Anil Menon interview
Sun 15 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal.| Posted by: Gavin
Talks with (the indefatigable?) Charles Tan. And if you like that, go read his blog.
Everyone’s going bovine
Fri 13 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., To Read Pile, YouTube| Posted by: Gavin
Go read Going Bovine. But first, watch this (old but excellent short):
Free books, songs, arguments
Tue 10 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Greer Gilman, Kelly Link, Pop, Publishing, writing| Posted by: Gavin
BSCreview has 3 free copies of A Working Writer’s Daily Planner 2010 to give away. Want Want Freebies?
Lev Grossman included Kelly’s Magic for Beginners in a list of “the six greatest fantasy books of all time.” Ladies and Gentlemen, start your arguments.
Richard Nash calls out BEA (via Shelf Awareness) on their rather silly decisions not to have a big party and not to let in the grand reading public. BEA is dying and no one seems to care. The American Booksellers Association has sensibly started a new thing, the very successful Winter Institute where publishers and booksellers get to meet in peace. Book fairs (hello Brooklyn!) do tremendously. ComicCon is spinning off secondary fairs like no one’s business. Kids are lining up to get into manga fairs. Someone else is going to take up the slack (hello again, Brooklyn, LA, Washington DC, Miami). Putting publishers in front of the public is no bad thing. We went to a huge indie book fair in Italy that was 4 days long and bigger than the Javits Center. People love that stuff — come on BEA, get like AWP and other smarter conferences, let the people in.
Hal Duncan has songs (with Neil Williamson) and a successful pay-per-view (or whateveryoucallit) going on on his site.
There have been two fascinating reviews (one website, one blog—there are many on the blogs but I just happen to be posting right now) of Greer Gilman’s Cloud & Ashes: Paul Kincaid on SF Site,
Time and again, in innumerable different ways, we see hints about the ways that the stories we tell shape the actions we take…. This is where the circle is broken, and if events drive us incessantly towards tragedy as stories must, it is a very different tragedy from what has gone before.
Cloud and Ashes is not an easy book to read, but it is incredibly worth while making the effort. Any sense I have given of what goes on here is inevitably only partial, there is so much I have had to omit, major characters, significant plot lines. Above all, I have barely hinted at how much it plays with gender roles, how much it has to tell us about the role of women in shaping the world, indeed how every potent active character is female. It is a book you will barely grasp, but it is a book whose hold on your mind, on your memory, is assured. It is a story about story, and stories are what we are all made of. Abandon hope all ye who enter here.
And She Who Must on LJ:
I loved it, and it still took me about a month to read it; it’s quite long, and very, very rich. After a few pages I’d have to stop and digest what I’d read. I don’t think that’s a bad thing – indeed, I was in no hurry to reach the end, I didn’t want it to be over.
Other end of the stick
Tue 10 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal.| Posted by: Gavin
Received by email today from one of the trade review journals after we queried them in September about reviewing our current books:
Dear Gavin,
Thank you for your inquiry regarding the title “XXXXXXXX.”
Unfortunately, this title was not selected for review by XXXXXXX
as it did not fit our present needs. However, we would
encourage you to send your future titles to us for review consideration,
and we look forward to receiving them.
Best,
Oh well. Next time.
Interfictions: LA + Henry Jenkins
Tue 10 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Interfictions, Interstitial Arts| Posted by: Gavin
First once-was-MIT honcho Henry Jenkins heads for LA, now he’s writing about interstitialism (fantastic intro here), and now tonight there’s a huge event tonight in LA.
La what? No! L.A.! Don’t miss the latest Interfictions event tonight in LA (and then on Friday in Boston) with a huge selection of readers, musicians and so on. Here’s the info straight from the horse’s mouth:
Q&A with Cecil Castellucci, and Interfictions 2 hits LA tonight!
To celebrate the launch of Interfictions 2, we’ve been arranging a number of interviews with the contributors, which will be posted to the new Interviews page in the Interfictions 2 section of our site. The first of these is with none other than a host of (and a featured performer at) tonight’s Interfictions 2 Reading in Los Angeles – Cecil Castellucci!
