Apple-Obsessed Author Fella

Category: The Ramble (page 321 of 462)

Yammerings and Babblings

Crowdsourcing The Essentials: Non-US, POC Sci-Fi and Fantasy?

https://twitter.com/jolantru/statuses/370729349223165952

Author Joyce Chng (aka J. Damask) asked me the other day on Twitter to talk about non-US SFF written by persons of color — and woefully, I thought, I am utterly ignorant of the subject and — I mean, jeez, do I even have a single book to recommend? I don’t. And that’s on me not paying enough attention to these sorts of things, and so I told @jolantru I’d open up a post about it.

And it dovetails nicely with my Monday “crowdsourcing the essentials” posts, I think.

So, let’s talk about the essential reads that fit those categorizations: non-US and written by persons of color.

Who wants to start?

Flash Fiction Challenge: Another Ten Words

Last week’s challenge: Subgenre Frankenstein.

I’m going to give you ten words. Your job is to work all ten of these words into a flash fiction story, ~1000 words in length. That’s it. End of mandate.

The story’s due in a week: Friday, August 30th, noon EST.

Post at your online space.

Link back here.

The ten random words are as follows:

Funeral

Captivate

Deceit

Brimstone

Canyon

Balloon

Clay

Disfigured

Willow

Atomic

Questions For You Runnin’ Types

Tonight, I upped my game somewhat significantly and in fact unexpectedly — jumping from six minutes of running without stopping (and dying) to nine minutes without stopping (and dying). I attribute this in part to the inclusion of music, which got me amped up to keep running.

So, some questions for you Humans Who Run (yes, I’m prejudiced against robots, shut up):

a) What music do you listen to when you’re running?

b) I got a pair of Nike running shoes new (though on clearance) — though some folks say it’s worth investing in a real shoe. Like, ones actually designed to fit my wide-ass shovel-feet. Anybody got any suggestions for where to go to get that? Or any advice at all, re: shoes? SHOULD I RUN IN FLIP-FLOPS? DO THE COOL KIDS RUN IN CROCS? Are roller skates considered cheating?

c) Apps. What apps do you use for running? To track, to motivate, to whatever. Also, what appetizers do you like to eat while running? I am partial to gooey mozzarella sticks!

d) Dumb flailing monkey question — I’m running with headphones on and sweet jesus the headphone cords are trying to fucking kill me when I go. At a distance I must look like I’m jogging through a spider’s web — playing cat’s cradle with my headphone cable is not exactly energizing. This time I wrapped it around the phone and just… well, held the damn thing while I played music, but it’s not ideal.

THOSE ARE MY QUESTIONS, RUNNERS OF THE PLAIN.

Please provide me succor in these hard times or the tribe will burn me at the pyre.

Ten Questions About Crux, By Ramez Naam

I met Ramez at last year’s Worldcon and at the time was just hearing about his book, Nexus, out with Angry Robot — I am regrettably a slow reader and  I crawl through a TBR list (that seems to be multiply every time I blink my pretty little eyes), but finally getting around to Nexus showed a helluva book — an exciting thriller that just so happened to be whip-smart about its subject matter. So, here’s Ramez to talk about the sequel (which drops Tuesday):

TELL US ABOUT YOURSELF: WHO THE HELL ARE YOU?

I’m Ramez Naam. I’m a total dilettante. I spent most of my adult life working on software, some of which you’ve probably used.  And I’ve written books about science – about topics like genetically tweaking humans and hacking the brain and whether we should do those things, and about climate change and how to grow more food and make better solar panels and save the planet and whatnot.

And I also happen to write sci-fi, starting with my debut novel Nexus and now its sequel Crux. Which, I’ve gotta say, is super fun.

GIVE US THE 140-CHARACTER STORY PITCH FOR CRUX:

Illegal nano-drug links minds. Spies, hackers, super-soldiers. Chinese clones, Buddhist monks, uploaded posthumans, and explosions, oh my.

WHERE DOES THIS STORY COME FROM?

The first book in this series, Nexus, was an outgrowth of research I did for my non-fiction book More Than Human.  I’d done all this research on technology in the lab to make people stronger and faster and smarter, and – most interesting to me – this field called ‘neural prosthetics’ where doctors were putting implants in people’s brains to restore vision and hearing to the blind and death, to give paralyzed people control over robot arms  and cursors on computer screens, and even, in animals, to restore damaged memory and intelligence.

