This week’s word for Wednesday is the noun blether-head, which means a noisy fool. I think you can make it a modifier too, as in “blether-headed nonsense,” which might be redundant.

Awards:

The 2017 Hugo Awards shortlist is out. I am disappointed by one terrible oversight; City of Blades by Robert Jackson Bennett is not on the short list for novel. That is a crime. Otherwise, I think it’s a good list.

Here are the finalists for Best Novel:

All the Birds in the Sky by Charlie Jane Anders (Tor) Our review, and our interview.
A Closed and Common Orbit by Becky Chambers (Hodder and Stoughton/Harper Voyager US)
Death’s End by Cixin Liu, translated by Ken Liu (Tor Books/Head of Zeus) Our review and our interview.
Ninefox Gambit by Yoon Ha Lee (Solaris) Our reviews.
The Obelisk Gate by N.K. Jemisin (Orbit Books) Our review and our interview.
Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer (Tor Books) Our review and our interview.

What’s your take?

Books and Writing:

MacMillan Publishing is introducing Read Without Walls, a nationwide reading program that challenges everyone to read a book with a character who doesn’t look like them, or read about a topic they don’t know much about, or read in a new format such as audio books or graphic novels. This sounds wonderful! Here is the link to this exciting program.

Marie Brennan starts a thoughtful discussion of how time might be measured in an alternate world or history. This is part of her Patreon. It’s good information and some of it was new to me; another great resource for writers and readers, when you’re deep in that second-world epic and wondering just how they keep track of time.

The origins of some of our favorites may take you by surprise. LitHub has a list of a few famous starting places.What was it with women writers and ankles?

While this article is basically a guy nearly spraining his shoulder because he’s patting himself on the back so hard, it offers a view into the world of literary or “little” magazines, and systematic exploitation of writers. LitMag does not charge a “submission fee” to read your story, and editor Marc Berley touts that. Well, good for them for doing the right thing, but let’s not rush to throw them a parade. The editorial is interesting, because it shows exactly the attitude certain markets have toward writers. I don’t think we run into this issue as much with the SF genre; I don’t at least, because I won’t submit to a potential market who wants me to pay to let them reject me. The idea that a submission fee somehow replaces postage costs in the online-submission world is a shaky argument at best, especially when literary markets still want paper submissions. Still, interesting.

Ruthanna Emrys gives us a list of five books that tell the monster’s side of the story, and they won’t all be the ones you might expect.

Naomi Alderman thinks about women speculative fiction writers throughout history, and why it might be that one person’s utopia is another’s dystopia.

“The only thing that works is quality.” Kiran Millwood Hargraves’s children’s book The Girl of Ink and Stars took Britain’s Waterstone Prize this year. The Waterstone Prize is offered by the book chain of the same name. The Girl of Ink and Stars, about a girl who volunteers to go find her missing friend in the forbidden forest, using her knowledge of her homeland’s myths and her father’s old maps, sounds suspenseful and rich.

TV and Movies:

Question: This FanLit reviewer will be on the ABC quiz show Jeopardy, the week of July 11, 2017. Answer: Who is our own Kelly Lasiter? Mark your calendars.

Did you go to your 20th high school reunion? Well, the students of Sunnydale High did, even though many of them were dead. Entertainment Weekly offered a massive Buffy the Vampire Slayer twenty year reunion. Enjoy!

When John Scalzi announced on Whatever that The Collapsing Empire had been optioned for television, he generated a lot of excitement—and a lot of questions. In this post he answers some of those questions. And please don’t send him your sample screenplay or headshot,’kay?

Syfy wire reports that Joss Whedon has been tapped to write and direct a Batgirl feature film. How do you feel about that?

For fans of Legion who might not know much about the Shadow King (like me) Marvel has a nice summary of this well-established villain.

Here is the latest Valerian trailer. Did you know the graphic novel is out of print?

Internet:

Our robot overlords are already here! MIT did a study of automation in the US, and suddenly the explanation for vanishing manufacturing jobs is a little clearer.

From out of the latest puppy dust-up, a fun game, courtesy of Camestros Felapton: Make Your Own Title. It’s like our own fantasy title generator, but with more features. Thanks to File 770, and a warning: You can waste a lot of time with this. A lot. Here is the article, which contains the link.

Here is something you really needed; a British supermarket commercial that features Skeletor dancing to the theme from the 1980 movie Fame. You don’t need to thank me.

Science and Tech:

Elon Musk is tiptoeing up to the border of neural interfaces. (Thanks to Kat.)

Gaming:

Workers in Britain’s gaming community are considering moving their operations as Brexit goes forward, according to a report by BBC.

Earth:

This road in Britain sounds like an epic fantasy in itself. Wouldn’t a fantasy villain live on Foulness Island?

There is much speculation over this cinnamon bear, filmed in Montana, who appears to be carrying a laptop. I think it’s just looking for a wifi hotspot.

Author

  • Marion Deeds

    Marion Deeds, with us since March, 2011, is the author of the fantasy novella ALUMINUM LEAVES. Her short fiction has appeared in the anthologies BEYOND THE STARS, THE WAND THAT ROCKS THE CRADLE, STRANGE CALIFORNIA, and in Podcastle, The Noyo River Review, Daily Science Fiction and Flash Fiction Online. She’s retired from 35 years in county government, and spends some of her free time volunteering at a second-hand bookstore in her home town.