3. Couldn’t make it to WorldCon? You can watch the entire Hugo Awards Ceremony on UStream. Live Streaming Api (The Campbell award, with first bonus astronaut, is at 34:00. Best Dramatic Presentation, long form, with second bonus astronaut, is at about 1:08. Hey, I like astronauts. Fiction awards start at about 1:24.)
That’s it for now. Must put post-its on whiteboard, draw connecting lines, and muse further.
… but down with the most miserable cold/flu/whatever.
It actually hit Sabine the last day of the convention, which resulted in us staying in Kansas City one extra day, since she was in no shape to even ride in a car for an eight-hour drive, much less share the driving (we drove cross-country, remember?).
And during that extra day — yep, I caught the same damn bug.
Fortunately, it hit me not quite as hard, so between the two of us, we managed to slog our way from motel to motel back across the country, setting aside all plans for exploring the sights on our exciting road-trip. We finally reached home Thursday night and collapsed in a DayQuil/NyQuil haze until, basically, now.
Still got it, but I thought I’d let people know that we made it home safely.
I do have stuff to say about the convention — but later, sorry, not now. Must dose myself with even more NyQuil and sleep soon. I’ll just say that I met many old and new friends, all my panels went well, and I actually had people show up for my autographing!
Also, many of you made a point of speaking to me and letting me know how much you liked my work — Thanks so much for that! It means a lot.
… With no opportunity to post (I’m writing this on my iPhone, while waiting for my autograph session to start). Â I’ll fill you in later– but note my Twitter feed, over there in the next column on this page. There’s a chance I might tweet now and then, and you can see it here without even having a Twitter account, if you like
Still in Chicago, where I’ll be until just before the con, staying at a dubious Airbnb place with a crowd of people, but mostly hanging with Ada Palmer (of Too Like the Lightning fame), and Jo Walton (of fame fame), and various others who are equally excellent (but who might not want me to plaster their names all over the Internet, so I am being discreet).
Yep, I’m older. But still here, so: WINNER!
No actual time to post much, but here are some quick pix:
Heron hunting in the Beaver Marsh at Cuyahoga National Park.
Just so’s you know. Visiting friends and new acquaintances, taking in the scene and the culture, for a week before Worldcon.
My updated Worldcon program:
Living with Cancer
Wednesday 14:00 – 15:00, 2206 (Kansas City Convention Center)
$£%* Cancer. Our panel talks about the experience of cancer, how it affected their writing and lives, and how we can support the fan community.
Janet Freeman-Daily, Rosemary Kirstein, Ms Pat Cadigan (M), Priscilla Olson
(For those of you just joining us, I’m doing fine now; the cancer exeperience took place a couple of years ago, and I am cancer-free!)
Writing Major Minor Characters
Wednesday 16:00 – 17:00, 2210 (Kansas City Convention Center)
Do you ever read a book and come across a character that is so wonderful you want to know everything about them, yet you know you never will because they aren’t the main character? Such characters add immeasurably to our reading experience and yet they are very hard to write. This session discusses how to do just that.
Michelle (Sagara) West (M), Julia Mandala, Connie Willis, Rosemary Kirstein
(I’ve been told that I’m good at this.)
Reading: Rosemary Kirstein
Thursday 13:00 – 13:30, 2203 (Readings) (Kansas City Convention Center)
Rosemary Kirstein
Autographing: Rosemary Kirstein, Larry Niven, Robert Silverberg, Jeff Sturgeon, Connie Willis
Friday 15:00 – 16:00, Autographing Space (Kansas City Convention Center)
Rosemary Kirstein, Larry Niven, Mr Robert Silverberg, Jeff Sturgeon, Connie Willis
(I expect this to be an exercise in humility. I shall observe the long lines for the other authors, and acknowledge their superiority. It will be good for me. Plus: ebooks, hard to autograph. )
Transcending the Genre
Sunday 13:00 – 14:00, 2209 (Kansas City Convention Center)
Critics still use the term “transcending the genre,” but what does that really mean? Do we want to completely transcend genre, or are we experiencing snobbish reactions rooted in fannish history? When Zadie Smith talks about reading Octavia Butler, or Marlon James says his next novel will be “an African Game of Thrones”? do we really want all the genre walls to disappear?Â
Dr. Tom Easton, Rich Horton, Jennie Goloboy (M), Rosemary Kirstein, Teresa Nielsen Hayden
(Teresa is part of the crowd I’m hanging with this week… She’s so damn smart!)
