Next Tuesday is Half-Witch Tuesday
Fri 18 Oct 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., John Schoffstall | Comments Off on Next Tuesday is Half-Witch Tuesday | Posted by: Gavin
Coming next Tuesday: the paperback edition of Half-Witch. I love having this on the table at book fairs and conventions. The title speaks to so many people who pick up the book and say something along the lines of “I’m a bit of a witch . . . ” Pick it or here, you know, from Book Moon!
Coming Soon: Book Moon
Wed 25 Sep 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Book Moon | 3 Comments | Posted by: Gavin
Here’s a project we’ve been working on for a bit and will be, with luck, working on daily for a long time to come: Book Moon!
ETA: Shelf Awareness story. Now in our local paper, the Daily Hampshire Gazette.
Kim Scott on The Vintner’s Luck
Wed 25 Sep 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal. | Comments Off on Kim Scott on The Vintner’s Luck | Posted by: Gavin
Book Riot just posted this week’s episode of their Recommended podcast and one of the authors featured is Kim Scott who recommends Elizabeth Knox’s novel The Vintner’s Luck [transcript].
Kim is the second author on the show. The first is Jackson Bird (@jackisnotabird), who recommends The Perks of Being a Wallflower by Stephen Chbosky. Bird’s memoir, Sorted: Growing Up, Coming Out, and Finding My Place, is now available.
I highly recommend this Recommended podcast!
Good news for those that like signed books: we’re stocked up on signed copies and are shipping them out for website orders of Kim Scott’s novel Taboo, Andy Duncan’s collection An Agent of Utopia, and a few others.
News
Tue 24 Sep 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., John Crowley, LCRW, The Moon | Comments Off on News | Posted by: Gavin
We have some news coming tomorrow. It’s not about announcing a new short story collection coming next summer which will provoke much fainting and sharing on the sosh meeds. It’s not about the next issue of LCRW, coming together, should be out in November, as per usual, fingers crossed for a yay. Neither is it about a John Crowley reading in Easthampton in November, but that should be happening. We haven’t been unlawfully prorogued, so it’s not that. More manana!
Brooklyn Book Fest 2019
Thu 19 Sep 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Andy Duncan, book festivals, Sarah Rees Brennan | Comments Off on Brooklyn Book Fest 2019 | Posted by: Gavin
Humans and other inhabitants of this universe and others, on this coming Sunday, September 22, 2019, from 10 a.m. in the morning until 6 p.m. in the balmy early evening please make your way to
Table 649
Brooklyn Book Festival
Borough Hall
Brooklyn, NY
and join us at our booth where you will find: New Books · Old Surprises · Sale books · Zines · and perhaps even: Andy Duncan, author of An Agent of Utopia! (Andy is To Be Confirmed so that’s a solid maybe, actually. Read one of his stories here in the meantime.)
Last year I had a great time, sold tons of books, talked to a lot of people. This year I’m looking forward to having the paperbacks of Sarah Rees Brennan’s In Other Lands and maybe even John Schoffstall’s Half-Witch as last year everyone picked those up.
New Margo Lanagan & Kathleen Jennings
Tue 17 Sep 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Kathleen Jennings, Margo Lanagan | Comments Off on New Margo Lanagan & Kathleen Jennings | Posted by: Gavin
We are delighted to announce our second surprise Australian title of the year: Stray Bats by Margo Lanagan, illustrated by Kathleen Jennings.
Stray Bats, which is number 13 in our very occasional chapbook series, will be published on November 5, 2019. It will also be available at the World Fantasy Convention in Los Angeles (Oct. 31 – Nov. 3) where Margo will be a Guest of Honor and Kathleen, who was one of the World Fantasy Award judges this year, will be attending.
Stray Bats will be available as a 68-page, saddle-stitched chapbook, and as an ebook on Weightless Books as well as all the other usual ebooksites once the information filters out to them.
Both author and illustrator are probably quite familiar to our readers — I’ll drop their bios in at the end, though, just in case — and being long-time admirers of their work we could not resist this fabulous collaboration. Stray Bats began when Margo started writing short vignettes in response to poems from Australian women. She gathered those and sent them to Kathleen who responded in kind, in loose enjoyable pencil illustrations that capture the same quick, quirky smart energy of Margo’s responses. The result is this chapbook of short shorts which imitate the style, character or subject of a work for the purposes of celebrating the work. There are “Dachshund droids, sinister crones, shapeshifting children, a plethora of witches, dragonstalkers, familiars, slithering eels and, of course, bats.”
For those readers who wish to explore Lanagan’s inspirations further, she has included a list of poems that inspired her and notes on where those poems might be found.
We’re very much looking forward to publishing this tiny chapbook. You can pre-order or share info about it here.
Margo Lanagan has published two dark fantasy novels, and Stray Bats is her eighth short story collection. She collaborated with Scott Westerfeld and Deborah Biancotti on the New York Times-bestselling YA superheroes trilogy, Zeroes. Her work has won four World Fantasy Awards, nine Aurealis and five Ditmar Awards and been listed for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, the Dublin IMPAC Award, Shirley Jackson, Michael L. Printz, and Seiun awards, among others. Her books and stories have been translated into 19 languages. Margo lives in Sydney. Her twitter is @margolanagan.
