Ã…con Underway

Yesterday was mainly a travel day, and I slept most of the way from Turku to Mariemamn, thereby saving myself from buying duty-free booze on the ferry. We did, however, have a small amount of programming in the evening. Tricia Sullivan and I, with expert help from Markku Soikkeli, did a panel on “Body and Mind” in which we talked a lot about false dualisms, the complexity of biological organisms, the lack of scientific basis for ideas of “uploading” minds to silicon, and the political minefields that result from “nature v personal choice” arguments. Judging from the feedback I have got, it went down very well. Kisu is threatening to have a philosophy panel on Thursday evening every year.

I had a bad case of time zone fail this morning and almost missed the bus to the chocolate tasting. Thankfully I did make it, and Mercedes was wonderful as ever. I refer you to last year’s con report for a more detailed description of what these excursions are like.

We’d hardly got back when I had another panel. This one was about “Classic Conventions”. I now owe several beers to Crystal Huff as I co-opted her onto the panel to talk about ReaderCon and other US events. Thanks also to my colleagues, Carolina Gomez Lagerlöf and Tommy Persson. Hopefully we entertained.

I skipped Tricia’s GoH interview because I very much wanted to get to the Maritime Museum and they close at 16:00. Mariehamn has a glorious maritime history, having once been home to the biggest fleet of windjammers in the world. The Pommern is still here and I had a good look around her. I have so much respect for the crews of such ships, and especially for Wilhelmina Widborn who served as a cook and steward on the Pommern for many years. According to the museum, she rounded Cape Horn eight times, and survived being torpedoed, during her career.

Also in the museum is one of only two genuine Jolly Roger flags in existence. This one was captured from Barbary pirates around 200 years ago and brought home to Mariehamn by the crew. I’ll have a photo of it up eventually.

And now, dinner beckons. There is a fine restaurant called Nordic Blues, which makes sushi with local fish. I went there last year with Cat Valente’s husband, Dmitry. The plan is to go back today.

For further Ã…con reportage, check out Tero’s blog.

WorldCon Scouting: Part I

So, here I am in Helsinki, and while I am here I intend to make use of my time looking for things that prospective Worldcon attendees might be interested in. After all, there may be some of you who haven’t yet made up your minds to vote for Helsinki in 2015. If there are any specific questions that people have, please ask them in comments below. I’ll be visiting the convention site on Monday when we have got back from Ã…con so I’ll have time to look around, shoot some video, and ask questions. In the meantime, here are some observations from today.

Helsinki airport is small but efficient. There’s not a lot in the way of direct flights, but those of you who are with Star Alliance will probably find it easy to change in Frankfurt, which is Lufthansa’s main hub. You could also change in London, of course, or Paris. Work on the railway linking the airport with the city is now underway and they expect to have it open in time for Worldcon.

The only cloud on the train horizon is that there are apparently suggestions afoot to fully automate the system. Driverless trains have to be built to a higher safety standard than human-operated ones, and there would be software to be written. I’ll keep an eye on developments.

On the way into the city we stopped off at a shopping mall to have dinner and get food for brunch tomorrow. Otto and Paula too me to Chico’s a restaurant chain that promises to bring American dining to Finland. They have got it pretty much spot on. All of the usual things you would expect from a high end burger joint were available. We had fried mozzarella and jalapeño poppers for starters. The chiptole mayo in my burger was definitely spicy, as were the chili fries it came with (in a little metal bucket). The Finns, being hard core about such things, added half a jalapeñno on the side, with the seeds still in it. That was warm. We were too full for the cheesecake, but I’m sure it would have been lovely. The poppers came with the BBQ mayo as a dip, and it was so nice I now want to try their ribs. OK, so it isn’t haute cuisine, but no one from California can complain that they can’t get good home cooking in Finland.

Also it is a change from my going on and on about the reindeer steaks, tar ice cream and cinnamon beer at Harald. You might get that tomorrow when we get to Turku.

I’m staying at Otto & Paula’s splendid flat in Helsinki overnight. I have had sauna, so I am now a happy and relaxed feline. Tomorrow we hit the road. Hopefully we’ll manage to go early enough to avoid the holiday weekend traffic jams.

By the way, the ice hockey world championships are underway in Helsinki. I won’t have a chance to go to any games, but it will be on TV in the convention hotel. There should be good crowds for Sweden v Canada on Friday, and Russia v Finland on Saturday. USA v Finland tomorrow should also be an interesting game. The Russians look like the best team in the tournament thus far, but the surprise package is most definitely Switzerland who have already beaten Sweden, the Czech Republic and Canada.

