Live talk in Brooklyn tonight

March 31, 2015

I will be speaking in front of the Brooklyn Speculative Fiction Writers association tonight, but non-members are able to attend as well (there is, however, a $5 entry fee and a two drink minimum).

The subject of the talk is humor in SF/F. How to write it, tricks for injecting some humor into one’s fiction, as well as a run-down of the short fiction markets that are most amenable to humorous and lighthearted stories.

The event will take place at Threes Brewing, 333 Douglass Street. Doors open at 6pm and the talk begins at 6:30pm. Come on by!

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2015 IGMS Reader Poll

March 27, 2015

hightechfairies

I’ve been sitting on this news for about a week, and now that the latest issue of InterGalactic Medicine Show is out, I can finally brag. The following are the results of the IGMS Reader Poll this year:

1st place – “The Sound of Distant Thunder” by Mike Barretta
2nd place – “The Golem of Deneb Seven” by Alex Shvartsman
3rd place (tie) – “Until We Find Better Magic” by H.G. Parry
3rd place (tie) – “High-Tech Fairies and the Pandora Perplexity” by Alex Shvartsman

Last year, “Explaining Cthulhu to Grandma” came in 2nd in the poll, and I’m very excited to see an even better result this time around. I was told that I am the first author in the history of the poll to place two stories in the top 3!

The illustration for “High-Tech Fairies” by Andres Mossa won first place in the Interior Art category of the contest.

I’d say this is a good week 🙂

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Reddit AMA

March 25, 2015
Harvard Campus

Harvard campus

 

I’m back after my trip to Boston, which was awesome. Vericon was held on Harvard campus and most attendees were students. They were a pleasure to talk to, bright, driven and inquisitive. It’s as if Harvard strives to select the best and the brightest, or something! I got to hang out with old friends, meet new ones, participate in panels, read from my work, and listen to some very intelligent ideas presented by other panelists.

Ken Liu was the guest of honor at this event and he delivered a brilliant lecture on fiction translation. The caption on the screen behind Ken reads “Traduttore traditore,” an Italian pun meaning “To translate is to betray.” I really hope Ken writes the lecture down because I think the community would benefit greatly from his wisdom. He made me reevaluate some of my memories of living in the former USSR and our perception of Western culture and literature.

Ken Translation Speech

Ken Liu delivers the Guest of Honor speech at Vericon

I’m getting back into the swing of things now, and today I will be spending a chunk of my day answering questions on Reddit. This is my first time doing an AMA, so if you’re a Redditor (or even if you aren’t) come hang out in that thread and ask a question or two. I could use some friendly faces! 🙂

Click here to visit the AMA thread.

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My 2015 Vericon Schedule

March 19, 2015

vericonThis weekend I’ll be attending Vericon — Harvard University’s annual science fiction convention.  This is a small affair with only a dozen or so guests and a handful of panels, but their other guests are top notch: this year’s roster includes Patrick and Teresa Nielsen-Hayden, Mary Robinette Kowal, Jo Walton, Will McIntosh and a plethora of other fine authors and editors. Ken Liu is the guest of honor (and also happens to be an alum).

I’m very excited to re-visit Boston, to visit Harvard for the first time, and to get to speak, participate on panels, and even do a reading there. I will stick around all weekend long, but these are the panels/functions I’m currently scheduled for, so come by and hear me (and people much smarter than me) speak, should you be so inclined:

Friday

7pm – Editing and Translating Genre Fiction (KL, AL, AS, PNH)  – Sever Hall 113

8pm – Diversity, Intersectionality, and Variety (DJO, KL, MRK, AS, JW) – Sever Hall 113

Saturday

7pm – Alex Shvartsman Reading – Sever Hall 102

8pm – Milk & Cookies – Story Reading & Snacks – Lowell Lecture Hall Basement

Sunday

11am – The Joys and Perils of Writing Short (MRK, KL, WM, GG, PNH, AS) – Sever Hall 111

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Lots of cool news (with pictures)

March 17, 2015

YearsBest2013-195x300

Twelfth Planet Press announced the Honorable Mention list for the 2013 Year’s Best Young Adult Speculative Fiction. I’m very honored to have my story “Things We Leave Behind” included on this list! Ken Liu’s story from UFO2, “The MSG Golem” has made the list as well.

