“In that prosaic room, in that very ordinary pub, was going on the most advanced thinking in this country. When lists are made of the best British writers since the war, they do not include Arthur C Clarke, nor Brian Aldiss, nor any of the good science fiction writers. It is conventional literature that has turned out to be provincial.”
— Doris Lessing, commenting on a visit to The White Horse [*] gathering circa 1952, in volume 2 of her autobiography
The White Horse in 1896: 50 years before fans arrived
[*] the London Circle of sf fans gathered at The White Horse in Fetter Lane — it appeared as the The White Hart in the Clarke short story collection Tales from The White Hart
Speculative fiction and new forms of art and storytelling and innovations in technology and computing are engaged in the work of mad scientists: testing future ways of living and seeing before they actually arrive. We are the early warning system for the culture. We see the future as a weatherfront, a vast mass of possibilities across the horizon, and since we’re not idiots and therefore will not claim to be able to predict exactly where lightning will strike – we take one or more of those possibilities and play them out in our work, to see what might happen. Imagining them as real things and testing them in the laboratory of our practice – informed by our careful cross-contamination by many and various fields other than our own — to see what these things do.
I’ve got news for you—the history of the Star Wars galaxy is precisely that. Jedi versus Sith, for thousands upon thousands of years, locked into a war they created for themselves and never seem capable of eradicating. The Sith are gone in name, but the Knights of Ren remain. Someone has to stop them… but maybe that someone shouldn’t be a Jedi.
Cinephiles, rejoice! Criterion Collection will be adding a major science-fiction classic to its roster [July 18th]: a restored version of Stalker, directed by Solaris filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky.
Based off the 1971 Russian science-fiction novel Roadside Picnic by Arkady and Boris Strugatsky, Stalker was originally released in 1979. The film follows a man known as “the Stalker” as he leads an expedition into a mysterious, forbidden area known as “The Zone.” In the book, the mysterious Zone is the location of an alien visitation decades before the story, littered with fantastic pieces of technology and dangers; in the film, its origins are more obscure. But in both cases, reality there is distorted, and somewhere inside is a room that will grant visitors’ innermost desires. The journey to get there is physically and philosophically arduous, and it tests the trio of men traveling there.
There are a few films which may be of interest to SF fans in the new season of cinematheque (screenings at the Mercury Cinema):
The Time Guardian, Thurs 27th April, 7pm — a dreadful Australian SF movie (1987) which features Carrie Fisher.
McCabe and Mrs Miller (2013) Thurs 4th may — Robert Altman with Leonard Cohen songs, an interesting haunting western.
Pride and Prejudice and Zombies (2016) Mon 22 May — the only way we could get Adam to watch Pride & Prejudice!
Devil in a Blue Dress (1995) Thursday 25 May — Denzel Washington brings to life Walter Mosley’s PI, Easy Rawlins, as part of a Literary Crime subseason featuring Ripley’s Game (May 29th) and In Cold Blood (June 1st)
Wings of Desire (1987) Mon, June 19th — the wonderful Bruno Gantz as an Angel in modern Berlin, much better than the American remake. Part of a Wim Wenders mini-season
Voting is now open, and can be done online here http://ditmars.sf.org.au/2017 or you can email ditmars@sf.org.au. Voting closes at 11:59pm Sunday 14th May EST, and you must be either a full or supporting member of Continuum 13, or a member of Contact 16 and eligible to vote in the 2016 awards.
Best Novel
The Grief Hole, Kaaron Warren, IFWG Publishing Australia
The Lyre Thief, Jennifer Fallon, HarperCollins
Squid’s Grief, D.K. Mok, D.K. Mok
Vigil, Angela Slatter, Jo Fletcher Books
The Wizardry of Jewish Women, Gillian Polack, Satalyte Publishing
Best Novella or Novelette
“All the Colours of the Tomato,” Simon Petrie, in Dimension6 #9
“By the Laws of Crab and Woman,” Jason Fischer, in Review of Australian Fiction, Vol 17, Issue 6
“Did We Break the End of the World?”, Tansy Rayner Roberts, in Defying Doomsday, Twelfth Planet Press
“Finnegan’s Field,” Angela Slatter, in Tor.com
“Glass Slipper Scandal,” Tansy Rayner Roberts, in Sheep Might Fly
“Going Viral,” Thoraiya Dyer, in Dimension6 8
Best Short Story
“Flame Trees,” T.R. Napper, in Asimov’s Science Fiction, April/May 2016
“No Fat Chicks,” Cat Sparks, in In Your Face, FableCroft Publishing
“There’s No Place Like Home,” Edwina Harvey, in AntipodeanSF 221
Best Collected Work
Crow Shine, Alan Baxter, Ticonderoga Publications
Defying Doomsday, Tsana Dolichva and Holly Kench, Twelfth Planet Press