Small Blue Planet: France

C’est animé? C’est vivant? Je ne sais pas. La traduction, elle est difficile.

Especially when you are as bad at languages as I am.

Thankfully my guests on Small Blue Planet are very good at English. Many thanks to Mélanie Fazi and Lionel Davoust for their wonderful tour of French science fiction and fantasy. Also thanks as ever to our wonderful producer, Karen Burnham, and to Kevin for being the emergency holographic sound recordist.

Along the way we talk about French conventions, the best award trophy in the world, how the UK came to be a fundamentalist Mormon state, Brian Stableford’s amazing translation work, and some of the best SF&F writers working in French today.

As ever, the podcast is available via the Locus Roundtable.

Calling Toronto

Hello Canada. I’ve been asked to fly to Toronto to give a training course on Friday May 31st. Sadly Kevin isn’t free the following weekend, but I haven’t booked my flights yet and I was wondering if anything bookish was happening in the city on the weekend June 1/2 that would make it worth my sticking around.

Note that this trip isn’t certain. There’s a possibility that the DHS has put me on the no-fly list. My client knows this and is happy to take the risk. If I do get let into Canada then I’m hoping to come back for SMOFcon in December.

St. Petersburg Info

Eurocon 2015I’ve had a few more comments on the announcement about the St. Petersburg Eurocon that suggest it isn’t going to be that expensive after all. Also the con committee is being very open and proactive. Most of the action is happening on Facebook in this group. They have also set up a LiveJournal community. And there’s something on Google+ if anyone actually uses it. This is all very promising. I’m crossing my fingers that one or two of the ConCom will be able to make it to Helsinki for Finncon, in which case I’ll try to arrange a chat.

News From Eurocon

This year’s Eurocon is taking place in Kiev this weekend. I didn’t make it, the whole thing got to be far too difficult and expensive. But a lot of people I know are there, and there appears to have been something of a revolution. For as long as I can remember, the European Science Fiction Society has been run by the same small group of people. Now we have a new committee. They are as follows:

  • Chair: Carolina Gomez-Lagerlöf (Sweden)
  • Vice-chair: Saija Kyllönen (Finland)
  • Secretary: Gareth Kavanagh (Ireland)
  • Treasurer: Vanja Kranjcevic (Croatia)
  • Awards administrator: Bridget Wilkinson (UK)

That’s a much more diverse group than before, and one I expect to be a lot more open and proactive. Carolina should be known to most Worldcon and Eastercon regulars, and she chaired a very successful Eurocon in Stockholm a few years ago which revitalized Swedish fandom.

The other piece of news I have is that the 2015 Eurocon will be in St. Petersburg over the weekend April 23-25. (2014 is in Dublin the weekend after the London Worldcon).

Given the reaction I got when I reported that the Russians were bidding, I’m expecting people to start demanding that we boycott the convention because of Russia’s attitudes towards QUILTBAG folk. Before you say anything, I want you to take a look at this website.

OK, I know most of you won’t have clicked through. That’s the English-language version of the website for Coming Out, the St. Petersburg LGBT organization. They do exist. They haven’t been banned. Earlier this month they celebrated the city’s first ever Week of Transgender Visibility. Their report on the event says:

On March 31 – the International Day of Transgender Visibility – a mass rally was planned to draw attention of the public and law enforcement authorities to the problem of discrimination against transgender and transsexual people and other gender minorities. 9 administrative districts of St. Petersburg refused Coming Out permission to carry out the rally. One of the refusals referred to the “propaganda” law, despite the Russian Supreme Court’s decision of October 2012, which stated that rallies in support of LGBT rights are not to be considered propaganda.

This is the first case of the “propaganda” law being used against transgender people.”Coming Out” intends to challenge the administration’s ban in the city and national courts and, if necessary, the European Court of Human Rights.

I note that St. Petersburg has 18 administrative districts, so a full half of them gave permission for the rally, and they have the support of the Russian Supreme Court. I don’t know the details of this “propaganda” law, but it sounds very much like the UK’s notorious Section 28. I can just imagine what British fans would have said if there had been calls to boycott the 1995 Wordcon because of that. Obviously it is tough for QUILTBAG people in Russia right now, but that means people like the folks who run Coming Out need our support and encouragement.

And, you know, that could be quite a year for the Baltic. Eurocon in St. Petersburg followed by Worldcon in Helsinki.

