Fast Forward 2

A Host of Pyr Reviews & a Podcast!

Okay, playing mad catch-up:

A podcast with Joe Abercrombie on the Dragon Page. Their description: “This week, Mike, Summer and Mike talk with Joe Abercrombie about Last Argument of Kings,the third book in The First Law Trilogy. We talk about the characters and the more contemporary feel of their speech, the more intimate nature of relationships and intrigues, and about how the buzz about these stories surround the writing style of the battle scenes.”

Meanwhile, Patrick Rothfus, he of The Name of the Wind,raves about Joe Abercrombie (and Brandon Sanderson) on his blog: “The books are good, really good. They pulled me in. Well-developed world. Unique, compelling characters. I like them so much that when I got to the end of the second book and found out the third book wasn’t going to be out in the US for another three months. I experienced a fit of rage, then a fit of depression, then I ate some lunch and had a bit of a lay down… I will also say this. This isn’t some cookie-cutter fantasy. It’s refreshingly realistic, but also very gritty and dark. It might even be fair to call it grim. You have been warned.” Of course, I should point out, the books are all three available in the US now…

Discover Magazine on Fast Forward 2: “It’s a great collection, with a good mix of stories ranging from hard science fiction to near magic realism. Stand outs for me included ‘True Names,’ a novella by Doctorow and Benjamin Rosenbaum set in a post-post-post-human universe, and ‘An Eligible Boy,’ written by Ian McDonald, that takes place in the mid-21st century India that McDonald has used as the backdrop for his 2004 book River of Gods.” Our friend and frequent commentator Rene also has a nice review on her blog, Little Bits of Everything: “This is a fantastic anthology that I look forward to rereading. I sincerely hope that Fast Forward becomes an annual anthology; the first two volumes are incredibly strong.”

Over at Adventures in Reading, Joe Sherry reviews Mike Resnick’s Starship: Mercenary. I was struck by a particular comparison he made – “This may be an odd comparison given the length and success of Mike Resnick’s career, but Starship: Mercenary is a fun military science fiction novel that fans of John Scalzi’s work will want to jump right into. There is a certain comparison and similarity in style.” This struck me because I read the manuscript for Mercenary within a month of The Last Colony and thought the same thing.

Also a positive review of Stalking the Vampire at Monsters & Critics: “…features offbeat humor, amusing dialog and a zany cast of characters that is sure to entertain the most jaded sci-fi fan and spark plenty of interest in an emerging series.”

And here Intercontinental Ballistic Discourse discusses a host of Mike Resnick works, including the extant Starship series: “I’ve got to say: wow! The characters are engaging, the story is fast and entertaining, and the plots are believable. My favorite form of science fiction is loosly described as military science fiction, or sci-fi that takes place around a starcraft or some form of governmental space navy and this series started off that way and branched out to something even more.”

Whew!

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Joe Mallozzi on Fast Forward 2

Stargate: Atlantis executive producer/writer and all around good guy Joseph Mallozzi has some nice things to say about my latest anthology, Fast Forward 2:

Long-time visitors to this blog are no doubt familiar with editor Lou Anders through his (all-too) infrequent visits here, and his previous SF collection, Fast Forward: Future Fiction From the Cutting Edge, which was a past book of the month club selection. Well, in Fast Forward 2, Lou has assembled a nice group of stories form the likes of Jack McDevitt, Nancy Kress, and Dr. Who’s Paul Cornell. As is the case with most anthologies, I didn’t like everything. But most of what I did like, I liked a lot. Stand-outs for me included Paolo Bacigalupi’s powerfully dead-on commentary on the challenges of maintaining journalistic integrity in a market increasingly driven by hits and eyeballs (“The Gambler”), Ian McDonald’s delightful tale of a young man in future India who relies on an Hindu A.I. to give him game (“An Eligible Boy“), Mike Resnick and Pat Cadigan’s trippy account of a world in which the borders between dream and reality blur (“Not Quite Alone in the Dream Quarter“), and Jack McDevitt’s amusing and ultimately heartfelt tale of a reluctant A.I. named George. Special mention should also be made of the book’s cover compliments of our pal John Picacio.

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Paul Cornell’s Short Story From FF2 Free Online!

In support of Fast Forward 2,we’ve put the entirely of the opening story from the anthology online at the new Pyr Sample Chapters page. (If you are viewing this inside the frame of the Pyr site, you might right click to avoid opening a window in a window).

