četvrtak, 30. travnja 2015.

Astra, the LARP

I do not LARP or play games much, unless it is with my five year old son. I have no idea why – I figure I am just lazy and much prefer to sit and read a good book. But occasionally someone comes up with something I would so totally get into. The idea behind Astra that Ivana Delac and Vesna Kurilic, both accomplished Croatian genre authors with day jobs in the culture and public education field and experienced game masters, came up with would have been my first LARP had they not asked me to be one of the small behind the scenes helpers. I am not sorry as I am sure I can bully them into making more of these. Also, I think it would be wonderful world if I could send my kid to school to learn like this.



Astra was a twelve days long, pervasive live action roleplaying game which took place in Zagreb, Croatia, October 15 – 26, 2014. It was designed and run by two game masters – Ivana Dela? and Vesna Kurili?, both accomplished Croatian genre authors with day jobs in the culture and public education field. Both have been active on the European LARPing scene since 2011 and have so far participated in designing and running three local LARPs in adition to Astra. These were: an intense chamber psychodrama LARP The Cabin, a prison LARP ?uza and a single-day sequel of Astra, held in the city of Rijeka under the name Astra: Apokrifija.


Astra was a pervasive game with elements of espionage and research on literature, with a playable plot relying heavily on the supernatural. It had a strong ARG  (alternate reality game) aspect, which is uncommon in Croatian LARPs. Most of the story had been kept secret until the game started (and continued so well into the game), the characters were pre-written by the organizers and the full number of participants – 28 active players, 2 GMs and a larger number of outsiders as supporting cast and crew – have been revealed only after the end of game. The main storyline revolved around the lives and works of three famous Croatian authors of the 20th century – novelist and journalist, Marija Juric Zagorka, Croatian Nobel award nominee and famed children’s author Ivana Brlic Mažuranic and acclaimed poet, Antun Branko Šimic.


What was it all about?


All of the characters in Astra were ordinary people applying for an internship at the Astra Agency, a discreet service which offers information – for the right price. The Agency had been monitoring information in the public domain and had selected a few potential candidates who seemed right for the job. The testing the candidates was what remained and that was done in the form of daily tasks. Some were some based on codes and cyphers, while other required creative activity (writing, drawing, sculpting…) Others yet revolved around the exploration of Zagreb, both online and in the real, physical world. There were also a couple of flashmob-based group assignments, i.e. public readings from works of the three authors.


Astra lasted for 12 days straight and 24 of the initial 28 players participated, in some way, until the very end. Loads of creative and informative material was produced: stories, poems, artwork, music, videos, research reports, statues, lanterns… All of it, as well as lovely ingame photos, are featured on the LARP’s website.


For every successfully completed task, players received a piece of information, often hidden in another puzzle, and the main goal was for them to put it all together in order to discover the story of the LARP. That story included the ancient, magical crown of Croatian kings that could bring a horrible death to those who desire eternal life, and immortality to those who fully accept that everyone must die. That crown subsequently, much to the joy of every fan of Marija Juri? Zagorka, made Zagorka herself immortal (and gave her enough time to continue her work and, eventually, create Astra).


Furthermore, a couple of characters were secretly working for Zagorka’s arch-nemesis, which brought on some interesting ingame situations and resulted in one character’s murder, which in return raised the tension and distrust among players. The highlight of the game was a treasure hunt in which players found the crown and discovered that Zagorka actually was  immortal, and the Director of  the Astra Agency. The game ended by Zagorka (played by the popular Croatian genre author Milena Benini) awarding the candidates with a job at Astra after which she left, with the crown, supposedly to end her over-long existence.


Why so special?


Although this game was not the first Croatian LARP based on the works of Croatian genre authors (that would be “Seekers of the Dawn”, created by Ana Rajner and Božo Špoljaric in 2012 and based on the Snakes of Nikonimor fantasy trilogy by Sanja Lovrencic), it was the first longer and pervasive one.


Astra included quite a few elements that were previously unseen in Croatian LARPs, such as numerous ingame video materials, “hard copy” casefiles (given to every player at the beginning of the game) filled with mysterious documents and old photographs, ingame blogs and websites created months before the game and regularly updated, etc. This game was also,to the best of our knowledge, the first Croatian LARP to include mainstream outside partners: Marija Juric Zagorka Memorial Centre, Školska knjiga Publishing House and the Booksa Book Club.


The feedback provided by the players shows that their opinion of the three authors improved significantly during the game, and that they learned a lot about the life and work of these writers who marked the Croatian literature of the 20th century. This leads to conclusion that pervasive LARP, as a transmedia form, is an amazing, efficient and fun tool for promoting literature and educating people about it.


Astra was nominated for the ESFS Award in 2015 and lost to Ireland. But I believe this is only the beginning.


 



Astra, the LARP

ponedjeljak, 27. travnja 2015.

Pyrkon 2015: Saturday

Photo by Valerija S.
Photo by Valerija S.

The second day of Pyrkon started off with a bit of weird deja-vu: it was a new day, as sunny and warm as Friday. And once we walked to the venue, the lines were also there again, just like on Friday. Another huge mass of fans were waiting to register! At first glance this was just too hard to believe, it felt as if we time hopped into a weird repetition of the first day of the con! This just had to be a not very well organized line to get in! Maybe the Poles simply do not know how to run the badge system efficiently. They do. It’s just so difficult to believe that so many more people showed up. But they did.


rsz_20150425_133258Throughout Saturday large numbers of people milled around the con, pursuing their various interests and desires.  That one of the big Poznan International Fair pavilions was reserved for vendors, making it essentially one enormous Dealer’s Room was not weird or new, even if it was quite a bit bigger than the Loncon3 one. But that RPGs had an entire pavilion of that size dedicated to them alone, with some spillover into the vendor’s one was surprising. And another one for computer gaming. And another one for LARP. And two more for various other programming items. And a big, main one for more programming. Getting the drift yet?


In all of this, there is one thing that I find to be the most impressive as well as precious beyond words (and I hope Pyrkon never looses it): the “feeling of fandom”, for lack of a better term. I hate crowds. They make me nervous and irritated and annoyed. I become rude and overwhelmed by a desire to go commune with trees, preferably somewhere without any people. Even at Loncon3, where I knew so many people, I felt the need to go find a bit of solitude. At Pyrkon the day before yesterday, it was like having science-fictional double vision of the best kind: despite the truly huge number of fans at the con, the feeling of closeness and coziness one gets at a convention of 300 remained. As I’ve tweeted already, I blame the enthusiasm and the atmosphere. And possibly magic.


CDchBekXIAAsSjQThough it may just be the adrenalin of the organizers – these people have been, up until this year, running the +20000 members convention that is Pyrkon entirely on volunteer power. Any other day I would have had to say that the most impressive part of my day was hearing stories about Krsto A. Mažuranic, the grandfather of Croatian SF fandom from Joe and Gay Haldeman. But after hearing that particular piece of information, in addition to them having 70 GoHs, 12 foreign and the rest domestic, all I could do is be in awe.

(And am suddenly more forgiving of the fact that there is not a single stand of books in English for sale. So no opportunity to get autographs by Fforde, Chiang and Haldeman for me since accidentally forgot my copies at home.)


I planned to go to panels but the one on YA fiction pissed me off and then I got sidetracked by talking to people and hatching new plans, discussing fandom, browsing the stands, being stood up for an interview by the most award winning writer in SF and gawking at even more fabulous costumes. Find some better photos here.



Pyrkon 2015: Saturday

nedjelja, 26. travnja 2015.

Croatia wins two ESFS Awards!

Vanja and Ivan Kranj?evi? accepted the Croatian awards at Eurocon 2015
Vanja and Ivan Kranjcevic accepted the Croatian awards at Eurocon 2015

And one of them is for me as best promoter! Having won an award for doing something I love – promoting science fiction – would have been great news and reason to celebrate any day. But winning one at a Russian Eurocon makes me twice as happy! I have an old report card from school which says “Mihaela’s Russian is excellent, but her English could use some work”. (Not even remotely true nowadays!)


