Helen Lowe's Blog, page 303

March 27, 2011

Earthquake Fundraiser: Tales for Canterbury

I have donated a short story, The Fountain, to the "Tales for Canterbury" anthology being put together by Cassie Hart and Anna Caro as a fundraiser for the Canterbury earthquake.


The latest news on this exciting project is that pre-orders are now open with a digital version projected to be available from mid-April, and the print edition closer to the end of April.  To pre-order, head over to Random Static, where you will find the pre-order information.


To keep track of updates on publication, check in on the "Tales for Canterbury" website and Facebook page for regular updates:


Website: http://talesforcanterbury.wordpress.com/


Facebook page: http://www.facebook.com/talesforcanterbury


I understand "Tales for Canterbury"will comprise an impressive line-up of New Zealand and overseas writers—and this is also a fundraiser for earthquake-riven Christchurch so get in there, pre-order, and support Christchurch getting back on its feet.

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Published on March 27, 2011 10:30

March 26, 2011

Sir Julius Vogel Award Nominations About to Close

The Sir Julus Vogel Award


On January 13, back in those untroubled halcyon days "before earthquake", I posted about the Sir Julius Vogel Awards being open for nomination from 1 January.


The nomination period closes on 31 March, 2011 so if there's a Science Fiction, Fantasy or Horror work by a New Zealander or NZ resident that came out in 2010, and that you loved—well, now's your final chance to nominate.


So do not hold back: get nominating! :-)


For details of the Sir Julius Vogel award categories and "how to" nominate, read my original post, here.

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Published on March 26, 2011 10:30

March 25, 2011

What I'm Reading Post-Earthquake

I'm finally getting back into reading after the earthquake, when between all that heavy digging and everything else going on, I just didn't feel like sitting down with a book. The turnaround  began on March 18 when  I had my "much-needed day off" and read and enjoyed  Dragonfly Falling, the second in Adrian Tchaikovsky's Shadows of the Apt series.


Since then I have picked up Ian McDonald's River of Gods again and am starting to get into it. I suspect I would probably be enjoying this book a lot more if not for the earthquake and its aftermath. It's a fascinating premise with a lot going on, usually the kind of book I absolutely love—but which, of course, demands energy, and energy has been in short supply of late. So I'm enjoying it so far, but maybe not loving it as much as I would under more normal reading circumstances.


How about you—what are you reading right now? What's "hot" on your bookshelf? Or e-reader?

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Published on March 25, 2011 12:30

Guest Blog Post: Historically-Influenced Fantasy Settings

I currently have a guest post, Historically-Influenced Fantasy Settings featured on the Orbit blog—Orbit is my UK/AU/NZ publisher  & The Heir of Night was released in the UK on March 3.  If you have the time, rock on over and check it out, here.

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Published on March 25, 2011 00:00

March 24, 2011

New Reviews for "The Heir of Night"

With the recent publication of The Heir of Night in the UK (the USA and AUS/NZ releases were in late September and early October of last year), UK-based reviews are now starting to come through. The most recent I have seen are from:



SFFWorld
Civilian Reader and 
BookChickCity .

(To read the reviews just click on the listed names.)

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Published on March 24, 2011 10:30

March 23, 2011

New Review for "Thornspell"

Sometimes, in all the excitement of the new book coming out, it's easy to forget the work that is already out there in the world. Not that I do ever forget Thornspell—but it is always a thrill when you get a new review. A new review that appears in English and Italian is extra special, which is why I was so pleased when Giada M drew her recent review of Thornspell to my attention.


I now invite you to visit her blog and read the review, here.

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Published on March 23, 2011 10:30

March 22, 2011

Of Earthquakes & Reader Feedback on "The Heir of Night"

Every now and then you receive an email that really makes your day.  At the time of the February 22nd earthquake I was fortunate enough to receive two—and believe me, in a world turned to a constant background of sirens and helicopters overhead; people dead, wounded and missing; collapsed buildings and riven earth; plus the shocking phenomenon of liquefaction everywhere, these were two very bright spots in my world.


I have waited until now, when life here has calmed down a little and most of the liquefaction has been laboriously removed, to share them with you (with the permission of the senders, of course.) Needless to say, these email remain bright spots and probably always will, simply because I will always remember how they were there waiting for me to read when the power came back on here, two days after the quake.


The first was from Marion in Australia:


I just finished reading the first in the series and now busily finding out if the other is available in Australia.  I really love the story and look forward to following Malian's journey over the next three books.  … I get desperate for great new books, and … having such a strong female as the central character is a joy as well.


Thank you, Marion. :-)



The second email came from Daniel in the USA, who wrote:


"hey ma'am, just saw a news squib and some tv pictures of christchurch, looks

pretty dreadful.  i hope you and yours are safe and well, and remain so.  [have

finished heir of night, and am eagerly awaiting the next installment.]


Daniel also shared part of why he had enjoyed The Heir of Night:


"Heir was a great read, dense, well packed, well paced, with a good blend of past

and past influenced present woven together and shown, bit by bit, through

various characters and their interactions.  the divergence of the various

cultures, both from a common history and from a common set of contradictions,

was alluded to both as aspects of the individual characters and as

background/preparation for later story arcs.  i found myself thinking this is

so going to show up later, as in the dream sequence of rooftop running, and in

the push pull of mine vs ours vs theirs abilities.  an aspect of good writing

that i don't think always gets proper acknowledgement, is the realization of

secondary, or even tiertiary, characters.  Kyr and Lira, and the acolytes in the

old keep are fully there, not only as characters, but as part and parcel of that

world.  Kry and Lira, with their steadfastness in the Jaransor, both prove and

give the lie to dulce et decorum est.  one could go on, but twere better to

encourage the book's reading."


