More of Me!

In case you haven't had enough me, here's some fun stuff:

  • Bryan Thomas Schmidt has compiled a Twitter interview he conducted with me a while back. Thanks to Bryan for both conducting the interview and pulling together all my comments, which were rather scattered. This often happens when you carry on long conversations in 140 character bites.
  • Meawhile, over on the Mad Hatter Review I join with Neal Asher, Hannu Rajaniemi, Robert Charles Wilson and many other authors to describe the science fiction devices we wish were real. My pick? Well, you'll have to read the article to learn that, but let me just say the various Star Trek series have gained a ton of milage from the device.
  • And if that doesn't hit your Jason Sanford fix, don't forget that there are only five days left to order a signed and numbered copy of my new collection Never Never Stories. Details are here.

Writers' Hangouts in Google+

The other day Mary Robinette Kowal explained to the social media world how to hold a writers' hangout in Google+. Basically, you use Google+'s ability to hangout with others while also cranking on your latest literary masterpiece. Since I'm aways looking for ways to bring more fun to my writing, I staged my first hangout last night.

The results: Fun as hell and a great way to motivate yourself into being more productive.

As Mary suggested, I scheduled a time for the hookup and mentioned it on both Google+ and Twitter. Once we started the Google+ hangout functionality worked great, with people easily able to see each other and talk. In short order ten other writers--ten people being the most that can use the hangout feature at one time--logged in. We spent about 15 minutes talking and wrote for the rest of the hour, followed by more talking and writing.

Thanks to everyone who showed up, including Mary, Paolo Bacigalupi, Jamie Rubin, Janet Harriett, Patrick Thunstrom, Adam Callaway, Brian Dolton, Bryan Thomas Schmidt, Juliette Wade, Shaun Duke, Scott Roberts, and John DeNardo. I'm also pleased that the hangout helped me write almost 1,500 words last night. Since late night has always been one of my least-productive writing times, the hangout was well worth doing.

I'll be scheduling more writers' hangouts in the near future. If you want to take part, simply keep an eye out on my Google+ feed.

Update: Bryan Thomas Schmidt and Jamie Todd Rubin give their take on our hangout.

Winners of the 2011 storySouth Million Writers Award

The public vote for the 2011 storySouth Million Writers Award is now complete. We had nearly 1150 votes. Here are the winning stories, along with their percentage of the vote:

  1. "Arvies" by Adam-Troy Castro (Lightspeed Magazine) – 18%
  2. "The Incorrupt Body of Carlo Busso" by Eric Maroney (Eclectica) – 16%
  3. "The Green Book" by Amal El-Mohtar (Apex Magazine) – 15%

The prizes for this year's award are:

  • First place: $600 plus the $100 gift certificate from ThinkGeek
  • Runner-up: $200
  • Honorable mention/third place: $100

Thank you to everyone who votes and nominated stories. Next year's award will kick off in early 2012.

Spotlight Publishing to Release Million Writers Award Anthologies

As I mentioned yesterday, Spotlight Publishing is a small press which recently relaunched with a new focus on science fiction and fantasy books. Among their first new titles are my own Never Never Stories, Edmund R. Schubert's The Trouble With Eating Clouds, and James Maxey's There Is No Wheel. Following these inital books will be the anthology InterGalactic Awards Anthology Vol. I, edited by Orson Scott Card and Edmund R. Schubert. 

Now obviously having my short story collection come out is extremely exciting. But equally as exciting is that Spotlight has agreed to publish two anthologies of stories from the last eight years of the Million Writers Award. These anthologies will be titled Million Writers Award: The Best New Online Voices and Million Writers Award: The Best Online Science Fiction and Fantasy.

The first anthology will focus on the exciting new authors and voices to emerge through the Million Writers Award, while the second anthology will focus on the many SF/F stories our judges and readers have loved. I will edit both anthologies, which will feature stories from all levels of the award process (i.e., winners, finalists, and notable stories).

In the coming months I'll be contacting authors to arrange reprint rights for their stories. The publication date for the two Million Writers Award anthologies is early 2012.

Spotlight Publishing to Release Print Edition of Never Never Stories

NeverNeverStoriesCoverTwo months ago I released Never Never Stories, an ebook collection of my short stories. I took this self-publishing step because I believed it was too difficult to land a traditional publisher for a short story collection.