In a twist of fate, I ended up going to Pyrkon this year rather than the St. Petersburg Eurocon. One of the reasons was that I felt that Polish fans needed to find out about fan funds and the Helsinki in 2017 bid. So I have the best possible excuse for not being there to say thank you in person: I was busy promoting science fiction in Poland! Thank you, Eurocon 2015!


The very talented writer who just had his first novel published in Croatia, David Kelecic, won the ESFS Encouragement Award. You can read one of his stories in the Loncon3/Shamrokon issue of Parsek (#125).


The 2015 ESFS Awards winners are:


HALL OF FAME



  • Best author: China Miéville (UK)

  • Best artist: Phillipe Bouchet Manchu (France)

  • Best magazine: Fantastica Almanac (Bulgaria)

  • Best publisher: Gollancz (UK)

  • Best translator: Ekaterina Dobrohotova-Majkova (Rusija)

ENCOURAGEMENT AWARDS:


  • Micheal Wozoning (Austria)

  • Kaloyan Zahariev (Bulgaria)

  • Martin D. Antonin (Czech Republic)

  • Liz Bourke (Ireland)

  • Luis Corredoura (Portugal)

  • Georgiana Vladulescu (Romania)

  • Victor Kolyuzhniak (Russsia)

  • Jana Paluchová (Slovakia)

SPIRIT OF DEDICATION AWARDS:


  • Best artist: Serhiy Krykun (Ukrajina)

  • Best fanzine: Pritiazhenie(Attraction) (Russia)

  • Best website: Europa SF (Romania)

  • Best performance: Song of the Sea (Irska)

  • Best children’s author: Anton Lomaev (Russia) & Ruth F Long (Ireland) (tie)

EUROPEAN GRAND MASTER:


  • Eugene Lukin



Croatia wins two ESFS Awards!

Pyrkon: Friday 2015

20150424_120234You say Pyrkon, and numbers immediately start being thrown around. It’s the Polish convention that had 15 000 members last year. No, 25 000! Or was it 30 000? You can check and recheck different sources, but it does not matter. The numbers sound so incredible, it really makes no difference. You can’t help doubting. It’s one of those things where you simply have to see for yourself. I saw. And I have never been so happy to be part of programming! This time, it saved me from spending a few hours in a line.


rsz_20150424_122454The first thing you notice about Pyrkon – other than the huge amount of fans that gather here – is the masks. This con may be a lot of things, but first and foremost, it is a festival of fannish masks and costumes. We came into the festival with the car, to unload all our stuff and set up the SFeraKon stand in the Fan Village. Getting out of the car, we walked straight into – Maleficent. Hand made, intricate and very, very impressive.  Photos away!


I must admit, I did wonder why so many of Pyrkon photos – I have been following the con online since 2013, while I was planning to visit  – focused on the costumes. Now I understand. It’s not that there are so many, there are more than quite a few. It’s not that they are exquisitely made and stunning, they are that, too. It’s the overall atmosphere of the con, the catching enthusiasm of the fans wearing them that makes you become part of this great feeling. Since you cannot magic a full costume into being right then and there, you want to take photos.


rsz_20150424_141629As an SF fan and con-runner, I exist in a world where, by virtue of these interests, I am strange. Remaining strange well into my thirties while still into the “immature”, I think it’s safe to say I’m not too susceptible to peer pressure. Yet, by the end of the first day in Poznan, I was regretting bitterly I had no costume to play with and even considering cosplaying at SFeraKon! So, yes, the enthusiasm of fans at Pyrkon is catching!


The program book lists our stand as SFeraKon. But, in reality, we are promoting so much more than a Croatian convention. Pyrkon has a raffle system in place and we put together gift packages that contained goodies like the special English issue of Parsek, the famous Zagreb licitar heart and gifts from various cons and bid, such as tattoos from the Helsinki in 2017, a T-shirt from the Dublin in 2019 bid, the Terry Pratchett calendar donated by Dysprosium, art by Nela Dunato and fridge magnets from the NZin2020 bid.


Ted Chiang, Joe Haldeman, Konrad Walewski
Ted Chiang, Joe Haldeman, Konrad Walewski

Panels are panels everywhere one goes and the one on short fiction I went to, featuring Pyrkon GoHs Joe Haldeman and Ted Chiang, turned out to be more about writing than about short fiction in general. Somehow, I keep wanting to hear famous writers’ opinions on themes, motives and tropes in the genre. I end up hearing about the writing process. I had to wonder why since there was the Architects and Gardeners panel in the evening, with the same panelists plus Jasper Fforde, and that one was explicitly about the writing process. I went to it only to see what Jasper Fforde was like and was pleased to find out I liked him as much as I liked Thursday Next.


rsz_img_0084The first ever Fan Funds Talk at a Polish convention went well, considering that it was a last-minute replacement for another, more popular programming item. Nina Horvath, the current TAFF delegate joined me to talk about her experience of having just won the race. She described how the trip planning was going and how much she was learning about fan culture even at this early stage. I may have found a Polish GUFF candidate, which, if this works out, would make me very happy.


We ended the evening with a dinner and a chat with some of the organizers who told us that 17 000 people entered the huge Poznan International Fair that is Pyrkon’s venue but that they expect many more tomorrow. Having spent the day among the throngs of fans, I am inclined to stop doubting their numbers.



Pyrkon: Friday 2015

petak, 24. travnja 2015.

Road trip!

I’d love to post a witty account of the 15 hour drive from Zagreb to Pyrkon I took yesterday or even some awesome photos. But had taken the time to take those, it would have been a thirty hour trip. Since we did not get out of the car:


rsz_20150423_190617


The drive was awesome because the company I was in was great. Ankica (the GPS) frequently asked us to turn left, into a river, a wall or a meadow. We failed to obey, a few times in the Czech Republic to our disadvantage too, so we had to double back. When she was indisposed and Google drunk, we resorted to gas stations and communication in my very bad German. There were trucks, small roads, some stunning nature, some startling views and some very weird public statuary. So many sites we wanted to stop and photograph and something that may or may not have been the Museum of Magic. Perhaps on the way back.


During the drive, we also managed to acquire more programming!


So, Croatians at Pyrkon:


Friday, 19:00, Fan Funds – Or how to travel to distant SF cons on zero money and loads of fun!


Sunday, 14:00, Croatian SF scene & literature


Sunday, 16:00, Space Lab


 


I now am off to meet Poznan and Pyrkon. :)




Road trip!

četvrtak, 23. travnja 2015.

The race is on! Become the 2016 Southbound GUFF delegate!

Want to go to Australia and meet an awesome and diverse SF fandom? Yup, it’s far away and expensive. But what if I told you that a little bit of work, a moderate amount of administration that also entails attending conventions and a lot of charm could get you to Australia and New Zealand?


And not just any Australia or any New Zealand but ones seen through the eyes of people like you, fans of science fiction, book hoarders and lovers of strange things who will show you everything that you ever wanted to know and experience about Australia but were unaware of your desire!


I speak from personal experience – my 2013 GUFF trip was both a longtime dream come true and a wondrous exploration of a world I had no knowledge of although I was convinced I did. It was exhilarating fun, a life changing experience and I only wish there was enough money in the world, or rather the GUFF bank account, to have two races, one each way, every single year.


Here is the invitation, feel free to share it as widely as possible and do not hestitate to contact me about details. Email response maybe slow until April 29th as I am in Poland, but if you are at Pyrkon, come to my Fan Funds talk this Friday, April 24th, at 19:00 t the English hall and I will answer all your questions! If not in Poland – find some answers here!



GUFF Call for Nominations


GUFF is the Get Up and Over (or Going Under) Fan Fund which transports SF fans from Australasia to Europe (and vice versa).


Nominations are now open for the southbound race, to transport a European fan (or fans) to Contact 2016 (http://contact2016.com/), the 55th Australian National Science Fiction Convention, to be held in Brisbane, Australia over Easter long weekend 2015.


