Archive for October, 2009

A New Look for Gulliver’s

Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

Busy, busy, busy around the store.  Everything is moved, there’s some fresh paint, and more and more discounted books are on the bargain table.  So come on by and get lost in the stacks.  Maybe you’ll find something new you wouldn’t normally read.  We’ve got a new bookseller, Dylan; he started earlier this week.  If you can’t find something ask him, he needs to learn where everything is located.davidpainting

Interview with Brenda Cooper

Sunday, October 18th, 2009

I met the fabulous & talented Brenda Cooper at the PNBA Fall Show in Portland this year.  She is the author of the Silver Ship series and co-author of Building Harlequin’s Moon, as well as numerous short stories.  (After meeting her, I kinda felt like a dweeb for not recognizing her name-Nick had given me Building Harlequin’s Moon to read the week before & I hadn’t gotten to it, but I was blinded by Larry Niven’s name on the cover.)  She recently took time out of her busy life to answer some questions for me.  Be sure to check out her website and these can’t-miss SF books.  Wings of Creation, the third book in the series, is due out November 10th.

Chelo, Liam, & Kayleen have an interesting alternative relationship; I wonder how these characters deal with the issues that might arise from it (especially as Chelo & Liam are ‘leaders’ whereas Kayleen is more of a ‘follower’).  Will there be further exploration of this in a future book?

I think any time you write about humans, it’s unrealistic to imagine all heterosexual monogamous relations.  Humans tends to experiment in matters of the heart.  This relationship will be challenged later, but not primarily because it’s triadic.  The larger challenge is that they all have slightly different destinies,  and the family may or may not hold up under the very real pressure put on them as they enter the Making War.

I understand that The Making War is going to be the fourth book in this series.  How is it coming along?

It’s outlined and ready to go as soon as I get a nod to write it.  I think it’s going to be a fabulous book (or books – I’d actually best like to tell the rest of the story across two books).  In the meantime, I’m working on another book in a brand-new universe, on marketing both READING THE WIND and WINGS OF CREATION, and on short work.

As a futurist you must spend a lot of time thinking about tomorrow; what excites you most about the future?  What frightens you most about the future?

I’m very excited about how we are starting (hopefully in time) to find ways to remain a high-tech society and yet live more lightly on the land.  At least in Seattle, there is a lot of movement to electric cars and clean energy, toward less violent consumption and more compassion. I love how global and diverse the world has become.

The two things that scare me the most are the idea of nuclear weapons in the wrong places (I do not understand terrorism since it’s essentially a failed strategy, but nuclear bombs in terrorist hands are a nightmare), the idea that we may have already done too much damage to our home, particularly the oceans.  I can’t quite imagine how shameful it would be to kill this beautiful planet.

What are you currently reading?  Do you read a lot of nonfiction?  What is your favorite SF novel?  Your favorite non-fiction book?

I read a lot.  I have writer friends who tell me they don’t read any more, and if I couldn’t read, I’m sure I couldn’t write as well.  I do read a lot on non-fiction:  I read the paper every day, I read The Economist and Nature and a lot of websites, although I don’t read very many nonfiction books any more.  I can list a ton of favorite sf novels, but to pick one would be like picking the child or friend or parent you loved best.  Rendezvous with Rama, Enders Game, Snowcrash, Beggars in Spain, A Deepness in the Sky, Ringworld, Anathem, Red Thunder, Time Enough for Love, Wake, Darwin’s Children, Allan Steele’s Coyote books. And we haven’t even started on the fantasy yet.  There’s Lord of the Rings, and Banewreaker, Canticle and Perdido Street Station, there’s Mercedes Lackey (I have short stories in almost all of her short story collections in Valdemar) and anything at all by Charles deLint or George R.R. Martin…and then there’s short fiction.  Well, you get the idea.

You write about mankind’s future in space.  What do you think is the largest obstacle opposing space colonization today?

The rocket equation.  Really – it’s physics.   Gravity if you will.  No matter how you look at it, it’s expensive and difficult to get heavy stuff from here out into space. The distances are long and the travel hard. There are other obstacles – the idea that space travel should be safe – the difficulty getting launch permits – competition for funding from very real other priorities here.  But I believe we’ll get there.  There is lot of energy and brilliance at work in the commercial space sector.  We also need some perspective.  We tend to think it’s taking a long time to explore space.  The Wright Brother’s first flight was in 1903.  So in a little over a hundred years we’ve gone from being stuck fact to the surface of the planet to flying all over it all the time with hardly a worry except the TSA search indignities, we’ve flown past almost every planet and moon in the solar system, landed rovers on Mars, and men on the moon. This is actually pretty good.