Turns out I was amazingly, happily wrong.

Spotlight Publishing, a small press in North Carolina which recently relaunched with a focus on science fiction and fantasy books, is releasing a trade paperback edition of Never Never Stories. The book will be out in early August. I will also continue to sell the ebook edition on my own.

The 10 stories in the print edition are:

  • The Ships Like Clouds, Risen by Their Rain
  • When Thorns Are The Tips Of Trees
  • Here We Are, Falling Through Shadows
  • Rumspringa
  • Millisent Ka Plays in Realtime
  • Memoria
  • Peacemaker, Peacemaker, Little Bo Peep
  • Into the Depths of Illuminated Seas
  • A Twenty-First Century Fairy Love Story
  • The Never Never Wizard of Apalachicola

The print edition of Never Never Stories also features my introduction exploring fantasy and archeology along with a dazzling cover by award-winning artist Vincent Chong. The book can be purchased through the Spotlight Publishing website, through Amazon and Barnes and Noble, or can be ordered through your local book store.

Signed and Numbered Editions

To celebrate my first book publication, for a limited time I'm selling hand-numbered, dated and signed editions of Never Never Stories.  While the trade paperback will normally cost $15.95, I will be selling these signed editions for $13 plus $2 shipping and handling to U.S. addresses and $13 plus $4 shipping and handling to all addresses outside the U.S.

I'll number these editions based on the order of each purchase, starting with number 1. And I'll only sell them for the next few weeks. After that, you can only purchase Never Never Stories for the regular price. To order a signed, numbered edition, please use the button below.

Order a Signed, Numbered Edition of Never Never Stories

Description: Trade Paperback (8.5"x5.5"); 240 pgs; ISBN# 978-0-9768469-1-8
Price: $13 plus $2 shipping and handling to U.S. addresses; $13 plus $4 shipping and handling to all addresses outside the U.S. All books will ship around August 1st.
Note: If you wish to purchase multiple copies of this signed, numbered edition, please email me at lapthai@yahoo.com.

Note: I am no longer taking orders for signed, numbered editions.

Last Day to Vote for the Million Writers Award

We now have just over one day left in the public vote for the 2011 storySouth Million Writers Award. The public vote will be open through 11:59 p.m. Eastern time on July 6, 2011. Readers and writers may vote one time for their favorite story by clicking here.

The latest vote tally is available here.

The prizes for this year's award are:

  • First place: $600 plus the $100 gift certificate from ThinkGeek
  • Runner-up: $200
  • Honorable mention/third place: $100

Update on July 6: Voting ends tonight a minute before midnight. Since there has been a rush of last-minute voting, it will take me a day or so to verify that all the votes are valid and release the results. Look for the official word on the winners on Friday.

Hugo Award for The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms by N.K. Jemisin

A few moments ago I cast my vote for this year's Hugo Awards. Usually I wouldn't make a big deal about voting – I'd simply cast my vote and be done with it. I also don't usually reveal my final picks. While I've long made it a practice of disclosing my initial ballot recommendations for the various awards, I do that to bring attention to deserving stories and books. But final votes tend to be more objective and, usually, all of the finalists for the various categories are deserving of a win. So until now I've kept my final votes to myself.

But this year the finalists for the Hugo Award for Best Novel are far from usual, so I'm breaking tradition and urging people to cast their vote for The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms by N.K. Jemisin. 

Here's my reasoning:

I read a number of SF/F books each year, and usually I enjoy most of them. Usually these novels are well written and entertaining and take me to new and interesting worlds as only good science fiction and fantasy can do.

However, perhaps you've noticed me using the word "usual" a lot in this essay. There's a reason for that – far too much of today's SF/F feels like simply another go around of the usual stuff. I'm sure every reader out there knows what I'm talking about. A "usual" novel is warm and soothing, the perfect story to read while sipping milk and munching cookies as you snuggle under a dozen cats on a cold winter's night. These usual novels use themes and ideas and plots we've all seen a thousand times in our genre. There's nothing wrong with usual novels – hell, I enjoy reading them.

But usual novels are not worthy of major literary awards.

Instead, I want award-winning novels to be those stories which break with convention, which come at our genre in new and exciting ways. And of this year's finalists for the Hugo Award for Best Novel, only N.K. Jemisin's The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms fits this bill.

