Last night we went to see Andrew Bird
Sat 11 Oct 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Pop, YouTube | Comments Off on Last night we went to see Andrew Bird | Posted by: Gavin
and didn’t bring any kind of recording device, still or motion. Woe. (Well, a phone, but that doesn’t count, right?) This was after we’d gone up to the Bookmill for a short set by the Winterpills, whose new CD comes out on Tuesday. But we got a copy, yay! (It is fabby. More TK on that—they play the Iron Horse on Oct. 25th if you’re in the area, see you there.)
Bird is (previously unbeknownst to us) a star. People went nuts when he whistled(!), played the glockenspiel, violin, and occasionally, a(n often tuned) guitar. Those big triffid things behind him are the speakers (“spinny,” “stripey,” and the two large unnamed ones). He’d pluck out a loop on the violin then another then another then add in some whistling, and sometimes singing to get a one-man wall of sound. It was music, Bob, but not as we know it. There were a couple of new songs (see below), and, he gave a shout out to the cave episode of Blue Planet.
Fortunately for us someone else up there in the balcony was recording:
You can see spinny at work in “Sectionate City” (Section 8 City?), Kelly’s new favorite Andrew Bird song:
Some of our books not crossing into Borders
Fri 10 Oct 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., bookshops | Comments Off on Some of our books not crossing into Borders | Posted by: Gavin
A note to our readers who might be out there in the wilds of the world (or at least the USA) hoping to snag their copies of our books at Borders: well, some of those books just won’t be there.
As ever, the best choice is your local bookshop—they can order it fast from Consortium or Ingram—but if you’re looking for Geoff Ryman’s The King’s Last Song or Joan Aiken’s Complete Armitage Stories or to get your copy of Ben Parzybok’s Couch (one couch to rule them all!) from Borders: at the moment you are out of luck.
Borders has sold a ton of copies of some of our books, Stranger Things Happen and Perfect Circle, for example, but while the indies, A*azon, and Barnes & Noble have ordered a nice chunk of our new books’ print runs, so far Borders, as Greg Frost also found, is sitting tight, not ordering books, trying not to go bust. So, best of luck on the not going bust, might be a bit hard if they’re not actually carrying the books people are expecting to find.
Thu 9 Oct 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., the world, YouTube | Comments Off on | Posted by: Gavin
And now a tiny car for the Future as seen in France—where all good things, like Nobel Prize winnerz (why is that funny with a ‘z’?), come from today—which also, and you won’t be surprised to find this, being a futurehead yourself, involves llamas. Source:
Thu 9 Oct 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., the world, YouTube | Comments Off on | Posted by: Gavin
And now a tiny car for the Future as seen in France—where all good things, like Nobel Prize winnerz (why is that funny with a ‘z’?), come from today—which also, and you won’t be surprised to find this, being a futurehead yourself, involves llamas. Source:
Central Chambers
Thu 9 Oct 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., YouTube | Comments Off on Central Chambers | Posted by: Gavin
Pretending we are part of the hype machine. Tiny track from the new Winterpills CD:
Slushee Platform
Wed 8 Oct 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Benjamin Parzybok | Comments Off on Slushee Platform | Posted by: Gavin
Ben Parzybok says:
My opponent has voted for reduced ice cream subsidies 94 times. Listen to my plan. I call for Slushees. I call for a slushee in every pot. Not once has my opponent even mentioned the word ‘Slushee’. But you and I know that it’s tough out there. That every day mothers are getting up early, working hard to feed their kids slushees. Grandfathers who are diabetic and have never even tasted ice cream are sacrificing their retirement so that their grand children can have slushees at school. When I’m president I will reach across the aisle, I will grasp hands with those who favor ice cream, and we will reach bipartisan agreements. We will have a Slushee plan and sign slushees into law. We are the greatest eaters of Slushees on the planet, and we must join hands and work together to solve our Slushee problems. And this is what I will do what I’m president.