In addition to being the author of the Interfictions 2 short story “The Long and Short of Long-Term Memory”, Cecil is the author of three YA novels, Boy Proof, The Queen of Cool, and Beige, with a fourth, Rose Sees Red, coming in 2010 from Scholastic; two YA graphic novels, The PLAIN Janes and Janes in Love, illustrated by Jim Rugg; and numerous short stories. She is currently working on a hybrid novel and the libretto for a multimedia opera. She has played in bands, produced and directed a feature film, a few one-woman shows, a play, and does the occasional confessional stand-up comedy gig. She is always on the lookout for new ways to tell stories. Having lived on both coasts and both sides of the 49th parallel, she appreciates a well-coordinated snow removal operation but wisely hides out where none is needed. For more information, go to www.misscecil.com or visit her blog at castellucci.wordpress.com.
For those of you in or around Los Angeles, here’s the rundown on tonight’s event:
LOS ANGELES
Tuesday, November 10, 2009 from 8 to 10 PM
@ M Bar – 1253 Vine (at Fountain)
Liz Ziemska and Cecil Castellucci invite you to an evening of readings from INTERFICTIONS 2: An Anthology of Interstitial Writing edited by Delia Sherman & Christopher Barzak!
Performances by: Patty Cornell, Dave Foley, Kimberly Huie, Michael O’Keefe, Rasika Mathur, Darcy Martin, & others reading stories by Cecil Castellucci, Elizabeth Ziemska, Brian Francis Slattery, Ray Vukcevich, Peter Ball, Nin Andrews, and Stephanie Shaw. Directed by: Flint Esquerra. Musical accompaniment by: Jonathan Stearns. No Cover + $10 food minimum. Reservations are strongly encouraged: 323-856-0036. Books will be for sale available courtesy of Skylight Books
http://castellucci.wordpress.com/2009/10/22/interfictions-2-anthology-reading-los-angeles/
Sounds like quite a party! Until then, though, why not check out the interview? And stay tuned – we also have interviews with Jeffrey Ford, Alaya Dawn Johnson, Ray Vukcevich and others coming soon!
UK Twilight site giving away Pretty Monsters!
Mon 9 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Canongate, Feeebies, Kelly Link, Pretty Monsters| Posted by: Gavin
Ganked wholesale from BellaandEdward.com(!):
BAE UK Book Contest: Win Pretty Monsters by Kelly Link!
Pretty Monsters is a great collection of horror short stories, and is a good crossover book that teenagers and adults will love. I really enjoyed it!
UK Competition:
Canongate Books is pleased to offer BellaandEdward.com prize copies of Pretty Monsters.
What’s for dinner?
Sat 7 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., food, the world, To Read Pile| Posted by: Gavin
Jonathan Safran Foer’s new book Eating Animals is causing a nice ruckus on the Huffington Post — and lots of other places. Nice to see people thinking about their impact on the world. I think it would be a great bookclub pick. For those interested in the numbers, United Poultry Concerns posted a list of the numbers of animals slaughtered for food (US only):
Chickens
Total number died for food: 8.13 billion (7.67 billion for meat, 458 million for eggs)
Average number killed per American meat-eater: 27.5 (26 for meat, 1.5 for eggs)
Average number consumed per American lifetime: 2,147 (2,028 for meat, 120 for eggs)
…
ALL ANIMALS
Total number died for food: 80 billion
Average number consumed per American meat-eater: 270
Average number consumed per American lifetime: 21,000
!
Sat 7 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal.| Posted by: Gavin
I just like exclamation points.
Read an excerpt from D*U*C*K
Thu 5 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Poppy Z. Brite, Second Line, stuff to read| Posted by: Gavin
The good folk at BSCreview just posted an excerpt from Poppy Z. Brite’s D*U*C*K which is the second half of our new books, Second Line: Two Short Novels of Love and Cooking in New Orleans. Starring lovable chefs Rickey and G-man and their assorted crew of hard working, fun loving restaurant crew the first novel, The Value of X, introduces Rickey and Gary (as he is known in his pre-G-man years!) and tells the story of their first years together. D*U*C*K jumps past the intervening years (chronicled in the novels Liquor, Prime, and Soul Kitchen) to when the guys have their own restaurant but Rickey can’t resist a challenge and takes on an outside gig to cater the annual Ducks Unlimited banquet.