There are plenty of reviews available for N.K. Jemisin's fantasy novel, so I won't bore you by giving a long one. Suffice to say this novel is amazingly well written, more so when you realize that the voice you're reading isn't as clear cut as you initially think, which is a trick our genre usually only sees in the works of Gene Wolfe. But even as Jemisin plays with our minds, she's also telling a totally engaging story you can't put down. This novel recently won the Locus Award for Best First Novel, and if there's any justice in our genre it will also win this year's Hugo Award.

Of the other finalists in this category, only The Dervish House by Ian McDonald is in the same league as Jemisin's novel. The Dervish House is a very good book and I wouldn't be upset if it wins. However, it is not McDonald's best book – which is easily Brasyl – and The Dervish House is also not as original or thought-provoking as  The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms.

Then we come to the usual books with make up the rest of this year's finalists. The double novel Blackout/All Clear by Connie Willis recently won both the Nebula and Locus Awards, so obviously it's a favorite for also winning the Hugo. However, for the life of my I can't understand why, aside from the fact that Willis is well-loved in our genre and hasn't published a novel in almost a decade. Unfortunately,  Blackout/All Clear is not her best work and reads as if the books should have been edited down into one novel.

Cryoburn by Lois McMaster Bujold is another usual book. It's a fun read, being a continuation of her well-known Vorkosigan Saga. If you've read the entire saga, then you'll know what to expect with this book.

The same with Feed by Mira Grant, although obviously this book is not part of a long-running series. Instead, Feed plays off our continuing love affair with zombies while throwing in a good bit about how social media is going to change our world. Unfortunately, it's not a startling idea that social media is going to change our world, and while Feed is a very good read it still feels very much like a usual novel.

I challenge anyone to tell me why The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms isn't the best novel among this year's finalists. This doesn't mean I'm saying the other finalists are bad novels. But none of them, with the possible exception of The Dervish House by Ian McDonald, is worthy of winning over The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms.

But don't take my word for it. If you're an attending, young adult, or supporting member of this year's World Science Fiction Convention, check out N.K. Jemisin's The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms. Hell, read all the novels, which are available as downloadable packets on the Renovation website (but you'll need your password to access them). And remember – the deadline to vote is Sunday, July 31. 

Postcast of "Peacemaker, Peacemaker, Little Bo Peep"

The great folks at Dunesteef Audio Fiction Magazine have released a podcast of my story "Peacemaker, Peacemaker, Little Bo Peep," which was originally published in Interzone and is now available in my collection Never Never Stories. Thanks to Big and Rish and everyone who pulled the episode together.

Check out the podcast here.

By the way, Dunesteef has podcast a number of my stories, while Big and Rish also produced one of my stories for StarShipSofa and in another Sofa episode provided some of the voices. Here are the links:

 

Final Week of Voting for the Million Writers Award

We now have one week left in the public vote for the 2011 storySouth Million Writers Award. With just over 800 votes tallied, the leading stories have continued to change positions. "The Green Book" is once again number one while "Arvies," "The Incorrupt Body of Carlo Busso," and "Most of Them Would Follow Wandering Fires" are close behind.

Before I go into this week's voting details, I should note I've seen a large number of attempts to vote using fake names and email addresses. These attempts were all deleted. The supporters of one author in particular seems to be waging a campaign to stuff the ballot on this author's behalf. If this continues I will name the author and list all the IP addresses and fake names and email accounts used on this author's behalf. Doing this would likely enable some cybersleuth to easily figure out who is doing this. All I can say is you've been warned.

Anyway, here are the current vote percentages, ranked from highest to lowest.

  1. "The Green Book" by Amal El-Mohtar (Apex Magazine) – 16%
  2. "Arvies" by Adam-Troy Castro (Lightspeed Magazine) – 15%
  3. "The Incorrupt Body of Carlo Busso" by Eric Maroney (Eclectica) – 14%
  4. "Most of Them Would Follow Wandering Fires" by Amber Sparks (Barrelhouse) – 13%
  5. "Do You Have a Place for Me" by Roxane Gay (Spork Press) – 12%
  6. "Cancer Party" by Nicola Mason (Blackbird) – 9%
  7. "Hell Dogs" by Daphne Buter (FRiGG: A Magazine of Fiction and Poetry)  – 8%
  8. "Arthur Arellano" by Viet Thanh Nguyen (Narrative Magazine) – 7%
  9. "Here is David, the Greatest of Descendants" by Spencer Kealamakia (Anderbo) – 4%
  10. "Elegy for a Young Elk" by Hannu Rajaniemi (Subterranean Magazine) – 2%

Remember, the public vote is open through July 6, 2011. Readers and writers may vote one time for their favorite by clicking here.

