Robert Bagnall's Blog, page 14
March 1, 2020
The Parmesan of misery
A rant. I'm sorry.
Those very nice folks at Third Flatiron are currently throwing their digital doors open to submissions to their next anthology. They've taken a story of mine before and have been utterly professional in their dealings. So what could I possibly have to complain about?
Well, the pitch for Gotta Wear Eclipse Glasses is positive sci-fi, "The future we all want... climate mitigation and adaptation, new opportunities to boldly go where none have gone before".
And that's where I have a problem. I keep a spreadsheet to record and manage my stories, alongside and in parallel with my account on The Submissions Grinder. Old school, but it works for me. Scanning some of my sold stories, they can be pitched roughly as follows:
a grumpy magician sends an annoying artist into a parallel dimension to scream into the void for eternityan android inadvertently causes its own destruction, thus finally understanding the meaning of ironya pensioner causes offence by mistaking a well-wisher for an appa paranoid rejects society, causing the death of Alan Aldaa gullible drone on Ernst Stavro Bloefeld's floating island is conned out of an inheritanceunbeknownst to each other, a couple have themselves replaced by androids to escape their failing marriagean inventor pitches a water additive, only to find out that the water company has been using something far more pernicious for the last fifty yearsan idiot second husband turns tries to hide his idiocy, turning over evidence of how his beloved came to be available in the first placeDo I need to go on? There's nothing positive in any of these. There's death. There's a couple of fates worse than death. There's being left feeling foolish and bereft, a couple of times being left foolish and bereft without realising, which seems somehow worse - and makes a nice story arc harder, to boot.
Why do I do it to myself?
I think the simple answer is I don't know any other way. If I wrote a story where everyone ended up grinning, there’d have to be some sinister catch. I’m not sure I want to write, read or watch something that tells me everything is happy without some sort of unintended consequence lurking under the floorboards. Sci-fi isn't made for happy endings, in the same way that chocolate sauce isn't made for meatballs and linguini. Give me the Parmesan of misery any time. At least it goes.
Those very nice folks at Third Flatiron are currently throwing their digital doors open to submissions to their next anthology. They've taken a story of mine before and have been utterly professional in their dealings. So what could I possibly have to complain about?
Well, the pitch for Gotta Wear Eclipse Glasses is positive sci-fi, "The future we all want... climate mitigation and adaptation, new opportunities to boldly go where none have gone before".
And that's where I have a problem. I keep a spreadsheet to record and manage my stories, alongside and in parallel with my account on The Submissions Grinder. Old school, but it works for me. Scanning some of my sold stories, they can be pitched roughly as follows:
a grumpy magician sends an annoying artist into a parallel dimension to scream into the void for eternityan android inadvertently causes its own destruction, thus finally understanding the meaning of ironya pensioner causes offence by mistaking a well-wisher for an appa paranoid rejects society, causing the death of Alan Aldaa gullible drone on Ernst Stavro Bloefeld's floating island is conned out of an inheritanceunbeknownst to each other, a couple have themselves replaced by androids to escape their failing marriagean inventor pitches a water additive, only to find out that the water company has been using something far more pernicious for the last fifty yearsan idiot second husband turns tries to hide his idiocy, turning over evidence of how his beloved came to be available in the first placeDo I need to go on? There's nothing positive in any of these. There's death. There's a couple of fates worse than death. There's being left feeling foolish and bereft, a couple of times being left foolish and bereft without realising, which seems somehow worse - and makes a nice story arc harder, to boot.
Why do I do it to myself?
I think the simple answer is I don't know any other way. If I wrote a story where everyone ended up grinning, there’d have to be some sinister catch. I’m not sure I want to write, read or watch something that tells me everything is happy without some sort of unintended consequence lurking under the floorboards. Sci-fi isn't made for happy endings, in the same way that chocolate sauce isn't made for meatballs and linguini. Give me the Parmesan of misery any time. At least it goes.
Published on March 01, 2020 12:55
February 22, 2020
Camponotus Vampiricus
A little something, snuck out under the radar on Valentine's Day, so I didn't even notice it. Like an ant in the sugar bowl...
Published on February 22, 2020 04:37
February 2, 2020
The Watcher needs a rewrite
"This was a good piece. Given more room and budget I’d have bought it."
