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Author of The Grace of Kings and The Paper Menagerie

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scifi

Silently and Very Fast

February 24, 2012 by Ken

“Silently and Very Fast,”, by Catherynne M. Valente (Clarkesworld Magazine, October 2011).

I read this back when it first came out, and I wanted to re-read it again before writing this post in my series on the Nebula nominees. It is a far more ambitious work than many novels. It is the story of an “AI” named Elefsis and the family that gave birth to it (or perhaps it is the other way around). I put AI in quotes because … well, by the end of the novella you’ll question that label.

It is a story about love, growing-by-learning, having children, Otherness, Self, and the yearning for authenticity in a world inevitably succumbing to the forces of more artificiality, more created-ness. It is beautiful, moving, and alien, much like the Auden poem from which it takes its title.

Be forewarned that this is not an “easy” work. Valente’s style is justifiably famous, and much of the novella is structured as a series of recast myths and fairytales that hint at or echo events in “the real world.” I think the technique works. The way the story is told is very much part of the point.

Filed Under: reading Tagged With: nebulas, scifi

Three More Nebula Nominees

February 22, 2012 by Ken

In this post, I discuss three more Nebula nominees. I actually read two of them a while back but didn’t write down my thoughts.

“Shipbirth,” by Aliette de Bodard (Asimov’s Science Fiction, February 2011). A powerful tale that uses its “Aztecs in space” setting to examine assumptions about gender, life, compassion and empathy. What I like the most about it is its unflinching refusal to put its protagonist in a neat box. More fiction in general (and spec-fic in particular) should try to achieve this. Be sure to read the author notes, which are very enlightening.

“The Old Equations,” by Jake Kerr (Lightspeed Magazine, July 2011). An alternate history-of-science tale in which relativity isn’t discovered/confirmed until we try to send someone on an interstellar journey and notice the time dilation. The story’s premise allows us to see the device of time dilation, a staple in SF, through fresh eyes and to experience the emotional wonder anew with the characters. Amazingly, this is Jake Kerr’s first published story. You cannot debut in a better way.

“The Migratory Pattern of Dancers”, by Katherine Sparrow (Giganotosaurus, July 2011). In the future, after the extinction of migratory birds, men modified to be like birds recreate their dance. I think of this as more fantasy than scifi, but it works very well on a symbolic level. I admire this piece especially because it breaks so many rules and yet soars anyway. I wish more of us could pull this off.

Filed Under: reading Tagged With: nebulas, scifi

Fields of Gold

February 22, 2012 by Ken

“Fields of Gold”, by Rachel Swirsky, is nominated for a Nebula this year. This story gets at the heart of fantasy: nostalgia for the losses and misses of a life. Lyrical, funny, beautiful. The ending does what Swirksky does best: just when you think it’s winding down, it lifts you up and takes you somewhere wondrous.

Filed Under: reading Tagged With: nebulas, scifi

… and Other Stories From 2011

February 21, 2012 by Ken

In case you’re catching up on your 2011 short fiction reading, here’s a list of stories I thought were noteworthy.

In it, I also talk about Nebula nominees: “Movement,” by Nancy Fulda, “The Cartographer Wasps and the Anarchist Bees”, by E. Lily Yu, “Her Husband’s Hands,” by Adam-Troy Castro, and “Ray of Light”, by Brad Torgersen.

Filed Under: reading Tagged With: nebulas, scifi

Six Months, Three Days

February 20, 2012 by Ken

“Six Months, Three Days” by Charlie Jane Anders is an amazing, funny, sad, super cool story about a man who sees the future and a woman who sees futures. Beautiful. Totally awesome that it’s up for a Nebula. Go read it now.

Filed Under: reading Tagged With: nebulas, scifi

Nebula Nominees

February 20, 2012 by Ken

SFWA has announced the Nebula finalists. Congrats to all the nominees! I know many of them and the nominated works, and they’re all deserving. I’d be happy to see any one of them win.

I’m honored to see that “The Man Who Ended History: A Documentary” and “The Paper Menagerie” are on the list.

I’m grateful to many people, especially all the reviewers who said kind things about my works and publicized them. But for now, I want to single out Erica Naone, who encouraged me to finish my novella (I was ready to give up on it until she came along), and Dario Ciriello and Gordon Van Gelder, my publishers, who believed in my stories.

And as always, I thank my wife Lisa, who is not afraid to tell me when she thinks something I write isn’t any good.

Filed Under: writing Tagged With: nebulas, scifi

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