Depending on the length of trip they’re able to make, the winner could also consider visiting other parts of Australia as well as visiting New Zealand (the New Zealand National Convention is in June). The winner will also be required to take over the administration of the fund for the next northbound and southbound races.


If you wish to stand, please contact us at the postal or email address below. You will need three European and two Australasian nominators (who will each need to confirm their nominations), a platform of no more than 100 words to appear on the ballot, a bond of £15/€20/AU$25 as a guarantee you will attend the 2016 Australian Natcon if you win.


If you wish to stand and are unsure about how to go about getting any of these things, what the fund pays for or the duties of a GUFF delegate and administrator, then feel free to contact us in confidence.


Nominations are open until 31st May 2015, and candidates will be announced soon after. Voting will then run until Wednesday 30th September 2015, with the winner announced online as soon as possible after voting has closed.


Nominations should be sent to books at gillianpolack dot com or rantalica at gmail dot com or Mihaela-Marija Perkovic, Maksimirska 100d, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia. The bond can be sent by cheque to Mihaela at the above address, or by PayPal to guffeurope@gmail.com, or contact her for bank deposit details. Cash can be given directly to Gillian Polack or contact her for bank deposit details.


Please disseminate widely.


 


 



The race is on! Become the 2016 Southbound GUFF delegate!

srijeda, 22. travnja 2015.

Magicna Noc knjige: Neil Gaiman i Kate Elliot u Branimir centru!

U sklopu Noci knjige, 23. travnja 2015 u organizaciji portala Inverzija.net održat ce se prvi SF&F Korner u prostoru Branimir centra u Zagrebu, u trajanju od 14 do 23 sata.


Zvijezde programa bit ce dvoje slavnih pisaca, neuhvatljiv i fenomenalni Neil Gaiman, autor kultnog strip-serijala Sandman koji je nedavno objavljen u hrvatskom prijevodu i to u lukzusnom izdanju famozne Fibre, te americka fantasy spisateljica s Havaja, Kate Elliot koja je ujedno i ovogodišnja gošca SFeraKona, najvece SF konvencije u ovom dijelu Europe na kojem je domaca publike vec imala prilike iskusiti intervjue uživo putem videolinka kada je na SFeraKonu na taj nacin gostovao u nas omiljeni fantasticar, Tad Williams.


Naravno, to nije sve. Kroz poslije podne i vecer na Noc knjige, svi ce posjetitelji, putnici namjernici iz drugih dimezija i galakticki autostoperi SF&F Kornera mo?i saznati kako objaviti pricu u casopisu Sirius B, tko je napisao prvi hrvatski steampunk roman, kakvog je okusa hrvatsko Zmajsko pivo, i što je potrebno da bi sudjelovali i pobijedi u pub kvizu o Igri prijestolja. Neki ce sretnici i osvojiti knjige, majice i šalice u zanimljivim nagradnim igrama.


Uz druženje i razgovore, održat ?e se i nekoliko promocija i najava knjiga, a ako niste iz Zagreba i ne znate se teleportitati, nema mjesta ocaju! Naime, cjelokupan program emitirat ce se u eteru Radija 808. Jer internet je zakon, a SF isto! :)



Magicna Noc knjige: Neil Gaiman i Kate Elliot u Branimir centru!

utorak, 21. travnja 2015.

ESFS Awards Nominations & Eurocon 2015

This year’s Eurocon, Worldcon’s European, smaller and younger cousin, will be held from April 23 to April 26, 2015 in Saint-Petersburg, Russia. Founded in 1972 at the first meeting of the European Science Fiction Society (ESFS), Eurocon follows the pattern of Worldcons and bid for and then hosted in various places throughout Europe selected by membership vote at previous conventions.


Russia is hosting the event for the second time and has merged it, as is customary in Europe, with a major local convention. This year it is big annual Russian Science Fiction convention Interpresscon. Guests of Honor at Eurocon 2015 are Joe Abercrombie and Michael Stackpole, a Russian cosmonaut Pavel Vinogradov is the local GoH and the awesome Finnish fan Jukka Halme is Fan Guest of Honour.


Eurocon is also where the main European SF&F Awards are given out. And the nominees this year are:


 Hall of Fame



Best Author


Best Artist


Best Magazine


Best Publisher


Best Promoter


Best Translator


Spirit of Dedication



Best Artist


Best Performance


Encouragement Awards




ESFS Awards Nominations & Eurocon 2015

petak, 17. travnja 2015.

The new and final Hugo ballot!

Now, some authors have withdrawn their work due to the SP controversy. This, as I understand, is the final Hugo ballot.


If you have never voted for the Hugos, 2015 is a good year to start!


Become a supporting member of Sasquan and vote away! No need to actually go to Worldcon, as I found out to my great dissapointment at Denvention in 2008, since the voting is done months in advance, and online.


The good news is, they will send the e-books, so no need to worry whether the book will reach you by snail mail in time. The bad news, the Hugo voter package used to be a lot more appealing. If you wanted it be so, again – vote! A supporting membership give you not only the voting rights for 2015 but the nominating rights for 2016. :)


BEST NOVEL (1827 ballots)


  • Ancillary Sword by Ann Leckie (Orbit US; Orbit UK)

  • The Dark Between the Stars by Kevin J. Anderson (Tor Books)

  • The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison (Sarah Monette) (Tor Books)

  • Lines of Departure by Marko Kloos (47North) (withdrawn)

  • Skin Game by Jim Butcher (Roc Books)

  • The Three Body Problem, Cixin Liu, Ken Liu translator (Tor Books)

Note: The Three-Body Problem was originally published in Chinese in 2008. The 2014 publication by Tor was the first English-language version, and therefore it is again eligible for the Hugos, according to section 3.4.1 of the WSFS Constitution.


BEST NOVELLA (1083 ballots)


  • Big Boys Don’t Cry by Tom Kratman (Castalia House)

  • “Flow” by Arlan Andrews, Sr. (Analog, Nov 2014)

  • One Bright Star to Guide Them by John C. Wright (Castalia House)

  • “Pale Realms of Shade” by John C. Wright (The Book of Feasts & Seasons, Castalia House)

  • “The Plural of Helen of Troy” by John C. Wright (City Beyond Time: Tales of the Fall of Metachronopolis, Castalia House)

Note: Both Big Boys Don’t Cry and One Bright Star to Guide Them were previously published in much shorter versions, and were significantly expanded to novella-length in their 2014 publication. Following previous precedents, for the purposes of the 2015 Hugos they are designated as new works.


BEST NOVELETTE (1031 ballots)


  • “Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust, Earth to Alluvium”, Gray Rinehart (Orson Scott Card’s InterGalactic Medicine Show, 05-2014)

  • “Championship B’tok”, Edward M. Lerner (Analog, 09-2014)

  • “The Day the World Turned Upside Down”, Thomas Olde Heuvelt, Lia Belt translator (Lightspeed, 04-2014)

  • “The Journeyman: In the Stone House”, Michael F. Flynn (Analog, 06-2014)

  • “The Triple Sun: A Golden Age Tale”, Rajnar Vajra (Analog, 07/08-2014)

SHORT STORY (1174 ballots)


  • “Goodnight Stars” by Annie Bellet (The End is Now (Apocalypse Triptych Book 2), Broad Reach Publishing) (withdrawn)

  • “On A Spiritual Plain” by Lou Antonelli (Sci Phi Journal #2, Nov 2014)

  • “The Parliament of Beasts and Birds” by John C. Wright (The Book of Feasts & Seasons, Castalia House)

  • “A Single Samurai”, Steven Diamond (The Baen Big Book of Monsters, Baen Books)

  • “Totaled” by Kary English (Galaxy’s Edge Magazine, July 2014)

  • “Turncoat” by Steve Rzasa (Riding the Red Horse, Castalia House)

BEST RELATED WORK (1150 ballots)


  • “The Hot Equations: Thermodynamics and Military SF” by Ken Burnside (Riding the Red Horse, Castalia House)