I woke up to this response to a story submission this weekend. I get feedback along these lines quite often, a sense that my stories are falling just short of the transom. I'm sure editors will say that they get many, many more stories that tick all the boxes than they have pages, webspace or dollars to accommodate.
So I've decided to try to absorb and actively apply some of the lessons of writing out there in an effort to give my stories just that little bit heft in order to achieve escape velocity. Not just to keep on keeping on, but not to keep on making the same mistakes over and over. Trouble is, I'm a mule-headed student who often thinks they know best...
I haven't the faintest who T Gene Davis is, but he's posted some excellent lessons on the art of the speculative short story which, he claims, will put you ahead of 99% of the competition:
cut out passivesditto backstory exposition - if it's needed, make it happenknow your characters inside outbrilliant title, first sentence and first paragraphgive your readers at least three reasons to keep reading Meanwhile, Eschler Editing offers three rookie errors: lack of a hook (essentially, the brilliant opening piece above); low stakes; and an abrupt ending
So, I have decided to keep these credos front and centre in the writing of my latest piece.
Cutting out passives
I don't think I have too much of an issue here: I naturally gravitate towards 'the cat sat on the mat' rather than 'the mat was being sat on by the cat'. In this story I do have a quandary over "There is a moment of resolution in her face" ("Her face resolved itself after a moment"?) before deciding the whole sentence in which appears can go.
Backstory
T Gene suggests searching for 'had' and cutting out what's happened in the past. Again, I think I'm generally adept at avoiding 'I had been born in Frankfurt thirty-seven years before', etc., and laying a trail of allusion in its place, although I have a niggle with this one in that sometimes you can give context in a line whereas spelling it out may stop the mystery tour for longer than you want.
I'm probably breaking the rules, but I kept in "Vanessa has printed off a reply to the email, the email I asked her to send. She was reluctant and, I must confess, I feel I somewhat bullied her into it. But her face is bright with the news." Should I have shown John bullying Vanessa into composing the message, searching for who to send it to, pressing 'send'? I think those paragraphs would derail the tale more.
Know your characters
This is one I don't think I'm always that great at. I have no repeating characters; every story starts with a fresh team. I'd be awful at crime fiction. I tend to know my characters as much as you would a new colleague after a day's work - the bare biographical facts, plus joining the dots between various statements and actions. My technique is as much to surprise myself with plausible inconsistencies in how they act and react, another facet on display each time. It feigns complexity and nuance.
In this story, one character is an enigma, and the story is about her enigmatic status. Is she an alien? Is she even real? Time does not apply to her as it does to us. Suggestions are made of a criminal, even slightly perverted past for the other. I don't know the details. I'm not sure I want to know.
Brilliant title
It's called 'The Watcher'. Hmmm. Well, the digestive biscuit is doing just fine, thanks. And I won't give you the opening sentences, but I think they're reasonably hooky.
Low stakes
Again, I'm not sure I score well against this, or even want to score well. It seems a very... American requirement. British life is more about quiet desperation, and it certainly shows in my fiction. In this tale, John, whose story it is (actually, I'd put that ahead of any of T Gene's points - know whose story it is) is seeking clarity, understanding. That is what is at stake for him. Not everything has to be about saving humanity.
Abrupt ending
Again, I have form. I've already commented on this blog that my stories, even to me, feel like act ones. My good friend Richard Earl, a Big Finish Doctor Who and Sherlock Holmes actor, said of The Root Canals of Mars that it read like page one of a Netflix pitch. That email, that John persuades Vanessa to send, resolves the story. There's less than 400 words of a 2500 word story after John decides that will settle matters. Too short, too abrupt...
Actually... I have a sudden sense of clarity. The ending is all wrong. John, across a prison table, is shown the response from a Princeton professor confirming that his hypothesis is correct. John is proved right, but he has limited agency: he's in prison for no vital reason, his hands metaphorically tied. Others make the final connection for him. I'm having flashbacks to Philip Roth's Operation Shylock and Donna Tartt's The Goldfinch, and what made me so furious about them. In the first Roth gets out of writing an act three by claiming the CIA (or somebody, I forget) has made him redact it (!). In the latter, subsidiary characters resolve the story off-screen. I've made the same error - I need John to man up and solve the mystery himself.
The Watcher needs a rewrite: an act three with more agency for the main character and more to play for. This is the mistake that I keep on making. And to think this would have otherwise gone off to Clarkesworld tomorrow...
I think this may count as a blog posting with a story arc.