Kathleen Jennings is an illustrator and writer in Brisbane, Australia. She is a Hugo Award finalist and has been shortlisted three times for the World Fantasy Award and has received the E. G. Harvey Award for Australian SF Art and several Ditmar Awards for professional and fan art. Many of her illustrations and incidental drawings appear on her blog tanaudel.wordpress.com and she tweets @tanaudel.
20% of the List is (or isn’t?) Small Beer
Fri 13 Sep 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Abbey Mei Otis, Booklist, Sarah Pinsker, Top 10 | Comments Off on 20% of the List is (or isn’t?) Small Beer | Posted by: Gavin
We are celebrating having two titles on the recent ALA Booklist Top 10 Debut SF&F list — and they’re both short story collections: shout out to Abbey Mei Otis for her Top 10 debut Alien Virus Love Disaster and Sarah Pinsker for her Top 10 debut Sooner or Later Everything Falls into the Sea.
Vandana Singh in the TLS
Fri 6 Sep 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Vandana Singh | Comments Off on Vandana Singh in the TLS | Posted by: Gavin
This lovely review seemed worth highlighting — Vandana Singh’s Ambiguity Machines was reviewed by Michael Saler in London’s Times Literary Supplement:
“Vandana Singh’s science fiction . . . highlights the interplay between scientific and mythic narratives, focusing on the ways that ‘stories make the world’. A physicist in the United States, Singh was raised in India, where she was attracted by traditional legends as well as science. Several of her tales ruminate on the self-critical representations of science and the manifold meanings of myth. In one, an eleventh-century Indian poet famous for his collection of folklore has been resurrected in the future by a scientist who records alien legends, allowing Singh to compare poetic and scientific responses to oral tales. She shows that neither science nor myth are sufficient on their own, as her characters discover when they are misled by reductive empirical descriptions or beguiled by fairy-tale desires. Singh instead champions complex systems, in which discrete parts influence each other in unpredictable ways. She combines seemingly opposed categories, such as tradition and modernity, human and animal (or machine), the urban and the natural, and – most frequently – myth and science. Each yields facets of a more capacious reality that gradually unfolds within ingenious plots, which extend from earth in the near future to alternative histories and gleeful romps across time and space.”
Tonight in Easthampton
Fri 6 Sep 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., events, Kim Scott, readings | Comments Off on Tonight in Easthampton | Posted by: Gavin
Come join us at 7 p.m. at White Square Books, 86 Cottage Street, where Kim Scott will be reading from his award-winning novel Taboo. Kim lives in Perth, Western Australia, and this is an opportunity not to be missed. The reading was featured in the Boston Globe:
Australian novelist Kim Scott was the first writer of Indigenous Australian ancestry to win the prestigious Miles Franklin Award for his second novel “Benang,” a prize he won again for his fourth book, “That Deadman Dance.” Widely lauded in Australia, Scott’s work hasn’t yet penetrated the market in the US, but this week, the boundary-pushing Western Mass-based Small Beer Press is publishing the North American edition of his latest award-winning novel “Taboo.” In this potent, ghostly book, Scott, part of the Noongar people of Western Australia, tells what happens when a group of Noongar return to the site of a massacre which followed the killing of a white man for kidnapping a black woman. The book wrestles with the haunt of history, and poetry lives on each page. “Now his own house was haunted, and he was glad.” In the taboo farmland, the group reckon with language and connection, and what reconciling with the past means for the present. They face the way the history and its sins live on, and how rebirth demands destruction. “Death is only one part of a story that is forever beginning,” Scott writes. On a brief US tour, Scott will read and discuss “Taboo” on Friday at 7 p.m. at White Square Books in Easthampton.
And here’s a short clip of Kim reading at the Library of Congress Book Festival in Washington, DC, last Saturday:
"Come close. Closer." The spilling wheat, "Golden, it has both the look and sound of great wealth." Kim Scott reading from TABOO @librarycongress Book Festival—moderator @BWheeler_PhD who put the panel together on the left & graphic novelist @brentonemckenna on the right. pic.twitter.com/yJBhkpiYYg
— Small Beer Press (@smallbeerpress) September 5, 2019
All Change at the Top
Tue 3 Sep 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Kim Scott, Publication day, Sarah Rees Brennan | Comments Off on All Change at the Top | Posted by: Gavin
This is the top of our website yesterday:
And this is how it looks today:
Yes, we have 2 new books out today: the North American edition of Kim Scott’s award-winning novel Taboo and the huuuuge paperback edition of Sarah Rees Brennan’s In Other Lands — the latter comes with an extra short story, “Wings in the Morning,” originally published in Monstrous Affections: An Anthology of Beastly Tales (also just out in paperback).
Taboo was a lovely surprise, it came to us in January and later came the news that Kim might be attending the Library of Congress Book Fest in DC in August — which he did, this past weekend, that was fun. The novel is immersive, different, and ticks a lot of the boxes that make us and our readers happy. As Kim does events in the next week in Charlottesville, VA, Easthampton, MA, and Brooklyn, NY, I can’t wait to see how North America reacts to it.
