Katherine Addison's Blog, page 51
May 23, 2014
ATTENTION WISCON plus BONUS MYSTERY OBJECT
ATTENTION WISCON: I will be in the dealers' room Saturday, pretty much from 10-6. You can find me behind
elisem
's table. Please feel free to stop by, say hello, and/or get me to sign books. WHICH I WILL BE HAPPY--NAY, DELIGHTED!--TO DO.
BONUS MYSTERY OBJECT: I have no idea what this is. It was moving against the current, so I'm guessing it's alive, but educated guesses and wild speculations are all welcome. (And, yes, I am the world's worst (possibly)wildlife photographer.



I mean, yes, turtle, if it is alive. But a kind of peculiar looking turtle if so.

BONUS MYSTERY OBJECT: I have no idea what this is. It was moving against the current, so I'm guessing it's alive, but educated guesses and wild speculations are all welcome. (And, yes, I am the world's worst (possibly)wildlife photographer.



I mean, yes, turtle, if it is alive. But a kind of peculiar looking turtle if so.
Published on May 23, 2014 10:51
May 19, 2014
Final guest post
The last of my guest posts is live at Bibliosanctum, on the court intrigues of the elves and the goblisn.
ICYMI, the master list of all the guest posts and interviews I did for The Goblin Emperor is here.
Also, thank you to everyone who invited me to write something for them!
ICYMI, the master list of all the guest posts and interviews I did for The Goblin Emperor is here.
Also, thank you to everyone who invited me to write something for them!
Published on May 19, 2014 10:36
May 15, 2014
Guest Post Round-Up: The Final Chapter
Barring other invitations, I've finished doing interviews and posts for The Goblin Emperor. This post is to get all the links in one place, for my benefit primarily, but also for anybody else who's trying to find something.
Between Dreams and Reality interview
Bibliosanctum post on court intrigue in The Goblin Emperor (will provide link when the post goes up)
The Big Idea post on fantasy and technology (on John Scalzi's blog)
Bitten by Books interivew and chat
The Book Plank interview
Bookshelf Bombshells post on thwarting genre conventions
The Booksmugglers post on grimdark
A Dribble of Ink post on hope in fantasy
Dungeon Crawlers Radio interview (podcast)
Fantasy Cafe's Women in SFF Month post on women in Tolkien
Forces of Geek post on inventing languages
Functional Nerds, episode 190 (podcast)
Intellectus Speculativus (formerly Daniel Libris) post on worldbuilding
Q&A on Marissa Lingen's blog
My Bookish Ways interview
My Favorite Bit (on Mary Robinette Kowal's site)
No More Grumpy Bookseller post on The Goblin Emperor and Elizabeth I
The Pop Quiz at the End of the Universe
Riffle Q&A
SF Signal post on The Goblin Emperor and genre conventions
SF Signal: Special Needs in Strange Worlds post on albinism
Speculative Book Review post on The Goblin Emperor and the Wars of the Roses
That Was Awesome about the awesomeness of Scott Lynch
Tor-dot-com post on quests and bildungsromans
Tor/Forge Blog post on the reification of conventions in fantasy
I believe that's the lot.
Between Dreams and Reality interview
Bibliosanctum post on court intrigue in The Goblin Emperor (will provide link when the post goes up)
The Big Idea post on fantasy and technology (on John Scalzi's blog)
Bitten by Books interivew and chat
The Book Plank interview
Bookshelf Bombshells post on thwarting genre conventions
The Booksmugglers post on grimdark
A Dribble of Ink post on hope in fantasy
Dungeon Crawlers Radio interview (podcast)
Fantasy Cafe's Women in SFF Month post on women in Tolkien
Forces of Geek post on inventing languages
Functional Nerds, episode 190 (podcast)
Intellectus Speculativus (formerly Daniel Libris) post on worldbuilding
Q&A on Marissa Lingen's blog
My Bookish Ways interview
My Favorite Bit (on Mary Robinette Kowal's site)
No More Grumpy Bookseller post on The Goblin Emperor and Elizabeth I
The Pop Quiz at the End of the Universe
Riffle Q&A
SF Signal post on The Goblin Emperor and genre conventions
SF Signal: Special Needs in Strange Worlds post on albinism
Speculative Book Review post on The Goblin Emperor and the Wars of the Roses
That Was Awesome about the awesomeness of Scott Lynch
Tor-dot-com post on quests and bildungsromans
Tor/Forge Blog post on the reification of conventions in fantasy
I believe that's the lot.
Published on May 15, 2014 10:56
May 6, 2014
Bitten By Books event is LIVE!