I woke up to this response to a story submission this weekend. I get feedback along these lines quite often, a sense that my stories are falling just short of the transom. I'm sure editors will say that they get many, many more stories that tick all the boxes than they have pages, webspace or dollars to accommodate.
So I've decided to try to absorb and actively apply some of the lessons of writing out there in an effort to give my stories just that little bit heft in order to achieve escape velocity. Not just to keep on keeping on, but not to keep on making the same mistakes over and over. Trouble is, I'm a mule-headed student who often thinks they know best...
I haven't the faintest who T Gene Davis is, but he's posted some excellent lessons on the art of the speculative short story which, he claims, will put you ahead of 99% of the competition:
cut out passivesditto backstory exposition - if it's needed, make it happenknow your characters inside outbrilliant title, first sentence and first paragraphgive your readers at least three reasons to keep reading Meanwhile, Eschler Editing offers three rookie errors: lack of a hook (essentially, the brilliant opening piece above); low stakes; and an abrupt ending
So, I have decided to keep these credos front and centre in the writing of my latest piece.
Cutting out passives
I don't think I have too much of an issue here: I naturally gravitate towards 'the cat sat on the mat' rather than 'the mat was being sat on by the cat'. In this story I do have a quandary over "There is a moment of resolution in her face" ("Her face resolved itself after a moment"?) before deciding the whole sentence in which appears can go.
Backstory
T Gene suggests searching for 'had' and cutting out what's happened in the past. Again, I think I'm generally adept at avoiding 'I had been born in Frankfurt thirty-seven years before', etc., and laying a trail of allusion in its place, although I have a niggle with this one in that sometimes you can give context in a line whereas spelling it out may stop the mystery tour for longer than you want.
I'm probably breaking the rules, but I kept in "Vanessa has printed off a reply to the email, the email I asked her to send. She was reluctant and, I must confess, I feel I somewhat bullied her into it. But her face is bright with the news." Should I have shown John bullying Vanessa into composing the message, searching for who to send it to, pressing 'send'? I think those paragraphs would derail the tale more.
Know your characters
This is one I don't think I'm always that great at. I have no repeating characters; every story starts with a fresh team. I'd be awful at crime fiction. I tend to know my characters as much as you would a new colleague after a day's work - the bare biographical facts, plus joining the dots between various statements and actions. My technique is as much to surprise myself with plausible inconsistencies in how they act and react, another facet on display each time. It feigns complexity and nuance.
In this story, one character is an enigma, and the story is about her enigmatic status. Is she an alien? Is she even real? Time does not apply to her as it does to us. Suggestions are made of a criminal, even slightly perverted past for the other. I don't know the details. I'm not sure I want to know.
Brilliant title
It's called 'The Watcher'. Hmmm. Well, the digestive biscuit is doing just fine, thanks. And I won't give you the opening sentences, but I think they're reasonably hooky.
Low stakes
Again, I'm not sure I score well against this, or even want to score well. It seems a very... American requirement. British life is more about quiet desperation, and it certainly shows in my fiction. In this tale, John, whose story it is (actually, I'd put that ahead of any of T Gene's points - know whose story it is) is seeking clarity, understanding. That is what is at stake for him. Not everything has to be about saving humanity.
Abrupt ending
Again, I have form. I've already commented on this blog that my stories, even to me, feel like act ones. My good friend Richard Earl, a Big Finish Doctor Who and Sherlock Holmes actor, said of The Root Canals of Mars that it read like page one of a Netflix pitch. That email, that John persuades Vanessa to send, resolves the story. There's less than 400 words of a 2500 word story after John decides that will settle matters. Too short, too abrupt...
Actually... I have a sudden sense of clarity. The ending is all wrong. John, across a prison table, is shown the response from a Princeton professor confirming that his hypothesis is correct. John is proved right, but he has limited agency: he's in prison for no vital reason, his hands metaphorically tied. Others make the final connection for him. I'm having flashbacks to Philip Roth's Operation Shylock and Donna Tartt's The Goldfinch, and what made me so furious about them. In the first Roth gets out of writing an act three by claiming the CIA (or somebody, I forget) has made him redact it (!). In the latter, subsidiary characters resolve the story off-screen. I've made the same error - I need John to man up and solve the mystery himself.
The Watcher needs a rewrite: an act three with more agency for the main character and more to play for. This is the mistake that I keep on making. And to think this would have otherwise gone off to Clarkesworld tomorrow...