Also: we’re working on printing up a menu for the banquet for Poppy to sign and if it does work out we’ll be selling them here with or without copies of the book.
In the mean time, read on:
Everything you’ve heard about summer in New Orleans is true. The only tourists who visit during that infernal season are hardy Germans and Australians, who can weather anything, and people from Alabama, Mississippi, and Texas, who are used to it and don’t have far to drive. The deepest pits of Hades have nothing on your average August day in the Crescent City. (You can say Crescent City if you like, because the Mississippi River cups the city in a crescent shape. Say “the Big Easy,” or, worse, “N’Awlins,” and people will know you’re a tourist.)
The impish love child of Tutuola and Marquez
Wed 4 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Books, Karen Lord| Posted by: Gavin
That’s what Nalo Hopkinson says of Karen Lord’s debut novel: “The impish love child of Tutuola and Marquez. Utterly delightful.” Yes it is, yes it is!
Interfictions 2 is made of Top 10 Stuff!
Tue 3 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Books, Interstitial Arts, readings| Posted by: Gavin
It’s publication day for Interfictions 2 (yay!) and there’s a lot going on:
- There’s a reading tonight at 7 PM at Borderlands Books in San Francisco, CA
What could be a better match for Borderlands than a collection celebrating art that crosses borders?
- Amazon.com selected Interfictions 2 as one of the Best Books of 2009!
(And if you’re not sure where this interstitial book belongs, Amazon says science fiction & fantasy. But you might want to look for it in fiction or anthologies as well.) - A second piece of art has been posted to the auction.
- There are more free stories in the Interstitial Annex:
- “Quiz” by Ellis O’Neal
“Some Things About Love, Magic and Hair” by Chris Kammerud
“For the Love of Carrots and The Luxembourg Gardener” by Kelly Cogswell
“Stonefield” by Mark Rich - Keep an eye on the Library Thing blog as they will have 15 copies of Interfictions 2 going out to their Early Reviewers.
- Pre-orders have shipped out and the book should be in stores and libraries this week.
Don’t despair ebook readers: the book is available as a DRM-free PDF directly from us or in many formats on Fictionwise.
This week there are readings all across the country: drop in and join the fun! These are events you won’t want to miss—readings, music, light shows, unicyclists (maybe), and so on:
NEW YORK
Friday, November 6 at 7:00 p.m.
Housing Works Bookstore Cafe
126 Crosby Street
LOS ANGELES
Tuesday, Novemberr 10 at 8:00 p.m.
M Bar
1253 Vine (at Fountain)
BOSTON
Friday, November 13 at 7:30 p.m.
The Lily Pad
Inman Square
1353 Cambridge Street
Interfictions 2
Tue 3 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Books| Posted by: Gavin
November 2009 · 9781931520614 · 302 pp · trade paper/ebook
Q. Where do I find a book like Interfictions 2 in my local bookshop if this is a book that slips between the crevices?
A. It depends, as always, on your local booksellers. They might have chosen to shelve it in Fiction/Anthologies or Science Fiction/Anthologies. If they don’t have it, they can of course order it.
Interfictions 2 Study Guide by Delia Sherman, Christopher Barzak, and Carlos Hernandez. PDF: Interfictions 2 Study Guide (6629 downloads ) .
Direct from the globe-spanning hive mind of the Interstitial Arts Foundation (IAF) comes the second wide-ranging, mind-melding anthology of short fiction: Interfictions 2: An Anthology of Interstitial Writing .
Delving deeper into the genre-spanning territory explored in the first Interfictions, this anthology showcases 21 original and innovative writers. Features work by Jeffrey Ford, Brian Francis Slattery, Nin Andrews, and M. Rickert. With an introduction by Henry Jenkins and an afterword/editor interview by Colleen Mondor of Chasing Ray.