There seems to be a central theme in your novels about conflict between those who, by choice or design, are not technologically advanced and those who are.  It is a definite issue that awaits our future.  How do you think it can be avoided or mitigated?

It’s not only a future issue; it’s current.  And oddly enough, at the rate we are going, America could be among the less technically advanced.  We don’t do a good job with science or math education, with broadband, with holding up high bars and asking ourselves or our people to sacrifice and get there.  But then I’ll get off my soapbox for a moment and complement you – you hit on one of the two core themes for this series.  The first book, the Silver Ship and the Sea, is very much about what happens when we are actually different.  Today, humans everywhere are very good at finding ways to hold prejudice for things that really don’t make us very different – skin color or gender or religion or class. I think it’s worth exploring what might happen when we really are different.  We are steadily getting better at accepting differences (same discussion as the space one – a lot of good has happened in a short time.  From woman’s suffrage to gay marriage has not been a long time for so much and so deep a set of cultural changes).

I think we will be challenged, but we’ll work it out.

You coauthored Building Harlequin’s Moon with Larry Niven.  What was it like to collaborate with such a masterful author and what did that experience teach you about writing?

I am so lucky to have been able to write with Larry.  He is a fabulous teacher, and brilliant.  At first it was downright scary, but later, after I got a little more confidence, it was just fun.  Larry did a lot of work on that book.  I could never have written it alone or even mostly alone.  He gave me gift beyond measure; he helped me reach my dreams.

What is the best advice about writing you’ve ever received?  What is the worst?  What advice do you have for young writers?

Best.  Write.  Actually, the best was write fast.  Write so fast your editor mind can’t catch up with your subconscious.   I don’t know that there is a worst advice I can think of.  My advice for all writers?  Write.  Writer’s write.  I spent years writing about how I wanted more time to write.  I wrote so much angsty stuff about wanting to write I could have written a novel.  Just trust yourself and go, and if you write some bad words, that’s okay.  We all do.

How is technology helping you to write?  Have you tried any of the voice recognition programs out there, or do you use a handheld device to jot down notes?

I carry a computer all the time.  I tried Dragon Naturally Speaking years ago, and I’m thinking of trying it again. I am also drooling over Scrivener, but it only runs on a Mac.  We’ll see if I decide I want it bad enough to buy a Mac or not (yes, I love Apples. I love my ipod and my iphone and I want an iMac; I just have multiple computers and I run a tech shop as my day job that is very windows-centric, so I would have to keep up to date in both OS’s and software.  This could be expensive.)

You have a day job, how do you find time to balance it and writing time?  How do you keep from getting ‘burned out’?

This year, it’s been hard.  I have typically held a thousand words a day as a minimum, and tried for more most days, but this year I kicked it back to five hundred as a minimum.  I still usually do closer to a thousand, and so I’ve gotten a third of the way through a novel, plus about ten stories done this year. But it’s less than usual.  Work has been busier because of the recession (I work for a city, and we have an ever-tightening budget) and I have felt like I needed to do more marketing.  So I’ve developed the Academy website at www.thefiveworlds.com and blogged more and been doing a science column over at www.futurismic.com.  Some days it is hard not to get burned out, but then I really do love writing and that keeps me at the keyboard.  And this will sound odd, but a long time ago a teacher taught me that death is a friend.  I use the knowledge that I won’t be here forever to keep me moving forward, to keep progressing and to appreciate what I have all at once.

IMG_0618Many thanks again to Brenda!  I can’t wait to read her next book.  And be sure to check out her website at www.brenda-cooper.com

This is just the first of what I hope to be many interviews with SF/F writers.  If you’ve got a suggestion of someone you’d like to hear from, or questions to ask, let me know!

Empty Shelves & Piles of Books

Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

emptyshelvesWe are in the midst of a massive overhaul of the store.  Remaindered books from the Bargain Annex are being worked into the appropriate sections in the front of the store.  All of the new children’s books, including Alaskana are being moved to their new home in what used to be the Bargain Annex.  Cooking will also end up in that room, as well as CD’s and DVD’s.  I’d like to see some space for the graphic novels and manga and a large display table in what I am now referring to as Kiddie Land.  All the moving means that we’re purging our sections and a ton of great books are being discounted.  Come on in while the selection is fresh!

Backroom Battle Book sales are steady, we didn’t have the usual October drop-off and are now sold out of the 3rd/4th and 5th/6th grade lists.  We’ve got more books arriving daily.  It’s Groundhog’s Day all over again, shipping and billing out partial orders one after the other.  Job security, I guess.

