Michael Swanwick's Blog, page 75
July 24, 2019
Things Simmering Away
.
This glitterati life! I've been signing tip-in sheets for an unannounced future project. It sounds glamorous. But five reams of signature sheets is a lot of work.
Every now and then, Marianne will ask if she can sign just one of the sheets for me. "No," I say.
"But it'll be much rarer than the others!"
"Speciously put, but no."
I cannot remember ever saying no to Marianne on any other request. But the people buying an autographed book expect it to be autographed by the author. I won't betray that trust. Even for a mischievous wife.
And in the Image Bopk . . .
The top image is labeled A MAP OF THE WORLD.
Below, where it says "the Crown of Thorns," is actually a label for tomorrow's image.
This is the last page of the book, incidentally. Only the inside and outside back covers to go.
*

This glitterati life! I've been signing tip-in sheets for an unannounced future project. It sounds glamorous. But five reams of signature sheets is a lot of work.
Every now and then, Marianne will ask if she can sign just one of the sheets for me. "No," I say.
"But it'll be much rarer than the others!"
"Speciously put, but no."
I cannot remember ever saying no to Marianne on any other request. But the people buying an autographed book expect it to be autographed by the author. I won't betray that trust. Even for a mischievous wife.
And in the Image Bopk . . .
The top image is labeled A MAP OF THE WORLD.
Below, where it says "the Crown of Thorns," is actually a label for tomorrow's image.
This is the last page of the book, incidentally. Only the inside and outside back covers to go.
*
Published on July 24, 2019 14:29
July 23, 2019
Great Footnotes of Western Literature
.
If I were an organized man, I would have carefully saved all my favorite footnotes in a series of notebooks and be well on my way to pitching The Oxford Book of Footnotes to a doubtless receptive publisher.
Alas, I am far from that organized. Still, occasionally a footnote rises up to charm me. Most recently, it happened in a paper I'm reading titled Lud-in-the-Mist as Memento Mori: Existential anxiety and the Consolations of an Aestheti Theology in Hope Mirrlees's Fantasy Novel. Here's the footnote in question:
Above: Only a few more excerpts from the Image Book to go.
*

If I were an organized man, I would have carefully saved all my favorite footnotes in a series of notebooks and be well on my way to pitching The Oxford Book of Footnotes to a doubtless receptive publisher.
Alas, I am far from that organized. Still, occasionally a footnote rises up to charm me. Most recently, it happened in a paper I'm reading titled Lud-in-the-Mist as Memento Mori: Existential anxiety and the Consolations of an Aestheti Theology in Hope Mirrlees's Fantasy Novel. Here's the footnote in question:
2 Brian Attebery notes that Lud-in-the-Mist has never been "read as an important Modernist text, not even in an article on Mirrlees as Modernist poet (Boyde) or in a book-length study of Jane Harrison's influence on Modernism (Carpentier)" (Stories 59). Given the religious argument I advance below, I would suggest that this oversight springs in part from a distaste for "things religious" among those who have shaped the Modernist canon.Which is a nice, tight, two-sentence essay. To it I would only add that in my experience most academics find the novel baffling simply because it is fantasy, a genre they tend to be poorly read in. They're like early travelers to a distant land. They don't understand the customs and the language... well, it's weird.
Above: Only a few more excerpts from the Image Book to go.
*
Published on July 23, 2019 07:17
July 22, 2019
A Day in the Life
.
There are all kinds of interesting projects simmering away on a variety of metaphoric stoves. None of which I can talk about yet. So I'm forced to fall back on What I'm Doing Today.
Not much, as it turns out. Some time ago, I wrote a story called "Sparks and Embers," which I had decided was not a success and put it aside. This morning, I picked it up, changed the title to "Artificial People," did a light rewrite of the text, and gave it a new ending.
The result? Much better. Eminently publishable. Not one of my best.
Life is too short to waste on a story that isn't one of my best. So back into the pile mulching away on my desk it goes. I'll pick it up again sometime and see if I can make it sing. Until then, it simply must wait.
This is the glamorous, excitement-packed life of a working writer.
And from the Image Book . . .
Not a lot to be said about today's images. The typewriter is a reminder that artifice and lying are thematic to the novel. The murky figures, possibly drowned, are an evocation of the fast that Faerie is, in many ways, an inversion of our own world--which its inhabitants call Aerth.
Only five more of these to go, by the way.
*

