Thursday, December 24, 2009

The 2009 Gulliver Travel Grant Has been Awarded

The Speculative Literature Foundation Announces the 2009 Gulliver Travel Research Grant Winner

(excerpted from the SLF's press release)

The Speculative Literature Foundation is delighted to announce that its 2009 Gulliver Travel Research Grant has been awarded to author Caren Gussoff. The $800 grant will be used to help Gussoff to travel to western Washington State in order to research the setting of her near-future novel "The King of Seattle".

Gussoff's stories have appeared in Abyss & Apex, PodCastle and Fantasy Magazine, and in several Seal Press anthologies. Her novel explores a post-pandemic Puget Sound, in which mental illness is a communicable disease.

This year the competition was especially fierce, with many excellent entries. Five Honourable Mentions were given:

Nisi Shawl
Jeremy Smith
Livia Llewellyn
Emily Jiang
Nadia Kalman

The Gulliver Travel Research Grant is awarded to assist a writer of speculative fiction in his or her research. As in previous years, the 2009 grant of $800 is to be used to cover airfare, lodging, and/or other expenses relating to the research for a project of speculative fiction. The grant is awarded by a committee of Speculative Literature Foundation members on the basis of interest and merit.

The grant is named after Gulliver, a character in the 1726 story "Gulliver's Travels" written by Jonathan Swift. The story represents one of the earliest examples of fantasy travel.

Applications for the seventh annual Gulliver Travel Research Grant will open on July 1, 2010.

----------------

PR Contact: press@speculativeliterature.org

The Speculative Literature Foundation is a volunteer-run, non-profit organization dedicated to promoting the interests of readers, writers, editors and publishers in the speculative literature community.

An Index of The Pleasures of 2009 series

The Pleasures of 2009 series is not finished-- we still have several pieces to come. But the rate at which they're going up will be slowed and interspersed with the more usual kind of posts. Given that, I thought that it might be useful to have a list of the pieces in the series that have already been posted. To wit:

2009: Memorable Reading by Lisa Tuttle The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 1: Lisa Tuttle

Reading, Viewing and Listening in 2009 by Jeff Ford The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 2: Jeffrey Ford

Best of the Year by Cheryl Morgan The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 3: Cheryl Morgan

Best Books and Music Consumed in 2009 by Therese Littleton The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 4: Therese Littleton

2009: The Year in Review, As It Were by Cynthia Ward The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 5: Cynthia Ward

Best of 2009 by Rachel Swirsky The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 6: Rachel Swirsky

2009 Best by Nisi Shawl The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 7: Nisi Shawl

A Sampling from 2009 by Kristin King The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 8: Kristin King

Read and Appreciated in 2009 by Nancy Jane Moore The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 9: Nancy Jane Moore

Readings 2009 by Mark Rich The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 10: Mark Rich

What I’ve been watching, reading, looking at in 2009 – or not by Rebecca Ore The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 11: Rebecca Ore

Reading: 2009 by Carrie Devall The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 12: Carrie Devall

What a Waste of Talking Dogs! by Andrea Hairston The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 13: Andrea Hairston

What I Read in 2009 by Wendy Walker The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 14: Wendy Walker

Pleasures of Viewing and Listening in 2009 by Sue Lange The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt.15: Sue Lange

Sounds Like 2009, Sure Enough by Haddayr Copley-Woods The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 16: Haddayr Copley-Woods

Best Books and Movies of 2009 by Vandana Singh The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 17: Vandana Singh

Reading and Looking, 2009 by Lesley A. Hall The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 18: Lesley A. Hall

Highlights of Reading and Viewing in 2009 by L. Timmel Duchamp The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 19: L. Timmel Duchamp

The Pleasures of Reading 2009 by Lucy Sussex The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 20: Lucy Sussex

I'll try to remember to update this list as I add more pieces to the series.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 16: Haddayr Copley-Woods


Sounds Like 2009, Sure Enough
by Haddayr Copley-Woods

This summer, a friend of mine had to bully me into starting the Sookie Stackhouse mysteries, upon which the True Blood series is based. Well, twist my arm. You see; I am a horrible snob. However, I finally decided that friends do not look down their noses at friends' taste in stuff unless we know wtf we're talking about, so I picked up the first book she'd loaned me and started reading: Dead Until Dark.