  • Letters from Gardner by Lou Antonelli (The Merry Blacksmith Press)

  • Transhuman and Subhuman: Essays on Science Fiction and Awful Truth by John C. Wright (Castalia House)

  • “Why Science is Never Settled” by Tedd Roberts (Baen.com)

  • Wisdom from My Internet by Michael Z. Williamson (Patriarchy Press)

BEST GRAPHIC STORY (785 ballots)


  • Ms. Marvel Volume 1: No Normal written by G. Willow Wilson, illustrated by Adrian Alphona and Jake Wyatt, (Marvel Comics)

  • Rat Queens Volume 1: Sass and Sorcery written by Kurtis J. Weibe, art by Roc Upchurch (Image Comics)

  • Saga Volume 3 written by Brian K. Vaughan, illustrated by Fiona Staples (Image Comics)

  • Sex Criminals Volume 1: One Weird Trick written by Matt Fraction, art by Chip Zdarsky (Image Comics)

  • The Zombie Nation Book #2: Reduce Reuse Reanimate by Carter Reid (The Zombie Nation)

DRAMATIC PRESENTATION (LONG FORM) (1285 ballots)


  • Captain America: The Winter Soldier screenplay by Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely, concept and story by Ed Brubaker, directed by Anthony Russo and Joe Russo (Marvel Entertainment, Perception, Sony Pictures Imageworks)

  • Edge of Tomorrow screenplay by Christopher McQuarrie, Jez Butterworth, and John-Henry Butterworth, directed by Doug Liman (Village Roadshow, RatPac-Dune Entertainment, 3 Arts Entertainment; Viz Productions)

  • Guardians of the Galaxy written by James Gunn and Nicole Perlman, directed by James Gunn (Marvel Studios, Moving Picture Company)

  • Interstellar screenplay by Jonathan Nolan and Christopher Nolan, directed by Christopher Nolan (Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros. Pictures, Legendary Pictures, Lynda Obst Productions, Syncopy)

  • The Lego Movie written by Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, story by Dan Hageman, Kevin Hageman, Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, directed by Phil Lord & Christopher Miller (Warner Bros. Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, RatPac-Dune Entertainment, LEGO System A/S, Vertigo Entertainment, Lin Pictures, Warner Bros. Animation (as Warner Animation Group))

DRAMATIC PRESENTATION (SHORT FORM) (938 ballots)


  • Doctor Who: “Listen” written by Steven Moffat, directed by Douglas Mackinnon (BBC Television)

  • The Flash: “Pilot” teleplay by Andrew Kreisberg & Geoff Johns, story by Greg Berlanti, Andrew Kreisberg & Geoff Johns, directed by David Nutter (The CW) (Berlanti Productions, DC Entertainment, Warner Bros. Television)

  • Game of Thrones: “The Mountain and the Viper” written by David Benioff & D. B. Weiss, directed by Alex Graves ((HBO Entertainment in association with Bighead, Littlehead; Television 360; Startling Television and Generator Productions)

  • Grimm: “Once We Were Gods” written by Alan DiFiore, directed by Steven DePaul (NBC) (GK Productions, Hazy Mills Productions, Universal TV)

  • Orphan Black: “By Means Which Have Never Yet Been Tried written by Graham Manson, directed by John Fawcett (Temple Street Productions, Space/BBC America)

BEST EDITOR (SHORT FORM) (870 ballots)


  • Jennifer Brozek

  • Vox Day

  • Mike Resnick

  • Edmund R. Schubert

  • Bryan Thomas Schmidt

BEST EDITOR (LONG FORM) (712 ballots)


  • Vox Day

  • Sheila Gilbert

  • Jim Minz

  • Anne Sowards

  • Toni Weisskopf

BEST PROFESSIONAL ARTIST (753 ballots)


  • Julie Dillon

  • Kirk DouPonce

  • Nick Greenwood

  • Alan Pollack

  • Carter Reid

BEST SEMIPROZINE (660 ballots)


  • Abyss & Apex Wendy Delmater editor and publisher

  • Andromeda Spaceways In-Flight Magazine Andromeda Spaceways Publishing Association Incorporated, 2014 editors David Kernot and Sue Bursztynski

  • Beneath Ceaseless Skies edited by Scott H. Andrews

  • Lightspeed Magazine edited by John Joseph Adams, Stefan Rudnicki, Rich Horton, Wendy N. Wagner, and Christie Yant

  • Strange Horizons Niall Harrison Editor-in-Chief

BEST FANZINE (576 ballots)


  • Black Gate edited by John O’Neill

  • Elitist Book Reviews edited by Steven Diamond

  • Journey Planet edited by James Bacon, Chris Garcia, Alissa McKersie, Colin Harris and Helen Montgomery

  • The Revenge of Hump Day edited by Tim Bolgeo

  • Tangent SF Online edited by Dave Truesdale

BEST FANCAST (668 ballots)


  • Adventures in SF Publishing Brent Bowen (Executive Producer), Kristi Charish, Timothy C. Ward, Shaun Ferrell & Moses Siregar III (Co-Hosts, Interviewers and Producers)

  • Dungeon Crawlers Radio Daniel Swenson (Producer/Host), Travis Alexander & Scott Tomlin (Hosts), Dale Newton (Host/Tech), Damien Swenson (Audio/Video Tech)

  • Galactic Suburbia Podcast Alisa Krasnostein, Alexandra Pierce, Tansy Rayner Roberts (Presenters) and Andrew Finch (Producer)

  • The Sci Phi Show Jason Rennie

  • Tea and Jeopardy Emma Newman & Peter Newman

BEST FAN WRITER (777 ballots)


  • Dave Freer

  • Amanda S. Green

  • Jeffro Johnson

  • Laura J. Mixon

  • Cedar Sanderson

BEST FAN ARTIST (296 ballots)


  • Ninni Aalto

  • Brad Foster

  • Elizabeth Leggett

  • Spring Schoenhuth

  • Steve Stiles

Award for the best new professional science fiction or fantasy writer of 2013 or 2014, sponsored by Dell Magazines (not a Hugo Award).


CAMPBELL AWARD FOR BEST NEW WRITER (851 ballots)


  • Wesley Chu *

  • Jason Cordova

  • Kary English *

  • Rolf Nelson

  • Eric S. Raymond

*Finalists in their 2nd year of eligibility.



The new and final Hugo ballot!

The new (and final) Hugo ballot!

Some nominated works have been disqualified due to ineligibility. Some authors have withdrawn. This, as I understand, is the final Hugo ballot. If you have never voted for the Hugos, 2015 is a good year to start! Become a supporting member of Sasquan and vote away! No need to actually go to Worldcon, as I found out to my great dissapointment at Denvention in 2008, since the voting is done months in advance, and online.  The good news is, they will send the e-books, so no need to worry whether the book will reach you by snail mail in time. The bad news, the Hugo voter package used to be a lot more appealing. If you wanted it be so, again – vote! A supporting membership give you not only the voting rights for 2015 but the nominating rights for 2016. :)


BEST NOVEL (1827 ballots)


  • Ancillary Sword by Ann Leckie (Orbit US; Orbit UK)

  • The Dark Between the Stars by Kevin J. Anderson (Tor Books)

  • The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison (Sarah Monette) (Tor Books)

  • Lines of Departure by Marko Kloos (47North) (withdrawn)

  • Skin Game by Jim Butcher (Roc Books)

  • The Three Body Problem, Cixin Liu, Ken Liu translator (Tor Books)

Note: The Three-Body Problem was originally published in Chinese in 2008. The 2014 publication by Tor was the first English-language version, and therefore it is again eligible for the Hugos, according to section 3.4.1 of the WSFS Constitution.