Those interested in teaching Interfictions 2 can request an exam or desk copy here.
Reviews
* Selected by Amazon.com as one of the Best Books of 2009.
“This anthology celebrates its cross-genre concept as much as its content, with a lengthy introduction, contributor notes, and afterword. Will Ludwigsen’s lovely, melancholy “Remembrance is Something Like a House” combines paranormal and true crime elements. Alaya Dawn Johnson’s dystopian “The Score” reads like a post-9/11 Twilight Zone episode. A scientist tries to prevent a world war in Elizabeth Ziemska’s winsome “Count Poniatowski and the Beautiful Chicken.” Stephanie Shaw’s strong and earthy writing grounds her story of dragons and a four-headed obstetrician in “Afterbirth.” … Fans of the first Interfictions anthology will dig it.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Some of the most experimental and formally daring genre fiction of the year.”
—Locus
“Interfictions 2: An Anthology of Interstitial Writing performs the paradoxical feat of containing what does not want to be contained: a collection of inventive, genre-flouting stories that unnerve as much as they delight.”
—New Pages
Bibliophile Stalker | Strange Horizons | Black Gate | Fantasy Magazine |
Table of Contents
Henry Jenkins, “Introduction: On the Pleasures of Not Belonging”
Jeffrey Ford, “The War Between Heaven and Hell Wallpaper”
M. Rickert, “Beautiful Feast”
Will Ludwigsen, “Remembrance Is Something Like a House”
Cecil Castellucci, “The Long and Short of Long-Term Memory”
Alaya Dawn Johnson, “The Score”
Ray Vukcevich, “The Two of Me”
Carlos Hernandez, “The Assimilated Cuban’s Guide to Quantum Santeria”
Lavie Tidhar, “Shoes”
Brian Francis Slattery, “Interviews After the Revolution”
Elizabeth Ziemska, “Count Poniatowski and the Beautiful Chicken”
Peter M. Ball, “Black Dog: A Biography”
Camilla Bruce, “Berry Moon: Laments of a Muse”
Amelia Beamer, “Morton Goes to the Hospital”
William Alexander, “After Verona”
Shira Lipkin, “Valentines”
Alan DeNiro, “(*_*?) ~~~~ (-_-) : The Warp and the Woof”
Nin Andrews, “The Marriage”
Theodora Goss, “Child-Empress of Mars”
Lionel Davoust, “L’Ile Close”
Stephanie Shaw, “Afterbirth”
David J. Schwartz, “The 121”
Colleen Mondor, Christopher Barzak, and Delia Sherman, “Afterwords: An Interstitial Interview”
Free copies of Interfictions 2
Mon 2 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Art, auctions, Free books, Interfictions 2, Interstitial Arts| Posted by: Gavin
Now is probably a good time to mention that we have 5 free copies of the snazziest mind-poppingest new anthology of short stories out there, Interfictions 2, to go out to readers in the USA + Canada who will review it on blogs, websites, etc., etc.
If you live outside these two countries, we’d be happy to send you a PDF.
Drop us a note in the comments box and we’ll contact you to get your address.
Interfictions 2 comes out tomorrow so preorders are shipping and events are starting to happen: today the IAF are launching their online auction of pieces inspired by the stories in the book—this is just fantastic stuff, check it out.
—
Later this week there will be more free Super Special Books (!) offered up of so do come back.
In which we are awarded!
Sun 1 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., 51%, Big Mouth House, Gavin J. Grant, Kelly Link, Small Beer Press| Posted by: Gavin
Lovely news from San Jose: Gavin & Kelly have been awarded the World Fantasy Award, Special Award, Professional, for Small Beer Press and Big Mouth House: yay, we say, yay! John Kessel, whose collection we were proud to publish, was on hand to pick up the Howards which seemed appropriate as it is all about the books.