Listening while driving
Wed 8 Oct 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Kelly Link, the world | Comments Off on Listening while driving | Posted by: Gavin
Went to Brooklyn to the Community Bookstore for Kelly’s reading, met lots of good people there and found that the store is as good as ever: they have a huge and tempting NYRB section, comfy seats, piles of interesting books not seen on other bookstore tables, and these people know books. Wish it were our local bookshop. But we have good ones here, so la. Also found there is a huge ad for Pretty Monsters in The Believer and one in The New Yorker (wow!).
Got to listen to the debate on the radio on the way back up to Northampton, which is one of the best car inventions there is, although there are some that aren’t that much, you can learn about it at this news online. Apparently Obama seemed to be debating the Penguin (“Eh? eh?”). These debates are completely misnamed. They should be renamed Presidential Candidates’ Talking Points as there’s so little actual debate. What about just letting the two of them have at each other and see if a discussion ensues? Sure, they must find each other tiresome, but Mr. V. Putin isn’t going to accept ” Two-minute answers, followed by one-minute discussion for each question.”
At some point as President one of these guys is going to have to actually get off the script and it would be nice to see them doing so. Obama at least tried to have a conversation a couple of times but apparently that’s not allowed to happen.
As for there only being 3 debates for the Presidency and 1 for the VP slot, there’s more debate at the average 7-11 over who should have slushees and who should have ice cream. Bah.
It was fascinating to listen to the debates and then to the various call-in shows as we avoided road works somewhere in the depths of Connecticut. No one seemed persuaded by the other guy and Obama seems to be taking the high road, so got to love that. One more debate to go, then 2 weeks of these two guys playing nice to each other and Palin doing all the mud-slinging, then it will all be over. Can’t wait.
BTW
Fri 3 Oct 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., the world | Comments Off on BTW | Posted by: Gavin
Kelly says Julie of the wolves would not vote for Sarah Palin.
Chevy gets some bail out action
Fri 3 Oct 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., the world | Comments Off on Chevy gets some bail out action | Posted by: Gavin
When for some reason the bail out failed, Autobloggreen posts a note from the Detroit News on their hometown industry getting a nice little backend governmental funding. Funding for electric vehicles: yay! $10-15K for trucks? Sure, electrify those Fedex trucks, school buses, all those large conveyances. 3-ton pick-up trucks? Not so much.
One particular $1 billion chunk of that extra money has been earmarked to provide cash back to American drivers who opt to buy plug-in vehicles. Tax credits starting at $4,168 (there’s a nice round number for you) will go to people to buy a vehicle with a battery pack that has at least 4 kWh of capacity. From there the credits ramp up to $7,500 for vehicles with a 16 kWh pack. For those that haven’t been paying attention, that just happens to be the size of the pack in the Chevy Volt. Medium and heavy duty trucks with plug-in capability are also eligible for credits of $10-15,000.
Waldrop in the Times
Fri 3 Oct 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Howard Waldrop | Comments Off on Waldrop in the Times | Posted by: Gavin
In the LA Times, Ed Parks has a look at Old Earth’s new collection of Howard Waldrop’s longer stories, Other Worlds, Better Lives, and Howard Who? receives a name check:
Waldrop knows the virtue of leaving the reader wanting more. (Last year, Old Earth brought out “Things Will Never Be the Same,” an anthology of his shorter work, and in 2006 Small Beer Press reprinted “Howard Who?,” a charming collection from two decades earlier.
Hope they are reading Ed in Hollywood!
Kelly in Boston, an interview
Fri 3 Oct 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Kelly Link | Comments Off on Kelly in Boston, an interview | Posted by: Gavin
Kelly Link reads tonight at the Harvard Book Store (which has a new owner, yay for them!) in Cambridge. One of the very amusing things about the store is that they own the url harvard.com but have nothing to do with the educational institution also named after a certain English man who left them some books.
