News: August 2007 Archives
As some of you may know, Labor Day weekend they hold DragonCon here in the City of the Braves. Attendance is somewhere in the vicinity of 50,000, or the equivalent of almost 100 CONduit conventions all at once. I plan to give you all a day-to-day account of events here. For now just imagine me trying to cope with several dozen streets all named Peachtree, and running every direction like a crazed spider's web. Our hotel is surrounded by three streets all named Northside Drive, and a couple named Powers Ferry Road. (In Salt Lake City you know most streets run east and west or north and
south. The folks here in Atlanta must have decided that if the Yankees
ever want to invade again, they'll first get hopelessly lost.)So far we've visited the Coca Cola Museum which is apparently based on Dante. And we ate lunch at CNN Center, which Turner Broadcasting has turned into a sort of theme park for news. (Before that it used to be where H.R. Pufnstuf was produced.) It didn't make my Killian's Red go down any better. Later we took the tour. Lots of security. Senator Craig doing a tap dance on all of the monitors.
The Georgia Aquarium was probably the best thing we've seen here. We could have spent hours there. Just watching the whales swim around and look at us was worth the price of admission.
These three spots are all separated by the Olympic Park, where Richard Jewel spotted that bomb. Only 11 years later he's dead. The slander he suffered from because of his quick action has never been settled. Lesson learned: take care of your health if you're suing deep pockets.
We've been to the High Art Museum, which was OK. Annie Leibowitz had an exhibition of photos. I'm not sure what the noise is about. Call me a philistine. I was particularly impressed by the exhibition of Cecilia Beaux's work.
We've been to the Carter Center (which seemed dated) and to the Atlanta History Center (which had a large but superficial exhibit on Ben Franklin, and lots of Civil War stuff).
Our oldest son lives here, so we visited him and met his two stepsons. We took them to the Atlanta Botanical Garden where they behaved themselves very well. I was impressed by both of them.Besides that we've found that Georgia drivers may rival Italians for aggressiveness and Jerseyites for cluelessness. We've eaten way too much, and we've taken a video of an honest to gosh UFO.
Today we went to the Peachtree Center to pick up our badges. After about an hour of standing in line we were let in and snaked through about a mile of queueing barrier. I kid you not when I tell you that one fellow who was waddling about as fast as he could (which was not fast) had to give up about halfway to the registration booths. He was pale and we asked him if he was OK. He said he'd recover and told us to go on, but after standing for a couple of minutes to catch his breath he collapsed in a heap. People hurried to get him help. Congoing is not for the physically unfit.
Elysa and I collected our bag of free swag, bought a couple of teeshirts, and got back on Marta to return to Dunwoody where our car was parked. This will be our routine for the next few days. Get up early, drive to Perimeter Mall, park, and take the train to Peachtree Center. Late in the evening things get complicated. They run two lines north and south. The one runs from airport station to Northsprings station, which is the line we have to take. The other runs to Doraville station. After 9 pm the Northsprings line only runs south to Lindbergh station, so we'll have to change trains there on our way home.
I've got 200 copies of the World HorrorCon flyer, and 200 bookmarks printed on bright yellow cardstock. I'll bring them along tomorrow morning.
Right now I have to decide what I'm definitely not going to miss, and just how much gaming I'll do. Then it's time for bed.
The Hugo Awards have a new website. They will be announcing the 2007 winners on September 1, 2007 after being announced and presented at the 2007 Worldcon held in Yokohama, Japan over labor Day weekend. You can also find lists of past winners, and info about the John W. Campbell Award.
Check it out!
(posted on behalf of Ken Rand)
Y'all,
Port Chicago Isn't There Anymore--But We Still Call It Home is DONE. I've said that before, I believe, as I've touched several milestones that felt like 'the end,' and it makes me wonder when a book is really, finally, finished. When you write 'the end' on the last page of the first draft? When you finish the 'final' edit, macro or micro? When it sells, or when it goes to print? Some special award or recognition? It's all a process--no news there. I'm realizing the process RIGHT NOW. I just got my POD copy of Port Chicago Isn't There a few minutes ago from Lulu. It arrived sooner than I thought. There are some tweaks I need to make--I should have a TOC for the ARCs, IMHO, and an author's bio in the back, but I can proceed for now without an index and the memorial list and that short '3 questions' chapter I've been chewing on. (Come to think of it, the book can be published--as is--NOW.) I'll see how easy it is to make the tweaks this week. If it isn't easy, I'll fuggetaboutit and order 25 of what I got. It'll do for my purposes--solicit corrections, additions and comment from a select list of principle contacts.
