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Loc on NASFA Shuttle Vol. 29 No. 10 (Mike Kennedy, ed.) [Nov. 14th, 2009|05:04 pm]

lloydpenney
Dear Mike and NASFAns:

Thanks for sending me a .pdf of the October Shuttle. Good to see it’s on the website now. In the meantime, I will get a quick loc together so you can stick it at the end of the November Shuttle, to be ready real soon now.

Now that my conventions are done for the year, too (we spent the first weekend of November in Rochester, New York for Astronomicon 11 – had a great time there), we must take care of other important fannish stuff like buying our Reno memberships, and voting for TAFF. Must get it done now, everyone! (CUFF nominations just opened for the 2010 CUFF trip from Eastern Canada to the CanVention, which will be in Winnipeg. Yvonne suggested that we run again…hmmmm…)

The Sunburst Awards committee does a fairly poor job of letting its readers know about the winners…I didn’t know about who won until I read it in another US fanzine. (I know three of the judges…don’t assume fandom doesn’t care, folks.) It’s still awards season, so keep notice of the hardware wars coming. (If you got the reference, you’re as old as I

The locol…Hi, Sheryl! Nope, didn’t win the Aurora in Montréal, but boy did we have a good time hobnobbing with the Canadian pro hoi polloi. Handing out a Hugo is a real highlight of my fannish career.

Anyway, must head off to dinner…time to go and freshen up for a meal with friends. Take care, send me that November Shuttle, and I’ll get on that, too.

Yours, Lloyd Penney.
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GUFF candidates for 2010 announced [Nov. 14th, 2009|09:23 pm]

dougs
The candidates in the 2010 GUFF race were just announced, here at Novacon 39.

The candidates are:
- James Shields ([info]lostcarpark)
- Douglas Spencer ([info]dougs)

More later, possibly Monday.

http://www.taff.org.uk/guff.html
http://pcwww.liv.ac.uk/~lister/guff/
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Hope Mirrlees, Lud-in-the-Mist (1926) [Nov. 14th, 2009|12:18 pm]
fringefaan
[Tags|]



I'm bereft! I didn't want this book to end! Even worse, it's a book I wish I had written. It seems like the type of book I would write if I only had the talent and gumption -- dreamy but full of precise details; homey but forlorn; arch but warm-hearted.

In a previous post I came close to pitching it as Dunsany meets Peake. More specifically, it's The King of Elfland's Daughter meets Gormenghast. Like Dunsany's equally great 1924 novel, it is about a human town on the border of Faerie, and about the place of magic and imagination in a commonsense, bourgeois world. Like Peake, it is full of eccentric, oddly tormented characters with eccentric names such as Endymion Leer and Polydore Vigil, Mumchance and Portunus. Yet of course Mirrlees is a far different writer than Dunsany or Peake, and the comparison shouldn't be taken too far.

One difference from Dunsany's book, for example, is that we barely see Fairyland (as it is called in Lud-in-the-Mist), while Dunsany takes us across the border a number of times. Mirrlees instead creates a geography in which a river from Fairyland, the Dapple, runs through the town, and the mischievous inhabitants of the land beyond the Debatable Hills try to sneak their magical influence past the bans placed on them by the burghers who have displaced the fairy-friendly aristocracy of old. The Mayor of Lud-in-the-Mist, Nathaniel Chanticleer, is haunted by a strange, magical-musical Note that he heard in his youth, and the plot of the novel is driven by the threat that Fairyland magic poses to his family, particularly his son. (His daughter, too, but one of the odd structural aspects of the book is that her experience is mostly treated as secondary until the very end, where it suddenly erupts into a heart-wrenching resolution.) There is a murder mystery at the heart of the book as well -- a cold case that happened thirty years in the past. The various plot elements intersect at a cozy farm on the border of Fairyland where the murder happened and where Master Nathaniel's son is taken to rehabilitate after ingesting fairy fruit.

Another difference from The King of Elfland's Daughter (and a lot of other great fantasy novels, including Lord of the Rings and Little, Big) is that it's not about the dying away of magic. It's almost the opposite, in fact, and this may reflect a slightly sardonic take on magic on Mirrlees' part. It is explicitly called a form of delusion many times in the book (possibly playing off the common etymology for "fairy"), and her bourgeois characters are nothing if not deluded. Thus their very attempt to banish magic is a delusion, or form of magic, itself. But Mirrlees also compares magic to narcotics, dreams, and to imagination itself, and she does not see modernity making an end of those things, far from it. So while she (the daughter of a wealthy sugar merchant) has a slightly wicked love of the banished aristocracy, she does not share Tolkien's yearning for a return of the old order. Duke Aubrey, the last aristocratic ruler of Lud-in-the-Mist, who is said to have vanished into Fairyland, is a complex figure, both noble and rapacious. The burghers who replaced him are more magical themselves than they care to recognize.