Ben Does Paper

Lots of good things appear to have happened at Eastercon over the weekend, so huge congratulations to Juliet and her team for a job well done. Meanwhile I’ve just bought my plane tickets for Ã…con. Thanks to my huge stack of United points, I can get to Finland much cheaper than I can get to Bradford. The weather’s better too.

Back with Eastercon, however, one of the book launches that took place there was for paper editions of Ben Jeapes’ books, His Majesty’s Starship and Jeapes Japes. Hopefully the ebook editions that I did for them helped Ben sell the paper rights. Best of luck to Colin and everyone at Clarion Publishing with the books. If you’d like to order paper copies, just use the links to the book titles. I see Clarion has a Jaine Fenn book, Downside Angels, available too.

Juliet Looks To The Future

Juliet McKenna is, of course, best known for her epic fantasy writing, but the experience of chairing an Eastercon has clearly tweaked the SF writer side of her personality because she’s started to wonder what Eastercons will be like in 10 years time. You can find her speculations here.

These sort of things concern me too. I’m still a director of SFSFC, Inc, and in fact we have a board meeting on Saturday. I’m also a trustee of the BristolCon Foundation, which is currently busy expanding its activities outside of the actual convention. How to best manage fannish activities in a time of economic crisis, and with those responsible for doing the work seemingly getting older and older, is an ongoing worry.

I don’t want to get into yet another predictable discussion about the “greying of fandom” because those never seem to go anywhere, but if I have the time I might write something about fannish organizational structures, and the sorts of events that they can support.

My Halo Is A Centerfold

Halo JonesHalo Jones, one of Alan Moore’s most famous creations, and unusually a female comics character who is famous for being just an ordinary girl, rather than for her outsize boobies and lack of clothing. Which is why there has been something of an online fuss today about the Bristol Comic Expo deciding to promote itself by selling a specially commissioned print of Halo (by the original artist), topless.

Much chat has gone back and fore, the most moving of which was a couple of tweets from Leah Moore saying how much she’d admired the character as a kid. Paul Cornell, who is scheduled to be a guest at the con, wrote an email to complain and was told off for being a “prude”. And Rebellion, who still own the copyright on the character, have apparently asked for the print to be withdrawn. That will doubtless outrage a whole different part of the online community.

As you doubtless know, I’ve attended the Bristol Expo and have helped promote it. Well, convention organizers have a right to promote themselves how they see fit. Also other people have a right to decide what conventions to attend. As it happens, I’m not going this year anyway as it clashes with Ã…con. Next year I have no idea what the dates will be, but there are lots of events I could choose to go to; one less will save me some money and time.

Bristol Women’s Literature Festival #BWLF

On Saturday I popped over to Bristol to catch part of the inaugural Bristol Women’s Literature Festival. I was dipping my toe into this, partly because Literature Festivals have a habit of not wanting any of those icky science fiction people around lowering the tone of the occasion, and partly because events that tout their feminist credentials often don’t want the likes of me around. However, I wasn’t going to miss out on an opportunity to meet Stella Duffy, and thankfully none of my fears about the event were realized. The Festival looked to be a very successful. The panel I attended was packed out and very interesting, and the event had an inclusive atmosphere. Andrew Kelly of the Festival of Ideas, who helps promote the event, was smiling happily when I met him, which confirms that all was going well. My apologies to all the people I knew who happened to be in the Watershed bar afterwards, but I did have an important rugby match to go and watch.

The panel in question was Women’s Writing Today, featuring Bidisha in conversation with Stella Duffy, Beatrice Hitchman, Selma Dabbagh and Helen Dunmore. It was expertly moderated. Admittedly the panelists were all very polite — there wasn’t anyone constantly talking over the others in an effort to promote his book. However, having moderated many convention panels myself, I was able to admire the effortless way in which Bidisha controlled the conversation and gave everyone a chance to speak.

Discussion ranged fairly widely, but I’d like to focus mainly on the issue that Bidisha opened and closed the panel with: the VIDA Report and the continuing difficulty that women have being taken seriously in the writing business, despite the fact that we pretty much run it behind the scenes.

Helen Dunmore commented on the way in which women tend to be self-effacing, whereas men will often trumpet their success with far less reason to do so. She’s right, but it is not entirely our fault. It is a defense mechanism. Because if women do stand up and promote themselves, they immediately get jumped on for being uppity, for over-selling themselves, and of course for not being pretty enough. The way to avoid that is to play down whatever success you have had, and make out that you think you didn’t really deserve it.