In Other Lands went through three printings in hardcover and has already earned out its audio advance. The paperback slipped out early since Sarah’s latest novel, Season of the Witch: Chilling Adventures of Sabrina #1, came out in July — there’s a second in December — and we wanted to make it easy for readers to find the huge new paperback. So far the paperback is flying off the shelf and more stores are adding it each week. Readers sure like novels so it’s fun to have these two both out today, both so differently brilliant.
In Other Book Clubs
Wed 28 Aug 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., book clubs, Sarah Rees Brennan | Comments Off on In Other Book Clubs | Posted by: Gavin
Next Tuesday is the official paperback publication day for Sarah Rees Brennan’s novel In Other Lands. The book is on the ALA Rainbow Book List, the ABC Best Books for Young Readers and Bank Street College Best Children’s Books of the Year lists, and is a Junior Library Guild selection. It was a nominee for both the Georgia Peach Book Award and the Florida Teens Read Award and a finalist for the Hugo, Locus, and Mythopoeic awards. Not bad!
Now it’s coming out in a huge trade paperback edition — extra big not just because of all the shiny gold on the cover, but also because it includes the story that started it all: “Wings in the Morning.”* Sarah originally wrote the novel on her blog as a prequel to “Wings”(!) and then rewrote it for publication.
It turns out that In Other Lands being a reader fave means it’s also turning up in book club recommendations! One bookstore near us, Annie’s in Worcester, MA, has it down for their Rainbow Readers bookclub on Sat., Sept. 14th, and over there in Columbus, Ohio, the Feminist Sci-Fi Bookclub at the fabulous Two Dollar Radio HQ have it scheduled for their Sept. 24th meeting. How awesome!
I’ll add these two book clubs to our events schedule. Do drop us a line any time your book club is reading any of our books and I’ll add it to the schedule.
Annie’s Book Stop of Worcester, MA
SPECIAL EVENT: Saturday, September 14, 6PM–8PM – Rainbow Readers Discusses IN OTHER LANDS by Sarah Rees Brennan. The Rainbow Readers of Massachusetts is an LGBTQIA book club that meets once a month. All are welcome!
Feminist Sci-Fi Bookclub: In Other Lands by Sarah Rees Brennan
Tuesday, September 24, 2019
7:00pm-8:00pm
1124 Parsons Ave, Columbus, OH 43206, USA
FACEBOOK EVENT PAGE
Hosted by Haley Cowans, Feminist Sci-Fi Bookclub:
Or, “Word After Word: A Feminist Speculative Fiction Book Club” — “Speculative fiction” (science fiction, fantasy, horror) has always been a vehicle for writers to explore identity, social inequality, the strangeness of the world, and the hopes and fears for the future. In this monthly book club we’ll be reading works of speculative fiction by women and nonbinary writers, discussing the ways these works make us think, feel, and reflect on reality. Read more: https://twodollarradiohq.com/feminist-sci-fi-bookclub
This month’s book is In Other Lands by Sarah Rees Brennan
“Four years in the life of an unloved English schoolboy who’s invited to a secret magical school and learns that even in fantasyland, real life is messier than books. . . . But over the course of four years training among child soldiers, Elliot, unsurprisingly, grows up. His slow development into a genuinely kind person is entirely satisfying, as is his awakening to his own bisexuality and to the colonialism, sexism, and racism of Borderlands society. . . . A stellar . . . wholly rewarding journey.” ―Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
* Bookclubs are free and open to the public with no signup required. Just read, arrive, and have fun.
* You can find the book at your local library, or available for purchase at Two Dollar Radio HQ and other fine booksellers.
* Our regular food and bar menus will be available.
LOT PARKING: The Columbus Metropolitan Library across the street (1113 Parsons Ave) has generously allowed our use of their parking lot while they are closed only; parking there allowed during the following hours: Tuesday: 8pm – close
*An aside: “Wings in the Morning” was originally published in the anthology Monstrous Affections: An Anthology of Beastly Tales edited by Kelly and me, and it too is now coming out in paperback!
A Trippy Genre-Hop Featuring a Trace of Fairy Tale, a Touch of Gothic, & More
Fri 23 Aug 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., events, Kim Scott, readings | Comments Off on A Trippy Genre-Hop Featuring a Trace of Fairy Tale, a Touch of Gothic, & More | Posted by: Gavin
Not this Saturday, but the next one, Kim Scott, the first Indigenous writer to receive the Miles Franklin Award will be traveling to the USA for a series of events in support of his fourth novel, Taboo. It has been a very quick run up for us on this book: it was submitted on January 25th of this year, which makes the publication date of September 3 the equivalent of a sprint in publishing terms. Thank you! to everyone at Consortium and all our sales reps who have brought the book to booksellers’ attention, to the trade reviewers at Kirkus and Publishers Weekly and to all the indie bookstores and others who are stocking it.
Taboo is Scott’s 4th novel. In his afterword, as quoted by Kim Forrester of Reading Matters, Scott calls it a “trippy, stumbling sort of genre-hop that I think features a trace of Fairy Tale, a touch of Gothic, a sufficiency of the ubiquitous Social Realism and perhaps a touch of Creation Story” which rings true to me.
