Sunday, July 8, 2012
Summer of Shakespeare continues!
From Star Trek: The Next Generation to Shakespeare. Michael Dorn is appearing in a production of As You Like It this summer in Los Angeles. (This month in fact.) It's a modern-dress version (it's often performed in modern dress) and directed by an associate of the Royal Shakespeare Company. Goldstar has cheap tickets, so I hope to go.
Saturday, July 7, 2012
Buy Shakespeare
Shakespeare iPhone cover |
Labels:
iPhone cover,
Shakespeare-themed stuff,
Zazzle store
Pulp Ink 2 is here!!
Huzzah--thanks to editors Chris Rhatigan and Nigel Bird!! These stories have a horror and a fantastical edge. Buy it here for kindle for just $2.99. Buy the print version here.
Here's what you need to know about it: Pulp Ink 2’s got beautiful killers, visions of the apocalypse, blood-thirsty rats, and one severed arm on a quest for revenge. No half-assed reboots here, just some of the finest writing in crime and horror today.
Featuring stories by Kevin Brown, Mike Miner, Eric Beetner, Heath Lowrance, Matthew C. Funk, Richard Godwin, Cindy Rosmus, Christopher Black, Andrez Bergen, James Everington, W. D. County, Julia Madeleine, Kieran Shea, Joe Clifford, Katherine Tomlinson, R. Thomas Brown, Court Merrigan, BV Lawson, and Patti Abbott.
Here's what you need to know about it: Pulp Ink 2’s got beautiful killers, visions of the apocalypse, blood-thirsty rats, and one severed arm on a quest for revenge. No half-assed reboots here, just some of the finest writing in crime and horror today.
Featuring stories by Kevin Brown, Mike Miner, Eric Beetner, Heath Lowrance, Matthew C. Funk, Richard Godwin, Cindy Rosmus, Christopher Black, Andrez Bergen, James Everington, W. D. County, Julia Madeleine, Kieran Shea, Joe Clifford, Katherine Tomlinson, R. Thomas Brown, Court Merrigan, BV Lawson, and Patti Abbott.
Friday, July 6, 2012
Win the Ultimate Shakespeare getaway!
Airfare to Stratford, Ontario, accommodations and two tickets to three of the Shakespeare Festival's offerings. Details here.
Thursday, July 5, 2012
Feminist Fiction Friday--CJ Cherryh
I started reading CJ Cherryh's books in the mid-70s but somehow (denial is a powerful drug), it never occurred to me that she would now be ... coming up on 70. (September 1, as a matter of fact.) I always figured that she used her initials instead of her full name (Carolyn Janice) because most science fiction writers at the time were men. It never occurred to me that "Cherryh" was not her real last name. According to Wikipedia, she added the silent H at the end of Cherry because her then-editor (Donald A. Wolheim) thought "Cherry" sounded too much like a romance novelist.
Well, nobody mistakes her for a romance novelist now--not after 60 science fiction and fantasy novels, a clutch of Awards (including the John W. Campbell award and a couple of Hugos).
And did you know she taught Latin and Greek after graduating Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Oklahoma and recieving a Master's Degree from Johns Hopkins where she was a Woodrow Wilson fellow.
Cherryh has never pigeon-holed her writing into any specific genre or sub-genre. (In fact, she's gone on record as being very much against that kind of categorizing.) She has written books from alien points of view. She has written books in shared worlds. I am a huge fan of Cherryh's fantasy and the first book of hers I read was the first of the books about time-traveling Morgaine, The Gate of Ivrel. I always thought the time-gates of her Morgaine books were much more interesting than any of the Stargates. I also loved Cyteen, which was a genre mash-up on a grand scale, featuring a cloned scientist trying to avoid the fate of her original.
Well, nobody mistakes her for a romance novelist now--not after 60 science fiction and fantasy novels, a clutch of Awards (including the John W. Campbell award and a couple of Hugos).
And did you know she taught Latin and Greek after graduating Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Oklahoma and recieving a Master's Degree from Johns Hopkins where she was a Woodrow Wilson fellow.
Cherryh has never pigeon-holed her writing into any specific genre or sub-genre. (In fact, she's gone on record as being very much against that kind of categorizing.) She has written books from alien points of view. She has written books in shared worlds. I am a huge fan of Cherryh's fantasy and the first book of hers I read was the first of the books about time-traveling Morgaine, The Gate of Ivrel. I always thought the time-gates of her Morgaine books were much more interesting than any of the Stargates. I also loved Cyteen, which was a genre mash-up on a grand scale, featuring a cloned scientist trying to avoid the fate of her original.
Shakespeare's Top Ten--According to Listverse
Twelfth Night |
Labels:
Hamlet,
Herojax,
Listverse,
Othello,
Twelfth Night
Review of GreenMourning by G. Wells Taylor
A serial
killer called “Pinocchio” is stalking Metro, collecting perfect body parts so
he (or she) can construct a perfect body and be a “real boy.” Pinocchio is
hiding inside the ranks of the “Variant Squad,” an elite group tasked with
protecting the city against a new outbreak of Variant, which in its most
virulent form turns ordinary citizens into skin-eating zombie-type monsters.
And
meanwhile, a billionaire whose personal agenda involves evolving to a new,
Variant-enhanced human 2.0 is manipulating everyone around him to force that
outcome sooner rather than later.
It’s enough
to make anyone go crazy and the people who make up the Variant Squad aren’t the
most solid citizens around. There’s alcoholic Borland who forges a bond with a
troubled orphan who gets under his skin in spite of himself. There’s Beachboy
who numbs himself with sex and drugs and alcohol—“cranking” in Squad parlance.
There’s Hyde, who literally has skin in the game, having lost his epidermis in
the last Variant outbreak. And then there’s Marisol, whose own presentation of
Variant Effect caused her to literally eat part of herself. Singly and
together, these characters are original and memorable, and their interaction is
intense, sometimes hilarious and often truly scary.
As any good
horror novel should be.
GreenMourning is a sequel to G. Wells
Taylor’s novel The Variant Effect, and
while that book was good, this one is great, with every aspect of the story and
characters amped up a notch. The relationship between Hyde and Marisol plays
out in a way that’s breath-taking in its honesty and her “tough love” stance in
the face of his reticence is impressive and admirable. Their interaction alone
is worth the price of the book.
The various
officials who are manipulating events are all very plausible character
constructs, and the goings on at the GreenMourning company are convincingly
conveyed. Taylor knows a little bit about manipulation himself, and he knows
how to whip up his readers with anticipation and mysteries (who IS Pinocchio,
for example) while taking them deep into a story that turns the zombie mythos
on its head.
The novel
ends on a cliff-hanger that will leave readers panting for more. People we like
will die. People we thought we knew will surprise us.
No one is
safe in the world of this book.
And the
Variant Effect is back, and worse than ever.
If you like
your horror cinematic and character-driven, you need to check out GreenMourning.
Labels:
G. Wells Taylor,
GreenMourning,
skin-eaters,
Variant Effect,
Zombies
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