Long List Anthology of listed 2015 Hugo works, $1

After last year’s Hugo debacle, David Steffen decided to put together an anthology of stories that appeared on the 2015 Hugo long-list. The Long List is currently on sale for one dollar.

One of these is my novella, “Grand Jete,” which was nominated for the Nebula Award and is one of my favorite things I’ve ever written. It’s about robotics, Judaism, death, and ballet.

If you’re intrigued, here’s more information on the book:

Long List anthologyThe Hugo Award is one of the most prestigious speculative fiction literary awards. Every year, supporting members of WorldCon nominate their favorite stories first published during the previous year to determine the top five in each category for the final Hugo Award ballot. Between the announcement of the ballot and the Hugo Award ceremony at WorldCon, these works often become the center of much attention (and contention) across fandom.

But there are more stories loved by the Hugo voters, stories on the longer nomination list that WSFS publishes after the Hugo Award ceremony at WorldCon. The Long List Anthology collects 21 tales from that nomination list, totaling almost 500 pages of fiction by writers from all corners of the world.

Within these pages you will find a mix of science fiction and fantasy, the dramatic and the lighthearted, from near future android stories to steampunk heists, too-plausible dystopias to contemporary vampire stories.

Spend a single dollar here.

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The most annoying strawberry.

annoying strawberry

Strawberry: “Why so blue?”

Drawn with my finger, in a Pictionary-like program I used to have on my iPad.

I give no apologies.

Posted in Drawing | 2 Comments

“The List” – People on the “sexual offenders” list for acts committed when they were children

DuBac is on the sexual offenders list for something she did at age ten.

One morning during her junior year, DuBuc returned to her room from psychology class to find a yellow Post-it on her door: “We know you’re a sex offender. GET OUT OF OUR DORM. You’re not wanted here.” She tore it up, and told no one. A few days later, as she sat in her room working on a paper for class, she heard a ping from her AOL Instant Messenger account. The sender was anonymous. “We know you’re a sex offender,” DuBuc read. “Get out.”

She no longer felt safe in the dorm. But in order to rent her own apartment she’d need a decent income. She applied for jobs that interested her—working with the homeless, helping out an urban ministry—without success. Then McDonald’s, Burger King, and Subway turned her down because of her offender status.

That’s a fairly mild anecdote, from this excellent and unsettling long read by Sarah Stillman.

The sex-offender registry, and any law that can be sold as protecting minors from sexual predators, are a clear case of democracy failing. The sex-offender registry, and the relative ease of passing any law, as long as it can be sold as protecting minors from sexual predators, are clear cases of democracy failing. It’s so easy for a politician to curry favor with voters by voting to “protect children” – and requires too much courage for a politician to resist the tide, or to try to repeal bad laws already in place. Aaaargh.

These laws are driven by citizen-activists, who often have personal reasons for their activism. Which is great – but those activists may not understand the consequences of the laws they advocate.

Back in 2006, she helped bring a Florida father, Mark Lunsford, to Capitol Hill, to tell the story of how his daughter, Jessica, had been kidnapped, raped, killed, and buried by a man with a long history of abusing children. Together, they lobbied for the passage of Jessica’s Law, in Florida and beyond. But, soon afterward, Rumenap learned that Lunsford’s eighteen-year-old son had been arrested in Ohio, for heavy petting with a fourteen-year-old. Now the teen faced inclusion on the very registry that his father had fought to bolster in his murdered sister’s name. “When these laws started getting implemented and enforced, we didn’t realize what would happen,” Rumenap told me. “Now here we are, stuck asking, How do we solve this problem?”

Even when kids are clearly guilty of sexual abuse – and many simply aren’t guilty of anything that should include prison crime – the system is entirely unprepared to deal with them in an intelligent or reasonable way. The “treatments” kids can be forced to often themselves amount to a bureaucratically inflicted form of sexual abuse.

On the other hand, democracy sucks, but so does everything else. It’s not as if the example of the Vatican gives me much confidence in non-democratic systems’ ability to do the right thing about child sexual abuse. At least with a Democracy, there’s some hope for reform (and there are some activists and hopeful trends covered in the article). All it requires is citizens and politicians willing to advocate for people on the sex offender list.