I think this may count as a blog posting with a story arc.
Published on February 02, 2020 09:27
January 26, 2020
Buy signals & bye bye signals
In my look back over 2019 I commented that I had ended up with an unusual number of submissions marked as 'Pending, Held for Consideration' on the Grinder.
Well, how those numbers have fallen.
Some of them I had limited faith in. Two still cling on - no names, no pack drill - although they fall very much into the category of 'didn't make the cut for this issue, but if there's ever a volume two maybe we'll consider it'. I doubt there ever will be a volume two, and I've been provided with no certainty even if there is, but their entries remain officially open for the moment.
Another two submissions were of the same story to the same publisher: Crone Girl Press. One clearly made it over some hurdles for 'Coppice and Brake' but fell before the finish, the other (which CGP asked, unbidden, to hold for a second volume of 'Stories We Tell After Midnight')... well, maybe there won't be a second volume, or maybe it got trampled on by a weight of better material. Guess I'll never know.
Also changed to 'Rejection- form', a reprint of My Avatar has an Avatar, which Frozen Wavelets liked, just not enough. A common enough response.
But, the sixth... well, delighted to say that Daily Science Fiction have taken my tale of an android finding out the meaning of irony the hard way, 'Audit's Abacus'. First sale of 2020, and it's not the only buy signal that I've had so far - but I'm hardly going to jinx matters by telling you, am I?
Well, how those numbers have fallen.
Some of them I had limited faith in. Two still cling on - no names, no pack drill - although they fall very much into the category of 'didn't make the cut for this issue, but if there's ever a volume two maybe we'll consider it'. I doubt there ever will be a volume two, and I've been provided with no certainty even if there is, but their entries remain officially open for the moment.
Another two submissions were of the same story to the same publisher: Crone Girl Press. One clearly made it over some hurdles for 'Coppice and Brake' but fell before the finish, the other (which CGP asked, unbidden, to hold for a second volume of 'Stories We Tell After Midnight')... well, maybe there won't be a second volume, or maybe it got trampled on by a weight of better material. Guess I'll never know.
Also changed to 'Rejection- form', a reprint of My Avatar has an Avatar, which Frozen Wavelets liked, just not enough. A common enough response.
But, the sixth... well, delighted to say that Daily Science Fiction have taken my tale of an android finding out the meaning of irony the hard way, 'Audit's Abacus'. First sale of 2020, and it's not the only buy signal that I've had so far - but I'm hardly going to jinx matters by telling you, am I?
Published on January 26, 2020 08:35
January 1, 2020
End of term report
Another year, another glance over my shoulder at the trail of chaos and confusion in my wake.
Last year, I didn't set myself a target of a short story submission a day, so there's no shame in only managing 206 in 2019. As regards results, the year saw seven acceptances, 162 form rejections, and 29 with something nice to say alongside a firm 'no'. Twenty-eight remain out in the ether, a herd of editorial Schrodinger's Cats, with an unusually high proportion (six) of 'held pending consideration', although I doubt more than a couple will bear fruit.
So, on the face of it, a good year, and the primary target of three pieces sold achieved in spades. But, when you consider what those pieces were and where they went:
'Camponotus Vampiricus' and 'Tesla luvs Waymo 4Ever', two drabbles to Black Hare Press. I'm not even sure whether these have appeared anywhere yet.'The Artist and the Magician', which will appear later this month in the anthology Pride, also from Black Hare Press.'The Root Canals of Mars', Harbinger Press, which hit your screens in October 2019. I'm glad to see this personal favourite, and one over which I still await a kill fee from Carrie Cuinn, has finally made it out there.'A Room With a View', in the anthology Five Minutes at Hotel Stormcove from AtthisArts, published in March.'How Did They Get You?' in James Gunn's Ad Astra #7, which came out two days short of 2020, and 'The Fool', in issue 9 of The New Accelerator.
Two drabbles, three pieces around 1000 words, and only two proper short stories. All new material, granted, but that's still barely 11,000 words in a year. Hardly Proust. And, having written ten stories in the year, I'm still selling them slower than I'm writing them.
Plus, when looked at through the prism of my acknowledged need to get published in more professional, higher paying, greater circulating, more prestigious places - with all respect to the semi-pro venues listed here - it's not been a roaring success.