You can read Things We Leave Behind at Daily Science Fiction, where it was originally published. You can also listen to the story podcasted at Cast of Wonders, and narrated by me!

 

 

Crains

The May 16 issue of Crain’s New York Business Journal ran a profile on me in my capacity as owner and operator of Kings Games. All I have is this thumbnail for now, but I’m expecting some copies in the mail and am looking forward to reading the article.

 

Informator

 

These are the contributor copies of Informator Gdanskiego Klubu Fantastyki, which has been publishing my Tales of the Elopus mini-stories translated into Polish, one per issue. You can also see the PDF issues online, here. (Click on the magazine cover at top right.)

 

missiontomorrow
Editor Bryan Thomas Schmidt shared the cover art of Mission: Tomorrow, his anthology forthcoming from Baen this November which includes my story “The Race for Arcadia.” This will be my second appearance in a Baen anthology, after this summer’s release of the latest Chicks in Chainmail volume.

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The Hook: Death Marked by Leah Cypess

March 13, 2015

DeathMarked HC cThe Hook:

The mirror shattered into a hundred pieces, a sudden explosion followed by a cascade of jagged shards. Ileni whirled, throwing her hands up in front of her face, but nothing hit her: no sharp pieces of glass, no sting of cut flesh. After a moment, she lowered her arms and crossed them over her chest.

The broken fragments of glass hovered in the air, glimmering with rainbow colors. Then they faded back into the mirror, smoothing into a shiny, unbroken oval.

“Impressive,” Ileni said. She had no idea who she was talking to, but it wasn’t difficult to sound unafraid. After six weeks in the Assassins’ Caves and three days as a prisoner of imperial sorcerers, false courage was second nature to her. “But since I’m the only one here, it seems a waste of effort.”

Leah Cypess writes:

This is the sequel to Death Sworn, a novel in which a naive ex-sorceress is entombed in a cave full of assassins in training — and discovers that her entire life was built on a lie. In Death Marked, Ileni is determined to find the truth for herself. But the answers she is seeking lie in the Imperial Academy of Sorcery, a place where danger and temptation sit side by side. If her true purpose is discovered, she won’t escape alive. But once she discovers what the imperial sorcerers can offer her, she may not want to leave at all.

Except this place has its secrets, too.

The truth is never purely evil or purely good. And Ileni no longer knows whose side she is on.

Most of my critique partners expected me to start Death Marked right where Death Sworn ended. Instead, I jumped ahead 3 days so I could start with a bang (literally), and begin with Ileni situated exactly where her struggles and conflicts throughout the book would take place. She’s a prisoner in a strange new place, and discovering the secrets of this place will form the heart of the novel.

My decision made the beginning a bit less straightforward to write. I still had to explain what happened in those three days, not to mention what happened in the first book. This required me to violate the no-flashbacks-in-the-first-chapter rule, though fortunately that’s a rule I’ve never been that fond of. The trick was explaining the past in short bursts that wouldn’t slow down the forward action of the new story, while still making the sequence of events easy to understand. Beginnings are usually easy for me, but I reworked this one at least ten times. Maybe that’s typical for sequels — I guess I’ll find out when I find the fortitude to write another one!

Buy Death Marked on Amazon

About the author:

Leah Cypess is the author of several young adult fantasy novels published by HarperCollins. Her latest book, Death Marked, is the second in a duology about a sorceress forced to serve as magic tutor to a secret sect of assassins. She has also published several pieces of short fiction, including the Nebula-nominated “Nanny’s Day” (Asimov’s Science Fiction, March 2012). She lives in the D.C. area with her family. You can find out more about her at www.leahcypess.com, or connect with her on Facebook or Twitter (@LeahCypess).

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RIP Terry Pratchett

March 12, 2015

This is not what I wanted to write about today.

Terry Pratchett, best known for his series of Discworld novels, was one of the most important voices in speculative humor.  His work had a profound influence on generations of writers, and brightened lives of millions of readers worldwide. I never personally met him or got an opportunity to work with him, and feel there is little I can say to add to the loud chorus of voices more eloquent and more relevant on this subject than my own, but I will say this: whether you are a long-time fan or are learning about him now, should you wish to honor his memory, the best way to do so is by reading (or re-reading) one of his books.