“Catherine Drewe” by two-time Hugo nominee Paul Cornell is a tale of a Bond-like character in an alternate history where the Great Game never ended and the British Empire – along with the other world powers – extends its reach throughout the solar system.

Paul says of the character:

“I like to think I’m writing in the tradition of Ian Fleming’s Bond novels (not the movies) but I’m trying to stay away from pastiche, and instead hope to explore the same debates about masculinity and Britishness he did, while perhaps coming to different conclusions.”

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Darkness is Overrated

Paul Cornell is interviewed at io9.com today. He talks about writing for Doctor Who (in the book, webisode and television mediums), Marvel comics (Wisdom, Captain Britain and MI-13, Fantastic Four: True Story), and radio (he’s adapting Iain Banks’ “The State of the Art” for BBC Radio 4).

And he even gets a nice plug in for a few SF anthologies:

So what are you working on now that you’re most excited by?

At the moment, I’m most excited by the fact that I’ve got a story in all three continuing original SF short story anthologies (non-themed, that is). It’s a complicated boast, but I like it. Two of the stories are in a series, the “Jonathan Hamilton” stories, which are in the style of Ian Fleming (the books, not the movies) and are vicious espionage tales set in a world where… well, I know what the difference to history is, but I haven’t told the audience entirely yet. At any rate, the ‘great game’ of political balance in Europe continues, and the great European nations have colonised the solar system, while continuing a delicate cold war against each other.

Those two stories, ‘Catherine Drewe’ and ‘One of our Bastards is Missing’ are in Fast Forward 2from Pyr and the Solaris Book of New SF 3, respectively. The other story, ‘Michael Laurits is: DROWNING’ is in the second Eclipse collection, which is I think is going to be launched at Calgary this year. I love SF short stories, and I’m hoping to get into doing more.

And yeah, “Catherine Drewe” is going to blow you away.

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Boxers don’t get good by avoiding being hit.

Fantastic writing advice from Paul Cornell here in this SFX interview.

“Boxers don’t get good by avoiding being hit.”

Paul is an old friend, a great guy, a fantastic writer, a two-time Hugo nominee, a superstar in Britain and around the world for his contributions to Doctor Who, a new star at Marvel comics, and his “Catherine Drewe” is the story I chose to open Fast Forward 2with, for reasons you will all understand shortly.

Enjoy!

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Fast Forward 2: "True Names" Podcast

I’m very happy to announce that my anthology Fast Forward 2 is set for an October 2008 publication date. I delivered the manuscript to my production manager just a few weeks ago. I think it’s even stronger than Fast Forward 1, which is saying something since FF1 saw seven stories reprinted nine times in four “Year’s Best” anthologies!

One of the highlights of the second volume will undoubtedly be a 32,000 word collaboration between Benjamin Rosenbaum and Cory Doctorow. “True Names” is a tale of galactic wars between vast, post-Singularity intelligences that are competing to corner the universe’s supply of computation before the heat-death of the universe. The title is, of course, a homage to Vernor Vinge’s famous story of the same name. Writing on his blog, Rosenbaum says that “This story came out of a conversation at the Hugo Loser’s party at Worldcon 2002 — the part about ‘the second law of thermodynamics as the ultimate party-spoiler in a transhuman utopia of self-spawning consciousness’; it acquired shades of Jane Austen, Voltaire, megamillion year ideological warfare, gender theory, coming-of-age story, and musical theater along the way.”

For those wanting a preview, Rosenbaum and Doctorow have begun podcasting “True Names” here on Cory’s site. Now here’s a peak at the rest of the TOC:

Introduction: The Age of Accelerating Returns – Lou Anders
Catherine Drewe – Paul Cornell
Cyto Couture – Kay Kenyon
The Sun Also Explodes – Chris Nakashima-Brown
The Kindness of Strangers – Nancy Kress
Alone With An Inconvenient Companion – Jack Skillingstead
True Names – Cory Doctorow & Benjamin Rosenbaum
Molly’s Kids – Jack McDevitt
Adventure – Paul McAuley
Not Quite Alone in the Dream Quarter – Mike Resnick & Pat Cadigan
An Eligible Boy – Ian McDonald
SeniorSource – Kristine Kathryn Rusch
Migration – Karl Schroeder and Tobias S. Buckell
Long Eyes – Jeff Carlson
The Gambler – Paolo Bacigalupi

Excited?

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