Although Scott has twice won the Miles Franklin award in his home country and Taboo received four literary awards (totalling AU$80,000) in Australia, his voice is one of those mostly missing from literary discourse in North America so I am deeply gladdened that the Australian Embassy is bringing him to the USA.
If you’re in DC on August 31 for the Library of Congress Book Festival, I hope I see you at the 10 a.m panel, “The View From Country—Australia’s Aboriginal Writers.” This will be a near unique opportunity to see these writers in the northern hemisphere.
After a trip to UVA, and before he heads to Community Bookstore in Brooklyn, Scott will come up to Western Massachusetts for a reading at Easthampton’s own White Square Books on Friday, September 6, where I hope we can show him a SRO crowd of enthusiastic, open-minded, and curious readers.
Here’s the full list of events:
Aug. 31, 10 a.m “The View From Country—Australia’s Aboriginal Writers” with Jeanine Leane and Brenton McKenna , Library of Congress Book Festival, Washington, D.C.
Sept. 5, 6 p.m. “Truth Telling,” Kluge-Ruhe Aboriginal Art Collection, UVA, 400 Worrell Dr., Charlottesville, VA 22911
Sept. 6, 7 p.m. White Square Books, 86 Cottage St., Easthampton, MA
Sept. 9, 12:30 p.m., NYU
Sept. 9, 7 p.m. Community Bookstore with Terr-ann White, 143 Seventh Ave, Brooklyn, NY
The Mount, signed by Carol Emshwiller
Thu 22 Aug 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Carol Emshwiller, Tiptree Award | Comments Off on The Mount, signed by Carol Emshwiller | Posted by: Gavin
The Tiptree Award is going to have an auction that starts August 24 but you can preview it here. Included in the auction is a very rare item, a copy of The Mount signed by the late author, Carol Emshwiller. (Is it rare? I searched on Bookfinder for a signed copy, any edition, and none came up.)
The Mount was a Nebula Award finalist, won the Philip K. Dick Award Winner, and was selected as a Best Book of the Year by Locus, Book Magazine, and the Village Voice. More recently MaryKate Jasper and Charlie Jane Anders included it in an io9 list 10 Ultra-Weird Science Fiction Novels that Became Required Reading.
It is a weird and fabulous novel. It’s rare to find one signed and the money goes to an excellent cause. Good luck with your bidding!
A. B. Young’s Vain Beasts in PEN America Best Debut Short Stories 2019
Tue 20 Aug 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., A. B. Young, LCRW | Comments Off on A. B. Young’s Vain Beasts in PEN America Best Debut Short Stories 2019 | Posted by: Gavin
Today Catapult publishes PEN America Best Debut Short Stories 2019, edited by three superstars writers, Carmen Maria Machado, Danielle Evans, & Alice Sola Kim.
The dozen debut authors are all winners of the $2,000 PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers. The stories collected here were originally published in Alaska Quarterly Review, Auburn Avenue, Black Warrior Review, Conjunctions, Epiphany, The Iowa Review, Kweli, Nimrod Journal, The Rumpus, The Sun, and I am delighted to say, Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet. That story is A. B. Young’s “Vain Beasts” from LCRW 38.
With editors like these, I am very much looking forward to reading this book. Here’s a little more about it:
“Prominent issues of social justice and cultural strife are woven thematically throughout 12 stories. Stories of prison reform, the immigrant experience, and the aftermath of sexual assault make the book a vivid time capsule that will guide readers back into the ethos of 2019 for generations to come . . . Each story displays a mastery of the form, sure to inspire readers to seek out further writing from these adept authors and publications.”—Booklist
Who are the most promising short story writers working today? Where do we look to discover the future stars of literary fiction? This book offers a dozen compelling answers to these questions.
The stories collected here represent the most recent winners of the PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers, which recognizes twelve writers who have made outstanding debuts in literary magazines in the previous year. Chosen by a panel of distinguished judges, themselves innovators of the short story form, they take us from the hutongs of Beijing to the highways of Saskatchewan, from the letters of a poet devoted to God in seventeenth-century France to a chorus of poets devoted to revolution in the “last days of empire.” They describe consuming, joyful, tragic, complex, ever-changing relationships between four friends who meet at a survivors group for female college students; between an English teacher and his student-turned-lover in Japan; between a mother and her young son.
In these pages, a woodcutter who loses his way home meets a man wearing a taxidermied wolf mask, and an Ivy League–educated “good black girl” climbs the flagpole in front of the capitol building in South Carolina. Each piece comes with an introduction by its original editors, whose commentaries provide valuable insight into what magazines are looking for in their submissions, and showcase the vital work they do to nurture literature’s newest voices.
Stories by Tamiko Beyer, Sarah Curry, Laura Freudig, Doug Henderson, Enyeribe Ibegwam, Jade Jones, Pingmei Lan, Marilyn Manolakas, Jon Paul Infante, Kelsey Peterson, Erin Singer, and A.B. Young
ABOUT THIS YEAR’S JUDGES
Danielle Evans is the author of Before You Suffocate Your Own Fool Self, which was a co-winner of the 2011 PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize for a Debut Short Story Collection, the winner of the 2011 Paterson Fiction Prize and the 2011 Hurston/Wright Legacy Award for fiction, and an honorable mention for the 2011 PEN/Hemingway Award. She teaches in The Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University.