A few years ago I reached out to Mr. Pratchett to see if I might be able to acquire a reprint (or, who knows, even an original story!) for one of the UFO volumes. His agent got back to me and declined to sell me a reprint, because there would be a short story collection coming out soon and he wasn’t interested in shopping short story reprints around, at least not at the rates UFO could afford. And so I didn’t get to publish Terry, but although this collection took longer than expected, it is actually coming out in less than a week.

I’ll be picking up a copy of “A Blink of the Screen” and humbly suggest that you do so as well.

blink

There is a number of much happier news I’d like to share as well:

* The Unidentified Funny Objects 4 Kickstarter campaign is going well. After three days, we have nearly 120 backers and are only a few hundred dollars away from 50% of the funding. There’s always a slow-down in the middle (offset by lots of activity in the first few and last few days of the campaign), but momentum counts, so if you plan on backing this book, please don’t wait for the last day!

* I accepted a flash story by Brent C. Smith titled “The Transformation of Prince Humphrey” for UFO4. I read an earlier version of this story in a contest we both participated in, and out of 200+ stories I read for that contest it was my favorite. So I reached out to him and, after a few rounds of edits, accepted the updated variant of the story for the book. Don’t worry though: there’s plenty of room for stories that will come in during the open submission period next month!

* Two of my own stories found new homes (well, the same home, actually.)  Mike Resnick accepted both for publication in Galaxy’s Edge.

“Islands in the Sargasso” is an 8000-word space opera novelette in the shared world setting regular readers of Galaxy’s Edge are already familiar with. I had the pleasure of advancing the setting by 200 years and allowing humans to finally escape the confines of our solar system — but you’ll have to read the story to learn the details.

“Dreidel of Dread: The Very Cthulhu Channukah” is one of the silliest humor flash pieces I’ve ever written. It makes fun of saccharine Christmas specials, uses copious amounts of Jewish humor, quotes both Einstein and The Ghostbusters film… and, of course, there’s Cthulhu!

Both stories should be appearing in GE later this year.

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UFO4 Kickstarter Campaign is Now Live

March 9, 2015

Today I launched the Kickstarter campaign for Unidentified Funny Objects 4 – the 4th annual collection of humorous science fiction and fantasy. This will be our first themed volume, and will feature stories by George R.R. Martin, Neil Gaiman, Piers Anthony, Esther Friesner, Mike Resnick, Karen Haber, Jody Lynn Nye, Gini Koch, Karen Haber and Tim Pratt.

There will be a submission window in April so that newer authors have a chance at sharing the table of contents with these established pros. All authors will be paid at pro rates.

And, of course, there’s a gorgeous and funny cover, by Tomasz Maronski:

image description

Please check out the campaign page, and help me spread the word of it to others? #SFWAPro

ufokickstarter


The Hook: Sing Me Your Scars by Damien Angelica Walters

March 9, 2015

 

SMYS_large

The Hook:

This is not my body.

Yes, there are the expected parts—arms, legs, hips, breasts—each in its proper place and of the proper shape.

Is he a monster, a madman, a misguided fool? I don’t know. I don’t want to know. But this is not my body.

#

The rot begins, as always, around the stitches. This time, the spots of greyish-green appear on the left wrist, and there is an accompanying ache, but not in the expected way. It feels as though there is a great disconnect between mind and flesh, a gap that yearns to close but cannot. I say nothing, but there is no need; Lillian’s weeping says it with more truth than words.

The hands are hers.

“Please don’t show him yet. Please,” she whispers. “I’m not ready.”

“I must,” I say. “You will be fine.”

“Please, please, wait until after the party.”

I ignore her. I have learned the hard way that hiding the rot is not acceptable, and while the flesh may be hers, the pain is mine and mine alone. I remember hearing him offer an explanation, but the words, the theories, were too complex for me to understand. I suspect that was his intention.

Lillian will still be with us; she is simply grasping for an excuse, any excuse at all. I understand her fear, but the rot could destroy us all.

Damien Angelica Walters writes:

With respect to openings, the same rules apply to both novels and short fiction. You want to grab a reader’s attention, draw them in, and give them reasons to care and to keep reading. In my short fiction collection, “Sing Me Your Scars” is both the title story and the first story to appear.