As part of that strategy, feeling that I at least had a sense of what the Writers of the Future were after, I went all out after that glittering prize, garnering two silver honourables, and two unplaced. One of the latter pair really stuck in the craw, as I felt it architect-designed for them, but them's the breaks...
In addition to those above, 'The Loimaa Protocol', sold in 2018, appeared back in the Spring. And 'May Nothing But Happiness Come Through Your Door', also sold in 2018, remains slated to appear on Abyss and Apex sometime this year - and caused a minor ruffle when they chased for a signed contract, with ominous tones of 'if we don't hear from you rapidly', a year after I'd actually returned the paperwork.
Three other targets: to sell a novel, write a novel, and publish a novel. In roughly that non-intuitive order. Might as well sell what I've already written whilst writing more. Right?
Less said the better on all fronts. Irons remain in the fire on my YA Harry Potter-meets-Doctor Who novel, which I just want someone to love as much as I do, but that hasn't shown any signs of life in a while. It remains out with a small number of agents and publishers - here's hoping that somebody lifted it off the slush pile whilst in a good mood this Yuletide.
As for my dark sci-fi thriller 'Toefoot', it's drifted along from 18,800 words to 33,000 words. I'm in that long dark tunnel known as act two with little sign of any light at the end. Ideas for short stories are too frequent and too enticing, and I keep reverting to the short form. That or working for money, which is also a constant fly in my ointment.
And, as for taking the easy way out and publishing direct to Kindle, I'm still clinging to the hope that somehow a proper imprint will come along and save me from being my own publisher.
I can dream, can't I? It's that time of year.
Last year, I didn't set myself a target of a short story submission a day, so there's no shame in only managing 206 in 2019. As regards results, the year saw seven acceptances, 162 form rejections, and 29 with something nice to say alongside a firm 'no'. Twenty-eight remain out in the ether, a herd of editorial Schrodinger's Cats, with an unusually high proportion (six) of 'held pending consideration', although I doubt more than a couple will bear fruit.
So, on the face of it, a good year, and the primary target of three pieces sold achieved in spades. But, when you consider what those pieces were and where they went:
'Camponotus Vampiricus' and 'Tesla luvs Waymo 4Ever', two drabbles to Black Hare Press. I'm not even sure whether these have appeared anywhere yet.'The Artist and the Magician', which will appear later this month in the anthology Pride, also from Black Hare Press.'The Root Canals of Mars', Harbinger Press, which hit your screens in October 2019. I'm glad to see this personal favourite, and one over which I still await a kill fee from Carrie Cuinn, has finally made it out there.'A Room With a View', in the anthology Five Minutes at Hotel Stormcove from AtthisArts, published in March.'How Did They Get You?' in James Gunn's Ad Astra #7, which came out two days short of 2020, and 'The Fool', in issue 9 of The New Accelerator.
Two drabbles, three pieces around 1000 words, and only two proper short stories. All new material, granted, but that's still barely 11,000 words in a year. Hardly Proust. And, having written ten stories in the year, I'm still selling them slower than I'm writing them.
Plus, when looked at through the prism of my acknowledged need to get published in more professional, higher paying, greater circulating, more prestigious places - with all respect to the semi-pro venues listed here - it's not been a roaring success.
As part of that strategy, feeling that I at least had a sense of what the Writers of the Future were after, I went all out after that glittering prize, garnering two silver honourables, and two unplaced. One of the latter pair really stuck in the craw, as I felt it architect-designed for them, but them's the breaks...
In addition to those above, 'The Loimaa Protocol', sold in 2018, appeared back in the Spring. And 'May Nothing But Happiness Come Through Your Door', also sold in 2018, remains slated to appear on Abyss and Apex sometime this year - and caused a minor ruffle when they chased for a signed contract, with ominous tones of 'if we don't hear from you rapidly', a year after I'd actually returned the paperwork.
Three other targets: to sell a novel, write a novel, and publish a novel. In roughly that non-intuitive order. Might as well sell what I've already written whilst writing more. Right?
Less said the better on all fronts. Irons remain in the fire on my YA Harry Potter-meets-Doctor Who novel, which I just want someone to love as much as I do, but that hasn't shown any signs of life in a while. It remains out with a small number of agents and publishers - here's hoping that somebody lifted it off the slush pile whilst in a good mood this Yuletide.
