Not a Blog

Back from Indianapolis

July 11, 2007 at 11:06 am
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I’m back home again after a weekend in Indianapolis, where I was the Guest of Honor at InConjunction. The good folks of the Circle of Janus were most hospitable, the hotel was nice enough, the parties were lively (until some high school baseball players in the hotel complained about the noise and shut us down), and I got to see some old friends and make some new ones. A small contingent from the Brotherhood Without Banners was on hand, as lively as ever. It was great to see Trebla looking much happier and healthier with his new bionic spine, to hang out with Pedicab Kate (well, she’s really a student, but as I explained to her, I know hundreds of students, but only one pedicabbie). My GOH liaison, the lovely Laura, came to the con with a cage of bats, which was pretty cool as well, and I met a couple of readers from Bulgaria who told me that in my Bulgarian editions, “battering ram” is translated with the word for a male sheep. I keep picturing the scene at the Wall, where the wildlings try to knock through the gate with… ah… sheep under their arms… the Bulgarians must think I’m very imaginative.

I had a reading at the convention, and decided to read the newly-completed prologue from A DANCE WITH DRAGONS. I’ve been struggling with this particular chapter off and on for years (not continuously, of course, when a chapter gives me as much trouble as this one has, I tend to put it aside, move on and write something else, and come back to it later with fresh eyes), writing and rewriting it, moving chunks of it around, trying different structures. There’s a lot of flashbacks in the chapter — not just one flashback, but more like four, each to a different time in the viewpoint character’s life — and integrating those with each other and with the present action has proved to be a bitch and a half. I finally did manage to get the ducks all in a row, however, so I thought I’d see how it went over.

FWIW, I have always found convention readings to be very valuable, especially when I’m doing a chapter than I’ve never read before. No matter how many times you go over your work on a computer screen, somehow mistakes still slip past you… but when you’re reading aloud, they leap right up into your face, screaming and spraying spittle. Typos, missing words, double words, tortured syntax, clunky dialogue, you name it. I always try to keep a pen on hand, so I can mark up my reading copy as I go.

And sometimes you see bigger problems too, as I did in this case. The audience seemed to like the chapter well enough, which pleased me. I talked to some of the BWB about it afterward, and was glad to hear that it mostly worked. There are still problems, though. A couple of awkward transitions, a false step and double beat in the middle, maybe too much repetition. Yes, I have reshuffled certain sections of the prologue half a dozen times already, but at the reading it became clear to that I need to look at the sequencing of the flashbacks yet again. I may be close, but I’m not there year. So that’s one of the things I’ve been doing since returning home: polishing, trimming, and restructuring the bloody prologue one more time. For the last time, I hope… but really, who knows?

This, by the way, is the quandary that every writer faces on every book. When is a chapter really done? When is it good enough? We all walk tightropes there. On one side are those who just pound out first drafts, publish them, and move on to the next book. On the other side is poor souls like the character from THE PLAGUE, endlessly revising one sentence over and over in search of some illusory perfection. The best work, I believe, comes from those who stay up the tightrope, leaning this way and that, but never falling off to either side. That’s what I try to do… and yes, that’s one big reason why the books take so long.

Anyway, I had a great time in Indiana, but now I’m home again, and I have a prologue to revise. Ciao.

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The Return of the Phipps

July 2, 2007 at 12:48 pm
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If the old gods, the new gods, and American Airlines all cooperate, Parris should be returning to Santa Fe this evening. Hoorah! I hear she had a great time in Ireland, but she’s been sorely missed on this side of the water.

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A new deal for WILD CARDS

June 28, 2007 at 5:46 pm
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I’ve just finished going over the copyedited manuscript of INSIDE STRAIGHT, the first book in our new Wild Cards triad, scheduled for a January release from Tor. It’s the eighteenth volume in the series, which we originally launched with Bantam way back in 1987, but it’s not necessary to have read the preceding seventeen books to be able to understand and enjoy this one, so I hope that come January some of you will go out and pick it up and give Wild Cards a try.