I keep waiting until the end of my day to write a blog post…
La-di-da, I say to myself, about time to go home, oh, I think I’ll just knock off a quick blog post...
Hours later:
Well, hours later it’s hours later.
Because there I am, tweaking the pics, checking on the links I’m using, looking up cool things, researching that last snappy bit of wisdom, to make sure I don’t make a total idiot of myself as I impart it. (You cannot make a paper airplane hover between two fans. Can Not.)
Let’s see if I can do this in under an hour, shall we?
Do you ever read a book and come across a character that is so wonderful you want to know everything about them, yet you know you never will because they aren’t the main character? Such characters add immeasurably to our reading experience and yet they are very hard to write. This session discusses how to do just that.
Time - Wednesday 16.00
Hard Fantasy – Does it Exist?
“I’m going to write about what Tove Jansson called “the lonely and the rum,” the unschoolable and ungroupable, those strange and shaggy literary creatures that have no ilk or kin and that mathematically can be contained in no set smaller than the set of all sets contained in no other sets’.  (Micheal Swanwick). Does Hard Fantasy have a place in fantasy literature, and how should we approach it?
Friday, 19.00. 2206
“Transcending” the Genre
Critics still use the term “transcending the genre,” but what does that really mean? And what does that mean for fandom – have we gone mainstream? Or are we experiencing snobbish reactions rooted in fannish history? What happens to the discourse when Zadie Smith talks about reading Octavia Butler, or Marlon James says his next novel will be “an African Game of Thrones”? At the end of the day, do we really want all the genre walls to disappear? Do we want to completely transcend genre?
Time - Sunday 13.00
Of the above, I think I’ll have the most to say about the Major Minor characters. It’s something I love doing.
In addition to those, I’ll also be on an panel about living with cancer (if you’re just joining us, I spent 2014 and most of 2015 being treated for breast cancer, with great success).  I don’t know yet what time that will take place.
I think I also requested a Kaffeeklatsch, but I can’t recall if I requested a reading! Ack! It would be good to know, as I have to decide what to read!
Although Worldcon itself is over two weeks away, I’ll be traveling or otherwise occupied for much of the run-up to it, so I’m already having little stress-fits about the prep. Well. All will work out, in the end, I’m sure.
Last weekend I spent some time visiting pal and fellow Genrette Laurie J. Marks and her wife Deb Mensinger, in their vintage bungalow, which they are in the process of lovingly restoring to its early-20th-century glory. Deb knows what she’s about, being a professionally trained preservation carpenter.
Ravens figure largely in Laurie’s Elemental Logic series.
Laurie also knows what she’s about, as couple of hours of conversation about our respective current projects resulted in me helping her solve one of her plot problems, and her helping to solve the basic major problem I was wrestling with in Book 5 - so that now I am currently mostly wrapped up in solidifying that central fix, and setting the book onto the path of righteousness, AMEN.   After which will merely remain the writing of it.  Which sounds like the hard part, but trust me, it’s not.
Meanwhile, I’m in the middle of reading Jo Walton’s, Necessity, which takes some unexpected and rather fun turns.  But I do occasionally want to kick certain gods in their butts. Not namin’ any names, here.
Well, Readercon is over, and my annual hang-out-with-pals-after-Readercon is also over…
Cool things from Readercon:
A reading by Ellen Kushner, from the next season of the serialized multi-author novel, Tremontaine.
Here’s a nifty trailer for the series:
The reading was followed by Ellen’s Kaffeeklatsch — which included as a treat, a guest appearence by Ada Palmer, singing her famous (in fandom) song, “Somebody Will,” which always makes me cry.
Also, I attended a reading by Delia Sherman, from her upcoming YA novel, The Evil Wizard Smallbone. I’ve heard bits of the book before, and it’s always a delight. Delia has such a graceful hand with tales of magic.
Comes out in September, but you could pre-order it now. Yes, you could.
Also: a reading by Jo Walton, from her work in progress, Poor Relations, which I enjoyed immensely. By laughing a lot. It was that kind of book, and she read it with vim!  (You can’t buy it yet — but the final volume of her Thessaly series, Necessity, is just out this week. )
And finally, a reading by one of Readercon’s guests of honor, Catherynne Valente, whose writing you know I love. I can’t recall the title — it was a work in progress, I think – but it was dark and rich and grim and lovely. (There’s an excerpt from it in the Readercon program, which I have at home where I am not, and not in my office, where I am.)