BEST NOVELLA (1083 ballots)


  • Big Boys Don’t Cry by Tom Kratman (Castalia House)

  • “Flow” by Arlan Andrews, Sr. (Analog, Nov 2014)

  • One Bright Star to Guide Them by John C. Wright (Castalia House)

  • “Pale Realms of Shade” by John C. Wright (The Book of Feasts & Seasons, Castalia House)

  • “The Plural of Helen of Troy” by John C. Wright (City Beyond Time: Tales of the Fall of Metachronopolis, Castalia House)

Note: Both Big Boys Don’t Cry and One Bright Star to Guide Them were previously published in much shorter versions, and were significantly expanded to novella-length in their 2014 publication. Following previous precedents, for the purposes of the 2015 Hugos they are designated as new works.


BEST NOVELETTE (1031 ballots)


  • “Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Dust, Earth to Alluvium”, Gray Rinehart (Orson Scott Card’s InterGalactic Medicine Show, 05-2014)

  • “Championship B’tok”, Edward M. Lerner (Analog, 09-2014)

  • “The Day the World Turned Upside Down”, Thomas Olde Heuvelt, Lia Belt translator (Lightspeed, 04-2014)

  • “The Journeyman: In the Stone House”, Michael F. Flynn (Analog, 06-2014)

  • “The Triple Sun: A Golden Age Tale”, Rajnar Vajra (Analog, 07/08-2014)

SHORT STORY (1174 ballots)


  • “Goodnight Stars” by Annie Bellet (The End is Now (Apocalypse Triptych Book 2), Broad Reach Publishing) (withdrawn)

  • “On A Spiritual Plain” by Lou Antonelli (Sci Phi Journal #2, Nov 2014)

  • “The Parliament of Beasts and Birds” by John C. Wright (The Book of Feasts & Seasons, Castalia House)

  • “A Single Samurai”, Steven Diamond (The Baen Big Book of Monsters, Baen Books)

  • “Totaled” by Kary English (Galaxy’s Edge Magazine, July 2014)

  • “Turncoat” by Steve Rzasa (Riding the Red Horse, Castalia House)

BEST RELATED WORK (1150 ballots)


  • “The Hot Equations: Thermodynamics and Military SF” by Ken Burnside (Riding the Red Horse, Castalia House)

  • Letters from Gardner by Lou Antonelli (The Merry Blacksmith Press)

  • Transhuman and Subhuman: Essays on Science Fiction and Awful Truth by John C. Wright (Castalia House)

  • “Why Science is Never Settled” by Tedd Roberts (Baen.com)

  • Wisdom from My Internet by Michael Z. Williamson (Patriarchy Press)

BEST GRAPHIC STORY (785 ballots)


  • Ms. Marvel Volume 1: No Normal written by G. Willow Wilson, illustrated by Adrian Alphona and Jake Wyatt, (Marvel Comics)

  • Rat Queens Volume 1: Sass and Sorcery written by Kurtis J. Weibe, art by Roc Upchurch (Image Comics)

  • Saga Volume 3 written by Brian K. Vaughan, illustrated by Fiona Staples (Image Comics)

  • Sex Criminals Volume 1: One Weird Trick written by Matt Fraction, art by Chip Zdarsky (Image Comics)

  • The Zombie Nation Book #2: Reduce Reuse Reanimate by Carter Reid (The Zombie Nation)

DRAMATIC PRESENTATION (LONG FORM) (1285 ballots)


  • Captain America: The Winter Soldier screenplay by Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely, concept and story by Ed Brubaker, directed by Anthony Russo and Joe Russo (Marvel Entertainment, Perception, Sony Pictures Imageworks)

  • Edge of Tomorrow screenplay by Christopher McQuarrie, Jez Butterworth, and John-Henry Butterworth, directed by Doug Liman (Village Roadshow, RatPac-Dune Entertainment, 3 Arts Entertainment; Viz Productions)

  • Guardians of the Galaxy written by James Gunn and Nicole Perlman, directed by James Gunn (Marvel Studios, Moving Picture Company)

  • Interstellar screenplay by Jonathan Nolan and Christopher Nolan, directed by Christopher Nolan (Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros. Pictures, Legendary Pictures, Lynda Obst Productions, Syncopy)

  • The Lego Movie written by Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, story by Dan Hageman, Kevin Hageman, Phil Lord & Christopher Miller, directed by Phil Lord & Christopher Miller (Warner Bros. Pictures, Village Roadshow Pictures, RatPac-Dune Entertainment, LEGO System A/S, Vertigo Entertainment, Lin Pictures, Warner Bros. Animation (as Warner Animation Group))

DRAMATIC PRESENTATION (SHORT FORM) (938 ballots)


  • Doctor Who: “Listen” written by Steven Moffat, directed by Douglas Mackinnon (BBC Television)

  • The Flash: “Pilot” teleplay by Andrew Kreisberg & Geoff Johns, story by Greg Berlanti, Andrew Kreisberg & Geoff Johns, directed by David Nutter (The CW) (Berlanti Productions, DC Entertainment, Warner Bros. Television)

  • Game of Thrones: “The Mountain and the Viper” written by David Benioff & D. B. Weiss, directed by Alex Graves ((HBO Entertainment in association with Bighead, Littlehead; Television 360; Startling Television and Generator Productions)

  • Grimm: “Once We Were Gods” written by Alan DiFiore, directed by Steven DePaul (NBC) (GK Productions, Hazy Mills Productions, Universal TV)

  • Orphan Black: “By Means Which Have Never Yet Been Tried written by Graham Manson, directed by John Fawcett (Temple Street Productions, Space/BBC America)

BEST EDITOR (SHORT FORM) (870 ballots)


  • Jennifer Brozek

  • Vox Day

  • Mike Resnick

  • Edmund R. Schubert

  • Bryan Thomas Schmidt

BEST EDITOR (LONG FORM) (712 ballots)


  • Vox Day

  • Sheila Gilbert

  • Jim Minz

  • Anne Sowards

  • Toni Weisskopf

BEST PROFESSIONAL ARTIST (753 ballots)


  • Julie Dillon

  • Kirk DouPonce

  • Nick Greenwood

  • Alan Pollack

  • Carter Reid

BEST SEMIPROZINE (660 ballots)


  • Abyss & Apex Wendy Delmater editor and publisher

  • Andromeda Spaceways In-Flight Magazine Andromeda Spaceways Publishing Association Incorporated, 2014 editors David Kernot and Sue Bursztynski

  • Beneath Ceaseless Skies edited by Scott H. Andrews

  • Lightspeed Magazine edited by John Joseph Adams, Stefan Rudnicki, Rich Horton, Wendy N. Wagner, and Christie Yant

  • Strange Horizons Niall Harrison Editor-in-Chief

BEST FANZINE (576 ballots)


  • Black Gate edited by John O’Neill

  • Elitist Book Reviews edited by Steven Diamond

  • Journey Planet edited by James Bacon, Chris Garcia, Alissa McKersie, Colin Harris and Helen Montgomery

  • The Revenge of Hump Day edited by Tim Bolgeo

  • Tangent SF Online edited by Dave Truesdale

BEST FANCAST (668 ballots)


  • Adventures in SF Publishing Brent Bowen (Executive Producer), Kristi Charish, Timothy C. Ward, Shaun Ferrell & Moses Siregar III (Co-Hosts, Interviewers and Producers)

  • Dungeon Crawlers Radio Daniel Swenson (Producer/Host), Travis Alexander & Scott Tomlin (Hosts), Dale Newton (Host/Tech), Damien Swenson (Audio/Video Tech)

  • Galactic Suburbia Podcast Alisa Krasnostein, Alexandra Pierce, Tansy Rayner Roberts (Presenters) and Andrew Finch (Producer)

  • The Sci Phi Show Jason Rennie

  • Tea and Jeopardy Emma Newman & Peter Newman

BEST FAN WRITER (777 ballots)


  • Dave Freer

  • Amanda S. Green

  • Jeffro Johnson

  • Laura J. Mixon

  • Cedar Sanderson

BEST FAN ARTIST (296 ballots)


  • Ninni Aalto

  • Brad Foster

  • Elizabeth Leggett

  • Spring Schoenhuth

  • Steve Stiles

Award for the best new professional science fiction or fantasy writer of 2013 or 2014, sponsored by Dell Magazines (not a Hugo Award).


