FOGcon Schedule

Dear all,

I’ll be attending FOGcon in the Bay Area of California this weekend (March 7-9th), along with other authors, fans, and members of the community. The Honored Guests are Seanan McGuire, Tim Powers, who are both powerhouse writers and pillars of the community. The Honored Ghost is James Tiptree, Jr. (aka Alice Sheldon), who was one of my favorite writers of feminist SF.

In addition to reuniting with my beloved college and post-college writing group, I’m going to be on paneling and hope to meet some readers and members of the local SF/F community.

Here’s my schedule:

Networking 101 for Writers participant Sat, 9:00–10:15 am Salon A/B
Secrets of the Writing World participant Sat, 1:30–2:45 pm Sacramento
Reading: Brennan, Helms, Underwood participant Sat, 4:30–5:45 pm Santa Rosa

I’m particularly excited about the reading, as the three of us (Marie Brennan, Alyc Helms, and myself) are all member of the aforementioned writers’ group. These folks helped me get my start, and it’s great for us to all now be on programming together as colleagues.

If you see me at the con, please come up and say hello! Meeting new people is one of my favorite parts of conventions.

Attack the Geek on NetGalley!

Engage Shameless Self-promo!

Calling all Geekomancers!

Attack the Geek: A Ree Reyes Side-Quest is now available for request on NetGalley – this is a novella in the Ree Reyes series (Geekomancy, Celebromancy), and is about 1/2 the size of a normal novel in the series. It has the same whacky energy and snappy comedy you’ve come to expect from the Ree Reyes series, with 100% more jokes about Jumanji and classic strategy games.

I hope you’ll check it out, or read when the novella releases on April 7th!

/Shameless Self-Promo

#SFWApro

Attack the Geek in Audio!

I’m incredibly pleased to say that audio rights to Attack the Geek, the forthcoming Ree Reyes novella have sold to Audible!

From Publishers Marketplace:

Audio rights
Michael Underwood’s ATTACK THE GEEK, a side quest novella starring his bestselling heroine Ree Reyes, to Lee Jarit at Audible, in a nice deal, by Sara Megibow of Nelson Literary Agency.

This means we’ll get to continue the Ree Reyes series in audio format, which makes me tremendously happy. I hope we’ll have the audio version out close to the release of the ebook, but that remains to be seen. More about this audio edition when I have it!

The Musical Life

I come from musical people. Not just Musical People (Broadway, etc.), but music people. My parents met doing musical theater, my little sister is likely to study Vocal Performance/Musical Theater at college, I’ve performed in musicals and spent more than ten year in various choirs.

Even though I’m five years out from my last music gig, music still has an incredible impact on me. Even being a writer, music is still the form most likely to get me from emotionally neutral to teary in 60 seconds flat.

I’ve talked before about the fact that I write to music. In fact, music is so integrated into my process that I seldom really feel like I have my head wrapped around a story concept until I’ve settled on at least a small handful of songs that take me to the right mental/emotional headspace.

Here’s some music that’s gotten me moving and kept me writing in the last few months:

Postmodern Jukebox “Die Young”

Daft Punk ft. Farrell Williams “Get Lucky”

Amy McNally Hazardous Fiddle

Grace Potter & The Nocturnals “Stars”

Two Steps From Hell Archangel

2013 Eligibility and Recommendations

Hi all. Because I have a zillion projects that I’m juggling right now, I’m late on the Eligibility Round-Ups for 2013 work.

 

Eligibility

I only published one fiction work in 2013 — CELEBROMANCY, the second in my Ree Reyes urban fantasy series. It is a 2nd in series, but it was written to be accessible to new readers and a stand-alone for folks who don’t like series. It’s available in ebook and the audiobook is performed marvelously by Mary Robinette Kowal.

Mary’s performance of CELEBROMANCY is eligible for Best Dramatic Presentation: Long Form, due to the current interpretation of how audiobooks are handled for eligibility. I’d strongly encourage people to consider their favorite audiobook performances of 2013 when drawing up your Best Dramatic Presentation: Long Form ballots.

I suppose I am also eligible for the World Fantasy — Special Award: Professional for my work as the Sales & Marketing Manager for Angry Robot Books. But in reality, that award should go to someone making more of an impact on the field. I’m still warming up at Angry Robot — my best is yet to come.

My other award-nominable activity is on the fannish side. I am a contributor to the Skiffy & Fanty blog, which is eligible as best Fanzine. I am also an occasional co-host on the Skiffy & Fanty Show, which is eligible for best Fancast.