Alice Sola Kim is a winner of the 2016 Whiting Award. Her writing has appeared or is forthcoming in Tin House, McSweeney’s, BuzzFeed, and The Year’s Best Science Fiction and Fantasy. She has received grants and scholarships from the MacDowell Colony, Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, and the Elizabeth George Foundation.
Carmen Maria Machado‘s debut short story collection, Her Body and Other Parties, was a finalist for the National Book Award, the Kirkus Prize, the Art Seidenbaum Award for First Fiction, the World Fantasy Award, the International Dylan Thomas Prize, the PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize for a Debut Short Story Collection, and the winner of the Bard Fiction Prize, the Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Fiction, the Brooklyn Public Library Literary Prize, the Shirley Jackson Award, and the National Book Critics Circle’s John Leonard Prize. She is the writer in residence at the University of Pennsylvania.
Kim Scott in the Valley
Mon 19 Aug 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., events, Kim Scott, readings | Comments Off on Kim Scott in the Valley | Posted by: Gavin

We’ve just added a local reading for Australian author Kim Scott, whose novel Taboo, we are publishing next month. Kim will be reading at White Square Books, 86 Cottage St., Easthampton, MA, at 7 p.m. on Friday, September 6.
Kim is an Australian superstar and we’re hoping to get a crowd together for good nights in Easthampton and Brooklyn. Come on by!
The full list of Kim’s events is:
August 31, 10 a.m “The View From Country—Australia’s Aboriginal Writers” with Jeanine Leane and Brenton McKenna , Library of Congress Book Festival, Washington, D.C.
UVA
September 6, 7 p.m. White Square Books, 86 Cottage St., Easthampton, MA
September 9, NYU
September 9, 7 p.m. Community Bookstore, Brooklyn, NY
Laurie J. Marks, Brattleboro, VT Reading
Mon 5 Aug 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Laurie J. Marks, readings | Comments Off on Laurie J. Marks, Brattleboro, VT Reading | Posted by: Gavin
We are happy to announce to say that next Friday (not this Friday), August 16 at 6 p.m., Laurie J. Marks will be doing a reading/signing from the final book in her Elemental Logic series, Air Logic, at Everyone’s Books (25 Eliot St., Brattleboro, VT 05301). The bookstore is getting all 4 books in the series in so it’s a great chance to pick up a signed set. Thanks to the bookstore and all those who worked to set this up!
Air Logic is a Locus Notable Book and here’s the beginning of Katherine Coldiron’s Locus review:
“You might not believe me, but this is the truth: Laurie J. Marks’s Elemental Logic books are as good as Elena Ferrante’s monumental Neapolitan Quartet. They achieve the same depth, the same spellbinding quality, and the same sense of falling entire into a world on the page, tethered to real life by the sure hand of a master writer. They expose a talent as mighty as Le Guin’s for building intricate moral dilemmas inside fantasy universes, for creating characters the reader will remember for decades, and for presenting solutions that amount to much more than throwing soldiers or magic at the problem. These books are a profound achievement in fantasy literature.”
Friday night: Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin
Thu 1 Aug 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Ursula K. Le Guin | Comments Off on Friday night: Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin | Posted by: Gavin
You might remember the Kickstarter for Arwen Curry’s documentary Worlds of Ursula K. Le Guin. It’s been shown at festivals around the world for the past few months and on Friday August 2nd at 8 p.m. it will premiere on PBS American Masters then be available to stream for 28 days. Do not miss.
First Taboo trade reviews
Tue 16 Jul 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Kim Scott, readings | Comments Off on First Taboo trade reviews | Posted by: Gavin
In a couple of months we will publish Kim Scott’s new novel, Taboo. Those in the know, i.e. Australian readers, have given the book 4 awards and we give it an enthusiastic thumbs up.
Kim is coming to the USA in August for the Library of Congress Book Festival on August 31 — I’m going down to DC for that, see you there? — and we’re working on a reading in New York City and maybe further north. More on that and his other events closer to the actual days and in the meantime to whet your appetite, here’s a word from Publishers Weekly
“In this assured, complex novel, Scott (True Country) delves into the fraught history of race relations in Western Australia. . . . Scott’s novel memorably describes this dramatic resurrection and the enduring power of ancestral traditions.”
and another from Kirkus Reviews:
“Scott (That Deadman Dance, 2010, etc.) has created a shadowy and elliptical story, but it is not as hopeless as it sometimes feels: Tilly is a survivor, and though her Aboriginal culture is not a perfect salvation, it nevertheless provides her with a touchstone in the chaos.”
As The Conversation says, Scott talks about events we don’t want to remember. He circles back to one in particular, which he wrote about in an earlier novel, Benang, and then fictionalizes here in Taboo. There’s an out-of-time grace to some of Scott’s writing although he shifts registers easily from humor to tense scenes where the possible outcomes are unknown and perhaps violent. Scott is one of the writers who are taking on the hard work of actually considering how to live with our pasts and, novel after novel, building a way for it to happen.
You can listen to the first two minutes read by the author here.