Trap Doors, Ping Pong, and Pretty Monsters: An Interview with Kelly Link
Friday Oct 3, 7 PM, Harvard Book Store, Cambridge, MA
Tuesday, Oct. 7, 7 PM, Community Bookstore, Brooklyn
Sunday, Oct. 24, 4 PM, Flights of Fantasy, Colonie, NY
a big day here: Sale. Free Download.
Thu 2 Oct 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Creative Commons, Kelly Link | Comments Off on a big day here: Sale. Free Download. | Posted by: Gavin
Here’s another reason we were up late last night:
1) We’re having a Sale—and 20% of the proceeds will go to Barack Obama’s campaign.
- Celebrate, come on! We are celebrating many things by having a sale.
- 20% of the proceeds of this sale will be donated to Barack Obama‘s campaign for President of the United States of America.
Next month in the USA we get to show the world that the mistakes of the last eight long years will not be repeated. If you really want to buy these books but don’t want to donate to Obama, we won’t insist. But: we hope you will donate! And vote.
- Everything on this page is at least 25% off. Some of it is 60% off. Reason enough to celebrate!
- You can get every book we’ve published for $249—including those still to be published in 2008.
- We are publishing our first book for readers of all ages: Joan Aiken’s The Serial Garden and we want to make sure that the kid in your life (or you) gets it for the holidays.
- Kelly Link’s new collection, Pretty Monsters, is published today by Viking.
With the gracious and kind permission of her US and UK publishers, most of Kelly’s previous collection, Magic for Beginners, is being released free online for the period of a year as a Creative Commons download. (More free books.)
- We just got our tax bill and apparently we have to bail the government out all by ourselves.
- Hallowe’en is coming and we need to move some books out of the haunted warehouse.
- Suggestions welcome!
- Get some books!
2) To celebrate the publication of Kelly’s new collection, Pretty Monsters, most of Kelly’s previous collection Magic for Beginners is now available as a free download in various completely open formats with no Digital Rights Management (DRM) strings attached. It is licensed under a Creative Commons (Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0) license allowing readers to share the stories with friends and generally have at them in any noncommercial manner. The book is provided below in these formats: Text file, HTML, rtf, and lo-res PDF.
Kelly Link and Small Beer Press would like to thank Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (USA) and HarperPerennial (UK) for their willingness to particpate in making these stories available online. Due to contractual obligations, “The Faery Handbag” and “Magic for Beginners” are not included in this download.
Small Beer Press CC-licensed downloads.
Order the book
US hardcover: Signed | Powells | local bookshop
US paperback: Signed | Powells | Amazon | local bookshop
UK edition: Amazon | John Smith | Waterstones
More editions: Japan | Germany | Romania | Poland | . . .
big day: 1
Thu 2 Oct 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Kelly Link | Comments Off on big day: 1 | Posted by: Gavin
Kelly’ new collection, Pretty Monsters, hits the stands* today and two great organization, The Black Arts and Skytemple, have been hard at work on a new super groovy site for the book (and Kelly). More stuff will be telemported up to the online world (Shaun Tan illustrations!) as the days go by, but there are already a a couple of stories to read, a FAQ from Kelly, book recs, and more.
There’s a huge great story on Kelly in the Boston Phoenix today:
While Link is not an author who shies away from referencing pop- and commercial-culture, nor is she some glib chronicler of the right-now. Her work — realm-straddling blends of fantasy, science fiction, fairy tale, and capital-L literature — possesses a mythic quality.
Which is well-timed, as Kelly will be reading on Friday in Boston (ok, Cambridge):
Friday Oct 3, 7 PM, Harvard Book Store, Cambridge
Tuesday, Oct. 7, 7 PM, Community Bookstore, Brooklyn
Sunday, Oct. 24, 4 PM, Flights of Fantasy, Colonie, NY (with Holly Black)
Kelly will also be signing books from the office (when they arrive!). Order a signed copy and receive tattoos, stickers, and similar items of interest.…
* newsboys all over the country are yelling semi-incomprehensively to the commuter crowds, “Come n git yurr Monstahs, Pretty Pretty Monstahs!”