I done it. There are more milestones yet, of course. When Patrick sets it, when we get a cover done, when he ships the first box of books, when I ship the first signed copy to the first buyer--and so on. More milestones—but I done it.
I done it.
I started this project in 1984. Quit several times. Worked on it almost daily for the past two years. Got rejected 116 times. Tens of thousands of hours of research and reading and writing, thousands of articles and documents parsed, millions of words written deleted and rewritten and edited, and hundreds of interviews conducted.
I done it.
By the way, if you don't know what I'm talking about it, read the intro to the book on my website. Comments welcome.
Ken
Read the introduction to Ken Rand's Port Chicago Isn't There Anymore--But We Still Call It Home at www.sfwa.org/members/Rand/. (to be published Saturday, July 26, 2008).
The Utah Speculative Fiction Council is proud to host Thru the Forgotten Door: Into Alexander Key's Magical Worlds, a site all about Alexander Key. The site was formerly hosted on Tripod.com. A related mailing list is also hosted by UtahSF. Anyone interested in Key's works is welcome to subscribe.
Keep an eye on the site as it will be undergoing a major overhaul soon to make it more user-friendly. We also recommend reading Key's books, if you can find them. Many of his titles are now out of print.
Thanks to Ken Rand for pointing these out as being missing in my original post. He wrote:
-- Paul Gennesse has a book coming out in April, 2008. The Golden Cord, Book One of the Iron Dragon Series, Five Star Books, April 2008
-- I have Rock 'n' Roll Universe coming out in a few weeks as a free e-book (on my website).
-- I have Where Angels Fear, a short story collection from Fairwood Press, coming out December 2007.
-- I have Fairy BrewHaha at the Luckly Nickel Saloon, a reprint from Yard Dog Press in February, 2008.
-- I have Port Chicago Isn't There Anymore--But We Still Call It Home from Media Man! Productions in July 2008.
-- I have short story collection The Gods Perspire from Fairwood Press in late 2008.
A collector's edition DVD of Serenity is being released August 21, 2007. New features included on this version include:
- Two discs
- AC-3, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, Subtitles, Widescreen
- Extended Scenes (6:45)
- Take A Walk on Serenity (4:00) Cast and Crew take us on a special tour of the Serenity space ship
- A Filmmaker's Journey (19:49) Take A Journey with Joss Whedon from script to the big screen
- The Green Clan (3:03) An expose on Cinematographer Jack Green and his team
- Sci-Fi Inside: Serenity (21:41) Hosted by Adam Baldwin, an in-depth look at the film that was resurrected from a cancelled television show, as well as its supportive culture.
- Session 416 (7:52) These internet pieces document a portion of River's participation in a psychological study and her interactions with her therapist.
- Feature Commentary with Director Joss Whedon and Cast Members Nathan Fillion, Adam Baldwin, Summer Glau, and Ron Glass
July 2007
Wizards of the Coast, July 2007
The Great and Terrible, Volume 4: Fury and Light
Chris Stewart
Deseret Book, July 2007
Mistborn: The Final Empire (paperback)
Tor, July 31, 2007
August 2007
Mistborn: The Well of Ascension (hardcover)
Brandon Sanderson
Tor, August 21, 2007
The Crystal Locket: The Key to the Portals of Time
Julia Lawrence
Brushfire Press, August 2007
September 2007
Worldbinder
Tor, September 4, 2007
The Candy Shop War
Shadow Mountain, September 11, 2007
Bloomsbury, September 18, 2007
October 2007
Alcatraz versus the Evil Librarians
Brandon Sanderson
Scholastic, October 1, 2007
Obert Skye
Shadow Mountain, October 1, 2007
Moon without Magic
Michael O. Tunnell
Dutton, October 4, 2007
Tunnel was just named to the Newbery committee
2007 (unconfirmed)
Song of the Dragon
Daw Books, 2007 (unconfirmed)
January 2008
Sun and Moon, Ice and Snow
Jessica Day George
Bloomsbury, January 8, 2008
April 2008
The Journal of Curious Letters
James Dashner
Shadow Mountain, April 2008
May 2008
Pax Dakota
Ken Rand
Five Star, May 2008
The cover art is by Alan M. Clark
2008 (unconfirmed)
Dark Memories
Jeffrey S. Savage
Covenant Communications, 2008
Farworld Book 1: Water
Jeffrey S. Savage
Shadow Mountain, 2008
Thanks to Marny and Jani for the information!