The prizes for this year's award are:

  • First place: $600 plus the $100 gift certificate from ThinkGeek
  • Runner-up: $200
  • Honorable mention/third place: $100

Second Week Vote Tally for Million Writers Award

So far I've received nearly 600 votes in the 2011 storySouth Million Writers Award. There is a small shakeup from last week's numbers, with the former number one story "The Green Book" dropping to number three while "The Incorrupt Body of Carlo Busso" and "Arvies" surged to numbers one and two. However, I should point out that it doesn't take many votes to do this and that all of the top five stories are very much in contention for the top prize.

Anyway, here are the current vote percentages, ranked from highest to lowest.

  1. "The Incorrupt Body of Carlo Busso" by Eric Maroney (Eclectica) – 17%
  2. "Arvies" by Adam-Troy Castro (Lightspeed Magazine) – 15%
  3. "The Green Book" by Amal El-Mohtar (Apex Magazine) – 13%
  4. "Most of Them Would Follow Wandering Fires" by Amber Sparks (Barrelhouse) – 13%
  5. "Do You Have a Place for Me" by Roxane Gay (Spork Press) – 12%
  6. "Cancer Party" by Nicola Mason (Blackbird) – 8%
  7. "Hell Dogs" by Daphne Buter (FRiGG: A Magazine of Fiction and Poetry)  – 8%
  8. "Arthur Arellano" by Viet Thanh Nguyen (Narrative Magazine) – 7%
  9. "Here is David, the Greatest of Descendants" by Spencer Kealamakia (Anderbo) – 4%
  10. "Elegy for a Young Elk" by Hannu Rajaniemi (Subterranean Magazine) – 3%

Remember, the public vote is open through July 6, 2011. Readers and writers may vote one time for their favorite by clicking here. And please note that I had to delete a number of duplicate votes this time. If you don't provide a valid name and email address your vote won't be counted.

The prizes for this year's award are:

  • First place: $600 plus the $100 gift certificate from ThinkGeek
  • Runner-up: $200
  • Honorable mention/third place: $100

Arthur C. Clarke's The Songs of Distant Earth

Of all the novels Arthur C. Clarke wrote during his Grand Master career, The Songs of Distant Earth was his favorite. His story also travelled through a number of different versions over the years, appearing first as a novella in a 1950's pulp magazine, followed by a 1970's movie treatise, a best-selling 1986 novel, and finally a musical tribute to both Clarke and his writings by New Age composer Mike Oldfield.

In my essay "Singing the Songs of Distant Earth," which is now on SF Signal, I explore both this history and how The Songs of Distant Earth relates to certain reoccuring themes in Clarke's writings. If you are even a little interested in how one of the most famous SF authors of all time approached the craft of fiction, be sure to check out my essay.

The Superhero Film Crash and Brazilian Speculative Fiction

Over on io9,the dismal box office performance of Green Lantern has Charlie Jane Anders asking "Is this the beginning of the end of the superhero movie boom?" For the record, I'd like to state that I raised this very point last month, well before the crash of Green Lantern and the latest X-men movie.

In unrelated but still exciting news, Orson Scott Card’s InterGalactic Medicine Show and The Elephant and Macaw Banner are hosting a contest to bring the best of Brazilian speculative fiction to the English-speaking world. Called the Hydra Competition, submissions will be accepted from eligible Brazilian authors from July 1 through August 15. Rules will be published in Portuguese on the website Universo Insônia. There is no entry fee to participate and the winner will receive a publication contract at professional rates.

I think this contest is a great idea and I can't wait to read the winning story. For complete details in English, please go here.

A Few Plugs

I'm behind in plugging a few items of note, so here goes.

