Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Free IGMS Reading
Also, congratulations to James Maxey, whose story "Silent As Dust" from issue 7 was one of the other finalists for this year's award. James' story was also selected for inclusion in The Year's Best Fantasy and Science Fiction 2009 edited by Rich Horton.
To celebrate, IGMS is making both of these stories free for everyone to read until the end of 2009. Dive in and enjoy! Just go to the IGMS homepage, click on the announcement at the top of that page, and get reading.
Monday, October 19, 2009
IGMS Story Wins WSFA Award for Best Short Story of 2008
Personally, I was particularly happy with the win (even if all I got was a certificate, when last year they gave the author AND the editor an engraved crystal thingamabob for their efforts). Partly it was because John Joseph Adams had two stories nominated from an anthology he edited, and IGMS had two stories nominated, so we made up more than half of the finalists between us and had been ribbing each other on and off throughout the convention about who was and wasn't going to win. But mostly I was happy because it was the first outright win for an IGMS story. We've had stories nominated for awards before, but this was the first time one of my authors went home with some hardware (and a nice check, too). So a great big thanks to Greg for getting IGMS over that hump and into the winner's circle.
Thursday, October 15, 2009
CapClave 2009
My own schedule is as follows:
Capclave 2009
Fri 7pm Plaza ‐ Alternate Dogcatchers
Participants: Jim Freund (m), Harry Turtledove, Tom Doyle, Michael Flynn, Edmund Schubert
What makes a good alternate history work and bad ones fail? What points of depature do you change?
How do you build a good alternate history? What alt histories aren't done that we would like to see?
Fri 8:30pm Twinbrook ‐
Sat 12am
Participants: Allen Wold (m), Davey Beauchamp, Edmund Schubert
Allen Wold and friends will help you become a better writer. Bring paper and a writing implement. All
else will be explained at the beginning of the session
Sat 1pm
Participants: Allen Wold (m), Davey Beauchamp, Edmund Schubert
(part 2 of writers workshop)
Sat 3pm Montrose ‐ Save the Magazines!
Participants: Edmund Schubert (m), Scott Andrews, C. Alen Loewen, Karen Newton, George Scithers,
Shelia Williams
What can be done to save the magazines? Asimov's circulation, once 100,000 is down to 17,000 F&SF
even fewer. Is it worth saving? Are magazines doomed? Can Internet save the magazines? What will
replace them?
Book signing schedule
Saturday
10am Harry Turtledove and Shelia Williams
11am Ed Lerner and Michael Flynn
12pm Andrew Fox and C. Alan Loewan
1pm Dan Danvers and Michael Swanwick
2pm Mindy Klasky, A.C. Crispin, and James Morrow
3pm Alan Smale, Eric Choi, and James Maxey
4pm Lawrence Watt Evans, Catherine Asaro and Donald Walcott (after their concert)
5pm Diane Arrelle, Dr. Lawrence Schoen, and Edmund Schubert
Sat 9pm Plaza ‐ Small Press Award
Participants: WSFA and the nominees
Who will win the annual WSFA small press award? Come and see. Celebrate with cake.
Sun 11am Plaza ‐ Paranormal Versus Urban Fantasy
Participants: Scott Andrews (m), Catherine Asaro, Karen Newton, Edmund Schubert, Jean‐Marie Ward,
Diane Weinstein
Is paranormal romance just another name for urban fantasy? If not, what is the distinction? How do
writers determine the right balance between paranormal and romance? Is it just classic boy meets girl or
does a paranormal being make it different.
Sun 2pm Randolphh ‐ Online Fiction
Participants: Brenda Clough (m), Diane Arrelle, Edmund Schubert, J.J. Smith, Sean Wallace
Is the fiction published in online magazines different from that in the print magazines and if so, how?
What online fiction sources are the best? How do readers and writers find out about online sources?
Friday, October 02, 2009
Pretidigitation - by Philip Powell - IGMS issue 14 audio
Prestidigitation - A Tale of Stolen Fingers
Written by Philip Powell
Illustration by Tom Barker
Performed by Philip Powell, Tommy Trull, Melanie Wallace, Jim McKeny, Billy Christiansen, Tom BarkerVerse bored me. It was my dirty little secret. E-Gads! My snobby friends would have shunned me. By randomly quoting snippets of Moliere I avoided their suspicion. But internally, verse made my eyes roll.
Until, I read "Le Bete" by David Hirson, wonderful play written in the late 80's that had rhyming verse. What was different? It was a modern playwright who had written something for a modern audience. I had been fooled all those years when reading Shakespeare or similar. I thought it was the verse that I didn't care for. But come to find out, the problem was all the anachonistic language. It got in the way of my comprehending the text. Once I actually understood what was being said, verse and I became fast friends.
This piece started out as a script for a NYC 24 hour film contest. The story had to be about a clown, at a party…oh…and it had to be in rhyming verse. So, I ripped out a few verses…but we ultimately went in a different direction. There it sat on my desktop for two years. Until a tag line hit me out of the blue one day. “A tale of stolen fingers” I mused “who would have to the most to lose if his fingers were stolen?” A magician I suppose. Hmmm..that sounds a bit like that piece I started a few years back.” The rhyming verse was already in place so I just went with it.
I learned a lot during the process. The confines were good, as I had to think very carefully about what I was doing. Every word was precious. I had 12 syllables per line, all of their accents had to hit the beat, it had to rhyme…oh, and manage to be funny. Prose never seemed so liberating.
Prestidigitation - A Tale of Stolen Fingers
Written by Philip Powell
Performed by Philip Powell, Tommy Trull, Melanie Wallace, Jim McKeny, Billy Christiansen, Tom Barkeris available now in issue 14 of Orson Scott Card's InterGalactic Medicine Show