I am, of course, prejudiced, since I edited the thing, but I think INSIDE STRAIGHT is one of the stronger volumes in the series. This is sort of “Wild Cards – the New Generation,” since a lot of our original cast of characters were getting a little long in the tooth. (Unlike the heroes of the Marvel and DC universe, the Wild Cards characters live in real time, and aside from Golden Boy and Dr. Tachyon and a few others, they age). A few of the older, established characters will appear in INSIDE STRAIGHT, some in major roles and some just as cameos or even just mentions-in-passing, but mostly this book will belong to the new kids on the block — Bugsy, Lohengrin, Curveball, Earth Witch, Bubbles, Rustbelt, Lilith, Drummer Boy, and a whole bunch more. I can’t wait for you guys to meet them. I think our old Wild Cards readers will find them worthy successors to Tachyon and the Turtle and Fortunato and Yeoman and the rest of our first generations stars… and I hope our new readers will like them enough to go out and hunt up some of the old books on ABE.

INSIDE STRAIGHT will also mark the Wild Cards debuts of some terrific new writers. Caroline Spector, Carrie Vaughn, and Ian Tregillis will all be joining the madness, and I think you’ll like their stuff. I do. “The Tin Man’s Lament,” Ian’s story in INSIDE STRAIGHT, is his first professional sale, but I promise you, it won’t be his last. I expect to see his name turning up on the Campbell Awards ballot in a couple of years.

And of course a bunch of our regulars will also be on hand, albeit with new characters. One of the best things about the Wild Cards series is the opportunity it gives me to work with so many talented writers, some big names, some just starting out. Writing for something like Wild Cards is a bit like being in a band, as opposed to doing a solo act. Unlike musicians, we writers play solo the vast majority of the time, so it’s huge fun to have the chance to jam with other people now and again… and what comes out of those jam sessions is often wild and wonderful, and quite different from anything any one member of the band could have come up with on his or her own.

Oh, and I’ve just seen the cover for INSIDE STRAIGHT as well. The art is by Michael Komarck, and it’s spectacular. I think this is the best cover we’ve ever had on a Wild Cards book. Yes, even better than the six Brian Bolland covers that adorned the Titan editions in England, and I loved those so much that I bought five of the originals and hung them on my wall. Komarck is a real comer as an artist, I think. In a few years, I think you’ll be seeing his name on Hugo ballots, if there is any justice (of course, there ISN’T any justice, or else Alan Lee and John Howe would both have Hugos, but that’s a discussion for another day).

I should also mention that, although I won’t be at this year’s San Diego Comicon, the Wild Cards series will be represented. WC writers Kevin Andrew Murphy and Carrie Vaughn will be there, participating, and Tor will be doing a special INSIDE STRAIGHT promotion, so be sure and visit their booth in the exhibit hall.

And yeah, yeah, I know this post will probably infuriate those “fans” of mine who would prefer that I work on A SONG OF ICE AND FIRE all day, every day, to the exclusion of everything else… but I’ve grown used to that by now. Sorry, guys. I’m working on DANCE, as I’ve reported, but I have other projects too, and that’s going to continue to be true for a long, long time.

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The Only Living Boy in New York

June 25, 2007 at 7:52 pm
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… or New Mexico, in my case.

It’s been too long since I last posted here, but I have a good excuse. Parris has been off in Ireland since June 6, and I have been trying to take advantage of the (comparative) isolation to get some serious work done on A DANCE WITH DRAGONS. I’ve only been partially successful there. It has been a good few weeks, work wise, but not the great few weeks that I was kinda sorta hoping for. I did manage to finish one especially troublesome chapter that I have been fussing and fretting over since before I split the two books, so that’s good. (At least I THINK I finally finished it. Tomorrow I may reread the thing and decide, no, it’s no good at all. But I hope not). Finished some other chapters too, and did some more revision, so I’ve been productive, but still… there’s no way around it, DANCE is simply coming more slowly than me, my editors, or my readers would like.

I am trying to deal with that, in a couple of ways. First, I have gone and hired an actual assistant, for the first time in my career. Ty Franck has been fixing some glitches with my computer system, running a lot of my annoying, time consuming, but necessary errands, and putting my files on a database, which will finally allow me to phase out the extremely idiosyncratic, pen-and-paper-index-cards-manila-folders-and-adding-machine record-keeping system that I made up myself at the beginning of my career in 1971 and have been using ever since. Once that’s done, Ty will keep my records up to date, and I may also have him take over some part of my correspondence and emails. I have been very reluctant to do that, since I value the contact with my fans and like being accessible to them, but I’ve have reached the point where that simply may not be possible any longer. Still, it’s hard to let go, at least for me. We’ll see how this all plays out.