Hero
Tue 30 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., the world | Comments Off on Hero | Posted by: Gavin
We don’t need Time to tell us who our heroes are but it’s nice that we agree on at least one: Kim Stanley Robinson.
He sees creating utopias as a technical challenge to his craft — they’re hard to do convincingly and interestingly. But he also sees them as an empty ecological niche in the imagination; if only to maximise cultural biodiversity, he wants that niche filled.
Winter: no. Winterpills: yes!
Mon 29 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Pop | Comments Off on Winter: no. Winterpills: yes! | Posted by: Gavin
One of our fave local bands are on a short tour with Cake—although I think they’re headlining ye olde Iron Horse here themselves.
And there’s more Winterpillian good news: there’s a new album on the way, Central Chambers, only a couple of weeks away. Kelly heard them playing on the radio the other day so you can probably find that somewhere. The whole album seems to be online at Virb, although it will sound so much better live or at least on decent speakers.
- Tuesday, September 30, 2008 in Winterpills in Albany, NY at The Palace
- Wednesday, October 1, 2008 in Winterpills in Sayreville, NJ at Starland Ballroom
- Thursday, October 2, 2008 in Winterpills in Baltimore, MD at Pier Six
- Friday, October 3, 2008 in Winterpills in Waterville, ME at Colby College
- Saturday, October 25, 2008 in Winterpills in Northampton, MA at The Iron Horse
Kelly on the radio
Mon 29 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Kelly Link | Comments Off on Kelly on the radio | Posted by: Gavin
Listen to Kelly (and a couple of other writers) talking about horror, love, and more and read excerpts from the stories in Pretty Monsters on WPR’s To the Best of Our Knowledge. She’s the third segment after Andrew Davidon (The Gargoyle) and Richard Hand (Terror on the Air!: Horror Radio in America, 1931 – 1952). You can choose streaming audio or a Real player file.
taxes
Thu 25 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., the world | Comments Off on taxes | Posted by: Gavin
What about this graphic from the WaPo is unclear?
Under McCain, the richest people get the biggest cuts (by percentage and by dollar count).
Under Obama, the top 1% of earners will have to pay more taxes. 99% of people will pay the same or less. Which plan is fairer?
Isn’t that John Kessel?
Thu 25 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., John Kessel | 2 Comments | Posted by: Gavin
Check out the art on this poster (and go see the man himself if you’re Raleigh, NC) and then decide whether it is in fact Prof. Kessel’s profile pointing the way to the future.
Also on the web, Colleen pointed us toward Justin’s fantastic short story playlist: an online short story anthology picked out by Justin for Guys Lit Wire.
LCRW + chocolate
Tue 23 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., chocolate, LCRW | 8 Comments | Posted by: Gavin
LCRW update: we’re in the middle of thinking about being in the middle of reading and putting together a new issue of LCRW for publication in November. We have stories, drawings, horses.
One thing we are wondering about is whether those smart and happy subscribers who receive a bar of chocolate each time with their zine would mind if we sent out a lovely but cheaper bar this time (except for those whose subscriptions are about to expire) and a lovely but expensive bar next time? Any thoughts? We’d love to hear.
Besides the chocolate bar subscribers, another choice proving happily popular is Option 6, “Newness,” which for $89 comprises: a random chapbook; 4 issues of the zine and a good chocolate bar with each issue & all our fall 2008 books The Ant King and Other Stories (pb), The King’s Last Song, The Serial Garden, and Couch). Otherwise, about $107.