First Week Vote Tally for the Million Writers Award

So far I've received over 350 votes in the 2011 storySouth Million Writers Award. As people may have noticed, this year I'm not releasing a continually updated vote tally. The problem with doing these continuous tallies is they automatically include anyone who manipulates the system, such as by voting multiple times. This can give a misleading idea of who is actually ahead in the voting.

This year the vote tallies will be released weekly, which enables me to easily screen and remove duplicate or manipulative votes. Not surprisingly, quite a few people tried do this. And equally as unsurprising, I caught them in the act and deleted those votes. I mean, if you enter a fake email address then hey, no vote for you!

Anyway, here are the current vote percentages, ranked from highest to lowest.

  1. "The Green Book" by Amal El-Mohtar (Apex Magazine) – 17%
  2. "Most of Them Would Follow Wandering Fires" by Amber Sparks (Barrelhouse) – 17%
  3. "Do You Have a Place for Me" by Roxane Gay (Spork Press) – 14%
  4. "Arvies" by Adam-Troy Castro (Lightspeed Magazine) – 12%
  5. "The Incorrupt Body of Carlo Busso" by Eric Maroney (Eclectica) – 11%
  6. "Cancer Party" by Nicola Mason (Blackbird) – 10%
  7. "Hell Dogs" by Daphne Buter (FRiGG: A Magazine of Fiction and Poetry)  – 7%
  8. "Arthur Arellano" by Viet Thanh Nguyen (Narrative Magazine) – 6%
  9. "Here is David, the Greatest of Descendants" by Spencer Kealamakia (Anderbo) – 5%
  10. "Elegy for a Young Elk" by Hannu Rajaniemi (Subterranean Magazine) – 1%

As everyone can see, two stories are essentially tied for first place while the other stories are not far behind.

Remember, the public vote is open through July 6, 2011. Readers and writers may vote one time for their favorite by clicking here.

The prizes for this year's award are:

  • First place: $600 plus the $100 gift certificate from ThinkGeek
  • Runner-up: $200
  • Honorable mention/third place: $100

CAPTCHA Fail

People can stop harrassing me about the CAPTCHA feature on the Million Writers Award voting page. While most people were able to vote for their favorite stories – we've already received several hundred votes – a sizable minority was unable to successfully complete the CAPTCHA challenge. As a result I've now removed the CAPTCHA altogether.

The voting system will still require people to submit their name and email address, and if an invalid email address is provided those votes will be discarded. I'll be releasing the first week vote totals tomorrow, so check back then for more information on how your favorite stories are doing.

On a related point, this isn't the first time that I've noticed the CAPTCHA systems online becoming so difficult to pass that they are ensnaring a lot of legitimate users (while spammers can now easily overcome this defensive technique). It's obvious the days of using CAPTCHA to battle spam are numbered.

Million Writers Award Top Ten Stories

Here they are: The 2011 storySouth Million Writers Award top ten online stories!

The public vote for last year's best online story is now open through July 6, 2011. Readers and writers may vote one time for their favorite by clicking here.

As a reminder, the prizes for this year's award are:

  • First place: $600 plus the $100 gift certificate from ThinkGeek
  • Runner-up: $200
  • Honorable mention/third place: $100

I also apologize for the delays in releasing these stories and starting the public vote. I swear that one issue after another has popped up with this year's award, starting with my eye problems and continuing onward from there.

The most recent problem involved one of our judges. In years past I've been the sole judge, reading all the notable stories and picking my ten favorites. This year, though, I invited two others to join me in this duty. Everything was looking good until one of these judges decided she no longer wanted to be a judge.

You see, she was worried what a writing friend would say because she hadn't picked this friend's story from the notable list. Even though this judge had already turned in her picks, and even though I promised her anonymity, at the last minute she demanded I remove her and not use her selections. Naturally this lead to irritated words flying back and forth, along with a promise by me to one day write a scathing essay about how flakey some writers can be.

The outcome of all this was a scamble to fill the selection void left by this person "unjudging" herself.

Anyway, please let me publicly thank my fellow judge, a non-trifling, extremely reliable, hell of a guy named D. Antwan Stewart. In addition to serving as a preliminary judge for a number of years with the Million Writers Award, Steward is the author of The Terribly Beautiful (2006) and Sotto Voce (2008), both Editor's Choice Selections in the Main Street Rag Poetry Chapbook Series. His recent poems appear in The Best Gay Poetry 2008, Callaloo, Meridian, Many Mountains Moving, Verse Daily and others. He is an assistant editor for the online poetry journal Anti- and lives in Knoxville, Tennessee, where he waits tables while working on his first full-length poetry manuscript.