Posted in Prisons and Justice and Police, Rape, intimate violence, & related issues | 4 Comments

Open Thread and Link Farm, Awful Typography Edition

LARKIPUR , KASHMIR, INDIA - AUGUST 12: Kashmiri Muslim women shout anti Indian and pro Kashmir freedom slogans as they mourn during the funeral of Bilal Ahmad Bhat, 23, a civilian who was allegedly shot dead by Indian paramilitary Border Security Force (BSF) on August 12, 2015 in Larkipur, 35 km (21 miles) south of Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian administered Kashmir, India. Hundreds of Kashmiris participated in the funeral of Bhat who was killed by the Indian paramilitary BSF after they allegedly opened fire on the protestors who were protesting against the killing of two Lashkar-e-Taiba (Army of the Righteous), one of the largest and most active militant organization operating in Indian administered Kashmir, militants in an gun battle in Rakh-e-Lajura village of south Kashmir district on 11 August 2015. (Photo by Yawar Nazir/ Getty Images)

This is an open thread. As well as discussing pretty much anything, you can also use this thread to self-publicize your stuff, or to publicize someone else’s stuff.

  1. What Do Campus Protesters Really Want? – The New York Times
    Less than 10% ask for someone to be fired; 80-90% ask for things like more non-white faculty and better support for Black students. “Surprisingly rare, too, in the data are the buzzwords often highlighted in articles about campus activism: “microaggressions” appears in only 15 percent of petitions, and “trigger warning” isn’t used once.”
  2. Even Lumberjacks Deserve Lotion: Gender in the Locker Room – The Toast
    Awesome essay, thanks to Grace for the link.
  3. An attempt at a polite discussion between a Sad Puppy and an Anti-Slater
    Beginning with a post by Sad Puppy Stephanie S, and then a response by Standback. I think Standback’s response is flawed – he makes it sound as if the anger at Sad Puppies was entirely about motivations and not at all about substantive objections to slates, which I think is not true – but it’s nice to read two people attempting at respectful dialog.
  4. The best book covers of the year, according to The Academy of British Cover Design.
    Some of these strike me as wonderful; others I wouldn’t glance twice at.
  5. Why Hamilton is Not the Revolution You Think it is | HowlRound
  6. Calculating US police killings using methodologies from war-crimes trials
    In the end, the number the author comes up with is uncertain (or, “not a true estimate”). But the methods are still interesting.
  7. Recent Study Shows Black Women Working in STEM Often Mistaken for Janitors or Secretaries
    And an illustrative anecdote.
  8. 101 Funniest Screenplays List
    I don’t know why I find lists like this so interesting, but I do. Lots of good films on this list, as well as a few I thought were awful. (Wedding Crashers? Really? And how could they include that while leaving the much funnier Ruthless People off the list?)
  9. Day care in the United States: Is it good or bad for kids?
    A readable summary of some of the research. Short answer: It’s complicated.
  10. Should Rhodes stay or should he go? On the ethics of removing controversial statues | Practical Ethics
  11. A better way to gauge how common sexual assault is on college campuses – The Washington Post
    Instead of surveying 6000 students and getting low participation rates, survey 600 students and pay them $50 each for a high participation rate.
  12. Obsession with Regression: Racial Discrepancies in Police Shootings
    “These disparities are large, statistically significant, and and consistent with previous analyses — black Americans shot by police are more than twice as likely as white Americans shot by police to be unarmed, and more than 50% more likely to not be attacking.”
  13. Make Buses Dangerous
    The argument is that buses are so much safer than cars, that any safety features on buses which reduce ridership have a net effect of decreasing overall safety. Fun verging on nonsensical.
  14. The Trouble with Transporters – YouTube
    Scotty and Chief O’Brian are mass murderers!
  15. Decision-Making under the Gambler’s Fallacy: Evidence from Asylum Judges, Loan Officers, and Baseball Umpires
    Scott Alexander describes this well: “Just as a gambler who’s had a long string of losses might be more likely to expect a win next time, so a judge who’s had a long run of innocent people will be more likely to find the next person guilty.”
  16. Speaking of… So Scott Alexander Says I’m A Jerk.
    Because I created that “types of antifeminist” cartoon. I can live with this.
  17. Noisy Poll Results And Reptilian Muslim Climatologists from Mars | Slate Star Codex
    Why poll results showing that 5% of some group believe [some ridiculous thing] shouldn’t be taken at face value.
  18. Syrian refugees in Canada got housed in same hotel as VancouFur furry convention and the children loved it | Americas | News | The Independent
  19. A letter in the Financial Times says that voting for Trump could be like voting for Hitler in 1933, but continued gridlock would be worse. WTF?
  20. Men of Their Times – Uncanny Magazine
    Jim Hines on Lovecraft, Baum, and the limits of the “he was a product of his time” excuse.
  21. How Both Sides of BDS Debate Get Oberlin Anti-Semitism Wrong – Opinion – Forward.com
  22. Muslims vote for a Jew! Some journalists make strawman of Sanders’ win in Dearborn — GetReligion
  23. Someone on Ebay is auctioning one of my earliest comics.
    This is one that was printed via copy machine. It was done with my friend Paul Winkler, and also with the “Brian” who occasionally posts in comments here. My cartooning back then was terrible, but it is a genuine rarity, in that Paul and I only printed like 50 copies.
  24. Inside the Protest That Stopped the Trump Rally – POLITICO Magazine
    “The plan worked better than they’d ever imagined. Then the trouble began.”
  25. Supercut of all the times Trump has called for violence at his rallies
  26. US Latinos seek citizenship so they can vote against Trump | The Times of Israel
    It’s possible that this will turn out to be the biggest long-term effect of this year’s election.
  27. 60 Stunning Photos Of Women Protesting Around The World

