I’m on Kindle

Mere days before I flit off to LA to live a week like I’m something special, I realize I am special.  I’m in a book on Kindle! Yeah, yeah, lots of people are, even people who aren’t in a real book…stop trying to burst my bubble.  I’m on the biggest electronic reader in the world.

For the bargain price of five bucks ($5.00), you can read “Leech Run” and all the other stories in Zero Gravity.  Big savings over the paperback price of $15.29.  There’s something spacial about having a story in tangible print on paper that I can keep on a shelf and point to.  There’s also something special about having my story distributed through cutting edge technology.

I suspect I may end up on the Kindle again when Writers of the Future XXV! comes out. Ooh, I just checked and found something cooler!!

How pretty is that?  It’s available for pre-order through Amazon. People are pre-ordering me!  *giggles like maniacal school child*  They aren’t advertising it for Kindle yet, but I bet it will happen after the first surge of paperbacks sell…but wait.  Previous years’ anthologies aren’t available on Kindle.  Huh.  I’ll ask about it next week to see why.  But a print book is still great.  They did an audio book of volume 24 that was excellent; I’d love to see that happen this year.

I guess I should go to sleep now.  I have that real job thing in the morning.

For those interested, I’ll try to throw up a note here every day or so while I’m in LA.  Nothing long winded until I get back.  Now go buy me on Amazon!

Writers of the Future XXVI authors

One of my current goals as a writer is to improve my online visibility and enhance all other forms of self-promotion.  I can only suspect that my fellow WotF XXVI winners have similar goals.  Thus I have taken strides to increase all our visibilities by making our websites and blogs easier to find via this handy set of links.

If anyone else wants a copy of these links to post on their website or blog, feel free to take them.  Or I’d be happy to send you the code for easy insert (not that it’s complicated…if it was, I wouldn’t be able to do it).

WotF vol. XXVI

1st Quarter
1st Place Tom Crosshill
2nd Place Alex Black
3rd Place K.C. Ball
2nd Quarter
1st Place Jason Fischer
2nd Place Simon Cooper
3rd Place Jeff Young
3rd Quarter
1st Place Brent Knowles
2nd Place Adam Colston
3rd Place Brad Torgersen
4th Quarter
1st Place Laurie Tom
2nd Place Scott W. Baker
3rd Place Lael Salaets

More reviews from WotF XXV

I finally got around to reading a couple more stories out of WotF volume XXV.  A few months back I posted reviews of three stories: Emery Huang’s Gold Award story “Gardens of Tian Zi”, Jordan Lapp’s “After the Final Sunset, Again”, and Gra Linnaea’s “Life in Steam”.  All three were enjoyable, “After…” probably being my favorite of the three.  Still, I had a feeling I wouldn’t have selected any of them as the Gold Award winner if I was asked (which of course I wasn’t).  So my search continues.

It seemed only sensible to read the other first place quarterly winners, those being the only ones that were actually up for the gold.  That led me to Mathew S. Rotundo’s “Gone Black” and Donald Mead’s “The Shadow Man”.

Let me start this pair of mini-reviews by saying these, too, were nicely executed stories that I enjoyed and couldn’t wait to turn the pages.  Still, “Gone Black” felt a touch disappointing.  I always felt a step removed from everything: the action, the character, the setting.  Like I was watching it from inside the automated cars from Jurassic Park, everything was there, but there was plexiglass and bars between us.  This wasn’t completely bad since the “prisoner” was indeed separated from everything, but I don’t think I was supposed to sympathise with the prisoner that way.  Maybe I felt a lack of intimate insight.  Or maybe some technique early in the story set me that way and I never shook it.  Maybe it was me (like a slush reader having a bad day).  Whatever it was, it overshadowed the story for me and left me feeling unsatisfied.

The alien wasn’t terribly imaginative or developed.  Most of the development went into the setting’s situation, a quarantined space outpost in a war harboring a POW and incubating a sense of paranoia among its crew.  This was effective, though a sense of things from before the prisoner arrived could have made the change more effective.  I’m not sure what part of the story made this a first place winner.  Again, it wasn’t a bad story.  I enjoyed it, cared about the main character, even sympathized with the mob and the prisoner.  I just wanted another degree out of it, in all those things.  Every person turned out to be who they were expected to be… It’s like my mother’s spaghetti: I enjoy it, I eat every bite, even get seconds, but I don’t particularly crave it.

Then there was “The Shadow Man”.  That was a story I would order off the menu.  It was a great twist on a phenomenon I was already intrigued by, the permanent shadows of people captured by the atomic bomb in Hiroshima.  Factor in a little yakuza, a little haunting, a twist ending…quite excellent.

Actually, the twist ending was a bit much for me.  It did answer some questions that had nagged me from the middle of the story,  but they were questions I had already had to dismiss in order to remain in the story.  (A bit vague, to be sure, but I’m avoiding spoilers where I can.)  While it answered questions, I don’t think it was hinted at enough through the story.  I think the story could have ended without the twist and lost little (other than the author’s vision).  I was also confused as to why the POV had to switch to Four Fingers in the middle of the story.  The shift wasn’t that bad and was executed cleanly, but when I spend half the story in one head, I expect to remain there for the duration.  An earlier switch could have made it less jarring.