Helen also commented that she felt the UK was particularly bad at kicking down anyone who had the cheek to appear to have some ambition. Given my experience of Australia, California and Finland, I suspect she’s probably right. But that’s about far more than sexism, and anyway sexism is pretty universal. Many of the magazines surveyed in the VIDA report come from North America, and one is French.

Selma Dabbagh had an interesting angle on the issue. Her day job (which she still does) is that of a human rights lawyer. She said that she found the legal profession less sexist than publishing, because in law there were clearer metrics for success. In law you get measured by what cases you win, and by which clients want your services. In theory writers are measured by success in sales and awards, but we all know that both of those things are critically dependent on how much effort your publisher puts behind your book. In our field we know that publishers put more resources behind male authors, and bookstores are more likely to stock and promote books by male authors (except in certain categories deemed more feminine) because they believe that those books are more likely to sell. I’m sure lady lawyers will now be rushing to say that its not that easy for them, but I’d like you to hold onto the idea of how subjective success in writing can be.

One of the more interesting takes I have seen on the VIDA data is this one in the New Republic, written by one of their senior editors, Ruth Franklin. New Republic is one of the magazines reported on by VIDA, so they have a stake in the debate. What Franklin did was take a selection of publishing houses and count how many books by men and by women they published. While some came close to parity, many, including what she described as “elite literary houses” published books in pretty much the same gender ratio as the reviews reported by VIDA, or worse.

The VIDA numbers, if you remember, were only for literary review magazines. They exhibit a range of female content from low to very low. VIDA doesn’t give an overall figure, but Bidisha said the accepted ceiling for women was around 22%. The figures that LadyBusiness reported for SF&F reviews were much better: at 42% female. Of course if you break down by gender you find that men are only reviewing 25% female authors, and the VIDA figures show that the literary review magazines have a low proportion of female reviewers. But the fact remains that if you want reviews of women SF&F authors then they are not too hard to find in the usual outlets for such things. You won’t find them in literary magazines, but you won’t find reviews of male SF&F writers there either.

I’ve joked before about “literary” fiction being a genre for stories about middle-aged male academics who have mid-life crises, but the real problem with “literary” as a category is the idea that “literary” means “good”. That would be fine if people really meant it, but we know all too well that certain types of fiction tend to get excluded because they are deemed “not good” by definition. And if one of the ways in which you define “good” fiction is “fiction by men, about men”, well, I’m sure you can see the positive feedback loop at work here.

So I think that perhaps one of the reasons the VIDA numbers are so bad is that they focus to closely on an area of fiction that is already tending to exclude women. If we want the numbers to get better, one very simple thing we can do is to try to judge each book on the quality of its writing, not screen whole categories of books out because they are “genre” or “not realistic” or “women’s writing”.

Of course the situation of men not wanting to read books by women is still bad. But the overall situation is not as bad as the VIDA numbers make out, provided that we stop being shy and diffident, but instead demand that our books not be excluded because they are not “literary”.

I should make one more comment about the event before I finish. There was a book room, and I headed off there after the panel because I wanted a signed copy of Bea’s book, Petite Mort. (She’s a friend, and I want to get her on Ujima sometime soon.) Stella, sadly, had to rush back to London. However, having secured a lift to the station, she dashed into the book room and quickly signed every book of hers that she could see there. She took them out of the hands of people in the queue and personalized them. And she recognized me from my Twitter avatar, so she didn’t even need to ask for a name. That’s a superb example of an author working her fan base. I was impressed.

So, congratulations to Sian Norris and her team. It was an excellent event, and one I would love to see repeated next year. Any chance of a panel on feminist SF, Sian? We’ve got Sarah Le Fanu on our doorstep, and I can probably lure Farah Mendlesohn along if you give her enough warning.

Busy Day – Radio, Readings, Lack of Sleep

I spent most of yesterday in Bristol, doing radio at Ujima and then hosting a reading by Emma Newman and Jo Hall.

The radio stuff ended up being not much about books, but was fun all the same. As a women’s issues show, we devoted most of the episode to themes connected with International Women’s Day. I got the crew to discuss this story about how women have moved to the left of men in UK politics, which I found quite interesting.

There are no downloads available for this week and last week’s shows as yet. There’s been some sort of tech screw-up with the Ujima website, and no one seems to know how the system works. I’m going to try to apply my awesome hacker skills to the problem. 😉

In the evening we did the Word of Mouth reading at the Thunderbolt on Bath Road. It’s a lovely little pub, with a great live music program as well as monthly literary events. Tír na nÓg are playing there next week, but I just can’t afford the time to go. Our reading gig went very well, and I thoroughly enjoyed MCing the event. My thanks to Dave, the landlord, Richard of Tangent Books who runs the readings series, and of course to Emma and Jo for being awesome.