awful-typography

Posted in Link farms | 38 Comments

New to the Net: “Monstrous Embrace”

Continuing my theme of reporting late on my news–for the first time, “Monstrous Embrace” is online in print, courtesy of Lightspeed Magazine.

The first line came to me in one of those strange, clear moments:

The_Perilous_Compassion_of_the_Honey_Queen_by_Carrie_Ann_BaadeI am ugliness in body and bone, breath and heartbeat. I am muddy rocks and jagged scars snaking across salt-sown fields. I am insect larvae wriggling inside the great dead beasts into which they were born. Too, I am the hanks of dead flesh rotting. I am the ungrateful child’s sneer, the plague sore bursting, the swing of shadow beneath the gallows rope. Ugliness is my hands, my feet, my fingernails. Ugliness is my gaze, boring into you like a worm into rotting fruit.

Listen to me, my prince. Tomorrow, when dawn breaks and you stand in the chapel accepting your late father’s crown, your fate will be set. Do nothing and you will be dead by sundown. Your kingdom will be laid waste, its remnants preserved only in the bellies of carrion birds.

There is another option. Marry me.

The voice on this story was driving. It forced me rapidly through the story. Although I did a lot of revision later, I wrote the whole first draft in a few fluid hours. That’s rare enough for me to savor.

You can also find an audio version at PodCastle.

Posted in Fiction, Mandolin, My publications | Comments Off on New to the Net: “Monstrous Embrace”

Catholic Schools Are Forcing Employees To Sign Away Their Free Speech

lego-burning-the-heretic

From the New York Times:

Part of the focus here and elsewhere appears to be online sharing of photos and personal opinions. A number of morality clauses in other dioceses express such concerns, specifying that teachers may not post anything on Facebook or Twitter that contradicts church teachings.

Archbishop Cordileone said that teachers who crossed doctrinal lines would be dealt with “on a case-by-case basis.” Asked if a teacher could post photos on Facebook of her gay son’s wedding, he said that “if someone was upset and reported it,” then “the person with the Facebook page would have to be talked to.”