And you know what? They're well written. They are entertaining and fun, and the protagonist is a beautiful blond who does stuff for herself but not in an overly annoying and phony "I Am Making A Point" sort of way, has an actual job as a barmaid and actual bills that she actually has to pay, and no one – not a single boyfriend – has a "crooked smile." Also, because Charlaine Harris is an actual Southerner instead of a condescending Yankee writing about Southerners, her backwoods characters feel like real people – even most of the bad guys, and her small town feels like a bunch of folks instead of a bunch of stereotypes.

Yes, yes there are vampires, which we are all so sick of, and werewolves and lord help us fairies but seriously check it.

Flushed with success from reading many of those books, I took a fellow writer's advice (hi, Dena) and started reading other mysteries to learn more about plot. I turned to none other than Agatha Christie herself.

Seriously, people. Read Miss Marple mysteries. Wonderful plotting, wacky twists, strong characterizations, delicious language. One thing I found interesting was that it was clear to me as she went how when she was an early mystery writer she sometimes depended on absurd and ridiculous coincidences upon which to found her mysteries, but as she became more and more experienced, I'd finish the book and slap myself on the forehead, annoyed I hadn't figured it out myself.

Are podcasts fair game for this series?

Because if they are, whether you are disabled or not you MUST check out the BBC podcast "Ouch," which a friend (oh hai Shana; look at all of my embarrassing shout-outs) suggested last year but which I didn't really get into until this year.

It's a talk show by and for disabled folks. You will laugh and laugh, and if you're able-bodied, you'll probably feel guilty and laugh some more. If you're a gimp (or "crip," as the Brits call themselves) you will again see this strange fellowship we are all in, and revel in it. (The podcast is here.)


Speaking of shout-outs, I heartily suggest that all of you read Alan DeNiro's book Total Oblivion, More or Less. Yes, yes, we are in a writing group together and blah blah blah but I have reasons:

1. Adult book with teen protagonist
2. Really REALLY weird and unexpected and
3. Scary in places
4. Bizarre resonances with Twain and Miéville.
5. A super gross and interesting plague.

So we started with vampires and ended with a plague. Sounds like 2009, sure enough.




Haddayr Copley-Woods is a copywriter living in Minneapolis with stories in places such as Strange Horizons and Ideomancer. She blogs at haddayr.livejournal.com.

The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 15: Sue Lange



Sue Lange:
Pleasures of Viewing and Listening in 2009
by Sue Lange



Pleasures of Viewing: Slum Dog Millionaire

Slumdog Millionaire might not be a great movie. It has a Cinderella ending that is improbable, maybe even downright silly if you consider reality important in your viewing pleasure. Despite that it is the most memorable flick I watched in 2009. The subject matter was too serious, too provocative, to pass the picture off as just another Feel Good Movie of the Year.

Slumdog reminds me of another movie I watched in 2009--the 1948 version of Oliver Twist. Both stories depict the lives of motherless children in a world that has no place for such beings. I imagine when Dickens first published Oliver Twist, he gave London's smart set a glimpse into what it is like to be a lost child, one whose only crime was being born. He showed them how cruel and unfair life for the poor can be. With a setting in Mumbai, Slumdog shows how cruel and unfair life amongst India's lost children can be. Like Dickens instructing the 1800s middle class, the directors of Slumdog, Danny Boyle and Loveleen Tandan, show us--the comfortable modern middle class--something we do not know.

In both movies, the main character is an innocent clearly out of place in the streets. Even being ignorant of the streets ourselves, we know this child can not last long without the help of others more clever and more ruthless than himself. In the end, both children escape their fate in silly, improbable ways. Oliver Twist because he is secretly related to a wealthy man who has a big, non-judgmental heart. Jamal in Slumdog knows all the answers on a gameshow despite the fact that he has no education and in all probability can't even read. His limited life experiences somehow correspond exactly to the questions on the show, however, and he wins big time. Both movies have happy endings proving that everything will work out for those who maintain a good attitude.

There's a big difference between Oliver Twist and Slumdog, though, and it lies in our reaction to the circumstances. Dickens' story took place in the 1800s. We watch it and say, wow, the industrial revolution sure did a job on the populace; thank god we're well beyond those evil times! Now we have a minimum wage, and benefits, and laws against child labor, and limits on the working day, and serious universal healthcare--Well, maybe we don't have that, but you see the point.