Also, sad to say, I have begun to question whether or not I can make this year’s worldcon in Japan. I hate to cancel, I truly do. I have not missed a worldcon, foreign or domestic, since Aussiecon II in 1985, and I do not want to break my twenty-one year streak. I love worldcons. Plus, I have never been to Japan, and I really wanted to go. Of course, I am not going to fly across the Pacific just for five days at a con. If I am going to Japan, I want to stay a few weeks and see Japan. My Japanese publisher has invited me to make some promotional appearances when I am over there as well. And my Chinese publisher has suggested I come in for a conference in China before the worldcon. And now my Korean publisher would like me to visit South Korea and do some signings after Japan. I would love to do all of this, and see the sights besides, but if I do it will mean at least a month-long trip, and maybe two months, and I just don’t think I can spare the time.

A year ago, it would never have dawned on me that DANCE would not be done by the time the Japanese worldcon rolled around, but that’s looking like a very real possibility now. Much as I might want to, I just can’t take off for a month of Asian travel with the book undone. I have to finish if it kills me… and some days I think it may. So I think my streak is going to have to end. (And no, skipping Japan does NOT mean I will now be free add the San Diego Comicon, the St. Louis NASFic, Dragoncon, or Bubonicon to the schedule. If I cancel one con then turn around and add others, it sort of defeats the purpose of cancelling). If I decide to stay home, that’s what I will do. Stay home.

Parris gets home July 2. She’s having a great time in Ireland, she tells me, despite a flight from hell, being stranded in O’Hare, a bum knee that is hobbling her still, pouring rain, an auto accident that totalled two cars. Which just goes to show how much she loves Ireland and her friends there. Still, it will be nice to have her home. Our two houses both feel very empty with her gone, especially at night.

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Back to My First Life

May 31, 2007 at 11:37 pm
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Well, I made my appearance on Sheep Island a few hours ago, cleverly disguised as Tyrion the Imp for a reading and Q&A session at Bantam’s virtual bookstore. Only this version of Tyrion could fly! Ah, if only the Tyrion in the books could fly, what mischief he will… ah… could… ah, never mind.

Anyway, it was great fun. My thanks to Ken and Dan and Betsy and all the other good folks at Bantam, Second Life, and Electric Sheep who made it possible and kept it running smoothly, and of course to all the fans and readers who donned their finest avatars and popped in for a listen. I hope you enjoyed yourself as much as I did. I hope you all bought a virtual copy of DREAMSONGS too, since that’s what we were supposed to be promoting.

And a special thanks to David Benioff and Dan Weiss, who made a surprise guest star appearance to answer questions about the HBO production of A GAME OF THRONES. It was great to have them there, even if they didn’t have time to fix their avatars up like the Clegane Brothers, as they wanted.

Even Second Lives must come to an end, however, so now I am back to my original life.

My next appearance will be similarly cutting edge. On Saturday, I will be meeting fans and signing books at Book Expo America in New York City, starting at 11am. I look forward to seeing some of you there, and defacing your books. Unfortunately, Parris has chained me to my desk, so I won’t actually be able to leave Santa Fe… but I’ll be there signing at the BEA all the same, thank you very much.

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The Best Science Fiction Film of All Time?

May 30, 2007 at 3:18 pm
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So, it’s been thirty years since we first saw STAR WARS. Hard to believe.