There are all kinds of interesting projects simmering away on a variety of metaphoric stoves. None of which I can talk about yet. So I'm forced to fall back on What I'm Doing Today.
Not much, as it turns out. Some time ago, I wrote a story called "Sparks and Embers," which I had decided was not a success and put it aside. This morning, I picked it up, changed the title to "Artificial People," did a light rewrite of the text, and gave it a new ending.
The result? Much better. Eminently publishable. Not one of my best.
Life is too short to waste on a story that isn't one of my best. So back into the pile mulching away on my desk it goes. I'll pick it up again sometime and see if I can make it sing. Until then, it simply must wait.
This is the glamorous, excitement-packed life of a working writer.
And from the Image Book . . .
Not a lot to be said about today's images. The typewriter is a reminder that artifice and lying are thematic to the novel. The murky figures, possibly drowned, are an evocation of the fast that Faerie is, in many ways, an inversion of our own world--which its inhabitants call Aerth.
Only five more of these to go, by the way.
*
Published on July 22, 2019 11:15
Sunday's Blog Post: A Letter from the Goddess
.
Number 103 in a series of 108. The text reads:
"A Letter from the Goddess."
Dearest Cat,
[A series of indecipherable word-length dashes]
Your loving persecutor,
G.
And at the bottom:
"The Black Stone."
*

Number 103 in a series of 108. The text reads:
"A Letter from the Goddess."
Dearest Cat,
[A series of indecipherable word-length dashes]
Your loving persecutor,
G.
And at the bottom:
"The Black Stone."
*
Published on July 22, 2019 09:05
July 20, 2019
Love, Death, and Emmys
.
This is nothing about me directly. But I've just learned that Love, Death,& Robots, the original Netflix cartoon series that included my short story, "Ice Age," has received two Emmy nominations for outstanding short form animated series and outstanding sound editing.
I feel this should be celebrated for two reasons: First, because the series uses the streaming video concept brilliantly by animating each story at the length it properly should be. The Procrustean bed of television, which routinely pads stories that are too short for a fixed format or stints those that are too long, has at last been tossed aside. I( will continue this metaphor no further; that way lies disaster and Thog's Masterclass.) Second, because Tim Miller, co-founder of Blur Studio, did a lovely job of adapting my story, hewing very closely to what I wrote. The few changes he made were, I blush to admit, improvements.
I wasn't expecting that.
Anyway, kudos to all involved. I'll be rootng for them.
And in the Image Book . . .
Rather a dull one, I'm afraid. But at least it's not glamorous. Are you aware of how difficult it is to find archetypal images of women in popular culture hat aren't glam? I'll be writing more about that later.
Above: Image 102 out of 108. Almost done!
*

This is nothing about me directly. But I've just learned that Love, Death,& Robots, the original Netflix cartoon series that included my short story, "Ice Age," has received two Emmy nominations for outstanding short form animated series and outstanding sound editing.
I feel this should be celebrated for two reasons: First, because the series uses the streaming video concept brilliantly by animating each story at the length it properly should be. The Procrustean bed of television, which routinely pads stories that are too short for a fixed format or stints those that are too long, has at last been tossed aside. I( will continue this metaphor no further; that way lies disaster and Thog's Masterclass.) Second, because Tim Miller, co-founder of Blur Studio, did a lovely job of adapting my story, hewing very closely to what I wrote. The few changes he made were, I blush to admit, improvements.
I wasn't expecting that.
Anyway, kudos to all involved. I'll be rootng for them.
And in the Image Book . . .

Rather a dull one, I'm afraid. But at least it's not glamorous. Are you aware of how difficult it is to find archetypal images of women in popular culture hat aren't glam? I'll be writing more about that later.
Above: Image 102 out of 108. Almost done!
*
Published on July 20, 2019 14:05
July 19, 2019
Reading in the Rain
.
Yesterday, Marianne and I drove to Baltimore for the Charm City reading series at Bird in Hand Cafe, hosted by The Ivy Bookshop. The weather was threatening. Then, an hour before the scheduled event time, the heavens tore open and produced a real frog-strangler. Rain so heavy that cars pulled off the road, wind that tore branches off the trees, and for a decorative flourish... lightning!
All the old hands at this kind of event will tell you that this is a recipe for disaster.
But while the turnout was much smaller than it would have been, there was a good sized crowd of mostly the core attendees. Leslye Penelope and T. Eric Bakutis and I read gallantly from our works, and received a warm reception, and afterward many of us went to the ramen restaurant next door.
So it was a good evening. I'm sorry if you missed it.
That's Leslye up above, reading from her Song of Blood and Stone.
And speaking of autographed books . . . I autographed some of the stock for The Ivy Bookshop--and they do mail orders. So if you need an autographed copy of The Iron Dragon's Mother, you can contact them. Be sure to specify that you want an autographed copy, though. They also have the unautographed version, for those who prefer their books not scribbled in.
Their website can be found here.
And in the Image Book . . .
The text says it all: A glimpse of the Goddess. Not a goddess, mind you. The One That matters.
Above: For those who came in late, I've been posting images from my Image Book to help promote my recently-published and wonderfully entertaining novel The Iron Dragon's Mother. We're getting near to the end of the series. Only seven more to go!
*

