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Nov. 11th, 2009

moonrise

ANOTHER BLOG ON THE NEBULA SITE

I have another blog about elements of science fiction up at the SFWA Nebulawards site:

http://www.nebulaawards.com/index.php/guest_blogs/things_that_go_bump_in_the_dark/

Oct. 9th, 2009

me

TANTALIZING COVER

No -- not a new Finch novel, but a novel with my name on the cover deserves *some* recognition don't you think? I can't wait to read this one from Jeff VanderMeer, coming next month!
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Sep. 4th, 2009

sick computer

GOOGLE SETTLEMENT

After wasting too many hours worrying over the Google settlement -- should I opt in or out? -- and trying to make sense of the (deliberately?) confusing settlement, and after getting advice from my lawyer daughter who read the settlement and said, "It *seems* as if it *might* be a good idea to opt out" (and she's rarely this wishy-washy in her advice)...

I decided to throw up my hands and go by the default position of staying in. Sigh.

Jul. 29th, 2009

book cover

HINDSIGHT

I wish somebody had warned me, when I wrote the first lingster story, that I had just set out to create a whole series of tales about communicating with aliens, my own universe, let alone an entire Guild of Xenolinguists with all its rules and precepts. I might have taken the endeavor more seriously right from the start instead of having to make it fit as I went along, with too many occasions where I found myself thinking, Oh no! I didn’t say that in a previous story, did I? How on earth am I going to get around it?

The novel that came to be called Triad (1986) started as notes on South African native cultures that quickly morphed into notes about an alien one. I was at UCLA for a quarter on a fellowship, studying South African literature, crafts and (dabbling in) language. It wasn’t the first novel that I’d written (actually it was the fifth – or sixth if we count a perfectly ghastly one that eventually went into the trash can) but it was published as my second. But somewhere in the writing the word xenolinguist appeared, and a Guild that trained them. The author hardly noticed.

“Babel Interface” was supposed to be a one-off story about alien communication (which I’d been convinced for many years wasn’t going to be as easy as Star Trek portrayed it). It’s a story whose birth pangs I don’t even remember – that’s how casually I dropped in details about the “Guild” back on Earth that Tomas worked for, or the fact that such communicators were called “lingsters,” or the field pack of interface drugs they relied on. But there they were.

I didn’t sell that story right away (several editors disliked it thoroughly), and I went on to write other stories. Meanwhile, I continued reading books about language, a major passion of mine. And somewhere along the line I started wondering what Whorf and Chomsky, Pinker – and all the other linguistic scholars whose books I bought as soon as they were published – might have to say about talking to aliens. I began noodling around with an article on how we might eventually approach the problem. I’m not even certain that I took the matter too seriously even then, judging from the title: “Berlitz in Outer Space.” But I had fun dreaming up the first class in Xenolinguistics 101.

An editor finally bought “Babel,” and wanted to see “Berlitz” too. He finally printed both in the same edition of Amazing Stories in 1988. But even then I didn’t seem to understand the trap I’d laid for myself. “A World Waiting” was under construction about that time, and I was thoroughly distracted by the marvelous experience I’d just had of hearing my unborn granddaughter’s heart beat and seeing her ultrasound picture which I knew was going into the story somehow. Then one morning I realized that my lingster (the term had stuck) was dragging her luggage into a tent and that the luggage had a logo on it – and the Guild of Xenolinguists finally made it into the author’s consciousness.

The rest is history, or maybe bibliography. There are now two novels and eleven stories about the lingsters, not to mention a couple of borderline stories where the lingsters themselves never appear.

What would I have done differently if somebody had warned me at the beginning what I was doing? Well, for one thing I wouldn’t have founded the Mother House of the Guild in Geneva. I had to do some hand-waving in “First Was the Word,” last written but first in the timeline, to explain that. And, if the reader notices, Triad is apparently set in a female-dominated world which had to be conveniently ignored in later stories. The role of Artificial Intelligence changed over the years too, from Earth’s warm and fuzzy CenCom to the Venatixi AI that acknowledges no loyalties. Little details like that. About midway through, I stopped and wrote myself a “bible” of the Guild and its teachings; I wish I’d had it from the beginning.

So do I now know all there is to know about the Guild and the lingsters? Heavens no! At least, not consciously. I’m currently working on a longer story – maybe a novella – set at the very end of the cycle, and I’m constantly surprising myself with things my unconscious mind apparently knew that I didn’t. Such as why Humans and Venatixi fought a war in “Out of the Mouths,” or who the Sagittans were whose presence Gia experienced in Triad.

Maybe I had to hide the fact I was creating a series from myself in order not to scare myself off from writing?

Jul. 6th, 2009

me2

Update on Westercon

Phoenix was hot! (Well, duh.) The Mission Palms Hotel in Tempe (site of a recent Nebula Conference) has a very lovely pool, and that helped even though the mercury was already soaring by 7 am. I didn't step off the hotel grounds between arrival Thursday morning and departure Sunday afternoon.