CAMPBELL AWARD FOR BEST NEW WRITER (851 ballots)


  • Wesley Chu *

  • Jason Cordova

  • Kary English *

  • Rolf Nelson

  • Eric S. Raymond

*Finalists in their 2nd year of eligibility.


 


 



The new (and final) Hugo ballot!

četvrtak, 16. travnja 2015.

Pyrkon 2015

I have known about the now huge Polish SF convention in Poznan since Kontakt in Zagreb. And have been wanting to get to it ever since! When I got back from my GUFF trip to Australia and New Zealand, the Pyrkon program book for that year – a thick, heavy thing filled with awesome things – was waiting for me courtesy of Polish fan and con-runner, Radoslaw Kot. (Thank you!)


I think I even remember him mentioning that after seeing how much of the Zagreb Eurocon was in English, they decided to make tracks in English a permanent item of Pyrkon.


And what a track it is! A huge one, where even guests of honor are numerous and this year it is the likes of Ted Chiang, Joe Haldeman, Jasper Fforde and Dmitry Gluhovksy! I will be spending the weekend trying to find some books I want signed!


Lauren Beukes was one of their GoHs last year and she was in awe of their numbers, too! Pyrkon gathered 15 000 people last April and I am sure it will gather even more this year. It is the largest SF con in Europe!


And this year, in exactly one week I will be leaving for Poznan & Pyrkon! (Because it takes about 13 hours to get there by car and it seemed like a good idea at the time!) Am even on the program , talking, of course, about Croatian fandom!


It is a shame that Pyrkon and the Russian Eurocon fell on the same weekend but I take comfort in the fact that the very same weekend would have also been the traditional SFeraKon weekend as well, had our venue not moved us to mid-May due to their midterm exams, in which case I would have not been travelling at all.


I look forward to seeing the multitudes of Polish fans, especially as I plan to invite them both to attend SFeraKon 2015 and to vote for the Hugos and the site selection this year. Helsinki is closer to them than it is to me, after all!


My talk is on Croatian fandom and literature is scheduled for Sunday, in the English presentation room, at 14:00.


A small country with a BIG fandom, Croatia boasts 6 SF conventions, one genre writing festival and a week long academic event dedicated to SF. Three annual anthologies, two national genre awards, an academic magazine and a commercial one, award winning fanzines, original LARPs and a fandom run by women – this is all part of the very the vibrant Croatian SF scene that will be presented by Mihaela Marija Perkovic, Croatian SF writer, conrunner and member of the Zagreb based SFera SF Society. Come & ask silly questions!


But you can also find me at the Fan Village where there will be a Croatian table with all kind of goodies, even if no Croatian fans! (Am pretty sure all of us will be go missing in action while investigating the huge con! I for one will be chasing down some GoHs to see if they can come to Croatia some day).


Alas, there will be no GUFF auction at Pyrkon as Polish law does not allow it but it has been explained to me that there are gifts one can get just by being a member of Pyrkon! So I will be bringing complimentary memberships from 3 Croatian conventions – Rikon, Liburnicon and SFeraKon as well a number of interesting things, such as an illustrated Terry Pratchett Calendar from Dysprosium and a number of books!


Come and find me and say hello, buy a SFeraKon membership or get a special Pyrkon issue Parsek, the award-winning Croatian fanzine!



Pyrkon 2015

srijeda, 15. travnja 2015.

SFeraKon 2015!

SFerKon 2015 will be held May 15-17, 2015, at FER (that’s the acronym for the Croatian name of the University of Zagreb’s Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing that has served as the venue for the largest Croatian con for 15 years now!) and the Guest of Honour will be the American writer Kate Elliott.


SFeraKon 2015 will be paying its respects to two unforgettable men of SF –  Sir Terry Pratchett and Leonard Nimoy will be its Ghosts of Honour.


It will also pay tribute to 150th anniversary of Alice in Wonderland by hosting a very special, interactive tea party with lots and lots and lots of tea! Of course, there will be talk (and perhaps a round of SFeraKon Survivor or two) of Dune and the five decades long love affair readers have had with Frank Herbert’s masterpiece. And that, of course, is just a tiny part that makes up SFeraKon.


For all the foreigners who did not come to Kontakt, a word or three:


There is always at least one item per day in English at SFeraKon and this year there will be more!


Everyone speaks English here. And I do mean it when I say that! The “at least one item per day” I just mentioned are the GoH gigs. Which are never translated. Because there is no need. Don’t take my word for it. Go ask Louis McMaster Bujold. Or any of one of a number of very awesome writers and fans who have visited SFeraKon.


And since everyone speaks English, some speak it well enough to be able to offer their panels and lectures in English at a moment’s notice, should someone who does not speak Croatian happen to find themselves in the audience. If whoever will be doing the program book gets enough sleep in the week before the con, they will remember to put a HR/EN mark next to those items.


A three-day (full) membership for SFeraKon is 12 or £9 or $13.

An Anthology of Croatian SF is included in the membership. In Croatian, of course, but if there ever was a reason to learn a foreign language, there’s one right there! :)


No, there is no supporting membership. For now. But we are forever open to new ideas!


Zagreb in May is quite lovely – come see it! You can experience the unique way we tell time at least once a day, both IRL and on Twitter, visit the Nikola Tesla Kabinet at the Technical Museum, see the famous Zagreb mummy and bicycle around the Solar System. The surrounding towns are more than charming, we have excellent beer, very cheap hostels (that can be even cheaper if you are a SFeraKon member!), and delicious food! What more do you need?


A safe space? Well, SFeraKon is definitely a safe space, just not for harassers. I will be honest – this is the Balkans, we do things a bit crudely at times. So, we do have a (unwritten, unofficial) policy. It’s very simple: do not harass or you will be thrown out on your ass before you can say WTF!


Women are not an exception (nor a wonder, a rarity or an intruder!) in Croatian SF fandom. They are mostly the ones in charge and have been for quite some time. The men happily do all the heavy lifting and have zero qualms about the lifted being alive and kicked out of the con.


 


 



SFeraKon 2015!

utorak, 14. travnja 2015.

Dysprosium: Monday

rsz_20150410_180644At Swancon in 2013, Monday came and I had not had enough. At Eastercon this year, Monday came and I needed more rest. :) Possibly because the Helsinki party was so great! I discovered a new kind of chips that alas are not sold outside of Finland. Another reason to bemoan the fact that I will have to skip Archipelacon which I have been so looking forward to!


What Monday did bring me was a great GUFF meeting, one that I had been missing in the last year and one that we were not able to make happen at Loncon and Shamrokon, for various reasons. Mostly, great programming on my end and the fact that a Croatian fan had a hand at organizing Loncon 3 volunteers’ which in reality meant that I had things to do even when I did not know I had things to do. :) (Am kidding: Petra did an awesome job and even managed to find me volunteering jobs that were ok to do with a kid in tow!)


Sitting down to talk about GUFF at Dyprosium was a new experience for me. All the people I have met IRL at various cons and that I have emailed for ages were suddenly there and agreements could be made without time delays and work and life interfering. Oh, joy! (Gillian, the only thing missing was you!). Thus, I missed almost all the panels I meant to go to, but had an awesome time brainstorming fan funds and just chatting to people afterwards. I should have taken more photos but this is where Irena saved me by graciously allowing me to use hers. After lunch, Irena left to see some London, leaving a sad Irish man behind and I found a quiet corner to do some work in.


I did manage to get to the panel on Fairies which dipped into the surreal every 10 minutes or so while the conversation went from how they got used in the panelists work to talking about them as if they were real (and uninvited!) beings. I alternated between being amused, very, very afraid and quite interested in all the turns the diversity in fandom conversation might go should the fae suddenly decide to come out at a con.


In the afternoon I took a walk around the hotel – the first time I went outside in three days, because convention! – and discovered that there was sun outside! The closing ceremony… I never know what to think – we don’t have those in Croatia. While I do enjoy them, I always find myself wondering why I do not feel prompted to organize one at home.


