Nebula Shortlist

  •  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.

Shortlist from Ansible

Dr Who returns in April!

Screen Shot 2017-03-19 at 6.09.31 pm
Missy’s back! With a new wardrobe!

The BBC have just released a new trailer for the new season of Dr Who, and there’s an analysis of it on  digital spy.

The trailer is viewable here:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p04wqvqp/player

Harper Voyager buys english translation of Russian SF masterpiece

Tor.com reports:

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.”

—- Tor.com
Harper Voyager Acquires English Translation of Russian Fantasy Vita Nostra

Earth size exoplanets!

trappistfrom io9:

On Wednesday, Earthlings were shocked—and certainly relieved—to finally get a push notification about planetary discovery, not political corruption. News broke that an international team of scientists had spied seven Earth-sized planets orbiting the nearby star TRAPPIST-1. Three of those planets are located in the habitable zone, where liquid water might form. NASA, the unofficial planetary hype train conductor, along with researchers behind the discovery, are doing everything in their power to drum up public excitement—including building a mythology for TRAPPIST-1 that blends science fact and fiction.

This week, planetary scientists launched a website for the star system that’s full of gorgeous infographics with data on the seven TRAPPIST planets. NASA has also added TRAPPIST-1 to its “Exoplanet Travel Bureau,” where it imagines what vacationing in the star system might be like.

— from io9

No Critical Mass for March

With the Fringe, the car race, and the unavailability of speakers, we’ve decided to cancel the March 1st meeting. We’ll try and make it up to you with a special extra meeting later in the year.

Our apologies if you were looking forward to it: go watch The Incredible Adventures of Adele Blanc-Sec if you need your SF fix!

 

Fannish history

iOTA is a little efanzine put together by Leigh Edmonds for the singular purpose of keeping informed the fans who are interested the progress of his project to write a history of Australian sf fandom with a focus on the period from 1956 to 1975, and sundry offences.

Leigh’s kindly sent me electronic copies, and we chatted last weekend about how it’s progressing. As a professional historian, he’s talking to key fans active pre-1975 and sharing his interim results in iOTA. You can download copies at efanzines.

As he notes in the first issue:

The first reason for researching and writing as history of Australian fandom is; why not? From an academic point of view, I think that a history of what science fiction fans did might be considered a vital adjunct to the current study of science fiction, due to the very close relationship between sf and fandom over the generations. I’m also keen to do this because most of my recent history projects have been about large organizations employing thousands of people, and I’m looking forward to a project in which it is possible to get closer to people and their daily lives. Perhaps most important, this project will tell a story about what fans did and what their lives were like. We had fun, didn’t we? That should be worth celebrating.

A french, female Indiana Jones

Perhaps better described as a cross between Indiana and Lois Lane, our intrepid reporter, Adèle deals with curious events in pre-war Paris (1911).

screen-shot-2017-02-26-at-4-06-41-pmThe wonderful SBS recently screened The Extraordinary Adventures Of Adèle Blanc-Sec, the glorious fantasy based on a french graphic novel series. If you haven’t seen it yet (for some reason it didn’t get general cinema release, despite its well-known director), you can view it via SBS’ OnDemand service on their website. Worth catching if only for the most violent tennis match you’ll ever see on screen!

Luc Besson directs this visually impressive adaptation of the graphic novel following an independent-minded writer who becomes embroiled in a mystery involving mummies, bad guys, and dinosaurs in pre World War I Paris. Desperate to cure her near catatonic sister, intrepid authoress Adèle Blanc-Sec braves ancient Egyptian tombs and modern Egyptian lowlife to locate a mummified doctor and get him back to Paris. Her hope is that oddball Professor Espérandieu will then use his unusual powers to bring the doctor back to life so he, in turn, can use his centuries-old skills on the unfortunate sister. In Paris however Espérandieu is already causing mayhem, having brought to life what was a safe museum egg but is now a very active pterodactyl.