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December 22nd, 2009
03:16 am
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Launch Pad Chat (Book Chatter #17)

My Launch Pad classmate Stacey Cochran hosted a live chat about Launch Pad a while back, and I just realized that I haven’t posted the link for those who missed the chat when I mentioned it on Twitter!

Plenty of participants joined in, and it’s worth giving it a listen, whether you’re considering applying for the program (I recommend it very highly!) or just curious about what it was like. It was so good to hear so many of their voices — and those who couldn’t make it were definitely missed…

You can check out the chat here.

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December 18th, 2009
03:32 am
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Apex Readers’ Poll and Anthology

Well, the final edit for “The Bodhisattvas” is finally in the can (thanks to Jonathan Strahan for very useful nitpicking and questions), and I’ve been nudged to mention that there’s a reader’s poll over at Apex for the best new fiction piece (”Story of the Year”) of 2009. Tons of good work there, so if you’ve been reading Apex Magazine this year, check out the list, Apex Anthology: Descended from Darkness covermaybe refresh your memory, and vote for what you liked best… which of course is my story, “Cai and Her Ten Thousand Husbands”, right? Right?

Speaking of which, the Apex anthology collecting “Cai…” and the other stories included in the poll is now available at Amazon. The book should be in stock at shops soon, and there’s a bunch of great stuff in there, so check it out…

And by the way, what a wonderful, killer cover. I love it.

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December 11th, 2009
02:54 pm
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What’s Your Major, Mr. Hippocampus?

A discussion of Steven Pinker in the comments for my last post brought up a memory from grad school, and I thought I’d post it here.

I was sitting in the little coffee shop/diner place across from the Second Cup on du Parc, up in the McGill Ghetto in Montreal. It was basically my favorite place for a light meal, and I always had a samosa and a calzone — usually chicken, sometimes beef or veg. This time, I’d met up with my friend Chiraz and we were having coffee and talking. Somehow, I got onto the subject of the book I’d just read, which I think was The Man Who Tasted Shapes by Richard Cytowic, or maybe something by Steven Pinker.

(Pinker drifts into my mind because it was the same week I saw him give a lecture at McGill. Those were the days, man. I saw physics students tearing down Roger Penrose’s most “highly speculative” theories about the role of microtubules and quantum processes in the brain — and he did seem a little off his rocker during his presentation — and attended all kinds of other lectures there as well. My school brought in good poets and novelists, but McGill was the place to see good or interesting science lectures. Steven Pinker’s was quite riveting.)

Anyway, there I was, explain to Chiraz some obscure function that the hippocampus served (I think in some area of sensory — olfactory? — processing, but it’s been a decade or more), when some med student at the next table stopped me in mid-conversation to correct me and tell me I was wrong. I told him that no, I wasn’t, and told him to look it up. He happened to be studying neurology, but that didn’t cow me. I’d just read it a day or two before and remembered it clearly. So he looked it up in the very book he was studying from, and lo and behold, I was right. He gave me a look of shock that only deepened when he asked whether I was in med school and I laughed.

“Uh no. I’m a Creative Writing major. But I do write science fiction, if that makes you feel any better. Some of us SF writers actually read about science sometimes.”

(Hmmm, would that more of us did so, and more often.)

Of course, given the standards of respect that science got in the humanities, I’m not surprised at the med student’s surprise. I always found it quite off-putting when literary types bashed science, or decided to write “science-inspired” texts, which repudiated or distorted science, without even a shred of research put into understanding what they were slamming.

It felt at the time to me as if it was really part of an enormous, juvenile turf war that was being conducted, with the humanities fighting dirty because those nasty science people had things like the internet and cures for various diseases in their roster, unfairly gained tricks which people ought to squint and ignore so they could affirm claptrap, flat-out wrong folk remedies and health-myths, and poetical rants as “other ways of knowing.”

It was this awful anti-science penchant which seemed so dominant in the humanities which finally made me feel there was no point in pursuing a PhD. I’m not sure I still think so, but at the time, I couldn’t imagine listening to such petulant whining and snideness from people so ignorant as to take Freud seriously as anything but a mildly interesting kook (and rather a data-falsifying asshole besides).

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03:17 am
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Six Word Story, Ahem,

Not that I consider this a serious publication, but I figured, if Ernest Hemingway (and a bunch of Wired contributors) could do it, so could I.

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The result is, I have a “six-word memoir” coming out in this book. I get a contributor’s copy, but no money, of course. It’s amusing, though I’m not really in the practice of giving away content, really. I am actually not fond of But it is just six words.

Since I don’t have any contract or anything, I guess I’m entitled to republish it here, so for those of you who don’t want to pony up and buy the book (which you can do at a bunch of places, but I’ll just give you the Amazon link because I’m lazy and not on their marketing staff, ahem), my little six word memoir is as follows:

“Here’s my secret: location, location, relocation.”

Nothing quite as moving or economical as Hemingway’s, but there’s a kind of vaudeville expat pizazz to it, of which I am mildly fond.

I don’t have a copy of this book, but I’ll tell you what: for the person who posts the most interesting six-word memoir in the comments, I’ll send you something interesting (no promises on quality or wonderfulness) from my travels this winter.

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December 10th, 2009
02:55 am
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Spider & Jeanne Robinson Fundraiser (& Sofanaut Award Shortlist)

So, the crew of the good Starship Sofa are running a fundraiser for Spider and Jeanne Robinson, for the latter is struggling with a pernicious sort of cancer. If you donate, you can have a copy of Lawrence Santoro’s “Lord Dickens’s Declaration” in ebook form, in addition to the free podcast of the story (starting here, continuing here). Yes, I’ve made a contribution, and you should too. Even you godless types, like me, have Newtonmass to celebrate and be thankful for.

At the same time, Tony, the captain of the Starship Sofa, also informed me that “Lester Young and the Jupiter’s Moons’ Blues” is a finalist for a Sofanaut Awards, as mentioned by Mark Bormann in this podcast. Very flattering, so thank you to the listeners who voted for it!

Here’s hoping those who voted (for any story at all) also make a small donation to brighten Spider and Jeanne’s December.

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