It was a small Westercon, maybe less then 450 people, probably due to the economy tanking. But those that were there had a good time. One of my former fiction writing students, Dana Davis, came in to see me and show me her newly-published novel -- Yay, Dana! That always makes me happy. I sold a number of books that almost amounted to the sum US Airways extracted from my wallet in order to transport them, and I did a very fine panel on alien linguistics with Stan Schmidt and Juliette Wade on Sunday morning.

I met many writers I already knew, and made the acquaintance of others. One in particular, T. Jackson King, exchanged his collection of short stories, JUDGMENT DAY, for my lingster collection after a shared Reading session in which we basically read to each other. I've just started to read it, and I like what I've read so far.

July 4th evening I spent in the LASFS suite on the 4th floor which had a great view of a very long fireworks display put on by the city of Phoenix. Another former student, Christian McGuire (Con Chair for World Con in Anaheim a couple of years ago, and on staff for this one) assured me I really needed to come to LosCon this year. With all those fireworks going off in the background, how could I refuse?

Now back to the recalcitrant novella (novel? perish the thought!), energized by the linguistics panel!

Jun. 30th, 2009

Enterprise

NEW BLOG AT NEBULA AWARDS SITE

My latest musing on life and science fiction is up:

http://www.nebulaawards.com/index.php/guest_blogs/fantastic_voyages/

May. 11th, 2009

me2

Nebula Guest Blogs Update

The latest one, "Old Man River," is up:

http://www.nebulaawards.com/index.php/guest_blogs/old_man_river/

Feb. 22nd, 2009

me2

MEMORIES OF A COURT JESTER

I’m doing something I rarely do unless pressured -- reading a volume of critical essays about SF, written by UC Santa Barbara professor Frank McConnell. These are papers he presented at the Eaton Conference on SF over the years. Th Eaton is a scholarly meeting, held at UC Riverside, home of an enormous collection of all things skiffy, a conference that annually attracts critics and scholars from the Ivy League as well as from Europe. I’m not fond of this kind of meeting, and only go because it’s in my backyard, so to speak (and I should disclose that the Eaton Collection now houses my own papers, though it didn’t during the years Frank attended)

When Frank died (too early) a few years ago, I – and others who had known him – was asked to contribute a few memories to be used in the afterword of this volume, and I was glad to, You see Frank wasn’t like your regular dry scholar. He was first and foremost a court jester. His papers skewered the pompous academics and their overblown theories about SF, and at times he had the normally sedate conference rolling on the floor with laughter. But he knew the field better than most, and there was always insight in his papers, underneath the humor. I’ll give you one example. Under the guise of examining the influence of SF on society, he brought a bunch of tabloid papers into the room and proceeded to analyze stories from the likes of the National Enquirer (“Aliens Holding Elvis to Ransom on Moon Base!” “Two-headed Baby Born Talking!” kind of thing.) as seriously as if they were the productions of the Ivy League crowd about legitimate SF stories. I remember laughing so hard that I was choking.

The thing is, there was a strong kernel of truth and wisdom in all the humor. He had powerful things to say even as he was goring all the sacred oxen of the field. He was a kind man, too, befriending a very new and shy writer when the Ivy League attendees didn’t deign to notice she was there. Since the early days, I’ve read a paper or two of my own, and been keynote speaker, but in the beginning I was just a newbie who got lost in the crowd.

The conference isn’t the same without him.

Aug. 6th, 2008

me

BRADBURY, BOOKS, AND LONG BEACH

My local paper, the Long Beach Press-Telegram, has a rather angry letter to the editor from Ray Bradbury today. Apparently, Bradbury has heard that the city is considering shutting down the main library in downtown Long Beach to aid an ailing budget. In fairness to the mayor and council, I should add that the library has some structural problems that would cost a fortune to bring up to codes these days, money the city definitely doesn't have; the mayor has proposed increasing the hours some of the nearby branch libraries will be open in exchange for losing the city center resource. The last council meeting saw a lot of people arguing passionately against the closure, and its fate isn't sealed yet.

Not only that, but a famous used book store – Acres of Books – is being forced to close its doors too, pushed out by downtown redevelopment for yet another strip mall (although the planners say the area is going to honor the arts, but apparently that doesn't include reading). Maybe some of you have visited this enormous and wonderful store when you were in Long Beach for a convention? We organized a very popular expedition to Acres of Books, the last time the Nebulas were here on the Queen Mary. Acres had an inventory of over a million used books. The place was a warren, but the owners always knew their stock and could find a gem for you.

Redevelopment is a different situation than too-expensive repairs, but they have both drawn the ire of Bradbury who points out the role libraries played in his development as a writer. The paper's headline writer tagged the letter, “Is Long Beach at war with books?” And the editorial cartoon under Ray's letter shows a group of children glumly watching the wrecking ball approach the library while another truck shovels up rubble from Acres of Books.

Long Beach has a history of tearing things down only to discover they were historic treasures, only this usually occurs to old houses and churches. Now, I guess, we have to add libraries and used book stores to the list. Maybe Ray's words will give the city fathers (and mothers)  pause. I certainly hope so.