Other winners include: Jeff Ford (twice!), Margo Lanagan—Jeff and Margo: they rule this award!—Rick Bowes, Kij Johnson, Paper Cities (ed. by Ekaterina Sedia), Shaun Tan, and Michael Walsh of Old Earth Books for his two Howard Waldrop collections.
—
Don’t know that we’ll keep counting, but this year we did some gender breakdown of a few of the genre awards and back in August we posted the World Fantasy Award nominees and the gender breakdown:
- 26 men
- 21 women
And the winners (not counting the two extra Life Achievement Awards to Jane Yolen and Ellen Asher):
- 6 men (1 AUS, 5 USA)
- 4 women (1 AUS, 3 USA)
Hound update
Sun 1 Nov 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., bookshops, Vincent McCaffrey, YouTube| Posted by: Gavin
Brian at BSC review hit the nail on the head in a review of Vincent McCaffrey’s Hound. The titular bookhound, Henry Sullivan, is a man alone has immersed in the world of books—a world the author is worried might be passing away (or at least in a state of rapid decline)—and Hound explores one reaction to the possibility of that passing. Perhaps the novel should have been subtitled “an investigation into the possible death of the book as a physical object,” but it doesn’t roll off the tongue.
If you missed Vince’s conversation-starting posts at Powell’s (get your cup of tea and biscuits/cookies ready) you can read them here. Here’s a reaction to the reading/panel on the future of the book at Mysterious Bookshop. I think Vince knows that the paper book won’t completely disappear but he is right to wonder and to agitate and to keep the conversation going on what the future will look like and who will make it.
And, yes, you can buy Hound as an ebook. Vincent might be worried about the death of the paper book, but we’re quite aware there is a growing percentage of readers who like to read our books on other substrates.
And in case you missed his readings (there’s one TK at the Odyssey in South Hadley in January, dorp by!) he was interviewed by The L Magazine and Jamaicaway Books:
Or, of course, just start reading Hound.
Second Line shipping
Thu 29 Oct 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Poppy Z. Brite| Posted by: Gavin
We’ll be shipping out Poppy Z. Brite’s Second Line to reviewers and readers asap — contact us if you want to review it.
We may yet have a nice little surprise for collectors (give us another week after all) and a little something sort of special for regular readers…
Greenstart
Tue 27 Oct 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., the world| Posted by: Gavin
In 2008 I was happy to see our home electricity through New England GreenStart came from:
- 75% hydroelectric power
- 20.9% biomass
- 3% solar
- 1.2% wind
For summer 2009 the figures had improved to:
- 69.3% hydroelectric
- 19.9% biomass
- 4.7% solar
- 6% wind
So solar and wind now make up more than 10% of our power: a good start! I think the program has changed in some way but as far as I know on it goes, happily charging a little extra to invest in alternative options.
Second Line
Tue 27 Oct 2009 - Filed under: Books| Posted by: Gavin
October 27, 2009 · 9781931520607 · 272 pages · trade paper/ebook
Selected for the inaugural ALA Over the Rainbow book list.
Read an interview with Poppy Brite in Gambit magazine.
Second Line: Two Short Novels of Love and Cooking in New Orleans starring lovable chefs Rickey and G-man from the incomparable Poppy Z. Brite. Includes: The Value of X and D*U*C*K and a new afterword by the author.
These two short novels bookend Poppy Z. Brite’s cheerfully chaotic series starring two chefs in New Orleans. The Value of X introduces G-man and Rickey, who grew up in New Orleans’ Lower Ninth Ward and who are slowly realizing there are only two important things in life: cooking and each other. Rickey’s parents aren’t quite so taken with the boy’s plans and get him an impossible-to-resist place at the Culinary Institute of America.
Reviews
“Seeing love and passion bloom in the hearts of what seem like the most unlikely of subjects is, to me, quite a remarkable feat. Simply put, Second Line was an excellent read that deepened my understanding of Rickey & G-Man’s relationship and left me hungry for more from this dynamic couple. I dare you to give Second Line a try and see if you don’t become a Brite fan like me!”