Still, “The Shadow Man” had nicely carved characters (I especially liked the Rice King), an interesting premise, and well-conceived plot arc.  So far, I think it would have been my choice for Gold.  For what it’s worth; it’s all a matter of taste and mine seems to lack some of the sophistication of true SF connoisseurs.

I haven’t found a bad story in the book yet.  Nor have I found one that left me scratching my head and wondering if I’m an idiot the way some stories in best-of anthologies tend to.  That’s what I really like about WotF anthologies, the stories are good reading for the common reader.  No PhDs or MENSA required.  Just nice, down-to-earth speculative entertainment.  Ahh.

Now if I could just get my story in one.

I now return to pretending to wait patiently for Joni’s call.

A few review-ish type things

It being Halloween time, horror movies seem to be en vogue.  That and my wife loves horror movies.  Not me.

I did love the first Saw movie.  Brilliant, people fighting for their lives in Jigsaw’s twisted games.  Then they made another.  And another.  Now the well is dry so they send the bucket down and pull up the mud, bottle it, and sell it like it’s going to satisfy thirst the way the well did in the beginning.

Yes, I saw Saw VI yesterday.  It wasn’t a terrible movie in and of itself until you look at the characters.  To be fair to the writers, some of it was the acting, particularly the brooding, mouth-breathing replacement for the series’ long deceased killer (Costas Mandylor).  To be fair to the actors, some of it was the writing.  There are still clever ideas in the script, but more of them are simply brutal and sadistic.  The last minute or so — involving the new killer — is fairly clever and sets them up to do something different with the next film.  Will they?  Who knows.

I am mainly disappointed withhow far the movie has diverted from its original warped morality.  For instance, there is a part of the movie where a man must choose which two out of six employees will live.  Another where he picks one of two to live.  In the first movie, everyone was supposed to have a chance and they were responsible for their own survival.  More and more, the Saw franchise has gotten away from this.  Twisted morality was what made the first film such a viral success.  With the morality lessened, it’s just twisted.  What’s unique about that?

The style and composition of the movie are also very different in ways that lessen my enjoyment.  If I ever sit through the film again (not likely), it will be to tally the number of flashbacks.  Most are flashes to previous movies.  It has become a soap opera, not a film.  The attempts do not make this movie a stand-alone film.  You have to have seen the others — all of the others, by my calculation — to appreciate what’s happening in the plot.  What’s more, some of the flashbacks actually weaken the morality of prior movies.  I understand a movie based on a dead character’s ideas is going to have flashbacks.  A house with cats will have a litterbox, too, but that doesn’t mean it has to reek  of urine.  It was exhausting to try to keep up with the twists and turns and doubletalk.  Just rip someone’s head apart and get it over with.

In summary, I didn’t like it.  (Did you get that?)  Not the worst film I’ve seen this year, but in the lowest quartile.  C-.  It was good enough that I didn’t feel like I flushed my money away, but bad enough that I wonder which doors in that hallway would have been better investments.

While I’m at it, I’ve been reading WotF XXV (lots of Roman numerals today).  Only three stories so far: Jordan Lapp’s “After the final Sunset, Again”, Emery Huang’s “Gardens of Tian Zi”, and Gra Linnaea’s “Life in Steam”, those being the three that really leapt out at me based on outside experience.  Jordan’s a friend, Emery is a message board acquaintance, and Gra is…out there somewhere, so these will not be scathing reviews.  They wouldn’t be anyway since all three stories were quite good.

The question that most entertains me is “which of the three was the best?”  It should be an obvious answer since Emery won the Gold Award, Jordan’s story placed first, and Gra’s was a third place finisher. Apparently that means nothing.  I found “Garden of Tian Zi” a bit derivative with the secret society man with super-speed and super-strength…  Still, the setting and backstory and such were quite unique (frogs for computers?) and interesting.  But it didn’t scream cream-of-the crop to me.  “After the Final Sunset, Again” was more out of left field (where all great ideas come from) and had me revetted through the first two-thirds.  The Phoenix idea was inspired and the Phoenix charactyer was breathtaking.  The ending blindsided me and left me staggering, muttering “what?”  I think I needed just a touch more twist to it resonate in my palate.  Nonetheless, a great story.  As for “Life in Steam”, I was thrown by the ancient-theory-as-science in the beginning, but I suspect that’s a favorite steampunk ploy, reminiscent of Moorcock.  Once I got into things and met Wood, I was swept away bby the storytelling.  A bit more poetic than I’m used to.  On the downside, the protagonist made the rest of the story almost moot since it was obvious where this was going; I feel like there might have been more interesting ways to get there.

All three stories were fantastic, but none flawless.  (When’s the last time you read a flawless story?  Really?)  Their quality gives me great hope for the rest of the volume.  I intend to select my own “Gold Award” (Bear Claw Award?) winner (not that they’ll get anything but some comments here) and I’ll be surprised if it ends up being any of these three.  I think a strong, surprising ending is what I look for most in a story (probably because endings give me so much trouble), and I didn’t feel like any of these endings wowed me enough.  But who knows.  Congratulations to all three writers on their excellent stories; I expect great things from all three careers to come.

-Oso