware of a theatrical adaptation of The Big Time, but I would not be surprised if someone tried it. And what characters these are. Drawn from timelines and worlds long gone, the characters are complicated, damaged, broken, and conflicted. The narrator, Greta, killed in a Nazi invasion of Chicago in one timeline falls into a fraught, violent, complicated relationship with a Nazi officer who died in a battle in Norway in a different timeline. Or at least this version of him, saved by the Spiders for The Change War,  died there. Doppelgangers and doubles of the soldiers and staff might and do exist out there. There is plenty of alternate history and time travel stories written since Leiber’s of course. The Big Time. But even today, it’s an alternate history and time travel novel that few have dared to imitate (I can think of only a bare handful of examples). I first read The Big Time at the height of my fascination with alternate history and found it to be sui generis. Leiber thought about writing a sequel, but sadly did not do so before his death.  However, there are a few Change War short stories out there I have not yet managed to track down and read. Having entered the Public Domain, The Big Time is widely available, including most recently in the Gary K Wolfe edited  LOA (Library of America) American Science Fiction: Nine Classic Novels of the 1950s box set. If the aforementioned box set  is too expensive, Project Gutenberg has a decently edited free edition for you to download and read. If you have any interest in Leiber’s work, or Alternate History, I encourage you to do so.

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Adventures in SF Parenting: Halloween is Cosplay for Muggles

One of the most difficult times of year for geek parents like myself is the month or so leading up to Halloween.  Not because Halloween isn’t the most awesome holiday in the United States, but because geek costumes aren’t the type that you can buy off the rack at Target.  No, that would be too EASY and it certainly would make cosplay a hell of a lot less esoteric. I don’t know the history of cosplay at all, but I do know it’s been around longer than most people think (the term wasn’t coined until the mid 80’s, but people have been dressing up as favorite characters since at least the Victorian age).  It has gained more and more prominence in the last decade or so as people have glommed onto nerd-dom as a valid form of popular culture.  The SyFy channel’s Heroes of Cosplay is the most recent example of cosplay going a bit mainstream, which is pretty damn awesome.  It means that kids who love to emulate their favorite characters in all forms of media now have people to look up to and, perhaps, learn from.  Sadly, it also means that my children are extra demanding about their costumes this year. For the past 3 Halloweens, I have had to bite the bullet and construct my kids’ costumes for them.  Because, as I previously mentioned, geeky characters just are not readily available in your standard big chain retail stores or Halloween pop-ups.  They are occasionally available online, but as they’re handmade by other nerds, they’re not exactly affordable.  And if a costume IS available on the mass market, it’s basically just crap.  I mean, really crap.  Five years ago, #2 wanted to be Leia for Halloween and #1 wanted to be Ahsoka (damn Clone Wars).  I bought both off of some online costume retailer or another, they both fell apart in my hands and didn’t fit anyway.  To my kids’ major disappointment, they were both stuck wearing random old pieces that we had lying around the house.  They had their hearts SET on those characters, but I had no faith in my ability to make something better.  Another random Halloween went by before the fit hit the shan.  October 1st rolled around and they, determined as can be, requested Finn and Princess Bubblegum from Adventure Time. Both of these costumes are now readily available (beware of crap), but at the time the only people dressing up as any character from Adventure Time were cosplayers.  Thank goodness for that, as cosplayers have established some fantastic communities that revel in revealing their processes and collaborative support.  I was able to find patterns for Finn’s hat and Princess Bubblegum’s crown.  Though most of it was up to my genuinely craptastic sewing skills.  Still… I managed to help my kids be who they wanted to be for Halloween!  And then the next year they wanted to be Hogwart’s characters.  And then LAST year?  Nyan-Cat and Link.  Seriously, who the hell dresses up as Nyan-Cat?? I didn’t even know who Nyan-Cat WAS, much less how to go about making a costume.  But here’s the really fun part about having kids that don’t want to be the usual suspects for Halloween — I get to help them create something.  Though I will admit to a majority of the sewing work, my kids collaborated with me in the development and execution of all aspects of their costumes.  This is a vital piece of what it means, to me, to be an SF parent — DIY. I have found that the SFF community is as much about the creation of works as it is about the consumption of them.  We are not passive receptors of all things “Geek,” but the creators and participants in those things.  We establish entire communities dedicated to just TALKING about geeky things.  So when my kid comes home and says, “Mom, I want to be Yukio for Halloween,” I don’t just stand there wondering who the frak Yukio is (though that is part of it), I also see it as an invitation to find out what my children love and why they love it.  (By the way, my children often dress in pairs… the other one wanted to be Rin.  Seriously, JFGI).  Then I get to do what cosplayers do — create those random costumes using bits and pieces of material and ingenuity.  It’s crucial to me that my kids are involved in this process as it teaches them the value of hard work AND imagination. So what ARE the kids going to be this year?  Yuno Gasai and Doctor Stein (not pairs).  Which means I’ve got a whole lot of anime to catch up on again.