Published on May 06, 2014 10:10
BItten By Books event starting TODAY at noon CDT
Just a quick reminder that the Bitten by Books chat/AMA event avec moi (as Miss Piggy would say) is today, starting at noon CDT. If you RSVP, you get 25 entries in the giveaway contest: 5 copies of The Goblin Emperor up for grabs. (As I'm writing this at 7:57 a.m. CST, Bitten by Books' site seems to be down. Hopefully, this is a transitory problem.)
Please drop by the chat. I would love to see you all there!
Please drop by the chat. I would love to see you all there!
Published on May 06, 2014 05:58
May 4, 2014
Another round-up of guest posts & so on
The Goblin Emperor has gone back for a second printing!
On MAY SIXTH I am doing an AMA-type event at Bitten by Books. We kick off at noon CST and I would love to see you there! ETA: if you RSVP here you get 25 entries in the giveaway contest (5 copies of The Goblin Emperor to give away!) when you show up for the event.
I've done guest posts at:
SF Signal (genre conventions in fantasy)
The Booksmugglers (grimdark)
A Dribble of Ink (hope in fantasy)
Fantasy Cafe (women in Tolkien)
And interviews with:
Dungeon Crawlers Radio
The Book Plank
Between Dreams and Reality
My Bookish Ways
I will have at least four more guest posts and a podcast interview appearing like daffodils in the month of May.
And just a reminder, because seriously this cannot be said enough times, to help the career of ANY WRITER YOU LOVE, Buy, Read, Talk.
On MAY SIXTH I am doing an AMA-type event at Bitten by Books. We kick off at noon CST and I would love to see you there! ETA: if you RSVP here you get 25 entries in the giveaway contest (5 copies of The Goblin Emperor to give away!) when you show up for the event.
I've done guest posts at:
SF Signal (genre conventions in fantasy)
The Booksmugglers (grimdark)
A Dribble of Ink (hope in fantasy)
Fantasy Cafe (women in Tolkien)
And interviews with:
Dungeon Crawlers Radio
The Book Plank
Between Dreams and Reality
My Bookish Ways
I will have at least four more guest posts and a podcast interview appearing like daffodils in the month of May.
And just a reminder, because seriously this cannot be said enough times, to help the career of ANY WRITER YOU LOVE, Buy, Read, Talk.
Published on May 04, 2014 08:59
UBC: Maccabee, Oates, Oney
Maccabee, Paul. John Dillinger Slept Here: A Crooks' Tour of Crime and Corruption in St. Paul, 1920-1936. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1995.
Oates, Jonathan. Unsolved Murders in Victorian and Edwardian London. Barnsley: Wharncliffe Books-Pen and Sword Books, 2007.
Oney, Steve. And the Dead Shall Rise: The Murder of Mary Phagan and the Lynching of Leo Frank. New York: Pantheon Books, 2003.
One of these things is not like the others.
The Maccabee and the Oates are similar in a number of ways: both are true crime books organized by place rather than time or person; both are well researched (the Maccabee in particular is exhaustively researched, and I admire him deeply for it); and both are, for all their excellent research, very poorly written. Neither of them has any feel for how to organize their facts into something either compelling or, frequently, comprehensible. My favorite is this passage from Oates: "There was certainly much to show that the boy had been deprived of food. This was due to the fact that the lungs were severely inflamed and cut to pieces." Maccabee has sentences just as bad.
I recommend the Maccabee, certainly, if you are interested in the history of St. Paul, because it is impeccably researched and it is full of fascinating details. It also does give a vivid sense of how wide and deep corruption ran in St. Paul during Prohibition and how vital an effect that had on the careers of Prohibition-era gangsters.
If you're interested, as I am, in the crimes of Victorian London that nobody writes about (like the Thames Torso murders, for instance), I will recommend Oates, because he does write about crimes that otherwise, at best, get a glancing mention from Ripperologists. But, given how poorly it's written, it is definitely a book for the fanatic.
The Oney is a completely different ball of fish. For one, it is an excellent book, extremely well-written along with being well-researched. For another, it is about a single disaster bookended by two catastrophes, the dreadful murder of Mary Phagan in the basement of the National Pencil Factory in 1913 and the lynching of Leo Frank in Marietta in 1915.
As Oney says, at this point, we are probably never going to be able to determine whether Leo Frank murdered Mary Phagan or not. I tend to lean toward "not" (and I think Oney leans with me), but there are just enough discrepancies and doubts that I'm not sure. On the other hand, we can be sure that he should never have been convicted of her murder, because there was more than enough evidence for reasonable doubt, and he as sure as sin shouldn't have been lynched for it. The course of the trial, the petty, self-interested politicking of the state prosecutor and the corrupt Atlanta police, the demagoguery of a gentleman named Tom Watson, and the cold-blooded lynching (Frank wasn't just lynched, he was broken out of/kidnapped from the state prison farm in Milledgeville and driven 118 miles to Marietta and then lynched), and the aftermath, which proves with sickening exactitude how the good ol' boy network worked (two members of the grand jury who determined that, no, they had no hope of discovering who lynched Frank had been in the lynching party and EVERYBODY KNEW IT) are just horrifying. And the good faith efforts to figure out the truth of Mary Phagan's murder were a dismal failure. The bad go unpunished and the good go unrewarded.