It’s not even Halloween yet and Christmas merch is starting to arrive.  Advent calendars and cards.  And there’s not even snow on the ground yet.  How weird is that?  We had a couple of inches in late September but all that melted and it hasn’t come back.  I saw a snowshoe hare yesterday.  It was pure white standing out against the brown fallen leaves and treetrunks.  The animals know what the season is, even if the weather doesn’t.  I bet the ptarmagin are white too.  If the snow doesn’t come soon the predators won’t have a problem finding their prey.

Synopsis Woes

Sunday, October 11th, 2009

Why does every agent/editor want different things?  Why can’t there be an industry standard?  I know, I know, we’re all different people.  Still.

My synopsis for Necali’s Domain, if you’ll remember, is ten pages long, about 5600 words.  Well, now I’m submitting it to an agent who only wants a two page synopsis.

Which means a heck of a lot of red pen.  Not that I mind.  I understand that they read hundreds, if not thousands, of queries every week.  Two pages takes less time to read than ten, but it was hard to break down the plot into ten, now I have to further reduce it to two.  So I got rid of all the secondary point-of-view characters except for their interactions with Necali.  It’s all about the Empress.

Sigh: Why does the business fo writing have to be more work than writing itself?

Ode to the Blue Suede Shoes

Friday, October 9th, 2009

shoes1Once upon a time there existed a website on which one could design a pair of shoes. It was called customatix and they had boots and running shoes and slip-ons. I chose blue suede and gave them a purple stripe down the front with an embroidered butterfly detail. The soles had great traction and a butterfly detail worked into them.

They were the most comfortable shoes I have ever worn, more comfortable than my Merrells. I wore them every day for more than seven years. People laughed, wondering if I had any other shoes (yes, several pairs that I never wear). And now the tread and butterflies are long gone from the bottom and the backs are shredded beyond repair.shoes2

I loved these blue suede shoes and I knew I would wear them until they fell apart. They were close to it, and while in Chicago I bought a replacement pair of slip-ons. They’re comfortable, nowhere near the uniqueness of my blue suede shoes, but nice nonetheless. It was time to say goodbye; if I didn’t toss them I wouldn’t wear my new shoes (or any of the other pairs in my closet).shoes3

I gave them one last day of shopping and walking, took some pictures, and then gave them a burial among dirty diapers and kitchen garbage. I will miss my blue suede shoes.

I got back to the office today from vacation and four different people made the same comment upon seeing my footwear: ‘You bought new shoes!’ Wow. I didn’t think anyone was paying attention.  By the way, does anyone know of a similar website that you can design a pair of uber comfy shoes?

Still on Vacation

Tuesday, October 6th, 2009

DSCN1825So I’m still on vacation, also known as babysitting duty.  Nephew Sam-Sam is just the cutest thing.  While I’m spending my days catering to a seven-month-old, why don’t you check out this interview Brenda Cooper did with me…I’ll be posting an interview with her in a week or so, after I get home and readjusted to life in Alaska.  I really love Chicago, but I don’t think I could move back; just too many people for my taste.

Bunco for Breast Cancer

Monday, October 5th, 2009

DSCN1817Went to the fifth annual Crystal Lake Bunco for Breast Cancer yesterday.  It was so much fun!  I had 4 wins and 8 losses.  Last year they raised $50,000 for the Breast Cancer Research Foundation, definitely collected more than that this year!  My Aunt Carol is a survivor (for several years now) and it was great to see her and all the other women who have conquered this killer.

624 women were there, most wearing various shades of pink.  There were raffles of gift baskets and I actually won one!  It was the Interior Accents basket and included (among other things) some gift certificates to local restaurants (I’m leaving them with my mother), a ‘Save the Boobies’ T-shirt, and a pink cashmere scarf.  The list of donors was several pages long, it was an amazing event.

My cousin Laura also won a raffle basket.  It had a gift certificate for a tooth whitening procedure and a discount on designer shoes.  She sat at the lucky table with me!

Unplug the Fax Machine

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

78hsbb3456bbThis last week has been one ‘Groundhog’s Day’ after another.

I’ve been trying to keep my desk caught up so that Maria isn’t stuck at it for the week that I’m gone.

But the Battle Book orders have been coming in daily.  So I’ve been pulling books and packing them up and shipping them out.

For Maria to be safe at her desk (and not chained to mine) I thought it best to unplug the fax machine.  Unfortunately that wasn’t an option.  I got Elisa trained on mailouts and other back-room sales so she can be of some assistance to Maria.  And those are the last thoughts I’m going to have about the bookstore for the next seven days.  I’m on vacation!