Bookshow follow up: 3 (of 3) [for now]
Mon 22 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Carol Emshwiller, Cons | Comments Off on Bookshow follow up: 3 (of 3) [for now] | Posted by: Gavin
The Brooklyn Book Festical was 1) great 2) too damn hot. In fact we’re not entirely sure we were there, it was so hot nothing quite made sense. We did catch up with innumerable friends and one of the fun things was that a certain trio of writers, Dan Braum, Nick Kaufmann, and Ben Maulbeck, kept arriving, disappearing, arriving, kvetching, disappearing, arriving (with cold drinks—saviors!), and so on.
Of course, anyone who hangs around a booth for too long is going to have to: sell books!
We sold some books, gave away button-and-tattoo sets that go with Pretty Monsters, Couch postcards, and got Vietnamese sandwiches for lunch (so that’s why people live in cities!) and at some point a reader was admiring the cover of Carol Emshwiller’s The Mount when Shelley Jackson came by and we asked her to sign the book. Shocked (hence the blinkage), Shelley obliged in a noble manner.
On linking to The Mount on Powell’s, we find an irresistible urge to send people there to read the one review “ech1969” has written one review—it’s a corker!
Bookshow followup 2
Mon 22 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., bookshops, Kelly Link, To Read Pile | Comments Off on Bookshow followup 2 | Posted by: Gavin
Last week we dropped by the NEIBA indie booksellers association trade show in Boston where Kelly signed real and actual (and so pretty!) hardcover copies of Pretty Monsters—mostly for happy booksellers and librarians. If you’re crazy, you can get one straight off of Bookfinder right now from the peeps who took the freebies, got them signed, and want to overcharge you.
However, we’ll be getting this in stock here for Kelly to sign and selling it the way we regularly sell books: regular price and free shipping.
Jedediah Berry was also there signing a huge stack of early galleys of The Manual of Detection which comes out in February from the Penguin Press. More on that as the date approaches.
One of the more exciting books to see on the floor was the first US edition of Iain Banks’s The Crow Road, which is an Indie Bound pick (which maybe means you can read it at your local coffee shop and get a high five from the barista). The Crow Road is a great big novel—we’d have published it if we’d realized it hadn’t come out here, oops! It was made into a TV series a couple of years ago but, what do you know, the book, it is better. The rec here comes from a bookshop that we used to frequent (along with Curious and Archives) whenever we were in East Lansing, MI, for Clarion, and who at one point carried LCRW, so lots of love for Schuler Books:
“This delightful and complicated novel begins, ‘It was the day my grandmother exploded,’ and just gets better from there. Weaving between two generations of family secrets, with an innocence and charm that’s rare in modern fiction, I can’t remember the last time I enjoyed a book this much!”
–Carol Schneck, Schuler Books & Music, Okemos, Mich.
Bookshow followup: 1 of a few
Mon 22 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Benjamin Parzybok, Cons | Comments Off on Bookshow followup: 1 of a few | Posted by: Gavin
Way back in May at BookExpo in LA we ran a scavenger hunt (well, we suggested it and Ben Parzybok and the Black Magic Insurance Agency made it happen!) which involved
- Getting a quarter from us and putting it into the gumball machine to get a set of clues (and a sticker and some candy)
Following the clues around the LA Convention Center to find a different set of stories than the obvious ones.
- Using your cell phone to get clues to get back on track after that all important wait in the line for Leonard Nimoy’s autograph.
- Getting recognized by the Black Magic Insurance Company stickers and receiving exclusive (ok, sometimes they weren’t exclusive) goodies from these fine presses:
- Tin House (who had Pinkberry gift certificates for Jim Krusoe’s novel Girl Factory (in which girls are manufactured in the back of yogurt shop), the hilarious “Republican family values book” You Don’t Know Me, and The Dart League King [which Kelly blurbed: “Sign me up as a member of the Keith Lee Morris fan club. His characters are as real, fallible, and surprising as anyone I’ve ever met, and his novel has all the textures of real life: precarious, tender, and utterly engrossing.”)