And my proudest S&F achievement for 2013, if by proud I mean delighted because it was so much fun, is the Skiffy & Fanty Show Torture Cinema episode on Sharknado. Recording that episode included far more laughing and hilarity than the Daily Recommended Dose, and was really what cemented my friendship with Shaun Duke, Jen Zink, and Julia Rios, who I would go on to join in Skiffy & Fanty hostitude. That episode, taken on its own, would be eligible for Best Dramatic Presentation: Long Form. And wouldn’t it be cool to have something not a movie win the Hugo? Super cool. I won’t shill hard for my novel, but I will shill for that podcast episode. It was super-cool.

 

Recommendations

Conveniently, in the latest episode of the Skiff & Fanty Show, I make some recommendations of some of the stuff I most enjoyed and would love to see on awards ballots, so you can hear some of what I have to recommend that way.

 

Trickle-Up Economics? (Rhode Island & more)

This news story via TruthOut caught my interest:

The article mentions Writeahouse, which I’ve blogged about before.

This overall strategy is intriguing, and not just as a part of the creative class this approach is intending to support/use to drive economic growth.

When the details of the PPACA started to become clear, I got a big dose of hope — more support for the arts means more artists living off their art, means fewer artists needing day jobs, means those day jobs go to other people, means the audience for art has more money to support artists.

Programs like this, acting together with the PPACA, could make some serious changes for what it means to be an artist in the USA, and in who can afford to live as a working artist. The easier it is for anyone to make a living as an artist, the more working artists we’ll see, and especially more artists from diverse backgrounds, rather than just artists who have inherited money or have an economic support system to allow them to work without making as much money.

The Thode Island plan is still in proposal stages, and it’s early to see how well facets of the PPACA (Medicare expansion, state exchanges, and plan rebates) will all work in execution, but I’m choosing hope for the moment.

The Kindle Daily Deal!

Hello, world! I try not to do *too* much blatant self-promo, but this is one of those times where I will indulge.

 

Celebromncy

I’m over the moon to share the news that CELEBROMANCY has been selected as a Kindle Daily Deal in SF/F today. And on top of that, if you buy or have bought the ebook, the audiobook narrated (awesomely) by Mary Robinette Kowal is *also* discounted to $1.99. They have Whispersync, so you can jump back and forth seamlessly between the ebook and audiobook.

GEEKOMANCY is still a Kindle Big Deal at $1.99, so you can get both novels for only $4! That’s less than a latte, and way geekier.

I’d love your help in signal-boosting to get the word out. There’s never been a better (or more affordable) time to get in on the Ree Reyes series.

Speculate! Interview with Gregory A. Wilson

Last month, I had the honor of being a guest interviewer over at the excellent Speculate! The Podcast for Writers, Readers, and Fans, talking with Gregory A. Wilson, author of The Third Sign and the forthcoming Icarus.

 

Headshot for author Gregory A. Wilson

Greg is normally a host on the show, but he and Brad have done a two-part series where they, the hosts, take a turn in the interviewee seat. It was a great time, and I’m really happy to have been able to help shed some light on Greg’s project Icarus, which is being made into a graphic novel with comics artist Matt Slay.

Greg and I had talked a bit before about Icarus, and I’m really pleased to see him bringing his vision for the story to life in graphic novel form.

You can listen to the interview here:

And here’s a link to the Kickstarter! It’s reached its initial goal, and now looking at very cool stretch goals.

10 Books That Have Meant Something To Me

Now that nearly every denizen of the internet has shared their 10 books that meant something to them, I’m finally getting to the bandwagon when it’s been stripped and mothballed. But you know, it’s still an interesting meme, so I’m going to take it out for one more spin.

 

Dragons of Autumn Twilight (The Dragonlance Chronicles) by Margaret Weis and Tracy Hickman

I started playing RPGs when I was eight. And around ten or so, I started reading the Dragonlance Chronicles series, quite possibly one of the best-known D&D tie-in series (along with the Dark Elf books).

For me, the Dragonlance Chronicles are the iconic D&D novels. They’re perhaps not the most sophisticated novels, but for a young reader, they had drama, menace, scope, and marvel.

 

A Canticle for Liebowitz by Walter M. Miller Jr.

I read this in a freshman SF&F lit class in undergrad, and was one of the first of 4 years world of mind-expanding science fiction and fantasy novels, including The Female Man, Dawn, The Demolished Man, Perdido Street Station, and more.

A Canticle for Liebowitz put science and faith right up next to one another, shows the cyclical nature of history, and took my appreciation of post-apocalyptic narratives back into text after years of Deadlands: Hell on Earth and video games.