Amidst all the hype and hoopla of this anniversary, I keep seeing people calling STAR WARS “the best science fiction film of all time.” Uh… really? I don’t think so. The original STAR WARS was a good movie, and EMPIRE STRIKES BACK was even better (Leigh Brackett wrote that one, so there’s good reason), but RETURN OF THE JEDI went downhill, and you really don’t want to get me started about those three wretched prequels. Even the original triad hasn’t aged as gracefully as one might have hoped. It has become apparent that much of the charm of the first movie came from the novelty of seeing favorite tropes from classic SF books realized on the screen for the first time… but that charm wears off on repeated viewings, and once it does you realize that neither the story is, well… not all that it could have been. You also realize how much retrofitting and backfill has gone on since the movie’s first release. I don’t care what Lucas says, I will never believe that Darth was meant to Luke’s father from the outset, or that the romantic pairing was always supposed to be Leia and Han (it is plainly Luke and Leia)… and damn it, Han shoots first!

Never mind about all that. STAR WARS is what it is, and it had a profound effect on both SF and on film, for both good and ill… but it is not even close to being the best SF movie of all time.

What’s better? Try 2001: A SPACE ODYSSEY. Try THE DAY THE EARTH STOOD STILL. Try the first ALIEN, or even better, ALIENS (but never mention the third installment in my presence). Try CHARLIE (the film version of the classic “Flowers for Algernon”). All worthy. Try George Pal’s wonderful adaptation of H.G. Wells’ WAR OF THE WORLDS (a better film than the Spielberg remake, in my opinion), or Pal’s version of THE TIME MACHINE (a MUCH better film than the really truly abominable recent remake).

The best, though?

MGM, 1956. Leslie Nielson, Anne Francis, Walter Pidgeon, Robbie the Robot. FORBIDDEN PLANET. Also known as the Tempest on Altair-4. Inspired by Shakespeare, in turn it inspired Gene Roddenberry, who borrowed heavily from it when coming up with STAR TREK. State of the art special effects (for 1956, admittedly), gripping story, some fine performances (especially by Walter Pidgeon, whose performance as Morbius beats anything ever seen in any of the STAR WARS films). Unlike STAR WARS, this is a film that only grows richer every time you watch it. A monster that makes sense, characters with a little psychological depth, science that isn’t just empty technobabble, a sexy heroine, a tragic hero, the awesome caverns of the Krel… FORBIDDEN PLANET has it all.

Winner and still champion.

The best science fiction film of all time.

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My Second Life

May 29, 2007 at 5:23 pm
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I can barely keep up with my first life, if truth be told… but all the same, I’ll be having a second life come Thursday.

Yes, I’m making a virtual appearance in Bantam’s virtual bookstore on Second Life. For those of you who don’t know it, Second Life is… well, sort of like World of Warcraft without the axes, swords, and monsters. Our world, kinda sorta, virtually. Anyway, I’ll be there this Thursday evening, in avatar form, doing a reading from A DANCE WITH DRAGONS and doing a Q&A afterwards. Proceedings will start at 9:00pm eastern and run about an hour. This will be a first for me, so it will be fun to see how it goes. Ah, ’tis a brave new world, surely.

If you’d like to be part of the festivities, get thee to www.secondlife.com. You can sign up there, download the software, and design your own avatar. (I’ve never done a reading with monsters in the audience before, at least not the sort you could tell my looking at ’em).

The virtual bookstore can only hold about sixty avatars, but the overflow will be able to see and hear the reading from satellite sites, and send questions via IM.

I’ve never done this before either, so that’s about all I can tell you about how things will work… but if you live out in the bookdocks where I’m never likely to visit on a book tour, this virtual appearance could be the next best thing. See you there

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Eight Things About Me

May 18, 2007 at 1:29 am
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Melinda Snodgrass has “tagged” me, she informs me. And now I must reveal eight things about myself. Presumably eight things that I haven’t revealed before, or at least not widely, or else what fun would it be?

So… eight things about me that most of you would probably never suspect.

1) The first vote I ever cast was for a Republican, New Jersey’s distinguished senior senator and favorite son, Clifford B. Case.

2) I had a crew cut all through junior high, high school, and most of college.

3) My favorite guilty pleasure movie is SUMMER LOVERS. I want to go to the island of Santorini and have a menage a trois with Darryl Hannah and Valerie Quinessen.

4) When I was in my twenties people used to tell me I looked like Kris Kristofferson. Now they tell me I look like Jerry Garcia. And he’s dead. I don’t like this trend.

5) I like writing when it’s going well, but I LOVE having written.