- Agate: copies of Where the Line Bleeds and, a favorite of ours, How’s Your Drink?
- Gray Wolf: who had toilet paper with aphorisms from Best Thought, Worst Thought printed on it
- Algonquin (handy doorhangers featuring a myriad of books including this nonfiction [cough] fave, An Arsonist’s Guide to Writers’ Homes in New England)
- Baby Tattoo: a free book! Tales of the Sister Kane by Christy Kane
MacAdam/Cage: CDs exclusively available for participants featuring 3-5 original recordings by Linda Robertson (author of What Rhymes with Bastard?) singing and playing the accordion
- No Voice Unheard: temporary tattoos of their “heart and paw” logo (publishers of One at a Time and Thought to Exist in the Wild, books no animal lovers should miss)
- John Hodgman (not an indie press but he had irresistible and incredibly funny posters for his new book, More Information Than You Require
- Drawn & Quarterly: posters for Lynda Barry’s What It Is
- and of course us: postcards, galleys of Couch, The King’s Last Song, and The Serial Garden, chocolate (except we had to chuck a box of yucky Peppermint Patties—they were stale!), electric cars, tandem bikes, inflatable couches (because the only good couch is one that you can carry), &c., &c.
Ok. It’s some months later. Everyone who made it all the way round the scavenger hunt received a raffle ticket and we kept those in a box. We pulled one out, and it was from a cool indie bookshop in Brooklyn, Word Books.
Last Saturday at the Brooklyn Book Festival we met Luca from Word—which reminded us that perhaps we should send out the pile of even more goodies we’d gathered from the presses above for the winner. So now we have the package together and it goes in the mail on today. Or tomorrow!
One more thing marked off the To Do list. Yay, just in time for tea!
Listen to The Ant King
Thu 18 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Audio out, Benjamin Rosenbaum | Comments Off on Listen to The Ant King | Posted by: Gavin
The title story of Ben Rosenbaum’s collection The Ant King, is part of this weeks’ StarShipSofa podcast (starting around 35:00):
Stan went to a group to try to accept that Sheila was gone. It was a group for people whose unrequited love had ended in some kind of surrealist moment. There is a group for everything in California.After several months of hard work on himself with the group, Stan was ready to open a shop and sell the thousands of yellow gumballs. He did this because he believed in capitalism, he loved capitalism. He loved the dynamic surge and crash of Amazon’s stock price, he loved the great concrete malls spreading across America like blood staining through a handkerchief, he loved how everything could be tracked and mirrored in numbers. When he closed the store each night he would count the gumballs sold, and he would determine his gross revenue, his operating expenses, his operating margin; he would adjust his balance sheet and learn his debt-to-equity ratio; and after this exercise each night, Stan felt he understood himself and was at peace, and he could go home to his apartment and drink tea and sleep, without shooting himself or thinking about Sheila.
I know you’re a big mouth but what are we?
Wed 17 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Big Mouth House, Joan Aiken | Comments Off on I know you’re a big mouth but what are we? | Posted by: Gavin
Publishers Weekly introduces our new imprint, Big Mouth House, to the world in a nice piece that also mentions Kelly’s new collection, Pretty Monsters:
When Kelly Link and Gavin Grant, founders of Small Beer Press in Easthampton, Mass., first considered publishing children’s books several years ago, they had a problem: the name of their press sounded like a brewery.
What We Talk About When We Talk About Beer? Anyway, it’s true: we are slowly and carefully opening out a new imprint for readers of all ages: Big Mouth House.
The first title comes out at the end of October, The Serial Garden: The Complete Armitage Family Stories, by the late Joan Aiken that has 4 previously unpublished stories. There are illustrations by Andi Watson and introductions by Garth Nix and Joan Aiken’s daughter, Lizza Aiken. It’s a Junior Library Guild pick and we got the best and most generous quote for it:
“Joan Aiken’s invention seemed inexhaustible, her high spirits a blessing, her sheer storytelling zest a phenomenon. She was a literary treasure, and her books will continue to delight for many years to come.”