Anyway, I hope everyone enjoys reading the top ten stories and votes for their favorite.

<ul>
    <li>"<a href="http://www.friggmagazine.com/issuetwentynine/fiction/buter/hell.htm">Hell Dogs</a>" by Daphne Buter (FRiGG: A Magazine of Fiction and  Poetry) </li>
    <li>"<a href="http://www.lightspeedmagazine.com/fiction/arvies/">Arvies</a>" by Adam-Troy Castro (Lightspeed Magazine) </li>
    <li>"<a href="http://apexbookcompany.com/apex-online/2010/11/short-fiction-the-green-book-by-amal-el-mohtar/">The Green Book</a>" by Amal El-Mohtar (Apex Magazine) </li>
    <li>"<a href="http://sporkpress.com/weeklies/prose/archives/00000083.html">Do You Have a Place for Me</a>" by Roxane Gay (Spork Press) </a> </li>
    <li>"<a href="http://www.anderbo.com/anderbo1/afiction-046.html">Here is David, the Greatest of Descendants</a>" by Spencer  Kealamakia (Anderbo) </li>
    <li>"<a href="http://www.eclectica.org/v14n3/maroney.html">The Incorrupt Body of Carlo Busso</a>" by Eric Maroney  (Eclectica) </li>
    <li>"<a href="http://www.blackbird.vcu.edu/v9n2/fiction/mason_n/cancer_page.shtml">Cancer Party</a>" by Nicola Mason (Blackbird) </li>
    <li>"<a href="http://www.narrativemagazine.com/issues/spring-2010/arthur-arellano">Arthur Arellano</a>" by Viet Thanh Nguyen (Narrative Magazine) </li>
    <li>"<a href="http://subterraneanpress.com/index.php/magazine/spring-2010/fiction-elegy-for-a-young-elk-by-hannu-rajaniemi/">Elegy for a Young Elk</a>" by Hannu Rajaniemi (Subterranean  Magazine) </li>
    <li>"<a href="http://www.barrelhousemag.com/?p=44">Most  of Them Would Follow Wandering Fires</a>" by Amber Sparks (Barrelhouse) </li>
  </ul>

Vote in the 2011 storySouth Million Writers Award

To vote for your favorite story in the 2011 storysouth Million Writers Award, please use the form below. To help prevent duplicate votes, a name and email address are required. However, this information will not be used except to verify votes and will not be made public.

VOTING IS NOW CLOSED. RESULTS WILL BE RELEASED SHORTLY.

As a reminder, the prizes for this year's award are:

  • First place: $600 plus the $100 gift certificate from ThinkGeek
  • Runner-up: $200
  • Honorable mention/third place: $100

Million Writers Award Vote Almost There

The top ten stories for the 2011 storysouth Million Writers Award have now been selected from the 158 notable stories. I'm currently testing the public vote system and hope to launch it either later today or in the morning (see update below). The top ten stories will be announced at that time.

As a reminder, the prizes for this year's award are:

  • First place: $600 plus the $100 gift certificate from ThinkGeek
  • Runner-up: $200
  • Honorable mention/third place: $100

Update: I've encountered an issue with the voting system. I can fix the problem but it will make me miss today's launch. The top ten stories and the public vote will now be launched on Sunday, June 5.

Locus Magazine from the 1980s

If the golden age of science fiction is age 12, then my personal golden age arrived in the 1980s. That was the decade when I fell under the genre's sway, reading older SF classics while also searching out hot new writers like David Brin and William Gibson.

However, while I read SF religiously during the 1980s I wasn't aware of the larger SF literary and fan culture which existed at the time. So imagine my excitement to discover a free cache of 1980s Locus magazines at this weekend's Marcon. The issues provide a fascinating backstory to the science fiction I read at the time while also showcasing the changing styles of the genre's magazine of record.