 

A Wizard of Earthsea (The Earthsea series) by Ursula K. LeGuin

While I listened to The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings approximately 1 bajillion times as a kid (as in before I was five), A Wizard of Earthsea was the first epic fantasy novel I read on my own. Reading and loving A Wizard of Earthsea was the reason I was unimpressed by Harry Potter until actually getting into the character relationships, since “school for wizards, chosen one badass screws up as a kid and has to fix things” was old hat to me ever since reading this first of the Earthsea series.

 

Perdido Street Station (aka the Bas-Lag series) by China Mieville

I ended up liking The Scar and Iron Council better than Perdido Street Station, but I read PSS first, so it was the book that cracked open my mind like a psychadelic (having never done psychadelics, I can only imagine). It combined Science Fiction, Fantasy, Horror, and Pulp seamlessly, combined radical politics with some of the most innovative worldbuilding and mind-blistering prose I’d ever read, and I was hooked. Without Perdido Street Station, there would be no Shield and Crocus.

 

Bloodchild and Other Stories by Octavia Butler

I could easily have listed The Parable of the Sower here, a gutwrenching novel about a slow apocalypse, about the power of community, and one woman’s journey and determination to be the guiding force in her own life rather than letting other people control her.

But Bloodchild and Other Stories is kind of cheating, because it provided multiple touchstones for me as a young writer. In addition to the gorgeous and painful stories “Speech Sounds,” Bloodchild, and “The Book of Martha,” the collection gave me the personal essays “Positive Obsession” and “Furor Scribendi,” which were as close as I’ll ever get to sitting next to the late great Ms. Butler and have her teach me about writing directly. I never got to meet Octavia Butler, but I carry her words and her worlds with me.

 

The Power of Myth by Joseph Campbell and Bill Moyers

Along with The Hero With a Thousand Faces, The Power of Myth put me on the path I’m following today. When I entered undergrad, I was convinced that I’d get a degree in East Asian Languages and Culture, focusing on Japanese, and then I’d go work for a Japanese company or a company that did business with Japan (anime import, etc.)

But after recalling that this Joseph Campbell guy was supposedly important to George Lucas in making Star Wars, I picked up the two books in late September of my freshman year. It’s also worth noting that the September in question was September of 2001, and the whole of the US was in a bit of a tailspin after 9/11, myself included. I liked in NYC for three years as a kid, and I remember the 1991 Trade Center Bombing.

So that month, I was in need of something big, something worldview affirming or challenging. And what I found was Campbell. Looking back as an older scholar, I see that Campbell’s syncretism was not only Euro-centric but reductive, but as a storyteller and young person seeking some meaning, a way to Make a Difference, it was life-changing, possibly moreso than any of the other works on this list.

 

Chuang Tzu by Chuang Tzu

When I was in college and designed my individualized major, I realized that I could still get an East Asian Studies degree without taking any more classes than the minor (since I’d already done my 2nd year of Japanese).

One of my main areas of focus was classical Chinese history & culture, which lead me to the Chaung Tzu (also romanized Zhuangzi). Many people are familiar with the Lao Tzu, also known as the Tao De Jing. The Chuang Tzu is a more playful and narrative work of what would become the Daoist tradition. The Chuang Tzu tells many stories about change, about dealing with change, embracing change, and in finding a way through the world. The Chuang Tzu, along with other Daoist texts, had a big effect on me in college, in helping me be centered, to roll with the punches, and to be passionate in pursuing my calling for writing.

 

Zoo City by Lauren Beukes

Zoo City is the first Angry Robot book that I ever read, years before I joined the staff. I’d heard so much praise, even without the Arthur C. Clarke award, that I knew I needed to see what it was all about. Reading the book itself was a revelation, quite literally. It showed me a version of fantasy that I’d never seen for myself before, one that was highly contemporary, subtly futurist, doing the sociological work I usually associated with science fiction, and showed me a part of the world that American literature almost never did, that of economically depressed South Africa. Beukes is a South African writer, and Angry Robot originally a UK publisher, so Zoo City came at me from such distinct and fresh (to me) angles that it was an incredibly powerful read.

 

Anansi Boys by Neil Gaiman

The thing about Anansi Boys that I remember most powerfully is the voice. Reading Anansi Boys felt like settling in at home, then getting a ring at the door to have Neil Gaiman himself turn up for tea and then tell me a story. I wrapped the voice of that book around me like a blanket, and was carried along by the skill of a master. Gaiman is, for my money, one of the best live readers in the SF/F genre, and his ability to bring his stories to life through performance is an ongoing inspiration for me, as well as his top notch Storyteller chops, drawing upon traditional oral storytelling traditions (that’s my interpretation, at least). Gaiman is the kind of Capital-S-Storyteller I want to be – finding the right medium and vessel for each story, trying out many different worlds, media, and format, but always focusing on the story, on making each tale emerge through the power of voice and of finely crafted Storytelling.