LCRW 39, it’s out there
Mon 15 Jul 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal. | Comments Off on LCRW 39, it’s out there | Posted by: Gavin
We were in Portland, OR, last week at the Tin House Summer Workshop — what a feat that is! 250+ people come from all corners of the world to write, talk, and work together. Before it all began (by which I don’t mean 20 years ago, rather a week or so ago), Kelly and I stopped off at Powell’s books and I’m delighted to report that, yes, they still have some good books. Face out in the small & indie press section I was very happy to see the new issue, the 39th of its kind, of LCRW.
Did I take a photo? No. I did not, mostly because I stood there picking through the zines and the place was busy, busy so there was no time for a quiet photo. I picked up some other zines, and, oh a few books. They never have everything I’m looking for, but, oh, they always have some things I wasn’t looking for, such a joy.
Fundraiser this weekend
Wed 3 Jul 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., fundraiser, immigration, RAICES | Comments Off on Fundraiser this weekend | Posted by: Gavin
This July 4th weekend I hope you will join us in celebrating and supporting Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services (RAICES) as part of the #BookstoresAgainstBorders campaign. We are pledging a donation of 10% of gross sales from July 5 – 7th from sales of books and zines (including subscriptions) from our website.
If you can, please donate (anything from $5 or $500 or more!) directly here — every little bit helps me reach my goal.
Thank you for your support of this fundraiser and your action to help those desperately in need.
Readercon 2019
Tue 2 Jul 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Cons, Michael J DeLuca | Comments Off on Readercon 2019 | Posted by: Gavin
While we won’t be at Readercon this year — Kelly will be back at the fabulous thing that is the Tin House Summer Workshop and I’ll be part of an editor panel — our books will be there at a table run by the mighty Michael J. DeLuca, publisher of the journal Reckoning.
Some of our authors will be there including John Crowley, Jeffrey Ford, Laurie J. Marks, Sarah Pinsker, Vandana Singh, and Howard Waldrop as well as innumerable friends and lovely people so I hope you get your books signed by them. We’ll have an ad in the program book, ping me if you see it, and their books will be available at the table — ok, not John’s forthcoming collection — as well as the current LCRW with the monster of gentrification on the cover as well as the zines Kelly and Ursula made this spring.
There will also be copies of all four of Laurie J. Marks’s Elemental Logic novels of which Katherine Coldiron says this in the new issue of Locus:
ETA: Jeffrey Ford & Howard Waldrop will be there.
Note: Laurie J. Marks will be there on the Saturday only and will be signing copies of her book at 3 p.m.
Air Logic Publication Day
Tue 4 Jun 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Laurie J. Marks | Comments Off on Air Logic Publication Day | Posted by: Gavin
Seventeen years ago Laurie J. Marks’s first Elemental Logic novel, Fire Logic, was released in hardcover and I, desperately searching for women writers to write about for my monthly BookPage sf&f review, was delighted to find a fantasy from Tor with some blurbs. I enjoyed it quite a bit:
Fire Logic is definitely not a simplistic fantasy where one side is right and the other must be wrong; like real life, it is all about shades of gray. Zanja comes from a highland people who hold themselves happily apart from other nations. She is their avatar, sent out to communicate, trade and learn from the outside world. But the outside world is in turmoil: former refugees have armed themselves and are taking over. The countryside is soon a war zone, replete with horribly familiar acts of war and reprisals. Marks has a wide-angle view and has written an immensely political and unflinchingly optimistic novel. Differences are celebrated as often as scorned, and love can be found even with an enemy without the costs that might be expected in our world.
Less than two years later and an ARC for the second book in the series, Earth Logic, landed, celebrations — and another review in BookPage. Show me the reader who isn’t affected when a book changes the world:
. . . Karis’ group finds a hidden library and an old printing press. They use the press to publish a book that reminds the Shaftali that they unlike the occupying Sainnites are a hospitable and generous people. This is one step on Karis’ path to the nonviolent defeat of the Sainnites. As Emil, the former Shaftali general says, ‘War cannot make peace.’ The nonviolent choice is a strong and difficult one, and not everyone in Shaftal supports it especially those who have lost family and friends in the occupation. However, it is what Karis wants, and in earth logic “action and understanding are inseparable,” so, although it seems impossible to overcome the warring factions, she is determined to make it happen.
Earth Logic is a thought-provoking and sometimes heartbreaking political novel which absorbingly examines the dynamics between two groups of people. Good bread, wine and friendships alone may not save the world, but they make the doing of it much more palatable.
A couple of years later Laurie asked us for advice on publishing the third novel and we slowly talked it over here and with her until we came to realize that we could and would happily publish it. So in 2007 Water Logic was sent out into the world — sometimes with tea! Laurie was Guest of Honor at WisCon, the book received another starred Booklist review and for readers of the Elemental Logic series, all was looking well.
Then slowly the series became one of those unfinished series that seemed like they would stay that way. We knew that Laurie was working away on it — tying up all those stories in one book that made sense of it all was a huge job — but there were family and health complications.
Over the years we’d check in and we were delighted to get a chance to put the first two books out in new editions, at first in ebook, and this year in trade paperbacks, especially as it gave us a chance to work with Kathleen Jennings again who did an amazing multi-part illustration over a number of years that gave a lively fresh visual identity to the series. (Of course, the 4 books still don’t match as we had previous cover of Water Logic stripped off and the books were rebound with the new covers so they have a smaller trim size than the first, second, and fourth Logics. If the books do well and we get to reprint . . . )
And slowly light broke over the horizon and then suddenly the day was here and it is June 4th, 2019, and here we are with the fourth and final Elemental Logic novel out in the world:
Welcome to Air Logic.