My goal for the opening was to offer a bit of mystery, a peek at the main character’s sense of physical dislocation, and a hint that this was not a result of her own doing.

From there, I move to the rot and the stitches, which hopefully ups the stakes and also gives the reader an indication that this story owes much to Mary Shelley. But the true hook to me is “the hands are hers.” That’s the sentence that provides the connection between the rot, the main character, and Lillian and makes it clear that this creation is not just a Shelley pastiche, but something new.

All told, it’s one hundred and twenty-two words. The next one hundred and nine up the stakes even more by revealing that the rot could destroy them all. So not only is the rot something the main character can’t take lightly, but it shows that she and Lillian are not the only occupants of this body. Also included in this section is another reference to the as yet unseen “him,” the true monster in the story.

All this information is conveyed on the first page.

It was a risk opening with a period piece, as most of the stories are set in contemporary times, but I think the story sets the tone well for the rest of the collection. A hint of darkness, a pinch of grim, and stories set a little off the expected path.

Buy Sing Me Your Scars on Amazon

About the author:

Damien Angelica Walters’ short fiction has appeared in various magazines and anthologies, including Year’s Best Weird Fiction Volume One, The Best of Electric Velocipede, Strange Horizons, Nightmare, Lightspeed, Shimmer, and Apex. “The Floating Girls: A Documentary,” originally published in Jamais Vu and reprinted in the Chinese literary journal ZUI Found, is on the 2014 Bram Stoker Award ballot for Superior Achievement in Short Fiction.

Sing Me Your Scars, a collection of her short fiction, is set for a March 10th release from Apex Publications, and Paper Tigers, a novel, is forthcoming later in the year from Dark House Press.

You can find her on Twitter @DamienAWalters or online at http://damienangelicawalters.com.

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Seeking Two New Slush Readers for UFO4

March 7, 2015

On April 1 the floodgates will open and submissions to UFO4 will pour in. As with previous years, I hope to respond to most submissions in well under a week. To do this, I rely on a team of awesome associate editors/slush readers.

Those of you who’ve been submitting fiction to the UFO series already know how this works: I look at each incoming story. If it passes muster (aka I don’t find a reason to reject it in the first thirty seconds to a minute) it is then forwarded to three readers. Those readers are not aware of who the author is, so they judge the writing purely on its merit. Each reader is asked to provide a YES or NO vote as to whether the story should be seen by the entire team.

Stories thus advanced to the second round are read by all the associate editors who then proceed to comment on it for me and to provide their YES or NO vote as to whether they feel the story should be included in the book. I’m the final arbiter and the decision is mine, but I do take their votes and opinions into consideration. I’ve been talked into (and talked out of!) buying specific stories by my team.

This year, we are a little understaffed. for various reasons. As such, I’m looking to add two more slush readers.

The readers would need to be able to commit to 3 stories per day on average during the month of April, with a slightly lower work load in the few weeks leading up to it and the few weeks afterward. It’s perfectly okay to skip some days, but the assigned stories need to be turned around in 24 hours so we can maintain our response times as they were.

If this doesn’t sound too scary and is something you would like to try, feel free to reach out to me via e-mail: ufopublishing at gmail dot com. I will then send you a “sampler” of a dozen stories, asking you to share your opinion on them. This will probably take you 2-3 hours of reading/commenting time.

I look to select the readers on or shortly after March 15th, so you can apply at any point until then, so long as you feel you can turn around the slush sampler in time.

Couple of things to keep in mind:

* There are no “right” or “wrong” answers. It’s perfectly okay for you to love the story I hated, and vice versa.  Because I am ultimately going to be the one buying the stories, I want to find readers whose tastes match mine as close as possible, so that they don’t reject something I might like (and, optimally, don’t send me too many things to read I might not like.)

* I will only select two readers, so don’t feel bad if you are not picked. I hope this will be valuable to everyone, including those not selected, as it will given them a sense of how the slush process works.

* It goes without saying that familiarity with the Unidentified Funny Objects series and the kind of material we publish is a huge plus and very nearly a requirement.

So, if this sounds like something you would like to try, drop me an e-mail.

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