Dreaming in the Dark, Jack Dann, PS Publishing
In Your Face, Tehani Wessely, FableCroft Publishing
Best Artwork
cover and internal artwork, Adam Browne, for The Tame Animals of Saturn, Peggy Bright Books
illustration, Shauna O’Meara, for Lackington’s12
Best Fan Publication in Any Medium
2016 Australian SF Snapshot, Greg Chapman, Tehani Croft, Tsana Dolichva, Marisol Dunham, Elizabeth Fitzgerald, Stephanie Gunn, Ju Landéesse, David McDonald, Belle McQuattie, Matthew Morrison, Alex Pierce, Rivqa Rafael, Tansy Rayner Roberts, Helen Stubbs, Katharine Stubbs and Matthew Summers
The Coode Street Podcast, Jonathan Strahan and Gary K. Wolfe
Earl Grey Editing Services (blog), Elizabeth Fitzgerald
Galactic Chat, Alexandra Pierce, David McDonald, Sarah Parker, Helen Stubbs, Mark Webb, and Sean Wright
Galactic Suburbia, Alisa Krasnostein, Alex Pierce, and Tansy Rayner Roberts
The Writer and the Critic, Kirstyn McDermott and Ian Mond
Best Fan Writer
James ‘Jocko’ Allen,
Aidan Doyle
Bruce Gillespie
Foz Meadows
Tansy Rayner Roberts
Best Fan Artist
Kathleen Jennings, for body of work, including Illustration Friday series
Best New Talent
T R Napper
Marlee Jane Ward
William Atheling Jr Award for Criticism or Review
Kat Clay for essays and reviews in Weird Fiction Review
Tehani Croft & Marisol Dunham, for Revisiting Pern: the Great McCaffrey Reread review series
Tsana Dolichva, for reviews, in Tsana’s Reads and Reviews
Kate Forsyth, for The Rebirth of Rapunzel: A Mythic Biography of the Maiden in the Tower, FableCroft Publishing
Ian Mond, for reviews, in The Hysterical Hamster
Alexandra Pierce, for reviews, in Randomly Yours, Alex
Gillian Polack, for History and Fiction: Writers, Their Research, Worlds and Stories, Peter Lang
Our guest for the meeting on May 3rd is Miranda Richardson, the writer for the online comic Hail. The lead character, Lena, crumbles into shards of glass when she experiences anxiety. In a literal sense. She learns to move while in that state, and slowly to take advantage of it.
It is written from the author’s experiences of mental illness and anxiety. She ran a successful Kickstarter to produce the first print run of the first two issues last year.
NOVEL Charlie Jane Anders, All the Birds in the Sky; Mishell Baker, Borderline; N.K. Jemisin, The Obelisk Gate; Yoon Ha Lee, Ninefox Gambit; Nisi Shawl, Everfair.
NOVELLA S.B. Divya, Runtime; Kij Johnson, The Dream-Quest of Vellitt Boe; Victor LaValle, The Ballad of Black Tom; Seanan McGuire, Every Heart a Doorway; John P. Murphy, ‘The Liar’; Kai Ashante Wilson, A Taste of Honey.
NOVELETTE William Ledbetter, ‘The Long Fall Up’ (F&SF); Sarah Pinsker, ‘Sooner or Later Everything Falls Into the Sea’ (Lightspeed); Jason Sanford, ‘Blood Grains Speak Through Memories’ (Beneath Ceaseless Skies); Bonnie Jo Stufflebeam’s ‘The Orangery’ (Beneath Ceaseless Skies, replacing Cat Rambo’s ‘Red in Tooth and Cog’ from F&SF); Fran Wilde, The Jewel and Her Lapidary; Alyssa Wong, ‘You’ll Surely Drown Here If You Stay’ (Uncanny).
SHORT Brooke Bolander, ‘Our Talons Can Crush Galaxies’ (Uncanny); Amal El-Mohtar, ‘Seasons of Glass and Iron’ (The Starlit Wood); Barbara Krasnoff, ‘Sabbath Wine’ (Clockwork Phoenix 5); Sam J. Miller, ‘Things With Beards’ (Clarkesworld); A. Merc Rustad, ‘This Is Not a Wardrobe Door’ (Fireside); Alyssa Wong, ‘A Fist of Permutations in Lightning and Wildflowers’ (Tor.com); Caroline M. Yoachim, ‘Welcome to the Medical Clinic at the Interplanetary Relay Station …’ (Lightspeed).
BRADBURY (dramatic): Arrival, Doctor Strange, Kubo and the Two Strings, Rogue One, Westworld: ‘The Bicameral Mind’, Zootopia.
NORTON (YA) Kelly Barnhill, The Girl Who Drank the Moon; Roshani Chokshi, The Star-Touched Queen; Frances Hardinge, The Lie Tree; David D. Levine, Arabella of Mars; Philip Reeve, Railhead; Lindsay Ribar, Rocks Fall, Everyone Dies; Delia Sherman, The Evil Wizard Smallbone.
In Sergey Dyachenko and Marina Shyrshova-Dyachenko’s fantasy Vita Nostra, described as “The Magicians but set in a rural Russian technical college,” Alexandra (Sasha) Samokhina is forced into a seemingly inconceivable situation: Against her will, she must enter the Institute of Special Technologies. A slightest misstep or failure at school—and the students’ loved ones pay a price. Governed by fear and coercion, Sasha will learn the meaning of the phrase “In the beginning was the word…”
The recipient of eight literary prizes and much critical acclaim in Russia, Vita Nostra has been translated into several languages. Harper Voyager has acquired Julia Hersey’s English translation of the novel, which was named the best novel of the twenty-first century in the sci-fi/fantasy genre at Eurocon-2008. The Magicians author Lev Grossman has described it as “a book that has the potential to become a modern classic of its genre.”
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