—Philip Pullman
At some point soon the Big Mouth web site will become better and we’ll put up more about forthcoming books, guidelines (queries only, no picture books for the foreseeable future), and so on.
For the moment, The Serial Garden is Big Mouth House: one book that is so lovely and has been such fun to work on that we can’t wait to get it back from the printer (the proofs are due tomorrow!).
Preorder it: here, Powells, Local Bookstores: Yours, Ours, (ebook available soon from us and Fictionwise).
Wall Street Journal on Palin
Tue 16 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., the world | Comments Off on Wall Street Journal on Palin | Posted by: Gavin
from the depths of pre-election desperation, some honest words from the Wall Street Journal. Yes, that old left wing bastion, the Journal:
Leave the fantasy land of convention rhetoric, and you will find that small-town America, this legendary place of honesty and sincerity and dignity, is not doing very well. If you drive west from Kansas City, Mo., you will find towns where Main Street is largely boarded up. You will see closed schools and hospitals. You will hear about depleted groundwater and massive depopulation.
And eventually you will ask yourself, how did this happen? Did Hollywood do this? Was it those “reporters and commentators” with their fancy college degrees who wrecked Main Street, U.S.A.?
No. For decades now we have been electing people like Sarah Palin who claimed to love and respect the folksy conservatism of small towns, and yet who have unfailingly enacted laws to aid the small town’s mortal enemies.
Massachusetts peoples
Tue 16 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., the world | Comments Off on Massachusetts peoples | Posted by: Gavin
It’ primary day: Go vote!
The Serial Garden . . . on film
Tue 16 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Joan Aiken, YouTube | Comments Off on The Serial Garden . . . on film | Posted by: Gavin
Some mornings are just that bit crappy so to wake up and watch this was indeed cheering. These kids, they are having the fun:
Gidney, Zombie Plans, Cringing, Nothing
Sat 13 Sep 2008 - Filed under: Not a Journal., Books | Comments Off on Gidney, Zombie Plans, Cringing, Nothing | Posted by: Gavin
Go get Craig Gidney’s new collection Sea, Swallow Me, and Other Stories—and help pay the man’s medical fees! (What kind of country accepts 10-15% of its citizens as a permanently uninsured underclass? This one. Vote for Obama and a new national health system.)
This is a collection we were gong to buy anyway and this offer from publisher Steve Berman was so irresistible that a check was dropped in the mail today:
Rather than just a royalty, I’d like to offer a pre-pub sale that would give him the entire amount. Yes, I won’t even keep my costs and, since 10% of my profits were to be donated to the >Carl Brandon Society, if you purchase a copy of the book before publication, I’ll still make that pledge. So, $13 goes to Craig and $1.30 goes to Carl Brandon. Books will be sent out via media mail at my cost.
If you’ve already ordered a copy through Amazon, I want to thank you. But that won’t help Craig for months. Plus, I’ll make sure Craig autographs your copy before it is sent out.
I’d prefer payment be sent via check, but you could Paypal it if necessary to lethepress AT aol DOT com. The price is only $13 per book.
Lethe Press
118 Heritage Ave
Maple Shade, NJ 08052
Other good things on the web: Kelly’s story “Some Zombie Contingency Plans” is now online as part of John Joseph Adams’s huge new anthology The Living Dead. Coincedentally there was a nice review of Magic for Beginners over at The Fix. And Strange Horizons recently ran Richard Butner’s weird and lovely(?) story “The Secret Identity.”
Did anyone watch the first episode of “Fringe” without spending a lot of time cringing? So many weird and bad things. Best and most hopeful interpretation is that it was a prequel tacked onto the show and that the actual show will be better. Seems over optimistic.
However, to make up for that, the second volume of M.T. Anderson’s second Octavian Nothing is absolutely fantastic.