Slumdog does not let us get away with that. This is a current story. It's still going on. Somewhere at this very moment, the mother of a little Jamal is being murdered in a religious war, leaving behind two orphans who must seek shelter under a canvas blanket in the middle of a garbage dump. Fagin will be along in a minute to take the children under his wing. He'll be plucking their eyes out, of course, but they'll be taken care of. You cannot feel comfortable and watch this movie. You wonder who is to blame. Is the Dickens' industrial revolution just now making it to Mumbai and soon they too will gain enlightenment and the Factory Act? Is this a world of their own making because of an overly religious culture? Well then, they're good with it. Next problem! Or, perhaps it's just the after-effects of English colonialism; it'll all work out in the end if we just maintain our good attitude.

If you think about it too long, though, you may find yourself recalling things you've seen in your own life. Maybe you needed gas at one point and took a wrong turn off the expressway. Maybe you got lost in Baltimore or LA and caught a glimpse of children hanging on the overpass. What was going on there? You begin to think that it may never be possible to save the children. Perhaps there can be no comfortable middle class without a slave class, or Fagin plucking out the eyes of the unwanted.
These are the things that Slumdog leaves you with. Perhaps, despite its pat Disney ending, it is a great movie after all. It is certainly sticking with me.


Pleasures of Listening in 2009: Yumeji's Theme (composed, arranged, and produced by Shigeru Umebayashi)

If anyone hears Yumeji's Theme and doesn't agree that it might be the most beautiful music ever written, they're dead from the neck up.

I think I discovered Wong Kar-wai's In the Mood for Love in 2008, but it took me until 2009 to get hold of the soundtrack. Amazon.com said they had it, but they lied. They didn't have it and they didn't want to tell me they didn't have it. When they finally copped to the fact that didn't have it, they tried to save face by assuring me they'd be getting a shipment in any day now. They can't fool me. I know they don't have any warehouses and so they don't have shipments. I pressed them for an ETA. They did not respond after that so I struck out on my own. CDChild.com had never heard of Wong Kar-wai, In the Mood for Love, it's sequel 2046, the more famous Chungking Express, or even Hong Kong for that matter. I truly was on my own. I searched the backwaters of the Internet for off-the-wall suppliers of music and finally found satisfaction at www.illegalimportsandblackmarketdrygoods.com. They carried a double CD set of the soundtracks of both In the Mood for Love and 2046. The price: about twice what Amazon.com said they would charge if they were in a position to charge. I paid, and gladly, despite the fact that I had a feeling in the pit of my stomach that the site might be a front for identity thieves. I took that chance because I love Yemeji's Theme.

As I write this I am listening to the album, so it all worked out in the end (I maintained my good attitude and that's probably what did it). There's lots of inconsequential music on the CD, but some great Nat King Cole as well. And something called "Blue" that I can only describe as a weird version of St. James Infirmary. And then there's Yumeji's Theme and Yumeji's Theme Redux. When it's done, I'll pop in 2046. I just watched the movie last night. It has more wonderful Shigeru Umebayashi music, a Dean Martin song, a haunting "Siboney" by Xavier Cugat and Connie Frances that makes me very happy, and "Perfidia." Perfect for an escape from the images of lost children huddling under a canvas tarp or hanging about on bridges in the new world.




Sue's serialized novel, The Textile Planet, is available free o’ charge at Book View Cafe. Aqueduct published her novella, We Robots, in 2007.

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 14: Wendy Walker







What I Read in 2009
by Wendy Walker


During 2009 I read in a rather scattershot manner, between editing jobs for Proteotypes (new website just launched, take a look!: www.proteotypes.org) but discovered some great things:

Fiction:

Stacey Levine’s The Girl With Brown Fur (this book is being held up by MacAdam Cage, the publisher, for reasons unknown, but is available in a bootleg edition).

Robert Walser’s The Assistant, translated by the wonderful Susan Bernofsky, New Directions.

Jimmy Crater (a pseudonym), Mars Needs Lunch, Spineless Books.

Per Olov Enquist, Downfall, Quartet Books.

Fyodor Dostoevsky, Crime and Punishment, dazzlingly translated by Richard Pevear and Larissa Volkhonsky, Vintage.

Douglas G. Martin, Branwell, Soft Skull Press.

Nancy Mitford, The Blessing, Carroll and Graf.


Art and Art History:

Juan Antonio Ramirez, The Bee-Hive Metaphor from Gaudi to Le Corbusier, Reaktion Books.

James Walsh, Foundations, Left Hand Books.

Balthus and Vircondelet, Vanished Splendors, Ecco Press.


Biography and Letters:

Lyndall Gordon, Charlotte Bronte, A Passionate Life, Norton.

Edmund White, Genet, Vintage.

Michael Swanwick, Hope-In-the-Mist, Temporary Culture.