As I so often say in reviewing true-crime books, I wish that Oney had gone ahead and pulled back for the meta chapter, a careful review of the evidence, what we actually know, what we can responsibly conjecture, and which theories of the crime we can prove to be incorrect. Excluding notes and index, this is a 649 page book, and by the end of it, I could really have used a clear summation of what had happened. But that's a fundamentally minor complaint in a book that is an excellent, careful, impartial-as-possible piece of history. (When someone's viciously, virulently anti-Semitic rhetoric is (a) in large part responsible for the (1) conviction and (2) lynching of a very possibly innocent man, and (b) in large part responsible for the revival of the KKK, and that someone is thrilled by and proud of both these things, it's a little difficult to remain impartial about him, Tom Watson I am looking at you.) It is not a pleasant read, but it is compelling, and I do recommend it if you can bear its subject matter.
Oates, Jonathan. Unsolved Murders in Victorian and Edwardian London. Barnsley: Wharncliffe Books-Pen and Sword Books, 2007.
Oney, Steve. And the Dead Shall Rise: The Murder of Mary Phagan and the Lynching of Leo Frank. New York: Pantheon Books, 2003.
One of these things is not like the others.
The Maccabee and the Oates are similar in a number of ways: both are true crime books organized by place rather than time or person; both are well researched (the Maccabee in particular is exhaustively researched, and I admire him deeply for it); and both are, for all their excellent research, very poorly written. Neither of them has any feel for how to organize their facts into something either compelling or, frequently, comprehensible. My favorite is this passage from Oates: "There was certainly much to show that the boy had been deprived of food. This was due to the fact that the lungs were severely inflamed and cut to pieces." Maccabee has sentences just as bad.
I recommend the Maccabee, certainly, if you are interested in the history of St. Paul, because it is impeccably researched and it is full of fascinating details. It also does give a vivid sense of how wide and deep corruption ran in St. Paul during Prohibition and how vital an effect that had on the careers of Prohibition-era gangsters.
If you're interested, as I am, in the crimes of Victorian London that nobody writes about (like the Thames Torso murders, for instance), I will recommend Oates, because he does write about crimes that otherwise, at best, get a glancing mention from Ripperologists. But, given how poorly it's written, it is definitely a book for the fanatic.
The Oney is a completely different ball of fish. For one, it is an excellent book, extremely well-written along with being well-researched. For another, it is about a single disaster bookended by two catastrophes, the dreadful murder of Mary Phagan in the basement of the National Pencil Factory in 1913 and the lynching of Leo Frank in Marietta in 1915.
As Oney says, at this point, we are probably never going to be able to determine whether Leo Frank murdered Mary Phagan or not. I tend to lean toward "not" (and I think Oney leans with me), but there are just enough discrepancies and doubts that I'm not sure. On the other hand, we can be sure that he should never have been convicted of her murder, because there was more than enough evidence for reasonable doubt, and he as sure as sin shouldn't have been lynched for it. The course of the trial, the petty, self-interested politicking of the state prosecutor and the corrupt Atlanta police, the demagoguery of a gentleman named Tom Watson, and the cold-blooded lynching (Frank wasn't just lynched, he was broken out of/kidnapped from the state prison farm in Milledgeville and driven 118 miles to Marietta and then lynched), and the aftermath, which proves with sickening exactitude how the good ol' boy network worked (two members of the grand jury who determined that, no, they had no hope of discovering who lynched Frank had been in the lynching party and EVERYBODY KNEW IT) are just horrifying. And the good faith efforts to figure out the truth of Mary Phagan's murder were a dismal failure. The bad go unpunished and the good go unrewarded.
As I so often say in reviewing true-crime books, I wish that Oney had gone ahead and pulled back for the meta chapter, a careful review of the evidence, what we actually know, what we can responsibly conjecture, and which theories of the crime we can prove to be incorrect. Excluding notes and index, this is a 649 page book, and by the end of it, I could really have used a clear summation of what had happened. But that's a fundamentally minor complaint in a book that is an excellent, careful, impartial-as-possible piece of history. (When someone's viciously, virulently anti-Semitic rhetoric is (a) in large part responsible for the (1) conviction and (2) lynching of a very possibly innocent man, and (b) in large part responsible for the revival of the KKK, and that someone is thrilled by and proud of both these things, it's a little difficult to remain impartial about him, Tom Watson I am looking at you.) It is not a pleasant read, but it is compelling, and I do recommend it if you can bear its subject matter.