LocusJuly1980 In fact, as shown in the July 1980 issue, back then Locus wasn't the "magazine" of record. Instead, it called itself the "newpaper of the science fiction field." This issue was a 20 page black and white fanzine which was folded but not stapled and laid out with actual cut and pasted typewriter copy. This resulted in extremely uneven copy at times. 

The big news story was the 1980 Locus Award results. Inside, other news included Harlan Ellison reaching a "new and, with luck, final settlement in his plagiarism battle with ABC/Paramount" and a mind-blowing essay by Norman Spinrad on why the literati hate science fiction. The essay was titled "Stayin' Alive" after that classic Bee Gees hit and showed a picture of Spinrad with long curly hair, looking very much like he could have been doing some disco dancing himself.

LocusApril1982 By April 1982, Locus was already morphing from a newspaper-style fanzine to an actual magazine. There were now 32 pages stapled in the classic saddle-stich fashion, and blue had been added to the black and white copy. The big news was the death of Philip K. Dick. Other news included Frank Herbert selling his latest Dune novel for $1.5 million, while Robert Silverberg also sold a three-book contract. FYI, this was right at the beginning of the 1980s science fiction boom, where major SF authors began pulling down massive payments for their books.

In other news, on page 7 was the notice that Douglas Adams sold the third book in his Hitchhikers series and ABC optioned the books for a TV series, due that fall. "ABC is having the show re-adapted for American TV because they want it open-ended." Yeah, that really worked out for ABC.

LocusJuly1985 By the July 1985 issue Locus still called itself a newspaper but for all purposes was now a magazine with a slick, full-color cover. The copy was still typewriter cut and paste but at 58 pages it would not have looked out of place on any magazine rack of the time. The front cover announced several new genre magazines, including Night Cry and the Hubbard-sponsored To the Stars. Theodore Sturgeon was memorialized after his recent death while the biggest news was the naming of a 38-year-old Gardner Dozois to edit Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine. Locus noted that Dozois was "primarily a short story writer and has won two Nebulas in that category."

LocusDec1989 The final issue of the 1980s came with the Dec. 1989 edition, by which time Locus had completed the transition to an actual magazine. The copy was no longer created by typewriter but instead utilized one of the early word-processing programs. In fact, with the full-color covers and inserts and the almost 70 pages of content it's hard to tell this issue from a current one. Except, I should add, for the bright orange on the cover. The bright red covers of the modern Locus wouldn't appear until the 1990s.

The big news was the list of World Fantasy Award winners. In Charles Brown's "Editorial Matters" column he described how the Locus offices survived the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake with only their 1971 Hugo Award being knocked over.

However, the biggest news in the issue was from a full-color slick cardboard ad, which folded out from the center spread to announce that Penguin Books and New American Library were launching Roc Fantasy and Science Fiction Books. What's most interesting is that while Roc promotes their "visionary" 1990 line-up, the only notable book there – aside from a few minor works by Isaac Asimov – is Wyrd Sisters by Terry Pratchett. All of the other visionary novels have been largely forgotten by time.

"Plague Birds" Is Co-Winner of Interzone Readers' Poll

I received Interzone 234 today so I can officially announce the big news: My novelette "Plague Birds" is the co-winner of this year's Interzone Readers' Poll, tying with Nina Allen's amazing story "Flying in the Face of God." This is the third year in a row I've either won outright or tied in the Readers' Poll.

I'm particularly pleased that Nina's story is the co-winner. I voted for her story in the poll and it's great to know so many other people loved "Flying in the Face of God" as much as I did. 

My novelette "Into the Depths of Illuminated Seas" placed third in the poll – you can read the story in my new collection Never Never Stories – followed by "The Shipmaker" by Aliette de Bodard, "The Shoe Factory" by Matthew Cook, and "Dance of the Kawkawroons" and "In the Harsh Glow of Its Incandescent Beauty" by Mercurio D. Rivera.

Congrats to all of these great authors, and thanks to all the people who voted in the poll. Interzone is an amazing magazine with even more amazing readers.

If you want to read "Plague Birds," click here to download it as a PDF. The sequel to "Plague Birds" has also been accepted by Interzone and will be published in the next few months. The story, titled "The Ever-Dreaming Verdict of Plagues," follows Cristina de Ane as she settles into life as a plague bird, a person containing a powerful AI which is both police officer, judge and executioner to the human/animal hybrids who inhabit her future world.