History and Politics:

Carolyn Fick, The Making of Haiti: The Saint-Domingue Revolution from Below, University of Tennessee Press.

E. Benjamin Skinner, A Crime So Monstrous: Face to Face with Modern-Day Slavery, Free Press.


Film:

My major discovery this year was the director Marco Bellocchio, and everything I recommend everything he has done. Fists In the Pocket, The Wedding Director, The Prince of Homburg and Good Morning, Night display an astonishing range. Films to see and immediately view again.

Other film favorites: Wall-E, and a selection of samurai movies by less well-known contemporaries of Kurosawa-- Sword of the Beast, Sword of Doom, Samurai Rebellion.


Exhibitions:

“The Art of the Samurai” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

“The Coney Island Psychoanalytical Society” at the Coney Island Museum.

Wendy Walker is the author of a poetic nonfiction, Blue Fire (Proteotypes), and four volumes of fiction: The Secret Service, The Sea-Rabbit, or The Artist of Life, Stories Out of Omarie (Sun and Moon Press), and Knots (Aqueduct Press). She is a core collaborator at Proteus Gowanus, an interdisciplinary gallery/reading room in Brooklyn, and the editor of its publishing arm, Proteotypes.

The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 13: Andrea Hairston









What a Waste of Talking Dogs!
by Andrea Hairston

The first time I went to see UP, I sat in a dark movie theatre with a crowd of ancients, tweens, little kids, college students, and folks getting their first copy of AARP magazine in the mail. During the relentless ads and silly previews for junk kiddie-fare, my lower back was screaming at the once plush but now bedraggled space-age bucket seats. I wondered if I would make it to the movie. But after the coming attractions, a short started to play, and my back just shut up. I was utterly charmed out of pain and irritation.

In the short—a silent movie with no dialogue—a storm-cloud creator fashions prickly baby life forms that sting and chew and zap their delivery stork. Following several difficult deliveries, the much abused stork looks to be running from storm-cloud to another creator-cloud who makes cute and cuddly baby life forms. Storm-cloud, feeling unloved and rejected, weeps thunder, lightning, and driving rain.
The audience roared laughter and wept too!

But, ahh, on screen, there’s a lovely reversal of expectations. The stork is not abandoning the storm-cloud creator after all. The battered bird has just gone over to another creator-cloud to procure football tackle gear to survive the wild ones he/she has to take down into the world.

The audience cheered and laughed and wept again! This short was one of my favorite viewing experiences of 2009. I confess to sitting in audiences and frequently wondering (with grumpy righteousness) what story the people around me are enjoying. Not so this time.

UP was even more captivating and delightful than its companion short. UP and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button were my favorite films of the past year. Watching these films, I was swept into all the ages of my life all at once. Both films, but UP in particular, allowed me to remember the feeling in my body of being a young, passionate believer ever ready to head out on the great adventure that would be my life. As a child, I believed in glorious, deep, awe-inspiring change, change that would last forever and a day. I believed that recognizing evil, we would, every one of us, turn away from it and seek another path. We would change; we would do whatever was necessary so that evil would not prevail. So all I/we had to do was put evil on display, tell everybody what they maybe hadn’t noticed, couldn’t access, or hadn’t had the opportunity to discover, and poof, justice, truth, and beauty would follow. It is astounding to think that I was ever so sure of myself, of my heroes, ideals, and dreams. Many heroes and some ideals have turned to straw and dust or have been revealed as hollow and unworthy of the mythical stories that cloak them. The bitterness of this kind of revelation can be corrosive.

UP is a meditation on the ideals of youth and the bounty of age.

As I watched a young boy, Russell, and an old man, Carl Fredricksen, float off on their adventure to Paradise in a house lifted into the sky by balloons, I was reminded of painful revisions of my early exuberance and naïve hope.

In his youth, Carl and soul mate, wife-to-be, Ellie, idolized Charles Muntz, a scientific explorer who lived the adventurous life they longed to experience. Muntz, it would seem, got to indulge his voracious curiosity on distant exotic shores. Traversing uncharted Paradise, Muntz got to live only for his sense of wonder while Carl and Ellie missed the boat to wonderland again and again. After losing Ellie, Carl (with Boy Scout Russell clinging to the porch) takes the house to wonderland.