Hm. I seem only to have attended readings by women this time! Not by intention: Daryl Gregory was listed on the original program, but left off of the updated one. Apparently he could not attend after all. Alas. I do love hearing him read.
The panels…
Well.
I didn’t go to many, but it seemed to me that each one I attended (and the one I was on), rather quickly turned away from books, and toward TV shows and movies as examples of whatever subject was on hand for discussion.
And I found this disappointing. The thing about Readercon, the blessed thing about it, is that it has traditionally been focused on books. There’s no film track, no gaming, the dealer’s room sells nothing but books. In theory it’s supposed to stand in opposition other conventions, which more and more deal with movies, TV, gaming, and the fandom that surrounds them. Not that those aren’t wonderful things, and sources of real art — But Readercon has always been the exception to the trend.  That was its charm, and its attraction.
But this time, not so much. I don’t know what to make of that.
As well as official convention events, there was plenty of meeting and re-meeting of friends, always a glad thing. (I’d detail more but… this is running rather long, and getting late. Perhaps I’ll expand on events in a later post?)
And after Readercon, as is traditional, I spent a few days with fellow authors Ann Tonsor Zeddies (aka Toni Anzetti, but not any more), and Geary Gravel.  A splendid time was had by all, including much deep talk far into the night on the front porch, one reading of a work in progress, the inevitable champagne, many delicious meals, and walks around interesting places.
A denizen of the forest.
The Bridge of Flowers, in Shelburne Falls, MA.
Authors!
So. All that is over, I’m back home and unpacked, and my laundry is done, and I’m tucked into my office.
Next on the agenda: Ack! Worldcon in August. Preceded by a week in Chicago… Yikes, only two and a half weeks before all that.
Better get back to wrestling with the Muse. Who is a slippery gal, but I do believe I have a weight advantage, there.
Still hunkered down, either working, or working at working, or working the peripheral tasks.  I need to get as much done as I can before various upcoming events take me away from my office and into the actual world of people who I did not invent.
Some of them are quite nice, of course, and I’m looking forward to seeing them! But time seems to tick away far too quickly lately. July and August are already chewed-into.
First up is Readercon, running from July 7 – 10.  I have exactly one panel:
Friday July 08
1:00 PM   5   Why Women Become Protagonists .Gwenda Bond, LJ Cohen, Rosemary Kirstein, Hillary Monahan, Navah Wolfe. In a 2015 essay about portrayals of female protagonists in crime fiction, Sara Paretsky writes, “Detectives like V.I. came to life in a time of bravado, when my peers and I… wrote out of a kind of cockiness: we’re doing a job because we want it, we like the work, no one can stop us. Today, the female hero often has been brutally assaulted… or suffered some other form of serious trauma. It’s as if the only acceptable reason for a woman to embrace the investigative life is to recover from damage, or get revenge for it—not because she takes pleasure in the work, and comes to it as a free spirit.” Let’s explore the reasons that female protagonists decide to protag, and discuss the many ways to motivate them other than assault and trauma.
I’m not sorry to have only one panel this time out, and I don’t mind the time slot — but it might be unfortunate for anyone who works a day-job, and would only be able to make it to Readercon from Friday after work until Sunday. I suspect I’ll also have a Kaffeeklatsch, but the schedule for that has not yet been settled. If the klatsch is not on the weekend, I’ll make sure to set aside some time to be at some locale, available to meet anyone who cares to show up! I’ll post the time for that, when I know it, here, on Facebook, and on Twitter (where I am @rkirstein).
This entirely in addition to persons to whom I’ve already promised hang-out time — you know who you are.
After Readercon I generally hang out with pals Ann Zeddies and Geary Gravel for a few days.  So, that’s about a full week of July in use for non-writing.
And then: August!  I’ve got three whole weeks of commitments! Including WorldCon. You can see why I’m trying to get as much done now as possible.
Of course, I am much encouraged by the most recent meeting of the Fabulous Genrettes, which could not have gone better, in my opinion.  It’s nice when you think you’ve done something especially well, and other people agree! The encouraging feedback was great — but so was the constructive feedback.  A fine time was had by all.
In other news:
The roof of my office is a pretty good place from which to watch fireworks.  Not as good as actually being under them, but the high ones did manage to clear the trees that stood between me and them.
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