Category Archives: Science fiction/fantasy

Anime TV goes digital

To satisfy the U.S. demand for popular Japanese anime, manga publisher Viz Media has licensed the digital download rights for the hit Japanese TV anime series Death Note, which is based on the bestselling manga series published by Viz in the U.S. It appears to be the first time a U.S. manga publisher has been able to secure the digital rights to a Japanese TV anime series while it is still popular and running in Japan.

Thanks to the Internet, U.S. fans want the most popular Japanese manga and anime right away. Marks said offering downloads is an effort to “satisfy fan demand” and beat digital pirates at their own game. “It’s up on YouTube anyway,” said Marks. “We’d like to have an official version available. It’s an experiment to figure out a way to get material to fans as fast as we can.”

According to the article, the episodes will probably sell for about $1.99 each.
Link to the Publishers Weekly article

Posted in Articles, Film, Science fiction/fantasy, Technology |

Carol Pinchefsky: Why more people don't read science fiction

Carol Pinchefsky wrote an article for Orson Scott-Card’s Intergalactic Medicine Show magazine in which she talks about a subject very near to my heart – why science fiction and fantasy seem to have such a limited appeal to readers.

The reasons are varied but inarguable — science fiction holds only a 6% market share, according to research done by the Romance Writers of America in 2005. (1)

Why does speculative fiction not appeal to mainstream readers? The answer, “It just doesn’t interest me” does not interest me. So after years of observation, I’ve drawn a few (non-scientific) conclusions. The answers are more complex than a choice to avoid the science fiction section of the bookstore.

Link

Posted in Articles, Reading, Science fiction/fantasy |

GRRM's email and bookmarks gone

Fantasy author George R. R. Martin posted on his blog that over three thousand emails and a couple hundred bookmarks have suddenly vanished from his computer.

There’s an interesting paragraph about how he works:

Lest anyone have a heart attack, let me hasten to add that this has NOT affected A DANCE WITH DRAGONS or any of my other work-in-progress. I do my writing on a completely different computer than the one I use for email and the internet, in part to guard against viruses, worms, and nightmares like this. My work machine does not even use Windows (which I loathe). I write with WordStar 4.0 on a pure DOS-based machine. Mock if you must… but WordStar and DOS are both stable as rocks, and never give me the sort of headaches I get from Windows. (I won’t even talk about Microsoft Word, about which I have nothing printable to say).

You can read the whole post here.

Posted in Authors, Science fiction/fantasy, Technology |

Another interview with author Karl Schroeder

Blogger Armchair Anarchist has a fascinating interview with sf author Karl Schroeder up on his blog.

(We’ve blogged about Karl Schroeder before – you can read our post about another interview between him and John Scalzi here)

Asking you to wear futurist and author hats at once, what effect do you think the ongoing democratisation of publishing via the internet, print-on-demand technology, e-books and pod-casts and the Google Universal Library project having on the writing industry?

“Oh, it’ll destroy it. Twenty years from now I don’t expect to be able to make a living writing fiction. You know, this is related to Bruce’s comments about the end of futurism. The end of the SF writer as the primary producer of SF is around the corner. As I’ve said, SF has been appropriated by mainstream culture – it’s not ours any more. Ditto for publishing in general. There was only a brief period in history when one could make a living as a fiction writer, and it’s ending. – Except, of course, for stars like J.K. Rowling. They’ll get richer, the rest of us poorer. Since technology is legislation, there’s not a damn thing we can do about it.”

Link to the interview (via Futurismic)

Posted in Articles, Authors, Newly Released Books, Reading, Science fiction/fantasy |

Peter Watts releases SF novel under Creative Commons license

Author Peter Watts writes through BoingBoing:

I’ve set my latest novel free under the usual Creative Commons license: you can get Blindsight (Tor, October) by going to my backlist and clicking the relevant thumbnail. I’ve also produced seven alternative dust-jackets for the same title, using (with the artist’s permission) artwork submitted to Tor but not used for their official Blindsight cover. You can get those here. (And take a look here for an impressionistic, documentary-style taste of the novel itself.)

I do this only partly to add data to the ongoing get-rich-by-giving-your-stuff-away experiment. The other reason is that a lot of people seem to be having trouble actually finding the book in brick-and-mortar stores; distribution has been spotty despite advance raves, subsequent praise, and (I’m led to understand) significant buzz. Smaller stores report being backordered for weeks; one of the continent’s two biggest book retailers isn’t carrying it at all (although individual store owners have evidently been special-ordering it). And all the buzz in the world is worth jack-shit if the product isn’t readily available.

So check it out and go wild. And when your eyes start to fall out from phosphor burn, consider buying an old-fashioned paper version. There should be enough to go around before long: I’m told Blindsight’s going into second printing.

Link to read the book online for free (via BoingBoing)

Posted in Authors, Book Release, E-books, Newly Released Books, Reading, Science fiction/fantasy, Self-publishing |

Interview with sf author Karl Schroeder

John Scalzi has a fascinating interview with sf author Karl Schroeder up on his blog.