In many narratives, a journey to “uncivilized” jungle lands is a journey to the past, an unspoiled past. UP’s wrinkle on this master narrative is intriguing. It turns out that Muntz is a bitter old colonialist determined to rape Paradise for his glory. Finding beauty on exotic, “uncivilized” land, Muntz is convinced that he has discovered it, that naming and cataloging it his right and duty. Documenting his particular story of Paradise to others back in “civilization” is of paramount importance. Muntz feels entitled to destroy Paradise to achieve his goal. What Paradise might have to say about itself is irrelevant. Does Paradise even know that it is beautiful or special?

Since old Carl Fredricksen was a little boy, Muntz has been hunting down the bird of Paradise. He is not marooned in the jungle for fifty years or more—he just refuses to go home without the bird! He has wasted his genius on a wild goose chase and a canine military. Miraculous dog soldiers patrol his empire to claim precious booty and put down resistance or revolution or any intruder claims on Muntz’s empire.

What a waste of talking dogs!

Young Russell feels immediate kinship with the bird of Paradise who likes chocolate as much as he does. Russell tries to name the bird and gets the gender wrong. No matter. The bird knows who she is and what she wants and values. She helps to rescue Russell and Carl from the deranged colonialist explorer. Russell in turn wants to save her from Muntz’s acquisitive, cannibalistic science that would consume what it proposes to study. Russell risks all to do so as the bird risked herself for him.

Face to face with his childhood hero, Carl sees Muntz’s evil and turns away, but in apathy. He does not wish to engage in a struggle against the powerful Muntz. Face to face with a reincarnation of his (and Ellie’s) youthful adventurer self, Carl would like to shut the door and dwell in what he’s lost. He’d like to cling to a dusty old fantasy.

Luckily, youthful adventurers are tenacious. Carl is inspired to wrestle with his boyhood hero. He, Russell, and the bird are a dynamic team, improvising their way around Muntz’s mad genius. In the end Paradise remains intact, the past embraces the future and evil cuts its own throat. In the face of powerful nostalgia and remorse for what never was, bitterness proves unnecessary.

In Cheek by Jowl (one of my favorite books of the year), Ursula Le Guin writes:
Fantasy’s green country is one that most of us enter with ease and pleasure, and it seems to be perfectly familiar to most children even if they’ve never been out of the city streets. It partakes of the Golden Age, whether mythic or personal, though it may also partake of the darkness that ends the golden age.
Below are the works that like UP took me to Fantasy’s green country, the Golden Age, and the Darkness in 2009.

Films (in addition to UP and The Curious Case of Benjamin Button):

Angelina Maccarone’s Fremde Haut (or in English, Unveiled)—the story of a woman, persecuted in Iran because of a lesbian relationship, who seeks asylum in Germany.

Til Schweiger’s Barfuss (Barefoot), a modern German fairy tale romance.


Books:

The Risen Empire and The Killing of Worlds by Scott Westerfeld—Space Opera!

Seen It All and Done the Rest by Pearl Cleage—an expatriate theatre artist, an African American diva defying all the conventions has her glamorous life shattered by war and political unrest. Back at home in America, she finds a new role to play.

The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie—he’s nailed what this young adult book is about in the title!

Plays (I reread these and was wowed for the nth time!):

A Number and Far Away by Caryl Churchill—two science fiction plays. In A Number, Caryl writes a devastating drama of human cloning – Her dramatic magic if is how might a man feel to discover that he is only one in a number of identical copies. And which one of him is the original. . . ? In Far Away, a terrifyingly elegant one-act, Caryl indicts our everyday complacency in the face of the brutal devastation we cause, profit from, and cease to feel.

TV Shows:

I got hooked on True Blood—Season One on DVD. I don’t do cable so I have to wait for Season Two.

Oh yeah—Star Trek. They beamed me up.



Andrea Hairston was a math/physics major in college until she did special effects for a show, and then she ran off to the theatre and became an artist. As Artistic Director of Chrysalis Theatre, she has created original productions with music, dance, and masks for over thirty years. At Smith College, she is the L. Wolff Kahn 1931 Professor of Theatre and Afro-American Studies. She writes regularly on SF & F film and theatre. Her novel, Mindscape, published by Aqueduct Press in 2006, was shortlisted for the Phillip K Dick and Tiptree Awards. She has an essay on Pan's Labyrinth in Narrative Power: Encounters, Celebrations, Struggles, ed. L. Timmel Duchamp, forthcoming from Aqueduct in spring 2010.