Well, I guess that's enough for now. I do, however, want to comment on the edition of the book that I read, which is from Cold Springs Press. I thought it was an incredibly poor production. Not only are there far more typos than is acceptable, but there were at least two places where a paragraph break came in the middle of a sentence. That's just embarrassingly shoddy work. The introduction by Douglas A. Anderson also contains at least one questionable statement, when he says that Mirrlees lived to see the 1970 reprint of her previously neglected book in the Ballantine Adult Fantasy series. While it's true that she was still alive, from what I've read elsewhere Lin Carter only made a perfunctory attempt to contact her, since the book was in the public domain. It's very possible, therefore, that the British Mirrlees was unaware that her magical novel had found new life and a new audience in America.
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The Communist Manifesto illustrated by Cartoons [Nov. 14th, 2009|10:03 am]

willshetterly


via Louis Proyect
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Eastercon 2011 News [Nov. 14th, 2009|04:52 pm]

ceemage
[Current Location |Nottingham]

The buzz on teh interwebs is "rumours of an Eastercon bid for 2011 at Novacon." Well, given that the flyers are up on many walls, I would say that Illustrious is a bit more than just a rumour. Many of the names on the flyer are reassuringly familiar, including Chris O'Shea and both Dowds.

ETA: Website is http://www.illustrious.org.uk/
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Novacon news [Nov. 14th, 2009|03:02 pm]

ceemage
[Current Location |Nottingham]

Busy at Novacon helping to sort out some of the webcasting (see http://tuckerverse.livejournal.com passim, as Private Eye would put it). Have also realised that I have yet to have lunch.
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(no subject) [Nov. 14th, 2009|10:02 am]

maiac
[Tags|]

November 14 is Paper Day.

On this day in history:

Go to The List )

Skating Mouse
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Flu/swine flu vaccines [Nov. 14th, 2009|03:22 pm]

surliminal
I'm not on the list for free flu jabs (grump: despite fact I teach 1000s of grotty students and get flu every year :( and was thinking of making the effort this year to actually go pay for both seasonal and piggy flu jabs.

Does anyone know where is doing this? My GP surgery was completely unhelpful, as was local Boots.. I have a vague recollection of Asda? But nothing on Google.

EDIT : isn't it a bit fucking stupid that they spend x million on people telling everyone to get swine flu jabs, then do the usual restrictions on who gets it (fair enough, NHS can't waste money etc) and NOT spend any money at all even telling their GPs surgeries where people could go and soend their OWN MONEY on them??? Ah the market economy!
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Playing Hobb with the book chains [Nov. 14th, 2009|08:27 am]

supergee
[Tags|]

One undocumented feature of the Intarwebs is that the memory of a financially unsuccessful book can linger like Abu Hasan's fart. Fortunately there is a way of dealing with that. The book chains enforce the banishment for insufficient commerciality but are either too forgiving or not resourceful enough to follow the malefactors through identity changes. Thus, Sarah Monette has stepped into one of the last remaining phone booths and emerged as Katherine Addison.
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New reason to hate the Patsies [Nov. 14th, 2009|08:03 am]

supergee
[Tags|]

The governor of Massachusetts said Friday there is no connection between big donations to him and the Democratic Party from the family that owns the New England Patriots and the state's support for development across the road from Gillette Stadium.
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Syphy [Nov. 14th, 2009|06:36 am]

supergee
[Tags|]

The network that chose to be named after venereal disease has decided that John Clute's column panders to the unimportant literate demographic and thus can be dumped.
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(no subject) [Nov. 14th, 2009|05:30 am]

supergee
[Tags|]

Happy birthday, [info]irismoonlight and [info]zpdiduda
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Image of the Day [Nov. 13th, 2009|07:35 pm]
fringefaan


-- Gaslight (1944)
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Quote of the Day [Nov. 13th, 2009|06:38 pm]

fringefaan
[Tags|]

YOU MAY, PERHAPS, have wondered why a man so full of human failings, and set in so unheroic a mould as Master Nathaniel Chanticleer should have been cast for so great a role. Yet the highest spiritual destinies are not always reserved for the strongest men, nor for the most virtuous ones.

But though he had been chosen as Duke Aubrey's deputy and initiated into the Ancient Mysteries, he had not ceased to be in many ways the same Master Nathaniel of old -- whimsical, child-like, and, often, unreasonable. Nor, I fear, did he cease to be the prey of melancholy. I doubt whether initiation ever brings happiness. It may be that the final secret revealed is a very bitter one ... or it may be that the final secret had not yet been revealed to Master Nathaniel.

And, strange to say, far from being set up by his new honours, he felt oddly ashamed of them -- it was almost as if he was for the first time running the gauntlet of his friends' eyes after having been afflicted by some physical disfigurement.