—NewOrleans.com
“If I had to sum up Second Line in a few words, I would say Kitchen Confidential meets A Separate Peace. Gary and Rickey, young foodies from the Ninth Ward in New Orleans, are separated by their fearful parents after they transition from best friends to lovers. They earn their kitchen chops during their time apart. Their love story is believably tender and yet unsentimentally told. Brite has beautifully captured the voices of very young men confronting fear and love. The charm of the guys together contrasts amusingly with the gritty bitchiness of busy men in the fast-paced kitchen of a luxury joint. They have knives, and they will pluck ducks.”
—Néna Rawdah, St. Johns Booksellers, Portland, OR on NW Booklovers
“Fun foodie fiction, and readers will scarf it down.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Poppy Z. Brite lives in New Orleans, which is perhaps the best setting in the world for two novels about the chaotic world of the restaurant kitchen. The first, “The Value of X,” introduces Rickey and G-man, two chefs who love food and each other. Against the backdrop of some fabulous meals, the two must navigate the end of childhood, questions of sexuality, the challenges of family and separation, and their divergent ambitions. In “D*U*C*K,” the two have become owners and co-chefs of Liquor, one of the Big Easy’s most popular restaurants.”
—The Daily Hampshire Gazette
“The Value of X should be particularly noteworthy for teens, as it is the coming out and coming-of-age stories of two of Brite’s long time characters, future chefs (and restaurant owners) Rickey and G-Man….. Brite’s books and stories about New Orleans are some of my all time favorite comfort reading and fans of southern writing and food should not let this collection pass them by. Great stuff, for sure.”
—Guys Lit Wire
Read an excerpt from The Value of X.
In D*U*C*K, Rickey and G-man’s restaurant, Liquor, is doing well but there are the usual complications of running a kitchen: egos get bruised, people get fired . . . and then Rickey is jumped in an alley by one of their ex-waiters.
On the mend, Rickey takes a side job to cater the annual Ducks Unlimited banquet, where every course must, of course, include the ducks the hunters have bagged. Rickey’s crew are ready to meet the challenge, but Rickey’s not sure he can do it all and deal with the guest of honor—his childhood hero, former New Orleans Saints quarterback Bobby Hebert.
Originally published in limited hardcover editions by Subterranean Press, these two novels are full of the pure joy of love, hard work, and great food and are a tremendous extension (or introduction) to Brite’s series.
Poppy Z. Brite’s fiction set in the New Orleans restaurant world includes Prime, Liquor, and Soul Kitchen. She has also published five other novels and three short story collections. She lives with her husband Chris, a chef, in New Orleans.
High praise for Poppy Z. Brite’s previous books:
“A high-end restaurant is—for any competent novelist—a gift that keeps on giving. The heat, the bickerings and intrigue, the pursuit of perfection, the dodgy money keeping it all afloat: the setting spawns plots . . . Can the [Liquor] franchise sustain itself? The answer is yes.”
—New York Times
“Rickey and G-man’s venture makes for a funny, surprisingly suspenseful story informed by Brite’s sure, sympathetic eye and her in-depth understanding of the arcane subculture she describes.”
—The Washington Post
Poppy Brite fun
Tue 27 Oct 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal.| Posted by: Gavin
If all goes well tomorrow we should have a fun surprise to offer Poppy Brite fans. If all does not go well this post does not exist.
Fantasy football for books people?
Sun 25 Oct 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Books, internets, Publishing, stock market| Posted by: Gavin
So why isn’t there something like Fantasy Football or the Hollywood Stock Exchange for books? Wouldn’t it be fun to bet who was going to be #1 next week, which house would have all the NBCC winners, etc., etc.? And if game-theory peeps are to be believed, wouldn’t the simulacrum give us some sense of the real world?
Anyway, some techy-programy-bookie-type person out there: please go and make millions on this now, please, thank you.
The Ant King
Fri 23 Oct 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Benjamin Rosenbaum, Free books| Posted by: Gavin
LitDrift are giving away a free copy of Ben Rosenbaum’s wide-ranging and excellent story collection The Ant King this week. Drop by and leave a comment for your chance to win. They also, bravely, encourage haiku.