Monday, December 21, 2009

The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 12: Carrie Devall


Reading: 2009
by Carrie Devall


Right now I’m reading Sarah Schulman’s The Mere Future (Arsenal Pulp Press, 2009), a snarky novel about a future NYC where social problems have (supposedly) been solved by the new mayoral administration and everyone works in marketing. I’m also working through Petina Gappah’s collection, An Elegy for Easterly (Faber & Faber, 2009), zingy short stories about life in Zimbabwe, and just started LeAnne Howe’s Miko Kings (Aunt Lute, 2007), about an all-Indian baseball team in 1907 Oklahoma, which seems like it will be as funny and devastating as her amazing Shell Shaker (2001), a Choctaw murder mystery that alternates between the past and the present, with cameos by an “art car,” the Peanutmobile.

Most of the current SF&F that I read this year was short fiction in magazines from 2009 and various “Best of 2008” anthologies. The stories that stayed with me were Geoff Ryman’s “Days of Wonder” (Oct/Nov 2008 F&SF) and Richard Bowes’ “Aka St. Mark’s Place” from The Del Rey Book of Fantasy & Science Fiction, edited by Ellen Datlow (2008).

My favorite 2009 collection was Year’s Best SF 14, ed. David G. Hartwell & Kathryn Cramer. Mentioning this feels a bit like pandering to Aqueduct, because I thought some of the best stories were “Oblivion: A Journey” by Vandana Singh, “Arkfall” by Carolyn Ives Gilman, “Cheats” by Ann Halam (Gwyneth Jones), and it also had Ted Chiang’s “Exhalation,” “Mitigation” by Tobias S. Buckell and Karl Schroeder, and the way cool world-building of “The Ships Like Clouds, Risen By Their Rain” by Jason Sanford.

I have enjoyed the stories I have read so far from Things We Are Not, the October 2009 queer SF anthology edited by Christopher Fletcher of M-Brane SF magazine (mbranesf.blogspot.com, with an awesome cover by Mari Kurisato). Malinda Lo’s novel Ash was a lush YA lesbian take on Cinderella (Little, Brown & Co., 2009).

For older short story collections I enjoyed Martha Randall’s self-published Collected Stories (lulu.com, 2007), which covers 1975 through 2007. The story that sent me searching for this was “Lázaro and Antonio,” a snazzy riff on Fibonacci-number-based FTL flight and sleazy spaceports. Mary Rosenblum’s old story collection Synthesis & Other Virtual Realities (1996) was also pretty gripping. For older novels, I liked Chris Moriarty’s Spin State (2003), a cyberpunky military SF thriller mixing quantum physics and that old time religion.

As novel research, I read most of the gay novels about AIDS from the 1980s and early 1990s. My favorites of the ones that were new to me were Felice Picano’s Like People in History (1996), and Onyx (2001), both of which contain some really stunning writing. I also still love Sarah Schulman’s fabulist take on ACT UP NY, People in Trouble (1991), and David Feinberg’s Queer and Loathing: Rants and Raves of a Raging AIDS Clone (1995), his columns and essays from the trenches of AIDS treatment activism.

A book that made me cry and also had many memorable passages was Martha Southgate’s Third Girl From the Left (2005), about the silences and relationships between a young filmmaker whose lesbian mother fled to Hollywood in the 70s and ended up in blaxploitation movies, and whose grandmother survived the white lynch mobs of the Tulsa Riots.

Also very thought-provoking was Toi Derricotte’s The Black Notebooks: An Interior Journey (1999), an intensely personal and piercing look at her own and other people’s internalized and externalized racism, from a black writer who is sometimes perceived as white.

I read many novels from queer fiction recommendation lists, the best of which were:

André Aciman’s Call Me By Your Name, a lyrical coming of age romance (2007). Aquamarine by Carol Anshaw (1997), about a swimmer who can’t get over her loss to an enigmatic girl. Stacey D’Erasmo’s prose is awe-inspiring in A Seahorse Year (2004), about a mother whose schizophrenic son disappears. Nairne Holtz’s The Skin Beneath (2007), a noirish novel about a lesbian’s search for the truth about her sister’s death. Stephanie Grant’s The Passion of Alice (1996), the best take I’ve read yet on anorexia and recovery, and, not as tight, her Map of Ireland (2008), about an Irish girl in 60s South Boston who falls for a black girl on her basketball team and her Senegalese French teacher.

Larry Duplechan’s Got 'til It’s Gone (2008) was an amusing and hot rendering of an ‘aging’ black gay man’s relationship angst. T. Cooper’s Some of the Parts (2000), a surprisingly romantic queer novel with great style. Achy Ojebas, Days of Awe (2001), about a Cuban woman's daughter who discovers her father’s family were “hidden Jews,” and Ruins (Akashic, 2009), a funny and moving story about a man who dutifully wants to stay in Cuba while everyone around him is trying to escape, and his obsession with Tiffany lamps.

As for movies, I saw Sleep Dealer before it had a limited 2009 U.S. theatrical run. The special effects and production values were amazing for the tiny budget of this scifi story about future maquiladoras that was made in Mexico, written and directed by Alex Rivera. The story was a little clunky and its use of the female sidekick/ love interest felt slightly dated, but overall it was really impressive. Now available on DVD (Spanish with subtitles).

I went to the five-plus hours of Stephen Soderberg’s Che (also in Spanish with subtitles) in the roadshow edition and never got bored. Benicio Del Toro did a great job as Che Guevara. The two halves of the film, one about Che’s time in Cuba and the other about his death in Bolivia, were suspenseful despite the known historical outcomes.

I also attended some of the Walker Arts Center’s Derek Jarman retrospective, already a fan. The new biographical film, Derek (derekthemovie.com), by Isaac Julien, about the pioneering gay British experimental filmmaker was fascinating, with great visuals and music, and showed an interesting side of Tilda Swinton, who starred in several of Jarman’s films and was a close friend. I went to Jarman’s first film, Sebastiane, not knowing what to expect: it was the first film to have dialogue all in Latin, and supposedly the first positive portrayal of homosexuality in a British film. As billed, the film was a homoerotic retelling of the story of Saint Sebastian’s crucifixion. The visual style (lingering on the desert landscape and scantily clad young men), music, and poetic dialogue (subtitled) were mesmerizing, and well worth driving in a snowstorm to experience.


Carrie Devall writes speculative fiction in Minneapolis and attended Clarion West in 2007. Her poem "Highsmith" made the short list for the 2009 Chroma magazine queer literary competition. She is working on a fantasy novel about early 1990s queer activism, "The Radical Fairy," and her essay about lesbian speculative fiction can be found in the Aqueduct Gazette, Winter 2009 (Aqueduct Press's newsletter, which is available here).

The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 11: Rebecca Ore













What I’ve been watching, reading, looking at in 2009 – or not
by Rebecca Ore


One book I haven’t read keeps coming up in various contexts, from The Valve (an English faculty blog with a certain tolerance of science fiction) to my own observations of the weirdnesses of the intersection of aesthetic tastes and class: Pierre Bourdieu’s Distinction. I’ve got it on the must-buy list when I either decide to put in a Powell’s order or when I find it at a local bookstore.

Otherwise, I’ve been looking at a lot of photography, both on line and in books, which may not be the ideal way to see it: Annie Leibovitz, Henri Cartier Bresson, Imogene Cunningham. And I’ve been reading in Ansel Adam’s The Camera, The Negative, and The Print. And taking my own pictures.

I’ve also been reading the Belle de Jour blogs and watching the British television program spun off from it. The divergence between what appears to have been the reality of the woman and the t.v. version is telling. While Dr. Brooke Magnanti claimed in the blog not to have been sexually abused by a relative and while this is factually correct, her parents weren’t happily married in the North of England, but were divorced Americans, and the reality sounds not as sweet as the slant given it. The T.V. show made Belle a liberal arts major, one of the hapless ones who can’t get good jobs; Dr. Magnanti was working on her dissertation and was able to program as well as whore. Sex worker with brains. There’s also Dr. Magnanti’s current work on an all female research team. I understand that many more women enroll in British medical schools than do in the US, so perhaps an all woman research team is more normal there than here. It might mean more here than there that she was working on an all female team.

Women supposedly have two other options to standard work – marriage or whoredom. I’m still not sure what Magnanti’s choices imply for the rest of us. She was obviously able to deal with the issues, but has a strain of defensiveness that may be understandable, but comes across as more aggressive than perhaps necessary.
Other than that, I’ve been taking pictures.


Rebecca Ore’s fiction burst upon the world in 1988 with the publication of her celebrated Becoming Alien trilogy, the first two novels of which were nominated for the Philip K. Dick Award. Since then she’s published a great deal of short fiction and numerous novels, including Gaia’s Toys, Time’s Child, Outlaw School, Slow Funeral, the short fiction collection, Alien Bootlegger, and from Aqueduct Press, Alien Bootlegger (a reprint of the novella) and Centuries Ago and Very Fast, a collection of linked short stories.

The Pleasures of Reading, Viewing, and Listening in 2009, Pt. 10: Mark Rich

Readings 2009
by Mark Rich


The other day I was reading and thinking I would have handled certain aspects of the story differently, had I written the book. The clincher is that I had written the book. I just received copies of C.M. Kornbluth: The Life and Times of a Science Fiction Visionary from McFarland, and in my compulsive re-reading of the whole, massive thing, I was more powerfully struck than ever by something I had observed before: that you cannot read a thing you have written until it is no longer yours. Before that point, you are the writer: the mind keeps fiddling with what the eye takes in. Even when proofing and indexing you are too close-in to see what you created.

When suddenly everyone else has your words before their eyes, at least potentially, is when you want it back. Now you read the published form and only now do you find the confusing statements, the transposed letters, the repetitions, the niggling little flaws.

The corollary to the above is that you have little clue what you say until it comes back to you. Then — to your horror, perhaps — you find out. In this case, fortunately, my sense of horror was well muffled. Except for a couple chapters that are confusing because of the absolute tangle of story and magazine titles, and for a few sections that are arranged chronologically when a thematic arrangement might have been clearer (and ... and ... ) the book is not a bad read — even for the one who should feel ho-hummish, the one who wrote it. I devoured the book with interest, and was overcome yet again by the emotional climax — which for me is not at Kornbluth's death, but at a very strange moment soon afterwards, contained in a few paragraphs Johnny Michel wrote years later.

This year, circumstances led me to catch up on a number of American poets, with the oldest one and the one who perhaps most interests me being John Hall Wheelock. His reputation for employing Christian elements, which he does do in some poems, has I think diminished his stature in the last half-century. I welcomed the chance to revisit Anselm Hollo, whose poems, elusive though they are, I still regard as worthwhile. Philip Whalen, whose poems I also tried to assimilate, is a congenial fellow figure to set alongside Hollo. I even read a short Whalen novel, You Didn't Even Try, which has refreshing immediacy. There were a few other poets I have been reading who are more famous in our day than Hollo or Whalen, whom I found or am finding less convincing, less natural, perhaps less important. On the other hand, I am just diving into poems by Alice Notley, and am regretting not having read her sooner.
I had opportunity this year, too, to read the newly translated novel by Ismail Kadare, The Siege, which, after my recent thinkings and writings (in C.M. Kornbluth) about the closing of the Modern Age and the beginning of the Age of the Masses, seemed strikingly Modern. This is not to say it has nothing to offer our times, for it is a worthy work, written simultaneously as a novel of history and of symbolism.

Among other books I read or dipped into, this year, some of the more rewarding were related to prisoner-of-war camps in the U.S., which is a separate topic from concentration camps in the U.S. As it happened, though, I also had reason to read up on Japanese immigrant experiences, which of course included the latter sort of camps; and so I chipped away a little more of my ignorance concerning one-half of my ethnic background. It felt gratifying to be reading Bill Hosokawa, a newspaperman my parents knew decades ago in Denver.

Dipping into Phil Klass's Dancing Naked: The Unexpurgated William Tenn has given pleasure for quite different reasons. If I have not read the whole, fat book, I am sure I have re-read some lengthy portions of it enough times to make up for any possible lack of devotion to completeness.

On a different note, literally, I have been doing some other reading I have wanted to do for some thirty years ... because at an auction held at a neighbor's house, this past summer, a quality piano came up for sale. Martha had the money for it — I didn't — so she bought it. I have been doing the reading I lacked the patience for, in my early twenties when I last had access to a piano. I have read through Bach's two-part inventions, and through a miscellany ranging from luminous Handel to the uncentered Chopin (and some really non-centered Moderns); and at this point I'm reading through the delightfully off-center sonatas of Scarlatti, which is something I've yearned to do since back whenever. Later I will stop reading and start studying. Back in the day I used to play a lively piece by another Baroque wildman, Antonio Soler. I have yet to dig up that music again, though. Oh, the feel of the well-balanced piano key! Reading need not be sedentary, you see.


Mark Rich is the author of a major biographical and critical study, C.M. Kornbluth: The Life and Works of a Science Fiction Visionary, which will be released in March 2010 by McFarland. Two collections of his fiction are already in print — Edge of Our Lives (RedJack) and Across the Sky (Fairwood) — as well as chapbooks from presses including Gothic and Small Beer. With partner-in-life Martha and Scottie-in-life Lorna, he lives in the Coulee region of Wisconsin where an early-1900s house, a collection of dilapidated antique furniture, and a large garden preoccupy him with their needs.