Yesterday, Marianne and I drove to Baltimore for the Charm City reading series at Bird in Hand Cafe, hosted by The Ivy Bookshop. The weather was threatening. Then, an hour before the scheduled event time, the heavens tore open and produced a real frog-strangler. Rain so heavy that cars pulled off the road, wind that tore branches off the trees, and for a decorative flourish... lightning!
All the old hands at this kind of event will tell you that this is a recipe for disaster.
But while the turnout was much smaller than it would have been, there was a good sized crowd of mostly the core attendees. Leslye Penelope and T. Eric Bakutis and I read gallantly from our works, and received a warm reception, and afterward many of us went to the ramen restaurant next door.
So it was a good evening. I'm sorry if you missed it.
That's Leslye up above, reading from her Song of Blood and Stone.
And speaking of autographed books . . . I autographed some of the stock for The Ivy Bookshop--and they do mail orders. So if you need an autographed copy of The Iron Dragon's Mother, you can contact them. Be sure to specify that you want an autographed copy, though. They also have the unautographed version, for those who prefer their books not scribbled in.
Their website can be found here.
And in the Image Book . . .

The text says it all: A glimpse of the Goddess. Not a goddess, mind you. The One That matters.
Above: For those who came in late, I've been posting images from my Image Book to help promote my recently-published and wonderfully entertaining novel The Iron Dragon's Mother. We're getting near to the end of the series. Only seven more to go!
*
Published on July 19, 2019 07:50
July 18, 2019
In Case You Die . . .
.
A lovely evening last night at Charm City. I'll blog about it tomorrow. Right now... breakfast and then the Visionary Art Museum. Which I may yet blog about the day after tomorrow.
And from the Image Book . . .
This was just a joke. I saw the words In case you die... in an advertisement, was tickled by them, and added a goldfish and the words ...have a goldfish. It had nothing to do with The Iron Dragon's Mother.
Yet, strangely enough, the goldfish made it into the novel. Here, from a scene in the goblin market:
A luminous goldfish swam past Cat then darted back to join a dozen of its kind circling a silent smiling-mask-faced gorojumo.
Mysterious are the ways of creativity.
Above: For those who came in late, as a way of drawing attention to my newly-published novel, The Iron Dragon's Mother, I'm serializing the Image Book I put together as a way of helping me to visualize Faerie and its inhabitants. There are eight more images yet to come.
**

A lovely evening last night at Charm City. I'll blog about it tomorrow. Right now... breakfast and then the Visionary Art Museum. Which I may yet blog about the day after tomorrow.
And from the Image Book . . .
This was just a joke. I saw the words In case you die... in an advertisement, was tickled by them, and added a goldfish and the words ...have a goldfish. It had nothing to do with The Iron Dragon's Mother.
Yet, strangely enough, the goldfish made it into the novel. Here, from a scene in the goblin market:
A luminous goldfish swam past Cat then darted back to join a dozen of its kind circling a silent smiling-mask-faced gorojumo.
Mysterious are the ways of creativity.
Above: For those who came in late, as a way of drawing attention to my newly-published novel, The Iron Dragon's Mother, I'm serializing the Image Book I put together as a way of helping me to visualize Faerie and its inhabitants. There are eight more images yet to come.
**
Published on July 18, 2019 05:34
July 17, 2019
Yet Another Message from the Goddess
.
.
This was not deliberate on the creator's part. The page was smudged by the kind of accident common to all manner of printing. But I thought it profound.
So I pasted it into the Image Book and explained what was going on below it.
Then I thought, "Why be explicit?" So I scribbled over the explanation and drew an arrow to it with the explication everything explained.
So very very much of my fiction is about the silence of God.
Above: For those who came in late, as a way of drawing attention to my newly-published novel, The Iron Dragon's Mother, I'm serializing the Image Book I put together as a way of helping me to visualize Faerie and its inhabitants. There are a week and a half more images yet to come.
*