20150406_231728At Shamrokon, I was devastated not to be able to go to the Dead Dog Party. So I was going to go to this one, even it meant spending the night at Terminal 5! (Luckily, I was saved from that by James Shields and Fionna O’Sullivan: THANK YOU!) So, in the evening I talked to (almost) all the people that I did not get to talk to during the con, saw the worst apology in the world, collected all the issues of Clickety Click to take back to Croatia and  hung out with Fluff – whom I had no seen one on one since Swancon perhaps and whom I very much hope to see again in Barcelona.


I also met the European Chocolate con lady Gillian told me about this summer! And I even had some Croatian chocolate on me to offer! A person handing out chocolates at cons is such an awesome idea (and it is how I met Gillian Polack who was last year’s GUFF delegate at Loncon3). The Dead Dog Party conversations are always deep, silly, full of laughter and insane details and topics – mine at Dysprosium were no different and I loved them.


All I have to do now is figure out how to afford going back next year.



Dysprosium: Monday

ponedjeljak, 13. travnja 2015.

Dysprosium: Sunday

Hearing about someone’s creative process has always seemed a bit voyeuristic to me. This does happen a lot at SF cons and is a very enjoyable part of panels. I started off my Sunday morning with just such a panel, on film this time. Scriptwriter Mark Stay and VFX Supervisor Paddy Eason presented how their very own independent British movie was made. The Our Robot Overlords panel was informative and fun and made me want to rush to a cinema right away because I have no idea whether a film like that would ever make in into cinemas in Croatia. And I have a five-year-old who just might love it if it did.


After that I went to listen about Holmes, but failed to be intrigued through no fault of the panel itself. It was just not a good fit for me jonesing to see a kids’ movie with robots. Totally the wrong kind of mood. although I love the character I did not like the panel. I went looking for people whom I could persuade the vote for Nina in the TAFF race. I believe I managed a few and am very glad I did as it turned out alter the race was quite lose.


I spent a lot of time chatting to Jukka Halme, because I like him very much and because I will not be there when he is quite deservedly guest of honour at this year’s Russian Eurocon in St. Petersburg. (I will be at Pyrkon!). And because I think he would make an excellent GUFF candidate. :)


20150406_133622
Beeblebears. <3

I planned to go listen to Seanan McGuire’s GoH speech but was a bit late, talking to friends old and new as well as actively ruining Anglophone fandom by telling tales of non-Anglophone fandoms where women run things. Because what else would I have done? Browsed the Dealer’s Rooms a bit, I found that the very social me really does not feel comfortable having to go into the smallish rooms. But I did get a lot of good advice in number 8 (I think it was) on how to get cheap flights to Spokane. To which I will probably not be able to go anyway, but I loved the advice and am sure to use it in the future.


Photo by Irena Hartmann
Photo by Irena Hartmann

The V is for Vampire panel was a bit strange. Or maybe I’ve just had enough of the topic. I did notice one thing though – there was no panel touching on anything even remotely connected with vampires (zombies and other panels) where sparkling was not mentioned at least once. Or several times. As I listened to the panel talk, I was reminded of why it was so terrifying to be on the same panel as Charlie Stross – he opens his mouth, and then something so clever comes out that it is difficult for anyone following him to sound even as remotely smart. This panel gave it a good go. It was a shame none of them had seen the Carmilla web series. The novella was mentioned, as it always. I find the web series is not just a whole lot of fun to watch but also a nice take on some of the drawbacks and criticisms people always mention when talking about Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu’s novella. (Still not hearing that name in my head the way the Irish say it, sorry!)


IMG_6128
BSFA Awards Winners Photo by Irena Hartmann

Watching things happen from outside of the Anglophone fandom can be daunting. Coming from a small country stopped being a problem for me when people at Worldcons started pointing out to me that Croatian fandom is quite lively and by no means as small as I had thought it. Still, standards need to be achieved. So it was that I was so very happy to see the head of the BSFA Awards Jury stand up in the middle of a winning speach for the non-fiction award – won by her partner – do proclaim that she had left the room for the counting of the ballots in that category. Made me feel so very less alone: it will be a story I tell members of the SFERA Award Jury, who also sometimes find themselves having to go out for coffee.


I was in awe at how quickly Dysprosium managed to fit in an emergency program item to discuss to bloc voting that got certain people nominated for this year’s Hugos and ramifications thereof. It was an interesting discussion and I learned one thing for sure – no matter what shitstorms develop online and offline, SF fandom consists of mostly very polite and nice people. There was a LOT less cursing than would have been involved at a Croatian con in similar circumstances. I was very impressed. Granted, no Sad Puppies were present. That was the panel I ran to as soon as the most important part of the Eastercon Sunday for me finished: The Fan Funds Auction!


IMG_6211
Photo by Irena Hartmann

And it was great! With the possible exception of one Rikon Auction, it was the best one I ever attended. Auctions are all about collecting money for the Fan Funds that fund trips for fans, across whichever ocean you’d like. This one was held for TAFF and GUFF. You bring fannish things and people pay outrageous amounts of money for them. In Australia though, where I had experienced my first Fan Funds Auction at Swancon 2013, it’s more about the fun than it is about fannish stuff. I took a risk and brought some non-fannish things, like the Zogettera soap and candies orange peel and Croatian wine. It sold. And all the other things sold incredibly well. And it was the best two hours I spent at Eastercon – all thanks to John Robertson.


IMG_6137
Photo by Irena Hartmann

I came to the room at the appointed time, with a lot of stuff. Jim Mowatt, who had organized it all with the Eastercon committee, gotten the room and gotten the word out, told me to be there at 18:30. There was no one there but this blonde guy, dressed all in black, whom I did not know and had never seen before. He said he was also told to be there at 18:30. People started popping to leave thing for the auction and I started panicking – 15 minutes till it was time, no Jim, no Kylie, no James – just a whole bunch of stuff, the European Fund Administrator who ran on a dare and the blond Australian dude. Soon there was too much to stuff – as there always seems to be in the end – to lay it out properly and Jim arrived and there was a crowd and we could start. So John did. And a lot of laughter later, the Funds were six hundred pounds richer and we had to leave the room. John, a comedian by trade, was AMAZING! There is no retelling it. I did tape some of it and hopefully I will manage to get my head out of my work this week to send it to Jim Mowatt.


In the meantime, take a look at photos from the Dysprosium Fan Funds Auction taken by Irena Hartmann.



Dysprosium: Sunday

nedjelja, 12. travnja 2015.

Dysprosium: Saturday

One of the biggest disappointments of my Chicon 7 trip was the fact that the con hotel did not have a pool. I am addicted to swimming and after a long day of sitting there is nothing better than a long swim. I loved that I was able to stay at the con hotel in Chicago and not lose any time getting to and from another one. I hated it that the room I was given had a view of the pool in the Radisson Blu accross the street that the internet claimed was the biggest (or perhaps the best?) pool near me.


The Park Inn at Heathrow has a pool. It’s not much but it was not crowded and it made my mornings at Dysprosium wonderful. Even though the Read Me, which I read solely because we @SFeraKon bitch so much over the fact that no one ever reads these things, was wrong and listed breakfast times wrong. (Dysprosium – the con that tells you to ignore your Read Me! how could I not love it?) Apparently, a lot of people at Eastercon do read them, because the breakfast queue was long – it appears everybody politely waited for 9 to go down and eat.The Writer’s workshop I went to was not what I would have called a workshop but it was immensely useful to me. Certain editing tips my be just OK for English speakers but when half your mind works in descriptive (read: adverb and adjective loving) Croatian, they can be GREAT!


At European cons there is no getting away from ESFS (European Science Fiction Society) so I chatted about that more than a few times with more than a few people. Even got mistaken for the current treasurer by the past one! I will leave it to her to discuss the mistake with the Irish gentleman who made it. (Makes me a tiny bit sorry I will not be there to see that discussion in St. Petersburg!)