Congratulations to last week’s winner, Paul Ketchum, who gets a free copy of Couch!
Planner Preview + $4.95 DRM-free PDF
Fri 23 Oct 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., downloads, ebooks, Working Writer's Daily Planner| Posted by: Gavin
We have just posted the month of March here as a preview of our Working Writer’s Daily Planner which is at the printer now. (2011’s will be earlier!)
The Planner is also now available as a DRM-free PDF (emailed within 24 hours of purchase — and usually sooner) for just $4.95.
We’re selling it as a nicely-bookmarked 2MB PDF (formatting makes it harder than other books to convert into other formats) which means you can print it at any size you want: letter-sized to put in a 3-ring binder, tiny to go on index cards, or 6″ x 9″ to replicate the printed edition.
We’d love to hear about different printing and use strategies and we’re always open to suggestions for what should go into next year’s edition. (Read the table of contents for this year’s Planner here.)
If it’s Thursday, must be Portsmouth
Thu 22 Oct 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., bookshops, readings, Vincent McCaffrey| Posted by: Gavin
RiverRun Books is one of the most popular Twittering Bookstores and they love Hound — you can’t miss it, it’s right there on their front table — which is great as Vince is reading there tonight.
Vince is blogging all week at Powell’s.com and is part of a great book event in New York City on Sunday.
Wed 21 Oct 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Alan DeNiro| Posted by: Gavin
Dave Schwartz posted a fantastic photo: “Alan Deniro’s poster at the Rain Taxi Twin Cities Book Festival, handmade publicity for his imminent novel, Total Oblivion, More or Less.” Click on it and make it bigger:
What do you think the price should be?
Mon 19 Oct 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Calendar| Posted by: Gavin

What should we price the pdf ebook of our upcoming A Working Writer’s Daily Planner 2010? The paper version is $13.95 (and is at the printer).
The ebook will be pdf only — there is too much formatting and too many pics for anything else.
Suggestions?
Free calendar
Wed 14 Oct 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Free stuff, Writer's Daily Planner| Posted by: Gavin
Update: Done!
We just received this promo and we won’t be ordering them (just like last year!) as we have a calendar all of our very own making that at long last is at the printer. It’s a nice enough planner, a month per page, and various handy things.
So, instead of letting it molder until next year, we’ll send it out to the very next reader to order one of our books or zines.
Ray Vukcevich at the movies (almost)
Mon 12 Oct 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Paranormal Activity, Ray Vukcevich, the movies| Posted by: Gavin
A couple of readers have emailed us to ask if the skippy viral thriller-chiller film Paranormal Activity is based on Ray Vukcevich’s incredibly creepy and wonderful story “Whisper” — which was collected in Meet Me in the Moon Room (and originally published in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction in January 2001).
The answer: while we haven’t seen the film at the moment we don’t think so. Ray tells us there has been a lot of film interest in “Whisper” over the years (along with a few of his other stories) but even though both “Whisper” and Paranormal Activity feature paranoid people setting up cameras to record themselves sleeping it seems that this is one of those cases of parallel evolution where the a similar idea is interpreted artistically from a couple of different points of view.
Either way, if you like creepy stories and haven’t read “Whisper,” now’s your chance.
Redemption in Indigo
Mon 12 Oct 2009 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Forthcoming, Karen Lord, Small Beer Press| Posted by: Gavin
Small Beer Press are very happy to announce they have acquired the rights to Karen Lord‘s debut novel, Redemption in Indigo, which received the pre-publication BDS$10,000 Frank Collymore Award in Barbados and will be published as a trade paperback original in June 2010.
Redemption in Indigo is a clever and entrancing debut which incorporates folktales to tell the story of a woman who frees herself from a troublesome and capricious husband only to become the unwitting heroine in a fantastic struggle to reconcile the supernatural forces of fate with humanity’s free will.
Jewel Forde interviewed Karen on CBC’s “Mornin’ Barbados” and Karen’s just posted the video on Facebook.
Read the introduction after the break: