September 22, 2012

World SF Special

We'll be runnig a Word SF Special, featuring Questionnaire and articles on the subject. It's not about SF scene around the world. With Anglo-American SF being declining from its world dominance, many SF people around the world now begin to write not just to their own domestic audience, but also to the world. We'd like to share their views with all SF/F people, to build the genuine global SF/F community.

August 23, 2012

Buddy's Birthday

It could have been 73rd birthday for Lewis Nordan today. Now I realize that he was anothre rabbit like me according to our Chinese-Japanese calendar cycle. I've just started his memorial at our site, and that's a little consolation for me, at least. Well, happy birthday, my fellow rabbit, Buddy. Please enjoy your stay at your ownmemorial, here.

August 17, 2012

Lewis Nordan Memorial

Buddy Nordan Passed away on April 13 this year. I miss him so much, I have to do something about our ignorance of wonderful world of his fiction. So I'm now holding a big memorial to him. There will be original materials on him and his works. Please drop by and join our celebration of Lewis "Buddy" Nordan.

May 25, 2012

The Steampunk special issue of Hayakawa's SF Magazine is now released. It features The Mad Scientist's Daughters by Theodora Goss; Reluctance by Cherie Priest; Silver Lining by Tim Pratt; Clockwork Fairies by Cat Rambo; The Stoker Memorandum by Lavie Tidhar; The Age of Miracles, The Age of Wonder by Aliette de Bodard; Atuhor interview: Cherie Priest, Gail Carriger; Clockwork Dreams, Steampowered Films by Chise Soeno (film review); What is Neo Steampunk? by yours truly (introduction) I edited the special section and translated Pratt, Tidhar and de Bodard. Our members Hiro Takasato did Rambo and Junko Suzuki did Goss. We'll feature more on our website, too.

June 5, 2010

The Loving Dead by Amelia Beamer (Nightshade, July 2010: $14.95)

Following Tim Pratt, another great editor of Locus Magazine makes a giant leap into a novelist career. Amelia Beamer is a staff writer of SF&F newszine, Locus. She’s also a critic and writer, writing for small magazines and Interfiction anthology. Now she’s a novelist, too. Her debut, The Loving Dead is a novel of zombie romance, but I can’t resist an old impulse to call it a novel of Love, Sex, and Death. Well, especially love. It’s the most poignant love story our genre has ever produced. Forget the terrible review of Publishers Weekly. The ending is beautiful. The story is rather simple. In the streets of Berkley, weird looking homeless guys start to attack the pedestrians. Our heroine Kate finds a strange behavior of her girl friend and it turns out she’s a zombie now. Zombies are lascivious, and her friends easily become their prey. Kate sees zombies everywhere and trying to escape, she and her boyfriend seek refugee in Alcatraz prison. OK, there’s a very useful cell phone app to tame zombies and that kind of modernity and hilarity are everywhere in the novel. It’s sensuous, with a lot of sex scenes, and it’s humorous. Entertaining and witty. But the last scene is very moving and memorable, despite dark and disconsolate. Wow, Amelia Beamer has a very bright future now.

April 16, 2010

Steampunk

Hayakawa's SF Magazine will run a steampunk specla issue this month. Here's TOC of the feature part:
Fixing Hanover by Jeff VanderMeer
Shattered Teacup by George Mann
Tanglefoot by Cherie Priest
Chain of Fools by Jay Lake
What's the Soundtrack of Steampunk? by Brian Slattery
The Corset Manifesto by Katie Casey
And a brief book list and an introduction by Takashi Ogawa.
We've done the translation. It'll be published in a week.

Clifford's Love of Books

Clifford has a serious taste for books. He first found love for Hardcovers.




And then he found a very handsome tradepaperback.







But now he finds a new thing. E-books. He loves a Kindle.
Except he's a biting kind. Look at the corners. He left his marks.



He's my lovely dog.