Photo by Irena Hartmann
Photo by Irena Hartmann

Charlie Stross interviewed Jim Butcher and it was fun to listen to. I am not a huge fan of The Dresden Files, but hearing things about the creative process, about writing teachers, lessons learned and dealing with internet trolls is always fun, especially when people do it in a humorous way. (I almost put “witty” here but the American accent got in the way.)


What in the world possessed programming to put anything related to Terry Pratchett in a small room I will never know. Due to the fact that I stopped to vote for the BSFA Awards and take part in their raffle (which I am sooo stealing for some future SFeraKon!) I did not manage to get to it on time and then it was full. No Equal Rites panel for me! (After Loncon I should have known better!)


Had a lovely time chatting Finnish fandom, birthing options, Helsinki in 2017, SF drama queens and trolls and naming customs with Leikomaa Karo and Bridget Wilkinson at the Helsinki in 2017 table.  (And they need to win the Worldcon bid, so if you haven’t gotten a supporting membership for Sasquan, get on it!). I also got to meet in person some of the people I have been emailing – that is always awesome.


I was not the only Croatian at Eastercin this year! Irena Hartmann, the young Croatian writer who won the ESFS Encouragement Award in Dublin last summer and helps run Rikon just happened to be in London over Easter and choose the con over sightseeing. Going from a fandom where you know most people and most people know you at almost every con in the country to a fandom where no one knows you at all can be a bit disconcerting. Irena took it well, and now she knows a lot more people, including James Bacon. I just realized I forgot to tease her that she spent a good portion of an evening talking to a Hugo nominee!


Eastercon Fan GoH Caroline Mullan I knew nothing about but after hearing her talk I wish we could afford to bring fan GoHs at SFeraKon more often. At the end of her talk a song was performed that made me think I might like go see a filking item some time.


Photo by Irena Hartmann
Seanan McGuire, Mike Carey, Sam Stone Photo by Irena Hartmann

In a bout of missing my husband I went to the Zombie panel. Zombies – the main idea of having to deal with an enormous number of deadly things coming out of the dark – terrify me. (Yeah, Starship Troopers also had some scary moments for me!). I don’t watch the TV series and the only book I read about them was the first one in the Mira Grant series. (and I loved that one!) The panel would have been great – awesome panelists! – but again the moderator was also an author who wrote zombies and that got in the way of it being interesting for me. Why can’t there be moderators who are just moderators? I seem to remember that is how this used to work?


I do like to hear how zombies ended up in somebody’s novel. But answering all questions with examples from one own’s books got tired real fast. As did a discussion of what European vs. American vs. non-European culture is or is not sparked by an unfortunately phrased question from the audience. Really do not appreciate it when everyone forgets – and this tends to happen at UK and American cons – that Europe is so much more than the UK. Really, mentioning Ireland, Spain, France and Italy as an afterthought, does not make it any more inclusive than just thinking of Britain in that context. They are not all Europe is, nor are they all that European fandom is. At all.


IMG_5959
Photo by Irena Hartmann

I have been told – and I have no memory by whom, it was by several people and more than once – about a game that is played at cons that is all about con-running . So I found The Great Game panel, convinced Irena that it was a useful use of her time and thus two Croatians and one Brit (I think! and sorry if I am wrong!) ended up organizing an imaginary Eastercon program in just 2 months. I had so much fun and I am soooo stealing that one, too!


The Hugo nominations deserve a post all of their own. I spent the rest of the evening thinking and talking about them.



Dysprosium: Saturday

subota, 11. travnja 2015.

Dysprosium: Friday

I love to fly. The best thing about flying is the acceleration. If I could get paid to go through that sensation or the one astronauts’ experience at the beginning of a shuttle launch, I’d probably die of joy. But, then again, I find turbulence an excellent aid in falling asleep, often to the horror of my traveling companions. I really like to fly and I always want the flight to last as long as possible. (Yes, my flight to Australia was awesome!)


Today, however, a two-hour flight seemed to take forever! I couldn’t get an earlier flight and I felt I was missing half the convention. Once I got off the plain, I found the bus stop quickly enough but not the bus itself.  It seems to be turning into a theme this year – me getting to conventions a bit later than I’d like.


So, Eastercon? It feels very different from all the other cons I’ve been to. I can’t say it feels cold, because it’s not. A bit distant? Maybe. It will take me a while to pinpoint the reason – maybe it’s just the space which feels very decentralized and narrow? I am a spoiled Croatian, used to large, open spaces that house stands of all varieties to entice me into buying things while I’m trying to get to a program item. Here, one has to go into a room to even see the stands. Perfect for me when low on funds – the chance of impulsive book buying cut down to zero!


I managed to attend exactly one talk and one panel, catch up with the Irish and the Finns and find two other Croatians at the con – one, a young con-runner from Rikon, my favorite Croatian con after SFeraKon and one working at the hotel.


The Hitchiker’s Guide to the Human Spaceflight by SpaceKate was witty and fun, and I learned a lot I did not know about shuttles, shuttle launches and even more about shuttle delays. It was all about space and explorations and, of course, space toilets. I see a pattern emerging – it always comes back to bodily functions in space! Story Musgrave shared a space toilet story at Chicon 7 and SpaceKate shared a story of a not entirely functioning toilet on one of the first space flights. I have to remember to ask the Croatians attending this year’s Eurocon in St. Petersburg where the Russian Guest of Honour is the kozmonaut Pavel Vinogradov if he had anything to say on the topic.


IMG_5861The one item I most wanted to see on Friday was the Ultimate Urban Fantasy panel. I figured this time I might get lucky, as the last time it I went to one with that title I came away surprised. It was Denvention in 2008 and I had gone in expecting to hear fans discuss Tim Powers and discover other fantasy books in urban settings. Instead I was introduced to the works of Laurell K. Hamilton and Kim Harrison. (Blessing or curse, have not decided yet!


With Charlie Stross and CE Murphy and Jim Butcher and Mike Carey on this panel, I figured it would turn out to be quite interesting. I honestly never thought of The Laundry as urban fantasy. Yes, it would have fit my understanding of the term prior to Denvention but not the one I now figured was prevalent – first person, female main character, mystery plot, romantic subplot, etc.


It was entertaining to hear how The Dresden Files came about and how all the panelists saw urban fantasy in relation to their own work. Unfortunately, the panel veered too much into the writing. For a while it seemed as if no answer may come unaccompanied by examples from the author’s own books!


I get that this is both good marketing and something fans do want to hear but it’s the kind of thing I would expect to hear at a GoH interview session. On this particular panel, I would have much preferred to find out what they all thought of the subgenre itself, in more depth. At the end of the panel, I discovered (yet another reason) is why enjoy Charlie Stross taking part in panels. He closed with a thought about urban fantasy that I would have been delighted to hear much more on from the other panelists:


We’re living in a really complex century and I’ve noticed there’s not that much extrapolative near future science fiction published (…). We live in a world which is functionally profused (?) by magic. We all carry around these magic mirrors that give us access to the sum total of human knowledge in our pockets although we mostly use them to take selfies and watch cat videos. The devices around us all run on magic smoke… without the magic smoke, they stop working. We have rituals that make the gadgets do things. And there are these strange shadowy entities that have influence on our lives. We call them corporations but we might as well call them artificial intelligences or gods. We are surrounded by these strange influence(r)s and it seems to me that in some ways urban fantasy is a more useful vehicle than extrapolative science fiction for exploring how we live in the world.  *


 


The We Live in the Golden Age of Television panel proved waaay too British for me; too many mentions of details from shows I had never seen as they aired ages ago on British TV. It was definitely aimed at the right audience as a lively discussion developed almost immediately.


I exchanged listening about TV for conversations about fandom and cons with a range of awesome people and learned how the word for “friend” in Irish pronounced sounds like one in Croatian you do not say in polite society, that Norwegian libraries, just like Australian ones, do not have subscriptions, that there is no convention in Norway this year and that there are at least 12 gaming cons in Ireland during a “slow” year. Don’t think I missed half a con after all.



Dysprosium: Friday