Published on May 04, 2014 08:59
April 16, 2014
promotional literature (The Goblin Emperor)
I will be at C2E2 on Saturday (April 26), doing a panel, All Things Fantastic, and an autographing session, both with Mary Robinette Kowal, C. Robert Cargill, Douglas Hulick, Steve, Bein, and Simon Green.
Guest post for Daniel Libris on worldbuilding.
Guest post for the Tor/Forge Blog on rules vs. guidelines.
Guest post for Speculative Book Review about The Goblin Emperor and the Wars of the Roses.
And guest post for No More Grumpy Bookseller about The Goblin Emperor and Elizabeth I.
I also did a live interview with Dungeon Crawlers Radio and a guest post for SF Signal, but neither site will talk to me at the moment.
Guest post for Daniel Libris on worldbuilding.
Guest post for the Tor/Forge Blog on rules vs. guidelines.
Guest post for Speculative Book Review about The Goblin Emperor and the Wars of the Roses.
And guest post for No More Grumpy Bookseller about The Goblin Emperor and Elizabeth I.
I also did a live interview with Dungeon Crawlers Radio and a guest post for SF Signal, but neither site will talk to me at the moment.
Published on April 16, 2014 13:01
April 1, 2014
Happy Book Day!
FIRST, Happy Book Day to Felix Gilman, whose book
The Revolutions
also comes out today. I don't know Mr. Gilman personally, but I admire his writing. And The Revolutions sounds awesome.
SECOND, Happy Book Day to me! To celebrate, my invaluable webtamer has put up the map of the Ethuveraz on katherineaddison.com.
THIRD, there's also a FAQ. I'm sure that more questions will need to be added for The Goblin Emperor, but I haven't been asked them yet.
FOURTH, John Scalzi graciously let me do a Big Idea post about fantasy and technology.
FIFTH, for Forces of Geek, I did a post about inventing languages.
SIXTH, for Tor-dot-com, I wrote a post about coming-of-age stories and quests.
SEVENTH, I also did the Pop Quiz at the End of the Universe for Tor-dot-com and can't remember if I posted the link or not.
EIGHTH and furthermore, there's a Q&A up at Riffle.
NINTH, if you haven't had enough of me yet, there will be other guest blog posts cropping up as my gracious hosts' schedules permit. I will, of course, post links.
TENTH, not one atom of this post is an April Fool's joke.
ETA: ELEVENTH, Tor-dot-com's That Was Awesome feature, in which I explain why you should be reading Scott Lynch.
SECOND, Happy Book Day to me! To celebrate, my invaluable webtamer has put up the map of the Ethuveraz on katherineaddison.com.
THIRD, there's also a FAQ. I'm sure that more questions will need to be added for The Goblin Emperor, but I haven't been asked them yet.
FOURTH, John Scalzi graciously let me do a Big Idea post about fantasy and technology.
FIFTH, for Forces of Geek, I did a post about inventing languages.
SIXTH, for Tor-dot-com, I wrote a post about coming-of-age stories and quests.
SEVENTH, I also did the Pop Quiz at the End of the Universe for Tor-dot-com and can't remember if I posted the link or not.
EIGHTH and furthermore, there's a Q&A up at Riffle.
NINTH, if you haven't had enough of me yet, there will be other guest blog posts cropping up as my gracious hosts' schedules permit. I will, of course, post links.
TENTH, not one atom of this post is an April Fool's joke.
ETA: ELEVENTH, Tor-dot-com's That Was Awesome feature, in which I explain why you should be reading Scott Lynch.
Published on April 01, 2014 10:43
March 31, 2014
Goblin Links
So, things are gearing up for the official street date of The Goblin Emperor, which is tomorrow.
I have a guest blog post at Tor-Dot-Com: The Emperor and the Scullery Boy;
mrissa
has a review of the book, and also, I did a Q&A; and there's a very in-depth review from the Jaded Consumer (beware spoilers).
I am also doing a slew of guest posts for other blogs; I will provide links as they happen.
And it seems like a good time to link to my Buy, Read, Talk post: what readers can do to help an author's career. (Again, that's not just my career, although that's obviously where my vested self-interest lies.)
I have a guest blog post at Tor-Dot-Com: The Emperor and the Scullery Boy;

I am also doing a slew of guest posts for other blogs; I will provide links as they happen.
And it seems like a good time to link to my Buy, Read, Talk post: what readers can do to help an author's career. (Again, that's not just my career, although that's obviously where my vested self-interest lies.)
Published on March 31, 2014 14:04