-- Hope Mirrlees, Lud-in-the-Mist (1926)
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Twitter tweetiness [Nov. 13th, 2009|08:03 pm]

rarelylynne
Random thoughts from my day:

  • 08:52 This morning's dream before waking: Criminal Minds: The Musical Episode. *snerk* #fb #
  • 09:05 RT @michaellorg Torchwood.org: Doctor Who DVDs on sale today! bit.ly/nZKGP #fb #
  • 09:08 RT @sally_j Who turns a rant about deceptive marketing practices into a lesson abt preserving photos? Me. -> tinyurl.com/yhdsq6h #
  • 09:10 @smithcollege WOOO HUBBARD!!! (We always did have the awesomest kitchen/dining room). #
  • 09:15 Happy Friday! John Barrowman does "Single Ladies": bit.ly/2RNtlm (you're welcome) #
  • 11:53 Heading home to pack for WindyCon. See you on the other side, unless I see you there. #fb #
  • 13:29 Someone on #Gallifreybase was talking about cosplaying the cover of #Chicks Dig Time Lords @ChicagoTARDIS. Wow. I have no words. #fb #
  • 13:33 @spastasmagoria if she does it, Jennifer wants to do a group photo with contributors after the panel. #
Automatically shipped by LoudTwitter
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Atmospheric river, take my mind [Nov. 13th, 2009|03:20 pm]

fringefaan
[Tags|]

Cliff Mass reports: "The numerical forecast models are consistently calling for a major pineapple expresss/atmospheric river event starting Sunday and extending through early Wednesday." Prepare the life rafts!
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Drinking from the fountain of youth [Nov. 13th, 2009|02:06 pm]

athenais
[Tags|, ]

Drink

Done with my pet sitting for the day. Gonna try to figure out how to use QuickBooks as I have a copy now from a sales rep who was eager to let me try out QB for Macs. I do need this sort of thing. I'm a lousy accountant.

Another thing I need to do is keep a mileage log, no matter how tedious it is. It's just one of those things I've been estimating and it could backfire on me. So, I have a nice new notebook in the car. Yay.

I've been posting photos of fandom in the 80's to Facebook. My friends in Britain are suitably wowwed. For myself, I'm just croggled at how slim we all were. With lots and lots of hair! And so young, bebe, it breaks my heart. A lot of the photos are from 1984, before the loss of dear friends like Dave Clements and Terry Carr, before having to move seven times in one year, before my best friends acquired drug habits. 1984 was an incredibly special year, as was 1987. It's so weird to publish the photos now, twenty-five years after I was twenty-five. I don't feel old, I feel like a different person.

If I could pick a year to revisit, I think I would choose 1984 with all the drama, joy, heartache and momentous first meetings it contained. Even if I couldn't change a thing. Especially if I couldn't change a thing.
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New blog post [Nov. 13th, 2009|02:28 pm]

skzbrust
So, it's starting to look as if the automatic cross-posting from my blog to LJ is never going to be fixed. For now, I've decided to use a BFMI approach. New blog post here. Any discussion should take place there.
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I am amazed at our fandom sometimes, in a good way. [Nov. 13th, 2009|01:38 pm]

rarelylynne
[Tags|, , ]
[Current Location |home]
[Current Mood |amazed]

Over on GallifreyBase, a fan mentioned wanting to cosplay the cover of Chicks Dig Time Lords.

Wow, just wow.

I'm so chuffed, I have no words.

I've just friended this person--if they want their handle known over here, they can comment and I'll name names.

In the meantime, if she does do it, I'll be sending her one of my author copies of Chicks. Because, you know. WOW.

ETA: [info]mrsdrtennant has won the internets today.

Oh, and the CDTL cover girl? We've named her Verity.
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Oklahoman kids are smart after all [Nov. 13th, 2009|12:22 pm]

frankwu
You may recall my post and follow-up a little while back about a poll that showed that less than 3% of Oklahoman secondary school kids would pass a citizenship test - and only 23% knew that George Washington was the first President. That poll was done by Strategic Vision (which has been accused of right-wing bias) and sponsored by the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs (OCPA). The numbers seemed rather not credible - statistician Nate Silver accused them of just making up numbers. Also, the follow-up post in this lj showed (in a self-reporting poll) that 90% of my lj readers got 9 or 10 correct).

Well... Oklahoma state representative Ed Cannady (rep'ing OK's 15 house district) has done what I wanted to do - recreate the poll with the same questions, using secondary school kids from his own district.

He found that they were quite a bit smarter than the Strategic Vision/OCPA poll lead us to believe. He polled all the seniors (inc. the special ed kids) in the 10 schools in his district (325 kids in all). The average score was 7.8 right out of 10, and 98% of them knew that Washington was the first President.



The lack of intellectual honesty on the part of Strategic Vision really gets me - did they just make up numbers? Seems like it. The way that Hannity and Friends just make up numbers about how many people show up for tea party demos. Or birthers just make up "facts" about the lack of documentation of Obama's birth certificate. OK, I'll stop there.
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