And having been up early, out all day, and home stupidly late, I’m now knackered. It is becoming increasingly obvious that I have too many commitments and am not doing any of them well enough. Some sort of weeding out is necessary. I’m going to have to bail on Kiev because I can’t afford the time or effort required to organize the trip. Ã…con and Finncon are, of course, firmly nailed down, as are BristolCon and World Fantasy. I won’t be at Eastercon, and even though I bought a membership to Nine Worlds I’m not sure I’ll go. Top of my list at the moment for additional trips is the academic conference in Liverpool in June, but that’s the weekend before Finncon so I’m already dreading the exhaustion that will result.

Right now, however, I need to get back to running a publishing company and a bookstore. It is, after all, World Book Day. Stand by for book-related bloggage.

Nine Worlds Takes Flight

Those of you in the UK may be aware of a new convention starting up in London. Nine Worlds has been running a Kickstarter appeal, and has now been fully funded. It is a very interesting project. I love some of the things that they are hoping to do. They are trying to appeal to a very wide range of fannish interests, and there is a strong streak of geek feminism running through what they do. However, I’ve kept quiet about them up until now because I’ve been quite worried about them.

You see, Kevin and I have seen lots of conventions with very big plans fall flat on their faces, and often leave the people running them owing a lot of money. When we started BristolCon we started very small and grew in a sustainable way. Nine Worlds started off with the ambition to be the UK’s answer to Dragon*Con, and the first email I had from them talked about expecting 20,000 members. It sounded like, for their own good, it would be better if they didn’t get funded.

Since then they seem to have scaled their ambitions back a bit. More importantly they have got funded. That should mean that they can pay their basic hotel bills, and bring in some guests. And it shows that they have ability. Of course that’s not all there is to running a convention. Nine Worlds is promising 28 tracks of programming. There are also complicated things like handling room bookings for members. They have apparently got a block of rooms available at £90, which is pretty good for a Heathrow location in August. They’ll need to sell those, and right now they have a little over 200 members, some of whom will doubtless commute in from London each day. Con running isn’t easy.

However, now that the Kickstarter is funded, the con has to happen. If anything goes wrong now it will be a serious disaster. It’s a bit like Worldcon. You may not be enamored of all of the bids, but once one wins it has to happen, and everyone mucks in to help. And I do hope that they make a success of it. Not too much of a success, because if they start attracting huge numbers of people it will soon become a commercial event and the fannish focus will disappear. But a regular convention in London with an interest in costuming, comics, gaming, feminist and LGBT issues would be a very good thing to have.

The Kickstarter appeal ends on Sunday. Memberships are available at £65 through that. Once the appeal is over, the price will go up, so if you want to go you should sign up now.

Forthcoming Appearances

I have a busy few weeks coming up. Here’s a brief rundown.

Tomorrow I will be at the M-Shed in Bristol giving a talk about trans pioneer, Michael Dillon. That’s a 2:30 start. It is a free event, but if you are coming please sign up on Eventbrite so we have some idea of numbers in advance.

On Wednesday (20th) I’ll be on the Women’s Outlook show on Ujima taking about Karen Lord’s The Best of All Possible Worlds. If the tech works, we’ll have an interview with Karen on the show.

The following weekend (23rd/24th) I’ll be in Exeter for Microcon where I’m giving a talk about ebooks. I can’t find any public web presence for this (there is a page on Facebook, but you have to log in to see it), but Kari Sperring will be there too, as will Emma Newman and Jo Hall.

On Wednesday 27th the Ujima Women’s Outlook show will be about getting boys to read. I’ll be talking about Ian McDonald’s Planesrunner, and we’ll have Tim Maughan as a guest in the studio.

And on March 6th BristolCon is taking over the Word of Mouth event at the Thunderbolt in Bristol. Emma Newman and Jo Hall are the guest authors, and I’ll be introducing them.

The World SF Travel Fund

Remember how we raised money to send Charles A. Tan to the World Fantasy Convention in 2011? And two Swedish ladies, Karin Tidbeck and Nene Ormes, to the 2012 event? Well that money has run out, so the folks at World SF are looking to fill their coffers again. They are hoping to raise $3000 to cover a two-year period. The 2013 beneficiaries, who will attend the Brighton World Fantasy, are Csilla Kleinheincz from Hungary and Rochita Loenen-Ruiz from the Philippines via the Netherlands. There are plenty of fine rewards on offer for backers. You can help out here.