Weekend Reading
Sat 1 Jun 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Laurie J. Marks | Comments Off on Weekend Reading | Posted by: Gavin
Brit Mandelo is writing a thoughtful series of short essays on Laurie J. Marks’s Elemental Logic series on Tor.com. As Andrew Liptak points out in today’s round-up of books to check out this month, the first three novels came out between 2002 and 2007, so it’s been quite a wait for the fourth and final novel, Air Logic.
Last weekend at WisCon in Madison, Wisconsin, it was delightful to chat with Laurie about Brit’s first essay on Fire Logic: Living in Hope is a Discipline:
The centering of hope as a practice, of hopeful thought as expansive and dangerous, is vital to the series’ political argument. Nurturing willful, wild, directed hope—even in moments of despair and defeat—is necessary to be able to envision a path out of conflict, in direct contravention of nihilism or the reactionary impulse.
I am so glad Brit is writing these and pulling up these threads. Hope as a practice, while working for peaceful regime change, is where I am in this world at the moment.
In the second essay (which contains spoilers, so heads up if that bothers you — the way it used to me, but now I don’t mind — maybe it’s time passing and the world encrappening but they seem less important to me now. Everybody’s mileage varies here, of course), on the second volume in the series, Earth Logic Rather Than Defeat the Enemies, You Must Change Them: Brit focuses on the hard work being done and attempted:
Renouncing the moral impulse to be (and to have been) right, decisively victorious above all else, in favor of the ethical impulse to create a better future is the philosophical core of Karis’s ultimate treaties . . .
I can’t wait to read what he has to say about the next two volumes over the next couple of weeks. The publication date for Air Logic is this coming Tuesday, June 4th, and what a celebration it is for all the readers of this series. Any number of people came by and chatted at WisCon about the series — with some picking them all up so that they can read it again and some readers who don’t read series until they are finished(!) picking up the first or all four. These books have had a profound influence in many readers’ lives and I am looking forward to following even more readers’ reactions to them over the next few months, the next few years.
Afrofuturism Bundle
Fri 31 May 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Ayize Jama-Everett, bundles | Comments Off on Afrofuturism Bundle | Posted by: Gavin
Hey, there’s a week left to get your hands on the current Afrofuturism collection on Storybundle. Ayize Jama-Everett’s debut novel The Liminal People is part of it as well as nine other books, which together make an essential library of recent hits. If you can get it, don’t miss out.
Free Copies of And Go Like This
Thu 23 May 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., John Crowley | Comments Off on Free Copies of And Go Like This | Posted by: Gavin
Don’t miss this: you have until May 28 to enter to win one of 15 free advance reading copies of John Crowley’s fifthcoming (see below) new short story collection, And Go Like This, on LibraryThing.
This is the third book of Crowley’s we will have published — how amazing that sentence still is — after Endless Things and The Chemical Wedding. And good news for all, the first trade review just came in from Publishers Weekly:
“A compassionate, ruminative eye frames the sepia-tinted worlds of the fifth collection from erudite fantasist Crowley (Ka). The stories are drawn from the last 20 years of Crowley’s long career and span the breadth of speculative and literary short fiction. . . . This collection’s recurring refrains—“pay attention,” Shakespeare, injuries and aging, the agony of making choices—coalesce into a reading experience like a long afternoon spent with an intimate, excellent raconteur.”
Read the full review on Publishers Weekly.
SBP at WisCon 2019
Mon 20 May 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Carol Emshwiller, conferences, conventions, Laurie J. Marks | 1 Comment | Posted by: Gavin
Next weekend I’m happy to say I’ll be back at WisCon for the first time in a while. I’ll be running the Small Beer table in the dealers’ room on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday — but I have to leave on Monday morning so do come before then!
I love the future WisCon imagines and present it inhabits, and Memorial Day weekend in Madison — with the farmers’ market and all those great restaurants — is a great place to be.
Twelve years ago we worked with Laurie J. Marks to make sure Water Logic would be available when she was Guest of Honor at WisCon 31 and the great news here is that Laurie is coming back to WisCon, and, if the shipping gods allow it, we will have all four new editions of her Elemental Logic series.
I am not 100% sure whether the rebound Water Logic will arrive on time. Fingers crossed. The rebinding means the trim size will be a tiny bit smaller than the other 3 volumes — just so that nothing is ever quite neat and square — but the choice was either recycling hundreds of books or rebinding.
The good news: we will definitely have Fire Logic, Earth Logic, and lo after these many long years: Air Logic.
We’ll also have the new issue of LCRW, a few books, some zines, and if all goes well the new issue of Reckoning.
On Friday afternoon if I’m not in the dealer’s room, you can find me at the Tiptree Bake Sale.