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My Superpower: Alisa Krasnostein

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 Alisa Krasnostein to talk about how Talking People Into Things relates to Kaleidoscope… I’m not sure I should actually tell you this but my superpower is talking people into getting involved in projects. I guess creative energy at the inception of a project is contagious. It’s definitely one of the best bits about publishing — the rush of coming up with a new project that you think can work, that you want to spend a year or two developing into something great and bouncing ideas off co-collaborators. That’s how we’re here— Julia and I—working on Kaleidoscope, an anthology of diverse contemporary YA fantasy. You see, I heard Julia Rios on a podcast recording of a panel at WisCon talking about YA dystopian fiction and how so much of it featured white, able bodied characters. And thinking about all the books I’d recently been reading, I realised how true that was and how little that made sense, really, that in post-apocalyptic worlds, only the white, able-bodied amongst us would survive some major world catastrophe. And I realised that I wanted to publish some fiction that was the opposite of that, to at least start to right that balance and provide some choice of something else for young adults to read. So I took this idea to Julia because I really wanted to work with her to make this project happen, since she’d prompted the idea, and, ok, I admit it. I used my superpower on her. And she said yes! And so here we are – this month we launched a crowdfunding campaign through the Australian platform Pozible to raise the funds to bring this anthology project to reality. The main characters in Kaleidoscope stories will be part of the QUILTBAG, neuro-diverse, disabled, from non-Western cultures, people of color, or in some other way not the typical straight, white, cis-gendered, able-bodied characters we see all over the place. Our focus is contemporary fantasy with protagonists from all sorts of backgrounds being the heroes of their own journeys. We’ve already acquired some fantastic stories from Sofia Samatar, Ken Liu, Vylar Kaftan, and Jim Hines and we’ll be opening the anthology to submissions when we raise $7k towards our fundraising goal. I can’t wait to bring this project to fruition. And um, use my superpower for good. To learn more about the project, check out the Kaleidoscope Pozible page! __________________ Alisa Krasnostein is editor and publisher at independent Twelfth Planet Press, a freshly minted creative publishing PhD student and recently retired environmental engineer. She is also part of the twice Hugo nominated Galactic Suburbia Podcast team. In 2011, she won the World Fantasy Award for her work at Twelfth Planet Press. She was the Executive Editor and founder of the review website Aussie Specfic in Focus! from 2004 to 2012. In her spare time she is a critic, reader, reviewer, podcaster, runner, environmentalist, knitter, quilter and puppy lover.

The Skiffy and Fanty Show Podcasts

#08 — The Riddick Trilogy (2000, 2004, & 2013) — A Shoot the WISB Discussion

http://media.blubrry.com/skiffyandfanty/dts.podtrac.com/redirect.mp3/archive.org/download/ShootTheWISB08TheRiddickTrilogy/Shoot%20the%20WISB%20%238%20–%20The%20Riddick%20Trilogy.mp3Podcast: Play in new window | DownloadSubscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Android | iHeartRadio | Podchaser | Podcast Index | Email | TuneIn | Deezer | RSSAlien monsters, action-packed slaughter-fests, and space Conan, oh my! Keffy, David, and Shaun offer their thoughts on the Riddick Trilogy:  Pitch Black, The Chronicles of Riddick, & Riddick.  That pretty much covers it… Spoiler Alert:  the following podcast contains spoilers for the film being reviewed; if you wish to see the film without having it ruined for you, download this podcast and save it for later. Download the episode here. Show notes (info about our contributors can be found on the about page): Pitch Black (2000) The Chronicles of Riddick (2004) Riddick (2013) Note:  We’re shifting over the Shoot the WISB segments from my personal blog to The Skiffy and Fanty Show.  Why?  It just makes more sense, I suppose.  If you’ve never listened to the Shoot the WISB casts, you’ll likely see them pop up in your iTunes or RSS feeds over the next few weeks.

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Feed the Machine: Blunderdome

This week’s Feed the Machine will be a little different. Before I go on, here is the link to the article in question: Following the missteps of giants — Phys.org It’s a short article, more a review than a science article really, but it got me thinking, and I want it to get you thinking. Why would one of the most respected scientists of the 21st century knowingly make such a blunder? Beyond this, what if, on an alternate earth, there was a scientist who was so respected, so smart, so right about everything, that her discoveries weren’t examined? In fact, they were taken as LAW the moment she set them down to paper? What if the world conformed to her laws, even when they were wrong? What if it didn’t? What if someone called her on it? Imagine a

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The Disquieting Guest: The Visceral and the Cerebral

The other day, I was exchanging a few thoughts with Shaun about film, the need to entertain, and the engagement of emotions versus the idea of a film that was a purely intellectual experience. This brought me to thinking about the same topic in relation to horror. Some years ago, I read an anthology of horror tales that was a success in that the stories were skillfully written, but a failure in that few, if any, worked at all as horror. The reason for this was (what seemed to me) a misplaced desire to “transcend” the field (a subject for another time), coupled with a form of self-referential storytelling that worked fine in and of itself but prevented the reader from engaging emotionally/suspending disbelief/what-have-you. Let me add here that I intend no disparagement to a more writerly (as opposed to readerly) style — each has its strengths and particular uses. However, what this

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