And when you dig into this research, you see that the line between restoring function and improving function is super blurry.  For example, if I can use a brain implant to send video from a camera worn on a pair of glasses into someone’s brain, it turns out we can probably also use that same implant to let someone project out of their brain whatever image they’re imagining.  And in the animal studies where they have implants that restore damaged memory and intelligence, they can actually boost memory and intelligence, and create rats and monkeys that are smarter than normal.

So when I sat down to write a sci-fi story that eventually became Nexus, that tech was the most amazing thing I could think of basing a book around, and to make it just a little more fun, I thought, heck, why don’t we package it up as a street drug that happens to be illegal?

And then I threw in explosions and spies and augmented super-agents and a cold war between China and the US and Buddhist monks and emergent group consciousness and biotech black markets in Thailand because, hey, those are all cool too.

HOW IS THIS A STORY ONLY YOU COULD’VE WRITTEN?

I’ve got the science background from my earlier book, of course.  I’ve got the software background – and the Nexus tech is also a software platform, which is key to the story, because there’s a lot of hacking that goes on.  But there are other elements that make it uniquely me.  A lot of the story is about the counterculture – the technology gets picked up by and driven forward by hackers, subversives, people out on the fringe.  I’ve spent the last decade and a half or so in Burning Man culture, out on the West Coast.  Those are my people.  It’s an incredibly creative community, an incredibly exuberant community, and also incredibly anti-authoritarian in a way that I wanted to bring to the page –in descriptions of music and dance and parties, in the dialogue and the value systems of the characters.

And then there’s the War on Drugs and War on Terror angle. A lot of the conflict in Nexus and even more in Crux is driven by the fact that the Nexus technology – and lots of other advanced biotech and nanotech – is highly illegal.  It’s illegal for a reason – this sort of tech has been abused in various terrible ways. But that also means that government is trampling on people’s civil rights, locking them up without due process, and preventing all sorts of positive uses that could be happening. I’m a big civil libertarian, and while I went out of my way to show both the pro and con perspective to this kind of tech – the ways it can be uplifting and the ways it can be abused – I think I had a unique steeping in the civil liberties issues that I could bring to bear, along with all the tech and underground culture and explosions.

WHAT WAS THE HARDEST THING ABOUT WRITING CRUX?

Living up to Nexus!  The first book was so well received that I was honestly just plain nervous that a sequel would pale in comparison. But there’s not much you can do except write the best book you can.  And the reviews seem to think Crux is at least as good, so I’m happy there.

WHAT DID YOU LEARN WRITING CRUX?

I bit off a more complex story with Crux.  I have more storylines going at once, and they all intersect in some pivotal and climactic ways.  I did that intentionally – more threads and more points of view means you get a much richer view of the world.  It’s a lot more nuanced, and you can see, in a lot of cases, where various characters have very different views of the world.  In some cases, characters that you’re rooting for are working towards really divergent goals, which means conflict between them is a real possibility, and as that looks more and more likely, the tension just ratchets higher and higher.

To pull that off, I had to improve my craft, to keep all the storylines compelling and hard to put down on their own, to keep the overall book always fast to read, and at the same time to make sure the reader never felt lost.  What I’m hearing from readers is that it worked, and I’m glad, because that was definitely a stretch of my skills for me.

WHAT DO YOU LOVE ABOUT CRUX?

Heh.  I loved running into a friend who I’d given an early draft to read and having her chide me (only half serious) for keeping her up until 3am the night before because she couldn’t put the book down.  That’s music to an author’s ears!

I also love that this is the middle of a three-book series and it’s very much the Empire Strikes Back of the three.  I’m an optimist, and there are some happy and beautiful things in this book, but it’s also a book with some dark and ominous tones, and the promise of an epic and world-changing climax in the final book.

WHAT WOULD YOU DO DIFFERENTLY NEXT TIME?

Next time I’d take what I know about Crux and go back in time and insert little bits of it into Nexus.  And I’d take what I know about the third book and go and insert it into Crux!  Writing a series, you’re always thinking ahead and doing your best to lay groundwork for the next book, but you also always reach a point where you think, “Dang!  It would have been awesome to lay a breadcrumb for this in the previous book!”