I don’t do many panels now, given that if I’m away from the table I want to hear other voices speak not mine, but there was one panel I did sign up for that I’m looking forward to. I hope to listen more than speak, am hoping to laugh but may cry:
Carol Emshwiller—A Memorial | |||||||||||||
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4 stars
Fri 10 May 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal. | Comments Off on 4 stars | Posted by: Gavin
Over the years, the first three volumes of Laurie J. Marks’s Elemental Logic series each received a starred review in Booklist. I am delighted to say that the fourth and final volume, Air Logic, which comes out next month, has just received a starred review, too!
Fire Logic
“Marks is an absolute master of fantasy in this book. Her characters are beautifully drawn, showing tremendous emotional depth and strength as they endure the unendurable and strive always to do the right thing, and her unusual use of the elemental forces central to her characters’ lives gives the book a big boost. This is read-it-straight-through adventure!” — Booklist (starred review)
Earth Logic
“Marks produces another stunner of a book. The powerful but subtle writing glows with intelligence, and the passionate, fierce, articulate, strong, and vital characters are among the most memorable in contemporary fantasy, though not for the faint of heart.” — Booklist (starred review)
Water Logic
“How gifts from the past, often unknown or unacknowledged, bless future generations; how things that look like disasters or mistakes may be parts of a much bigger pattern that produces greater, farther-reaching good results.” —Booklist (starred review)
and now Air Logic
“The entire series is highly recommended to anyone looking for a series that presents not only a queer fantasy world, but also one of the most well-wrought and engaging fantasy worlds out there.” — Booklist (starred review)
Nuekom Award Shortlists
Thu 9 May 2019 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Abbey Mei Otis, Awards, Claire G. Coleman | Comments Off on Nuekom Award Shortlists | Posted by: Gavin
These are words to brighten the day: there are two Small Beer titles on the Neukom Institute Literary Arts Debut Award Shortlist:
- Alien Virus Love Disaster: Stories by Abbey Mei Otis
- Terra Nullius by Claire G. Coleman
Last year, the inaugural year for the awards, Juan Martinez’s Best Worst American and Christopher Rowe’s Telling the Map were both finalists for the award with Best Worst American being one of the winners.
Here’s the full press release with all of the finalists, congratulations, one and all!
These 10 Books May Be Telling Us the Future
HANOVER, N.H – May 9, 2019 – Ten books that dare to imagine how society collides with the future have been named to the shortlist of the 2019 Neukom Institute Literary Arts Awards.
From the challenges of life on a floating Arctic city, to epidemics of forgetfulness and zombification, to an Earth occupied by amphibious aliens, the Neukom shortlist forces readers to grapple with uncomfortable twists to familiar storylines of climate change, social justice and technological innovation.
The second annual speculative fiction awards program will be judged by Ann and Jeff VanderMeer. Awards will be presented for a debut book and for a book in the open category.
“Artists and writers continue to take on the important role of challenging us with their visions of ‘what if,’ often picking up where scientists and technologists either neglect to or forget to go,” said Dan Rockmore, director of the Neukom Institute. “This year’s entries are testament to the extraordinary creativity and thoughtfulness that is finding its means of expression in speculative fiction.”
2019 Neukom Institute Literary Arts Awards Shortlist of Books:
Open Category
Blackfish City by Sam J. Miller (Ecco, 2018)
Plum Rains by Andromeda Romano-Lax (Soho Press, 2018)
Red Clocks by Leni Zumas (Little Brown, 2018)
The Night Market by Jonathan Moore (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2017)
Theory of Bastards by Audrey Schulman (Europa, 2018)
Debut Category
Alien Virus Love Disaster: Stories by Abbey Mei Otis (Small Beer Press, 2018)
Infomocracy by Malka Older (Tor, 2016)
Severance by Ling Ma (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2018)
Terra Nullius by Claire G. Coleman (Small Beer Press, 2018)
The Book of M by Peng Shepard (William Morrow, 2018)
“It’s been gratifying to play a part in reading and selecting such unique and strong fiction from so many different points of view. We’ve particularly enjoyed encountering writers we had not read before—and it’s especially gratifying to find so many new voices, who we believe readers will be encountering for decades to come. The Dartmouth prize is a much-needed addition to the current slate of science fiction awards,” said spec fic writer and co-judge Jeff VanderMeer.
The winning books will be selected from the shortlist in late May.
Each award winner will receive a $5,000 honorarium that will be presented during a Dartmouth-hosted panel to discuss the genre and their work.
“We’re looking forward to selecting the winners. This is such a strong list and a difficult choice for us but a very good problem to have! It’s wonderful to see so many writers taking chances and showing us other ways to view the world we live in today and what our tomorrows could be,” said spec fic editor and co-judge Ann VanderMeer.
The Neukom Institute for Computational Science is dedicated to supporting and inspiring computational work. The Literary Arts Awards is part of the Neukom Institute’s initiative to explore the ways in which computational ideas impact society.
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About the Neukom Institute Literary Arts Awards
The Neukom Institute Literary Arts Awards is an annual awards program to honor and support creative works around speculative fiction. Established in 2017, the awards program is an open, international competition sponsored by the Neukom Institute for Computational Science at Dartmouth College. The awards aspire to raise general awareness of the speculative fiction genre, as well as the interconnectivity between the sciences and the arts. The awards serve as part of the Neukom Institute’s initiative to explore the ways in which computational ideas impact society.