What can I say, except again—thank you.



And to both Daniel and Marion and everyone who emailed or posted with inquiries about how I was doing after the earthquake, thank you again: I keep trying to say it with these imperfect words, but it really did—and does still—mean a very great deal.

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Published on March 22, 2011 10:30

March 21, 2011

Tuesday Poem: Café

Café


The woman

sips coffee

– makes it last


avoids eye contact

– writes an occasional note

in a dog-eared book


takes in

every detail

– wrought iron palings

the spring sky


.


© helen lowe


Published in foam:e 1 March 2008



About the Poem: On March 18, in a further comment on my post Silent Witness, I wrote " … I went past Under the Red Verandah cafe today, where SpecFicNZ were having the long lunches and it was just another pile of rubble. I feel really sad because I loved that place …"


Under the Red Verandah (UtRV) was one of those places that seemed made for writers to hang out in, with a friendly, casual atmosphere and great coffee and kai (food.) Not surprisingly, I often caught up with fellow writers and other friends there or just dropped in for a coffee. Equally unsurprisingly, a few poems and other scribblings first sprang into life over those UtRV cups of coffee. This poem, Café, was first drafted at, and is about, Under the Red Verandah so I felt it was fitting to post it as my Tuesday Poem today.


Due to the exigencies of WordPress, I can't get the original formatting to reproduce here on the blog, so have gone for a work-around. To see the original, you can still read it online here at foam:e.


Note: The good news is that Mandy and the team are working to resurrect the UtRV business based out of the old forge at the back of the property. I really hope they can make it happen.



To read the featured poem on the Tuesday Poem Blog—and link to other Tuesday Poets posting around NZ and the world—either click here or on the Quill icon in the sidebar.

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Published on March 21, 2011 10:30

March 20, 2011

NZ Book Month, Here I Come!

March is NZ Book Month, but up until now the excitement and enjoyment that I had anticipated has largely escaped me due to—you know, the February 22nd earthquake and its aftermath. But quite some time ago I accepted an invitation from the Dan Davin Literary Foundation to travel to Queenstown and Southland, as part of NZ Book Month, to run a series of writing workshops for Year 12 and 13 high school students and also to give a public presentation while in Invercargill.


The workshops will focus on the essential elements of good writing—what my fellow author and poet, James Norcliffe, described as the "laws of fiction" in his guest post here earlier in the year, "stern injunctions" that the aspiring writer disregards at their peril—as well as some tips on professional practice. The workshop will also include a specific SFF section, with a module on world building, because I am primarily a speculative fiction author—and proud of it, too.


In the public presentation, I will talk about my personal path to international publication as well as what it means to be published overseas, and also about writing speculative fiction in NZ.


Putting together the workshop, including exercises and handouts, as well as the presentation, has been a harder than usual task given events of the past few weeks. But yesterday, as I collated everything together and packed it for the plane today, I really felt that first buzz of excitement, that moment when I really "got", not just that it's NZ Book Month (hurrah!) but that I'm part of it, after all.


It feels doubly nice to be leaving town for such a positive reason: I am definitely not "fleeing" my poor battered Christchurch, or even having a spot of respite yet, but doing something constructive—I hope— for NZ literature by helping grow our next generation of writers. I have done my prep, and despite the earthquake et al still feel I have a little left in the tank, so I hope my contribution will be judged a positive one. I welcome the opportunity to make it.

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Published on March 20, 2011 10:30

March 19, 2011

Silent Witness: True Heroes

Another Silent Witness:


On Friday 18, as part of the Christchurch Memorial Service the following video of the cordoned-off central area of Christchurch was played. The footage is eerie, haunting … the only sound that of sirens and the wind blowing through deserted streets and buildings brought to rubble. In the words of the Bruce Springsteen song, Christchurch is "My Hometown"—and this video clip is a more potent silent witness than any I could manage with my little camera in the 'burbs:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qbXJJN...


True Heroes


In Christchurch we have had to deal with the destruction caused by a major earthquake. In Japan, a level 9 earthquake was followed by a massive tsunami—which in its turn did serious damage to the Fukushima nuclear power station. The still unresolved struggle to get the situation there under control has absorbed our attention over the past week, but  a tv news clip on the evening of March 18 particularly caught mine. It showed a ceremony for the firemen who had volunteered to go to Fukushima and help with the containment effort.


Only that morning, I had listened to a radio interview where a nuclear power expert had said that the 50 or so personnel still remaining at Fukushima were basically already "dead men."  I have often thought that we bandy the word "hero" around too lightly these days—any citizen who simply does their duty is termed a "hero." But looking at the men who had volunteered to go to Fukushima, I thought: "This is true heroism. They must know the great risk they now run of dying as a direct result of volunteering, regardless of whether the situation at Fukushima is brought under control or not. And know, too, that the benefit of their individual sacrifice is exclusively for the wider society—yet still they volunteer. In this moment, these men—whoever they are now or whatever they have been in the past—are true heroes."

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Published on March 19, 2011 10:30