6) My favorite song is Kris Kristofferson’s “The Pilgrim, Chapter 33.” (See him busted on the sidewalk in his jacket and his jeans, wearing yesterday’s misfortunes like a smile). I am also very fond of “Me and Bobby McGee” and “To Beat the Devil” and “Silver” and a lot of Kris’s other songs. Maybe that’s why I was pleased when people said I looked like him.

7) I have never been defeated at RISK when I have the red army. Never. And I started playing RISK in grade school. Foemen tremble when I rattle my dice. Except when they make me play green or black or some other color. Then I am merely mortal.

8) Windows sucks. I use it, under protest, for the internet, but all my fiction is written on a DOS machine, using WordStar 4.0. I’m a word guy. When I want to copy something, I like to type “copy.” When I want to delete it, I like to type “delete.” I don’t like puzzling out these stupid little cartoons they call icons, or dragging them around with a mouse. The day WordStar 4.0 stops working is the day I retire.

So there you have it. My revelations.

And now, if I understand the rules of this “game of eight” correctly, I must tag someone else, just as Melinda tagged me. Let me look around. Hmmmmm, who… ah…

STEVE LEIGH! You’re tagged!

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NFL Draft, Day One

April 28, 2007 at 10:03 pm
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Well, the first day of the NFL draft is finally over. It was the longest first round in history, the longest first day in history. I’m exhausted just from watching it.

It’s impossible to evaluate a draft until three years after it’s finished, but that doesn’t stop anyone from trying. Including me.

My two teams took completely different approaches this year.

The Jets were very aggressive. They traded up in the first round to get the top corner in the draft, giving up one of their two second round picks to move up eleven slots or so. Then they traded up again in the second round, this time surrendering their third rounder to snag a highly-rated linebacker who’d slid down significantly. That left them without a third rounder. Today’s swaps and some previous moves also left them without a fourth or a fifth, so the Jets won’t be drafting again until round six, and maybe not until round seven. They are going to end up with a very small draft class, probably no more than four players. On the other hand, the two guys they got today are prime, and both of them should make an immediate impact on the team.

The Giants, on the other hand, were totally passive. With trades flying around like bullets and teams moving up and down and sideways and hopping over one another, the G-Men just sat there and picked when their turns came. One, two, three. Tomorrow, I expect, they will go four, five, six, and seven. The first two of the three players they got today were solid, I think. The first round cornerback will be of help to our aging secondary, and the second round wide receiver (Steve Smith — I was actually hoping the Carolina Panthers would draft him a couple pick earlier, so they could start Steve Smith and Steve Smith as their wideouts) looks be pretty decent as well (however, if Amani Toomer comes back and Sinorice Moss finally plays some, the Giants won’t really need another wide receiver). The third round pick seemed like a real reach — all the draft magazines had him rated as a sixth or seventh rounder. The biggest problem is, the Giants did nothing to address their most pressing need — a left tackle to replace Luke Pettigout and fortify the offensive line. Last season, when Eli faded down the stretch, I was screaming for the Hefty Lefty. Well, I have a feeling that I may get to see him this year. Unless the Giants do something to fix that line, Eli is going to bloody well get killed back there.

All in all, I thought the Jets had a much better day than the Giants did.

Of course, when watching the draft, a true fan not only wants his own teams to do well, he wants their archrivals to do poorly. That worked out better for me, I think. The Eagles traded away their first round pick, and then took a quarterback with their first pick of the day, in the early second round. That won’t please Donovan McNabb at all, and certainly did nothing to strengthen the team. He wasn’t even an especially great prospect, according to most of the commentators. I think Andy Reid shot himself in the foot.

Even at that, he did better than the Miami Dolphins, who shot themselves in the head. When Detroit, Cleveland, and then Minnesota passed on Brady Quinn, I was screaming and cursing, because that meant he would fall into the lap of the Dolphins, and finally solve their long-standing quarterback problem. I visualized myself cursing his name for the next fifteen years, as he led the Dolphins to victories over the Jets just like Danny Marino just to do. But then the Dolphins punted their brains, and passed on Quinn to pick a speedy wideout / kick returner coming off an injured foot. No one in Radio City Music Hall could believe it, and neither could I. I think the Miami fans will remember this day with as much fondness as Jets fans remember the day we passed on Marino to select Ken O’Brien… the day we passed on Emmitt Smith to take Blair Thomas… the day we passed on Warren Sapp to pick Kyle Brady…

And it’s great that it someone else’s turn to be really, really stupid.