As for my dark sci-fi thriller 'Toefoot', it's drifted along from 18,800 words to 33,000 words. I'm in that long dark tunnel known as act two with little sign of any light at the end. Ideas for short stories are too frequent and too enticing, and I keep reverting to the short form. That or working for money, which is also a constant fly in my ointment.
And, as for taking the easy way out and publishing direct to Kindle, I'm still clinging to the hope that somehow a proper imprint will come along and save me from being my own publisher.
I can dream, can't I? It's that time of year.
Published on January 01, 2020 02:00
December 20, 2019
The Safety Shelf
You know how it is, fellas. You've met a great girl. Second date, third date, and you go back to her place. There are buy-signals, but you want to remain respectful. You've had a few drinks, but no way are you drunk. You've just eased the tensions and are getting on really well. In short, you're both looking forward to the fumbling.
She opens the front door, drops her keys - does that mean she's more drunk than you, or just more nervous? She's just gone to open some wine. You're temporarily alone.
This is the moment that you spring, nay leap, to check her CDs, blu-rays and books. Will it be Katy Perry, Now That's What I Call Music and auto-tune merchants? Sex in the City - 1 and 2, Maid in Manhattan, Leap Year? On the bookshelf, tomes with airbrush soft-as-snow-porn art on the cover by authors you've never heard of: Sarah J Maas, Bethany Griffin, Cindy Flores Martinez?
If so, your heart sinks and you plan an exit strategy. You know that, however much you think she's the one, you'll have to co-exist with a TV and cinematic diet of a gay friend that works in publishing, with an over-bearing mother, a back-stabbing boss, and a significant birthday coming up necessitating a trip to Europe. On hard repeat, even if the faces and names change. She'll probably expect to watch it in her PJs. Or, worse, a onesie.
You're not asking for there to be, I don't know, At least that's how the world used to work. It was called the 'safety shelf'.
But now? It's all on the cloud, via apps, viewed on a tablet, listened to on a phone. How far into a relationship do you have to get before you discover your future is more I agree with the reactionaries. The modern world is just so much more dangerous than it ever used to be.
She opens the front door, drops her keys - does that mean she's more drunk than you, or just more nervous? She's just gone to open some wine. You're temporarily alone.
This is the moment that you spring, nay leap, to check her CDs, blu-rays and books. Will it be Katy Perry, Now That's What I Call Music and auto-tune merchants? Sex in the City - 1 and 2, Maid in Manhattan, Leap Year? On the bookshelf, tomes with airbrush soft-as-snow-porn art on the cover by authors you've never heard of: Sarah J Maas, Bethany Griffin, Cindy Flores Martinez?
If so, your heart sinks and you plan an exit strategy. You know that, however much you think she's the one, you'll have to co-exist with a TV and cinematic diet of a gay friend that works in publishing, with an over-bearing mother, a back-stabbing boss, and a significant birthday coming up necessitating a trip to Europe. On hard repeat, even if the faces and names change. She'll probably expect to watch it in her PJs. Or, worse, a onesie.
You're not asking for there to be, I don't know, At least that's how the world used to work. It was called the 'safety shelf'.
But now? It's all on the cloud, via apps, viewed on a tablet, listened to on a phone. How far into a relationship do you have to get before you discover your future is more I agree with the reactionaries. The modern world is just so much more dangerous than it ever used to be.
Published on December 20, 2019 07:58
December 12, 2019
How many sleeps to go?
Before then: An advent calendar, how nice.
Then: Ah, this one's called a 'chocolate advent calendar'. It has chocolates in it every time you open a window. Just so you know its different.
Now: It says it's an advent calendar. Where's the bloody chocolate?
Progress, huh?
Then: Ah, this one's called a 'chocolate advent calendar'. It has chocolates in it every time you open a window. Just so you know its different.
Now: It says it's an advent calendar. Where's the bloody chocolate?
Progress, huh?
Published on December 12, 2019 04:16
November 27, 2019
Back in your kennel, PETA
...and the PDSA and RSPCA, and the rest of you.
I've been enjoying the BBC's luscious adaptation of Phillip Pullman's His Dark Materials. I've even managed to keep one teenager engaged, although the other was lost after the first episode. The daemons are particularly well rendered - there is a moment when Mrs Coulter's golden monkey jumps from the car and the seat gives in response. Practically seamless.
But, am I the only one to notice that in Lyra's world, even if everybody has a daemon, nobody has a pet?