So these “morality clauses” are being used to discipline, and even fire, employees who state the “wrong” opinions on their personal social media. ((Although this post focuses on the free speech issues, of course it goes further than that – these same Catholic employers are also trying to control other aspects of their employee’s private lives, and in particular their employees sex lives and who their employees marry.)) There’s an ongoing problem in the US of employers using their power to chill and punish employees for their off-work speech, but I think this is the worse I’ve ever seen; not only are there thousands and thousands of employees being threatened this way, but they’re forced to sign “morality clauses” pre-emptively signing their right to free speech away.

(Couldn’t the employees just refuse to sign? Sure – as long as they can risk not having any income. In Oakland, three teachers were fired for declining to sign away their free speech rights.)

From CNN:

…last year, a dean of students at a Cincinnati Catholic high school was let go after supporting same-sex marriage on his private blog.

And a female gym teacher at a high school in the Columbus, Ohio, diocese was fired after publishing the name of her partner in an obituary column announcing her mother’s death. She sued and the diocese settled.

Could these people be any more open about their contempt for free speech and their desire to punish dissent? It’s like they think that by accepting a paycheck, their employees have signed away their entire lives.

After decades of gradual improvement, this problem has gotten worse in the last few years because of a Supreme Court decision. Jack Jenkins at ThinkProgress writes:

…the Archdiocese will likely defend the firing by claiming the so-called “ministerial exception,” an older legal framework that originally allowed religious institutions to have full control over who they hire and fire for ordained clerical positions. In 2012, however, the U.S. Supreme Court expanded the category to potentially include virtually any position a religious institution deems “ministerial” — irrespective of whether the job requires an employee to be ordained, such as a music director position.

This expansion has led to a rash of firings — and subsequent controversies — at Catholic institutions across the country, with LGBT schoolteachers and even food pantry workers being let go simply for publicizing their same-sex relationships.

The Supreme Court decision, Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church & School v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, seems reasonable on its face – the teachers really did seem to be partly ministers. They had a different job title than teachers who were secular employees, had to take extra training in religious instruction, and led prayers as part of their job. Why shouldn’t they be considered ministers for purposes of the ministerial exception?

Well, now we know why – because some Catholic institutions hate free speech and will eagerly leap through any possible loophole the Supreme Court creates. They’ve even been renaming already-existing teaching jobs (including those held by non-Catholics) “minister teachers” in order to be able to crush the free speech of their employees.

This is the leading edge of a general movement among the right-wing, including some of their leading intellectuals, to enshrine discriminating against queers into the law. ((From the linked article: “What troubles opponents most is a passage that does not mention weddings; in fact, it does not limit what actions it would apply to. The passage would shield religious groups from being penalized for acting ‘in accordance with a sincere religious belief’ about same-sex marriage, and lists many things that could qualify as religious organizations, including schools, charities and retirement homes. Critics said that could mean denying married gay people housing, employment, social services and schooling. The Missouri law does not ban discrimination against gay or transgender people, but a handful of local ordinances do; the proposed amendment would supersede elements of those.” So much for the rights of local governments that conservatives say they believe in.))

When employers use their power to police and punish employee’s off-work speech, what’s created is an environment in which only people who don’t need their paychecks to live can afford to speak out. But free speech shouldn’t be a luxury that only the well-off can afford.

One last point: It would be really nice to see the folks who have made a cottage industry of yelling “THE END OF FREE SPEECH!” when leftist students protest or Twitter bans someone for harassment, also expressing  concern about people being told by employers to sign a loyalty oath and agree not to say anything the employer disagrees with.

I don’t expect that they will. But it would be nice.

Continue reading

Posted in Free speech, censorship, copyright law, etc., Lesbian, Gay, Bi, Trans and Queer issues, Same-Sex Marriage | 8 Comments

Favorite Fiction Recommendation: “This Strange Way of Dying” by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

I was occasionally, informally reading slush for Giganotosaurus at the time this story came into the inbox. I read Moreno-Garcia’s version of a maiden and Death, and recommended the delicate prose and imagery to Ann Leckie who eventually made the purchase.