This was not deliberate on the creator's part. The page was smudged by the kind of accident common to all manner of printing. But I thought it profound.
So I pasted it into the Image Book and explained what was going on below it.
Then I thought, "Why be explicit?" So I scribbled over the explanation and drew an arrow to it with the explication everything explained.
So very very much of my fiction is about the silence of God.
Above: For those who came in late, as a way of drawing attention to my newly-published novel, The Iron Dragon's Mother, I'm serializing the Image Book I put together as a way of helping me to visualize Faerie and its inhabitants. There are a week and a half more images yet to come.
*
Published on July 17, 2019 00:30
Yet Another Message from God.
.
.
This was not deliberate on the creator's part. The page was smudged by the kind of accident common to all manner of printing. But I thought it profound.
So I pasted it into the Image Book and explained what was going on below it.
Then I thought, "Why be explicit?" So I scribbled over the explanation and drew an arrow to it with the explication everything explained.
So very very much of my fiction is about the silence of God.
Above: For those who came in late, as a way of drawing attention to my newly-published novel, The Iron Dragon's Mother, I'm serializing the Image Book I put together as a way of helping me to visualize Faerie and its inhabitants. There are a week and a half more images yet to come.
*

This was not deliberate on the creator's part. The page was smudged by the kind of accident common to all manner of printing. But I thought it profound.
So I pasted it into the Image Book and explained what was going on below it.
Then I thought, "Why be explicit?" So I scribbled over the explanation and drew an arrow to it with the explication everything explained.
So very very much of my fiction is about the silence of God.
Above: For those who came in late, as a way of drawing attention to my newly-published novel, The Iron Dragon's Mother, I'm serializing the Image Book I put together as a way of helping me to visualize Faerie and its inhabitants. There are a week and a half more images yet to come.
*
Published on July 17, 2019 00:30
July 16, 2019
Greer Gilman's Little Kingdom
.
How did I spend your weekend? Funny you should ask. I was at a science fiction convention (oh, all right, it was Readercon), where I did a small amount of stagehand work in support of the first public reading of Greer Gilman's new one-act play Little Kingdom.
The reading was not part of the convention, which has such demands on its program time that it could only afford to offer Greer a half-hour. Alas, for a play 33 minutes long this was far from enough. So the participants invented a sort of Readercon Fringe by putting it on anyway, on the Terrace, as an independent production.
Greer Gilman played the part of Ben Jonson, "playwright, pundit, malcontent," while Marianne Porter was Ethel Smyth, "composer, suffragist, Sapphist." The play records their first meeting on the Moon, the immediate dislike they take to one another, and how they come to terms with their fate and with each other.
It really was tremendously entertaining. Greer and Marianne played their parts with verve and brio, and everybody had a tremendous time. The audience, myself definitely included, loved it.
I also got to hang out with interesting people, meet old friends and new, buy books, learn much information of use and interest, and involve myself in yet more projects. Details as various matters become public.
And in the Image Book . . .
This is a great one . . . a picture of the Dowager herself.It brings out, I think, some of her glamour (in the novel, she is described thus: She was regally tall and imperially slim. She was also old, there was no denying that, but her face in age had taken on the mystique of a civilization lost in time and known only by rumor) and her darkness, but also the pain that made her into such a terrible individual. So I'm happy with it.
Above: For those who came in late, as a way of drawing attention to my newly-published novel, The Iron Dragon's Mother, I'm serializing the Image Book I put together as a way of helping me to visualize Faerie and its inhabitants. There are less than a dozen more images yet to come.
*

How did I spend your weekend? Funny you should ask. I was at a science fiction convention (oh, all right, it was Readercon), where I did a small amount of stagehand work in support of the first public reading of Greer Gilman's new one-act play Little Kingdom.
The reading was not part of the convention, which has such demands on its program time that it could only afford to offer Greer a half-hour. Alas, for a play 33 minutes long this was far from enough. So the participants invented a sort of Readercon Fringe by putting it on anyway, on the Terrace, as an independent production.
Greer Gilman played the part of Ben Jonson, "playwright, pundit, malcontent," while Marianne Porter was Ethel Smyth, "composer, suffragist, Sapphist." The play records their first meeting on the Moon, the immediate dislike they take to one another, and how they come to terms with their fate and with each other.
It really was tremendously entertaining. Greer and Marianne played their parts with verve and brio, and everybody had a tremendous time. The audience, myself definitely included, loved it.
I also got to hang out with interesting people, meet old friends and new, buy books, learn much information of use and interest, and involve myself in yet more projects. Details as various matters become public.
And in the Image Book . . .

This is a great one . . . a picture of the Dowager herself.It brings out, I think, some of her glamour (in the novel, she is described thus: She was regally tall and imperially slim. She was also old, there was no denying that, but her face in age had taken on the mystique of a civilization lost in time and known only by rumor) and her darkness, but also the pain that made her into such a terrible individual. So I'm happy with it.
Above: For those who came in late, as a way of drawing attention to my newly-published novel, The Iron Dragon's Mother, I'm serializing the Image Book I put together as a way of helping me to visualize Faerie and its inhabitants. There are less than a dozen more images yet to come.
*
Published on July 16, 2019 10:25
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