2084 on Amazon.com, .co.uk, .in or direct from Double Dragon
I've been enjoying the BBC's luscious adaptation of Phillip Pullman's His Dark Materials. I've even managed to keep one teenager engaged, although the other was lost after the first episode. The daemons are particularly well rendered - there is a moment when Mrs Coulter's golden monkey jumps from the car and the seat gives in response. Practically seamless.
But, am I the only one to notice that in Lyra's world, even if everybody has a daemon, nobody has a pet?
2084 on Amazon.com, .co.uk, .in or direct from Double Dragon
Published on November 27, 2019 05:55
November 12, 2019
Ad astra, just not very fast
It's a long way to the stars, particularly when your one concession to hard sci-fi is the rejection on principle of faster than light travel.
But I have it on good authority that the uber-tardy issue 7 of James Gunn's Ad Astra, containing a little something from me, will be a thing of the 2010s, not the 2020s, come hell or high water. Hmm... we've heard that before, but I have faith.
Apparently the issue has been with gathering material of a sufficient quality.
I'll confess, I found this odd. I like to think that my writing is of some quality - finalist and double silver honorables in Writers of the Future, two appearances in the Best of British Sci-Fi, 30 stories published - and I still fall short of Asimov's and Clarkesworld every time. I'm good, but there are a whole army of scribblers who are obviously great.
The Grinder records 267168 submissions (since it opened, I assume? which was when? in the last decade, I assume). That'll encompass a lot of multiple submissions, but that over-recording will be balanced by writers who don't use the Grinder at all. There must be a five-figure number of stories in circulation, let's say 10,000 which fall under sci-fi and speculative.
Even an infinite number of monkeys would churn out something decent with those odds. Surely.
But there is another way of looking at this. I've blogged before than I am not a voracious reader of science fiction. Some of the stuff that rises to the top - Ann Leckie, Hugh Howey - or classic Dick, Gibson, Vonnegut. But it's rare that I'll truly be startled by the contributor's copy of whatever I'm in. I rationalise it by not wanting to start to parrot the voices or story arcs of others writers in the genre. But, perhaps, subconsciously I can tell that there's genuinely a great deal of unreadable shit out there...
But I have it on good authority that the uber-tardy issue 7 of James Gunn's Ad Astra, containing a little something from me, will be a thing of the 2010s, not the 2020s, come hell or high water. Hmm... we've heard that before, but I have faith.
Apparently the issue has been with gathering material of a sufficient quality.
I'll confess, I found this odd. I like to think that my writing is of some quality - finalist and double silver honorables in Writers of the Future, two appearances in the Best of British Sci-Fi, 30 stories published - and I still fall short of Asimov's and Clarkesworld every time. I'm good, but there are a whole army of scribblers who are obviously great.
The Grinder records 267168 submissions (since it opened, I assume? which was when? in the last decade, I assume). That'll encompass a lot of multiple submissions, but that over-recording will be balanced by writers who don't use the Grinder at all. There must be a five-figure number of stories in circulation, let's say 10,000 which fall under sci-fi and speculative.
Even an infinite number of monkeys would churn out something decent with those odds. Surely.
But there is another way of looking at this. I've blogged before than I am not a voracious reader of science fiction. Some of the stuff that rises to the top - Ann Leckie, Hugh Howey - or classic Dick, Gibson, Vonnegut. But it's rare that I'll truly be startled by the contributor's copy of whatever I'm in. I rationalise it by not wanting to start to parrot the voices or story arcs of others writers in the genre. But, perhaps, subconsciously I can tell that there's genuinely a great deal of unreadable shit out there...
Published on November 12, 2019 12:42
October 18, 2019
What? No hoover on the Millennium Falcon?
I was going to blog about how distracting and off-putting in general references in fantasy to things rooted in the real world are, and specifically a reference to 'French sleeves' in a recent (to me, that is - I think it may have been season 3) episode of Game of Thrones. However, I've decided against it as a) it's already out there, b) apparently it's a mishearing - like hell, it is!, and c) I'm six years behind the curve. As ever.
So, instead, I'll stick to news hot off the press that my story 'The Root Canals of Mars' has gone live on Harbinger Press website. Enjoy!
So, instead, I'll stick to news hot off the press that my story 'The Root Canals of Mars' has gone live on Harbinger Press website. Enjoy!
Published on October 18, 2019 10:59