GIVE US YOUR FAVORITE PARAGRAPH FROM THE STORY:

So many choices!  But here’s a passage I like, and that doesn’t give too much away.  Two of my characters, Kade and Feng, have been ambushed by bounty hunters seeking the price on an extremely sought-after piece of information in Kade’s head. And because Kade and Feng are mentally linked via Nexus nodes in their brains, Kade sees the fight from Feng’s perspective, complete with the benefit of some of the unique ways in which Feng experiences the world. Oh, and Feng just happens to be a cloned Chinese super-soldier engineered, enhanced, and trained from birth for this sort of thing:

“Then Feng was among them, his mind cool and hard. Time slowed for Kade as his friend’s combat trance enveloped him, stretching out every instant into a long, deadly span. The flight paths of unfired bullets shone in Feng’s thoughts, brilliant lines of red light extending from the muzzles of their guns. The bounty hunters’ bodies cast echoes of future blows and kicks that he foresaw.

Feng moved like a dancer, calm and graceful. He leapt over the plane of fire of a swinging pistol, rolled under another as he converged on the first bounty hunter. His mind was utterly absorbed. This was samadhi. This was meditation. Guns exploded and the bullets were living things in Feng’s mental map, ripping out of the muzzles, shockwaves rippling visibly through the air, flinging themselves at the spots Feng had occupied fractions of a second ago.

Then Feng reached the first bounty hunter, and the man went down with his neck snapped.”

WHAT’S NEXT FOR YOU AS A STORYTELLER?

The third and final Nexus book! It’ll be out in 2014.  And it’ll be the most riveting, explosive, and world-changing of the three.

Ramez Naam: Website / Twitter

Nexus: Amazon / B&N

Crux: Amazon / B&N

The Runner

I never thought I’d be a runner.

I mocked runners. I’d think, “Oh, ha ha, look at them, gallumphing about, sweating like perps. They’re not getting anywhere. What are you running from, asshole? Go ride a bike. At least you can get somewhere on a bike.” Then I’d laugh and high-five myself and not go ride my bike.

As a kid, running was a small misery for me. I had something called Osgood Schlatter’s disease, which is basically the “growing pains” you hear about, except these growing pains form a pair of knobby protrusions beneath my kneecaps — like knots on a tree, like elbows beneath my knees — and when I ran, it hurt like a sonofabitch. This was, of course, also an excellent way of getting out of gym class. “Sorry, coach, can’t engage with your physical fitness regimen today because, hey, look at these knees.” Then I’d go and I’d sit on the bench and read a book or hang out with those other guys who forgot their gym uniforms that day.

It was a very good way to excuse myself not running.

A great way, in fact, to excuse not pushing myself at all, physically.

supreme way, perhaps, to train my mind and my body to pack on a little weight.

And pack on a little weight, I did. Never epic weight, but often enough to be uncomfortable, certainly enough to earn myself those little whispers I imagine others whisper (even though they probably don’t) about how I look or what kind of weight I’m carrying around.

I’ve tried all kinds of things. Various diets and exercise plans. They all work until they don’t, and they stop working because they mostly suck. By which I mean, they’re unpleasant and not easy and offer uncertain reward and just when you think you’ve worked out something that does work along comes a study that says that thing you’re doing is going to kill you and that’s enough for Doubt to get its wriggly toe in the door and make you taper off what you’re doing. Low-carb works but it’s low-carb (CAKE COOKIE ICE CREAM BREAD PASTA PIXIE STICKS egads I feel like a prediabetic cookie monster over here). The elliptical works but you have to stand in the same spot the whole time and spin those legs and accomplish nothing while staring at the wall or the TV. Going to the gym works but hot damn, I have things to do and the gym costs money.

I got a toddler. I’m a writer.

Time and money, c’mon.

Still. I’ve committed. So I do a mixture of all this stuff. An inelegant smooshy wad of various options and approaches and clumsy methodologies. I got myself a Fitbit. I have yet to lose it. I walk 10,000 steps a day. It’s working. Some weight has gone. Slowly. And surely.

Just the same, I kept thinking it wasn’t enough.

And I kept thinking about running.

I’d heard it was a good way to lose weight.

I worried that it was bad for my knees. Or was just so awful I’d never stick with it.

Then the Oatmeal’s cartoon about running came out.

And I thought, huh.