It begins:

Creative commons, from wellcome, see information in file name.Georgina met Death when she was ten. The first time she saw him she was reading by her grandmother’s bedside. As Georgina tried to pronounce a difficult word, she heard her grandmother groan and looked up. There was a bearded man in a top hat standing by the bed. He wore an orange flower in his buttonhole, the kind Georgina put on the altars on the Day of the Dead.

The man smiled at Georgina with eyes made of coal.

Read here.

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Alice’s Tea Party, pottery project in progress

When I was a kid, I took art lessons for a number of years in the garage of the professional artist who just happened to be living in our neighborhood. I’m not great at drawing, but I enjoy working with my hands immensely, and I’m usually happier if I’ve got a regular hobby going that involves making or drawing art.

For a while, that was jewelry-making, and I may post some of my jewelry and sketches online at some point. I got overexcited about making necklaces symbolizing fairy tales and myths which was neat, but expensive, and took a lot of creative energy. At the moment, I’m mostly doing art and comics on my iPad with my fancy new stylus.

I’m also painting pottery. Not making pottery. Painting it. You know, like at the pottery painting places. I go to the Color Me Mine near where Mike works. You buy pieces of unfired pottery and then paint them using on-site supplies.

My current project is a three-part teapot:

three part teapot

The top part is a lid. The middle part is a kettle, and the bottom part is a cup.

I decided to do it up with scenes from the original illustrations of Alice in Wonderland. (Alice was on my mind because of my recently published story about the hatter and hare having a love affair.) On the lid, I’m doing Alice being assailed by cards:

alice cards

And on the middle, I’m doing the tea party.

alice tea party

On the bottom, I’m doing the Cheshire cat, but he’s not so much Tenniel’s as a blend of different interpretations of the Cheshire cat, painted purple. I don’t have any photographs of that part of the kettle yet anyway, so moving on.

I’ve finished the lid and had it fired. The firing process is interesting because of the way that it erases a lot of the shading, while at the same time making things look polished and vibrant. I often like the look of the unfired pottery better than the look of the fired pottery, but that might be because you can make the unfired version look however you want; the firing will still be a surprise. (A relatively predictable one, yes, but it makes some changes.)

The lid, unfired:

Alice lid spinning unfired

The lid, fired:

Alice lid spinning

I did a sketch of the tea party, but I’m still coloring it in. (You can see where I am marking off and painting a yellow tablecloth.) For some reason, the gif we tried to take didn’t work. It left out some angles which makes it kind of trippy. I added in a couple stills:

Alice pot spinning Alice pot showing Alice Alice pot showing hare and alice

I’ll post updates as the work continues. Alas, I am slow and perfectionistic about this, as I am about everything else. 😉

 

Posted in Fan art, pottery | 4 Comments

FogCon: March 11-13

Mike and I will be at FogCon this year from March 11 to March 13. I’m not on any panels, but feel free to come bug me for a chat.

In March, I will also be attending AWP in Los Angelos, and ICFA in Orlando. In May, Mike and I will be at the Nebulas in Chicago. Those are our only convention plans this year. (Unless someone wants to invite me as a guest…? 😛 )

For the first year of FogCon, the committee decided to drum up some attention by throwing a party at WisCon where they served drinks in cups overflowing with dry ice. (Because *fog*con.) I admit I opposed the plan because everyone was already overwhelmed, and I was worried we’d all just freak out and collapse into puddles, but everything went well. And the cups were all foggy. Also, it gave my husband, Brin Schuler, and Paul Goodman (all non-writer spouses of writers) a chance to go be nerdy and engineery in a space with absolutely no writer chat.

If your curious,here’s a video of what misty drinks look like. They are using dip-in sticks, but at WisCon, we used two layers of cups, with the outer one containing the dry ice. (Mike wonders whether you can get a similar effect to the sticks with something like a tea diffuser–definitely something to test for safety first!)

I didn’t watch the video all the way to the end, just enough to see that they put in sticks of fog. So if it turns out to be the creepy Ring girl at the end, I apologize for getting you killed by ghosts.

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A Silly Interview with Tina Gower, newly published debut novelist!

tina-croppedMany thanks to Tina Gower for agreeing to do a silly interview with me!

