Marginalia
Aug. 3rd, 2005 08:31 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I'm off to Worldcon tomorrow. eeeeeeWorldcon! If you're there, feel free to say hi. I'll be back home on Tuesday evening. I'll probably be posting between now and then via the futurephone, but reading access might be limited. In the meantime, The Scotsman previews the con and The Herald talks to Chris Priest and Geoff Ryman. [both via Locus]
When a speech therapist goes to an sf convention [via someone on
sdn's journal]
A great conversation between Yoshio Kobayashi, Christopher Barzak and K. Bird Lincoln at Strange Horizons.
Some fiction: the first chapter of Double Vision by Tricia Sullivan; CommComm by George Saunders; and Peter Watts' backlist.
The rise of Shoujo and how it's caught the US comics industry on the hop. [via
coffee_and_ink]
What happened at this year's Romance Writers of America Awards. [via
fjm]
I have never played anything quite like this. There's a non-RPG version as well. [via Penny Arcade]
The September issue of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction includes Kelly Link's wonderful novella 'Magic for Beginners'. This means you should buy it. In addition, Robert J Killheffer's review column considers the UK/US divide. John Scalzi comments,
matociquala comments on his comments (here) and
sartorias comments on them both.
Just in case you think Kelly Link is not for you, Bluejack reviews 'Magic for Beginners' at the Internet Review of SF. He also muses about bias in the numbers of books by men and women that get reviewed on sf sites. Currently, the pile of review copies available for Strange Horizons leans strongly in the male direction. I've got a list of things I'm going to try to get hold of to help balance that (books by Elizabeth Bear, Judith Berman, L Timmel Duchamp, Carol Emshwiller, Gwyneth Jones, Margo Lanagan, Kelly Link, Maureen McHugh, Justina Robson, Tricia Sullivan, Cathrynne M Valente, Kate Wilhelm, and Liz Williams, although to be fair I'd be chasing all of those no matter what) but more suggestions are welcomed. I'm looking for forthcoming, new, or relatively recent books.
When a speech therapist goes to an sf convention [via someone on
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
A great conversation between Yoshio Kobayashi, Christopher Barzak and K. Bird Lincoln at Strange Horizons.
Some fiction: the first chapter of Double Vision by Tricia Sullivan; CommComm by George Saunders; and Peter Watts' backlist.
The rise of Shoujo and how it's caught the US comics industry on the hop. [via
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
What happened at this year's Romance Writers of America Awards. [via
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
I have never played anything quite like this. There's a non-RPG version as well. [via Penny Arcade]
The September issue of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction includes Kelly Link's wonderful novella 'Magic for Beginners'. This means you should buy it. In addition, Robert J Killheffer's review column considers the UK/US divide. John Scalzi comments,
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
![[livejournal.com profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/external/lj-userinfo.gif)
Just in case you think Kelly Link is not for you, Bluejack reviews 'Magic for Beginners' at the Internet Review of SF. He also muses about bias in the numbers of books by men and women that get reviewed on sf sites. Currently, the pile of review copies available for Strange Horizons leans strongly in the male direction. I've got a list of things I'm going to try to get hold of to help balance that (books by Elizabeth Bear, Judith Berman, L Timmel Duchamp, Carol Emshwiller, Gwyneth Jones, Margo Lanagan, Kelly Link, Maureen McHugh, Justina Robson, Tricia Sullivan, Cathrynne M Valente, Kate Wilhelm, and Liz Williams, although to be fair I'd be chasing all of those no matter what) but more suggestions are welcomed. I'm looking for forthcoming, new, or relatively recent books.
no subject
Date: 2005-08-03 12:10 pm (UTC)I mean from where I'm sitting, that he is a part of SF fandom is so glaringly obvious that pondering whether he is or isn't is an utterly redundant exercise. They may be other people who are also part of the fandom with whom he feels he has little in common, but that does not mean you're not both part of it, just as there are plenty of people at the Buffy cons I've been to I have nothing in common with but to deny that we're all there because we're part of Buffy fandom would be, well, stupid.
I would add that if this kind of nitpicking is meant to make the 'SF community' more inclusive, he might find it has quite the opposite effect..
no subject
Date: 2005-08-03 12:23 pm (UTC)You are clearly sitting in the seat of RIGHTHEADEDNESS today, Mr Milburn!
no subject
Date: 2005-08-03 01:34 pm (UTC)But 'Buffy fandom' and 'sf fandom' are not comparable entities. 'TV fandom' and 'sf fandom' would be comparable. If you generalise the logic of Buffy fandom to the expression 'foo fandom', then I am part of, for instance, third row fandom, lit fandom, Angel fandom, etc. I am not part of, say, filk fandom. And I'm not part of fandom fandom, which is to say I'm not part of the group that is fannish about fandom. The problem is that within 'sf fandom', 'fandom fandom' just calls itself 'fandom'.
I agree that this is stupid.
no subject
Date: 2005-08-03 03:00 pm (UTC)I got to this bit and just completely lost it. Apparently I've read the word 'fandom' enough times today for it to have become both meaningless and terribly, terribly funny.
no subject
Date: 2005-08-03 03:06 pm (UTC)It's not easy being a pedant, you know.
no subject
Date: 2005-08-03 03:09 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-08-03 03:13 pm (UTC)Indeed. One of the reasons I drifted away from fandom was its - to me - massively irritating obsession with metafandom.