Today’s interview is a special treat: Canadian writer Karl Schroeder, who has won some of his country’s highest awards in science fiction, and whose most recent book, Sun of Suns, is a real mind-blower, an adventure story that is both high-tech (massive space-faring balloons thousands of miles in diameter) and low-tech (pirates! Swordfights!) and a whole lot of fun. Kirkus Reviews has labelled it “Outrageously brilliant and absolutely not to be missed,” which, well, seems fairly positive, doesn’t it? And now, without further ado: Here’s Karl Schroeder.

3. When creating a world that is physically manifestly so different than our own, what, if anything, do you have to do to make sure readers can connect to characters and their situations? Are people the same anywhere? Or this is there a sort of translation you as an author have to make to get us into the heads of Virgans?

The principle is simple: constants and variables. If you vary one aspect of your story so it’s wildly out of the norm (say, taking away gravity) you have to ensure that other aspects of the story are constant to our experience (human behaviour, passions etc., like Hayden Griffin’s thirst for revenge in Sun of Suns). I don’t actually know if people who lived in a gravity-free world would be anything like us, but it was necessary to have them be so for this story to work. If you have too many variables in science fiction (sentient gas-blobs and uploaded personalities and nonlinear narrative time etc.) then you’ll lose the reader. So when I write a consciously balance the wildly esoteric with the ordinary. The ordinary is a life preserver you throw the reader so they can ride the white water you’ve thrown them into.

Link (via BoingBoing)

Posted in Articles, Authors, Interviews, Reading, Science fiction/fantasy |

Cory Doctorow on giving away your novel

Award-winning sf author and well-known blogger Cory Doctorow writes about how giving away free ebooks of his books through the internet helped increase his sales.

It’s good business for me, too. This “market research” of giving away e-books sells printed books. What’s more, having my books more widely read opens many other opportunities for me to earn a living from activities around my writing, such as the Fulbright Chair I got at USC this year, this high-paying article in Forbes, speaking engagements and other opportunities to teach, write and license my work for translation and adaptation. My fans’ tireless evangelism for my work doesn’t just sell books–it sells me.

The golden age of hundreds of writers who lived off of nothing but their royalties is bunkum. Throughout history, writers have relied on day jobs, teaching, grants, inheritances, translation, licensing and other varied sources to make ends meet. The Internet not only sells more books for me, it also gives me more opportunities to earn my keep through writing-related activities.

Link to the Forbes article (via BoingBoing)

Posted in Articles, Authors, E-books, Publishers, Reading, Resources, Science fiction/fantasy, Self-publishing, Technology, Websites |

Author Jack Williamson dead at 98

Pioneer science fiction author Jack Williamson has died at the age of 98 at his home in Portales, N.M., of natural causes.

‘Jack Williamson was one of the great science-fiction writers,’ writer Ray Bradbury told The Los Angeles Times Monday. ‘He did a series of novels which affected me as a young writer with dreams. I met him at 19, and he became my best friend and teacher.’

Full article here.

Posted in Authors, Obituaries, Science fiction/fantasy |

Canada Post launches 24th annual Santa letter-writing program

Canada post announced on Monday, Nov. 13, that Santa Claus’ North Pole Post Office at HOH OHO is open for business. Postal Elves across the country are ready and waiting to help Santa handle the satchels of mail he’ll receive this holiday season. Holiday spirit was in the air during an event held at The Salvation Army’s Christmas distribution centre. Santa looked on while post office representatives made a special delivery of $25,000 to the not-for-profit organization for its ‘Christmas Appeal’ fund.

For each of the past five years Santa has received more than one million letters from children around the world. Santa’s North Pole Post Office has processed more than 14 million letters since the national program began in 1982. More than 11,000 Canada Post employees (current and retired), known affectionately as Postal Elves, volunteer their time to help Santa respond to his letters in the language in which they are received, including Braille.

Children are reminded to include a complete return address and to send their holiday letters to Santa at his North Pole Workshop:

SANTA CLAUS

NORTH POLE H0H OH0

CANADA

Santa can also receive e-mails through a special website at www.canadapost.ca/santascorner. Children and parents can check the Canada Post site for holiday games and activities.

Original Northumberland News Article here

Posted in Children's books, Events, Resources, Science fiction/fantasy, Websites |

'Mean Girl' McAdams To Star in 'Time Traveler's Wife'

I know I can’t be the only one out there thrilled about this news:

The film adaptation of Audrey Niffenegger’s The Time Traveler’s Wife, which has sold 1,100,000 copies since it was published in September 2003 and had rights optioned Brad Pitt’s Plan B Productions, now officially has a director and star attached.

Rachel McAdams, who starred in Mean Girls and another book-to-film adaptation The Notebook, is set to star in the movie, TMZ.com reported. Robert Schwentke (Flightplan) will direct.

The script was adapted by Jeremy Leven, who also adapted the screenplay for The Notebook. In addition to Plan B, Nick Wechsler will also produce Wife.

Niffenegger’s novel is about a Chicago librarian who involuntarily travels through time and falls in love with a young heiress along the way.

read the original article here

Posted in Articles, Authors, Movie Adaptations, Science fiction/fantasy |