Tina’s bio has a typical writery buffet of eclectic experiences: “Tina Gower grew up in a small community in Northern California that proudly boasts of having more cows than people. She raised guide dogs for the blind, is dyslexic, and can shoot a gun or bow and miraculously never hit the target (which at some point becomes a statistical improbability).”

She also has a bunch of writing achievements, but this *is* a silly interview. (Though I admit it begins with me asking about her writing, and a picture of her book.

Later I bug her with questions about dogs and hats, though.

*

ebook1) The heroine of your book specializes in statistics as an actuary for the accidental death department. Have you worked in jobs that require that kind of statistical analysis? If not, what appealed to you about writing such a character?

I’ve never worked as an actuary or any kind of risk assessment except for the anxiety of always thinking about the worst case scenario in my head. I have, however, worked with statistics as a school psychologist where I had to calculate student test or IQ scores on the bell curve or create measures. While in graduate school, we had to take a lot of psychometrics and statistics to complete the degree. Seriously, statistics is the most fun of all the math classes. I’m pretty sure 😉 I don’t know why, but a crime fighting actuary was about the funniest combo I could think of, but the more I imagined it, the more I realized how cool it could be. And Kate Hale is a great character.

2) How did you decide to blend crime fiction with urban fantasy in this way? What does fantasy allow crime fiction to do that doesn’t appear in realistic crime novels?

I’m a fan of mystery crime stories AND I love the paranormal. I think it adds another layer of the types of cases that can be solved. Also, that the people involved could have an abnormal-out-of-this-world skill.

3) Your website focuses heavily on your novel, but you’ve written short stories as well. Is the short form something that interests you? (I know for a lot of novelists, it just feels like the thing to do at first.)

Writing short fiction has always been a fun way to clear my mind after a long project. Although I don’t write short very often anymore, I still get ideas that are only going to present well in the short form. It’s a project that takes a lot less time from start to finish than a novel (in theory!) and I love reading other short fiction by friends or other writers I admire. It’s a way to sample someone’s style, too.

4) You used to raise guide dogs for the blind. Personally, I’ve raised a few litters of kittens for adoptions. It’s fun, but also stressful — in the case of the kittens, partially because finding homes for them is so difficult. I imagine it’s still rough raising animals to give away, though. What was it like for you?

It’s not easy. The emotional difference between someone who has pets to keep and the person who raises services animals or shelter fosters to give away isn’t different at all. I still miss them. I think about all of them every day. I’ve put a lot of time, energy, and love in each dog. Then when they’re perfect and you can’t imagine what life was like without them, you send them off for more training. Eventually, hopefully, if all goes right with training and physicals, they’re paired with someone who really needs them. The fact I’m doing it to make someone’s life a heck of a lot easier cuts the edges of loss, but only slightly.

The hardest is when someone says “Oh, I could never do that! I love my animals too much.” Because somewhere in there is the idea that we don’t love animals to be able to “give them up” when that couldn’t be further from the truth. Secondly, I think everyone has it in them to sacrifice for the better good of humanity. I really believe that.

5) In your author photo, you are wearing a hat. Are hats underappreciated?

Heck. Yes. Everyone should have a hat that fits their personality perfectly. If I had a talk show, pairing people with hats would be the highlight. You get a hat and you get a hat. Hats for everyone!

6) Aside from your forthcoming novel Romancing Null, do you have any other upcoming projects you’re excited about?

Great news! Romancing the Null isn’t forthcoming anymore! It published on Amazon just a few moments ago right before I started typing this. As far as upcoming projects, I have books two and three of the same series (The Outlier Prophecy) written and in various stages of editing. Book two should be coming out in a few weeks. Book three closer to late April or May. I plan to write more books in that series this year along with a few projects that are being shopped around to traditional houses with my agent. And I do have some short stories I want to write, too. I like having lots of projects going at once, so I can convince myself I’m a real writer.

Posted in Interviews | Comments Off on A Silly Interview with Tina Gower, newly published debut novelist!