As for the other great rival of the Jets, the Pats of New England… well, there I am less sanguine. The Patriots wheeled and dealed and traded down and down again, and wound up with only one pick today… but they have stockppiled something like forty-seven for tomorrow, and Scott Pioli and The Vile Belichick have a satanic skill at the finding gems in the later rounds. The Patriots draft doesn’t look like much right now, but I have the feeling that by the end of training camp, they’ll have the usual hatful of talented young players.

And Dallas, well… to tell the truth, they moved around so much I don’t have any sense of what the hell they were doing. They traded up, they traded down, they did this and that, and who the hell knows? The big thing is actually next year. The Cleveland Browns gave up their first round pick in next year’s draft so they could go up and pick Brady Quinn… which means I have to root for the Browns to do well next year, since I don’t want the despised Cowboys to get a primo choice. Go, Brownies, go!

Brady Quinn’s fall was the big story of the day. From where I sit, it wasn’t warranted. I think Al Davis made a mistake. In the long run, Brady Quinn will have a better pro career than Jamarcus Russell. Yes, yes, Russell has a “cannon for an arm,” as I heard fifty times today. I’ve seen a lot of cannon-armed quarterbacks come and go in the years that I’ve been watching football. Bert Jones had a cannon for an arm. Richard Todd. Roman Gabriel. Jeff George. Kerry Collins. I’d rather have a Joe Montana or a Phil Simms. The fact that Russell can fling the ball eighty years off his back foot is only likely to be relevant if the Raiders sign Quicksilver and The Flash as wideouts.

We’ll know for sure in ten years or so, I guess. And have a clue in three.

That’s why they play the games.

Meanwhile, there’s another day of draft tomorrow.

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April 27, 2007 at 12:53 am
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I had a number of good days writing on DANCE after my last post. It felt great to have a solid streak of work like that. It’s been a while, with all the stuff that has gone down this last year. I got quite a bit done, including a marriage. Some of it was rewriting, but the book will be much stronger for the changes I made.

Unfortunately, the last two days have been less productive, at least for DANCE. A major crisis erupted on another front, and I had to spend most of my time dealing with it. Wish I could say it was all settled, but no, it drags on, and becomes increasingly unpleasant. You know, there are times when I love writing and there are times when it’s agony… but it’s the business side of this profession that can really drive you mad.

Ah, well. Sorry to be so vague, but some things I’m not allowed to speak about.

On other fronts, I will be off to LA next week, for a spate of recording. Random House is doing an audiobook version of DREAMSONGS (aka the RRETROSPECTIVE), and they’ve asked me to read the interstitial bits, the autobiography and commentary. That will be a first for me, but I’m really looking forward to it. (Don’t worry, the actual stories will be read by real professional readers and actors. We’ll have several great voices, and yes, one of them will be Roy Dotrice, who was greatly missed on the audiobook of A FEAST FOR CROWS).

Before that, though, there’s the NFL Draft. Always one of my favorite weekends of the year. Unlike the actual season, my teams can’t actually lose in the draft (or if they do, you don’t realize it for three years), so you have less chance of crushing disappointment. The Giants pick 20th and the Jets 25th, so they won’t be getting any of the big marquee players, but I’m still hoping they will come away with some guys who can make a difference. I will probably post some thoughts and comments here after the Saturday selections, so those of you who like football should check back then… and those of you who don’t want to read anything but DANCE WITH DRAGONS news should stay away.

I was very sad to read on LOCUS OnLine that Meisha Merlin Press has closed its doors. I can’t say that I was surprised, given Meisha Merlin’s struggles over the past few years, but it is a loss for the field nonetheless. Stephen Pagel and his partner Kevin Murphy are great guys and did some really nice things with Meisha Merlin… but publishing is a perilous business at the best of times, and this is hardly that. Here’s hoping that Stephe and Kevin land on their feet, and that all the Meisha Merlin books find new homes.

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