Hello Exeter

One of the regular SF conventions in the South West of England is Microcon, run by the University of Exeter Science Fiction & Fantasy Society. This year it will be over the weekend February 23rd/24th, and I understand that the fabulous Kari Sperring will be the headline guest. Several of the BristolCon crew will be heading down there. They don’t have a public web page, but if you are on Facebook you can probably see the event page here. The con has been cleverly timed to overlap with the end of the city’s Animated Exeter festival. Philip Reeve will be on town for that, and hopefully he’ll pop into the con as well. (He was a GoH last year).

The reason I’m mentioning this now is that the Exeter folks have kindly asked me to come along and give a talk. I am, naturally, very pleased. All the more so, in fact, as I have a lot of family in Devon. I haven’t decided what I am going to talk about yet, but if any of you want to come along and jeer, heckle, protest and so on I’m sure that the Exeter folks would be delighted with the extra memberships. Plus you get to see Kari, and the fabulous cryptozoologist, Richard Freeman, and Steve Green whose talk about short online films last year was a lot of fun (I’d not heard of Pink Five before). Hopefully I’ll see some of you there.

Eurocon Update

The Kiev Eurocon has updated its website. There is even a draft programme up (which, somewhat to my surprise, I am on). Meanwhile I have been trying to get some information on the local political situation.

Thanks to TGEU I have made contact with an LGBT activist organization in Kiev. Their view is that the proposed law against “promoting homosexuality”, if it is implemented by April, is unlikely to be used against foreign visitors. As to whether it happens at all, that’s unclear. The EU has recently given Ukraine a clear warning that the proposed law is in direct contravention of agreements that Ukraine has made with the EU. The UN has also spoken out against the proposed law. There was, apparently, a demonstration in Kiev today against the proposals. I hope it went well.

I’ll continue to monitor the situation. I’d like to go, especially if I can support local LGBT groups by doing so. My final decision will be based on the state of my finances, and on what the Ukrainian activists tell me.

Fannish Inquisition Online

Talking of Worldcon, SMOFcon is taking place this next weekend, and one of the things it features is the Fannish Inquisition, at which forthcoming Worldcons and Worldcon bids get grilled on their plans and facilities. You may remember Kevin and I doing live reporting on this in the past. Often much of the time is wasted with simple questions like “what is the weather like?”, “how far is the airport from the facilities?” and “do you speak English?” (because, you know, Ella California, she is very far from the East Coast…). This year SMOFcon has decided to get all of those out of the way in advance so that the live questioning can be more penetrating. And they have posted the responses on their website. You can find them all here, including, of course, details of the venue for the Helsinki in 2015 bid. Well done SMOFcon, an excellent innovation.

And for those wondering, yes of course I’ll be asking for a tour of the Helsinki facilities when I am over there for Finncon in July. (Or maybe even Ã…con in May if that’s more convenient.)

Worldcon Membership Sale

Happy Thanksgiving everyone. Today, amongst other things, we should be thankful that the kind people from Lone Star Con 3 are selling memberships at a reduced rate between now and December 3rd. There’s a price rise due on December 31st as well, so now is a very good time to buy. Details here.

LoneStarCon 3 Call For Papers

I’m delighted to see that my friend Karen Burnham has been put in charge of the academic track for next year’s Worldcon, LoneStarCon 3. I’m sure she will do a fine job. I’ve received a Call for Papers. Karen is looking for work that focuses on the convention’s Guests of Honor: Ellen Datlow, James Gunn, Willie Siros, Norman Spinrad, Darrell K. Sweet, Leslie Fish & Joe R. Lansdale. Papers on Steampunk, Old West/frontier themes, and Spanish language science fiction will also be particularly welcomed. I wish I could be there. For those of you who can, here are the important details:

Paper proposals must include a 300-500 word abstract and appropriate bibliography. Proposals are due by December 31 2012, and participants will be notified by February 1, 2013 if their paper is accepted. All participants must be members of the convention. They will deliver a 15 minute reading of their paper as part of a panel, followed by a Q&A. Attendees may present only one paper at WorldCon, so please, no multiple submissions. All submissions (and any questions) should be sent to the head of the academic track: Karen Burnham (academic@texas.lonestarcon3.org).

I’m willing to bet that there will be one or two papers about this particularly famous piece of Spanish language science fiction that has recently been re-issued.