I’ve flirted with running before. Never seriously. I walk a lot every day and so I’d once in a while break into a run and thirty seconds in I didn’t hit a Runner’s High so much as I hit a Sisyphean Nadir where the boulder rolled back on me and crushed my lung capacity and so again I’d return to that notion that running was for chumps and, pssh, pfft, I was no such chump.

Still, as noted, we have a toddler. And as of late it has become increasingly clear that he can run like a motherfucker. He’s like a bullet fired from a gun. It’s like something out of the Matrix — he can defy physics and turn on a dime and zip and dash and zoom.

He’s like a tornado made of wolverines.

And sometimes a thing will happen where he runs boldly toward danger.

A road. A countertop corner. A starving velociraptor.

A firm parental yell (aka “Daddy Voice”) stops him in his tracks.

But if it didn’t –?

I wondered: Could I catch him?

If I tried to run after him, would the toddler win out?

So, I decided to try running.

I decided to try it for real this time. I Googled how to do it, which felt like one of the most absurd Google searches of my life and I half-expected Google to return a single result which was the text: DO THE SAME THING YOU DO WHILE WALKING EXCEPT DO IT QUICKLY, DUMMY, then maybe also adding a lovely little infographic that shows left, right, left, right in clear and colorful diagrams. Running for Dipshits, the graphic might be called.

Except, turns out, I had a bit to read. And as I am a writer and a reader, I like it when subjects give me things to read — if I can distill a physical action down to an intellectual reading exercise, that really helps. And one of the most beneficial things I read basically said, at least initially, do not run yourself directly into misery. Right? At first, just run until it sucks, then stop. Then walk home. Because if your first experience with it is just a sack-punch of pure anguish, you’re not likely to do it again the next day.

I went out, bought a new pair of shoes. Running shoes.

Then not quite two weeks ago, I took my first run.

It was equal parts horrible and wonderful.

I felt like I was dying.

And at the same time, I felt like I was really living.

As my limbs pinwheeled and my body tumbled forward like a crashing passenger train — a graceless flopping about, really — I felt my heart throbbing in my neck like a hummingbird, I heard my breathing start to sound like the panting of a heat-struck dog. My knees hurt. My back hurt. My eyes were wide and my tongue was thrust out. And yet at the same time…

The evening was beautiful. The woods were loud with insects. No cars on the backroad. A distant dog barking. A nice breeze, utterly unlikely in August. My chin was lifted. My chest was out. My initial enervation reversed and suddenly I felt weirdly bright and oddly capable.

I was, that night, able to run for a minute and a half without having to stop and basically die.

The next time, I ran two minutes.

Then three.

Then four, twice in a row.

Then five, twice in a row.

Last night I ran six minutes without perishing in an explosion of sweat and fire.

The first time I ran, I ran fast, faster than I’d run in a long time.

The third time was awful.

The fourth time was revelatory.

My legs hurt. My back hurts.

But I want to keep doing it. I want to race the Devil. I want to outrun death (because really, that’s what running is about — it’s a race we will all lose, because life, like pinball, is a game we can’t beat). I want to enjoy the mornings and the nights while running.

If I think about running when I’m running it hurts, it’s awful, I hate it. If I think about other things, then it’s nothing at all. No pain. Just clear sailing.

I’m not good at it. I’m no expert. I’m so far beneath amateur hour that I wouldn’t even be allowed to join the Bar League. But I think I’m going to keep doing it.

I run now, so I guess that makes me a runner

At least for now.

Under The Empyrean Sky: Goodreads Giveaway

Huh, wouldja look at that? There’s a giveaway for Under the Empyrean Sky over yonder hills at Goodreads. The trick is, it seems to be ending tomorrow (8/21), so, hop on it.

The book seems to be reaching lots of eyeballs and I’m getting quite a few emails from people who seem really hungry for the second book — which has to be a good sign, right? If you’re up for an adventuresome YA agripocalyptic dustbowl dystopia with bloodthirsty GMO corn and rich people who float in the sky and shuck rats and scavenger crews and a growing hobo menace (plus: LOVE QUADRANGLE), hey, dang, this book might be right up your alley, so check it out?

And if you have read it and dug it — or any of my books, or any book by any author! — then I’d sure appreciate you leaving a review somewhere. Your word of mouth matters. Thanks!