Showing posts with label Cat Sparks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cat Sparks. Show all posts

Oct 3, 2014

D6 Issue Three is live

dimension-6-download_badge_white_bg

Just click on the badge to the left and you will be taken through to the Dimension 6 page where you can download your copy of Issue One (in Mobi or epub format). Or you can click here if the image isn’t showing in your browser.

What is Dimension 6 and How did it come about?

Short answer - a collection of free fiction, free from a price tag and free from DRM but containing the some of the cream of Australian SpecFic Writing.

Long answer – read Angela Slatter’s interview with Dimension 6 publisher Keith Stevenson of Coeur De Lion Publishing.

 

 

Issue 3 features:

‘Shark-God Covenant’ by Robert Hood
You never make a deal with the Devil. But what about the child of a god?

_________________________________

‘The Last of The Butterflies’ by Steve Cameron
Let me tell you a story about when I was young and the world was a very different place.

_________________________________

‘New Chronicles of Andras Thorn’ by Cat Sparks
Just like his uncle, Andras Thorn wanted adventure and excitement. Unfortunately he found it.

 


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Jul 13, 2013

Galactic Chat 21with Cat Sparks has hit the …airwaves?

GCLogo Airwaves, internets, interwebs whatever take your pick, it’s out.  Alex Pierce of Galactic Suburbia and Last Short Story fame interviews Cat Sparks.  I love the conversational tone that the two of them have.

You might also note that I have set up  tumblr  and facebook pages.

You can play the cast directly below or download the mp3 here

Here are the show notes:

In this episode we steal Alex from Galactic Suburbia and get her to interview the wonderful Cat Sparks, award winning writer and fiction editor at Australia's premier science magazine - Cosmos.  They discuss Cat's early career as a photographer of rock star hopefuls and politicians, before moving on to talking about her recent collection put out by Ticonderoga. They also cover her involvement in Australian speculative fiction as a small press publisher, writer and editor.  Of particular interest will be her bar panel discussion on the structure of novels using table condiments and cutlery.

[Note:  We apoligise for the feedback echo experienced in the first couple of questions Alex asks]

Cat Sparks' The Bride Price can be found at:

Amazon (for internationals)

Booktopia (Australia)

IndieBooks Online (Australia)

Agog Press Titles can be found at Booktopia.

Cosmos Magazine can be found here

Author Website: Cat Sparks

Author Twitter: @catsparx

Credits:

Interviewer: Alexandra Pierce

Guest: Cat Sparks

Music & Intro: Tansy Rayner Roberts

Post-production: Sean Wright

Feedback:

Twitter: @galactichat

Email: galactichat at gmail dot com


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Jun 22, 2013

Book Review – The Bride Price by Cat Sparks

tbp

Cat Sparks is probably more widely known for her role as an editor and small press advocate (indeed she was included in Donna Maree Hanson’s Australian Speculative Fiction: A Genre Overview as such). A talented graphic artist and photographer she’s been a stalwart, a firm fixture in the Australian Speculative Fiction scene long before I rocked up.

The Bride Price collects works that have appeared intermittently over the course of the last decade or so, it’s the short fiction that she’s fitted in around being generally brilliant and multitalented with everything else.  And like everything she does in Australian speculative fiction its got that polished feel to it. 

You can perhaps tell I am a little bit of a fan.

No collection can be everything to everyone, there’s usually some stories that hit the mark and some that don’t but heavens, I’d have trouble finding a story in this collection that I thought was even slightly off the boil.

The award winning A Lady of Adestan opens the collection.  A beautifully written fantasy tale that ducks and weaves under your defences and delivers a sharp stinging uppercut. It was released in 2007 but I won’t spoil it.  It’s a brilliant opener that snaps the reader into focus and gets them prepared for some quality work.  If you think women can’t write gritty fantasy well read this story and then we’ll chat.

This is followed by the first of the Sammaryndan stories, Beyond the Farthest Stone, which is chronologically the last written, being an original composition for this collection.  In Beyond the Farthest Stone, Sparks manages to conjure up a superb post apocalyptic setting reminiscent of those bleak 80’s films like Mad Max 3 and Salute to the Jugger.  Only with Sparks, you get the sense of a deeper, more realized and diverse world. You’ll also note that women are mostly the heroes of these stories - which is to say that you get a different perspective, a subtle shifting of focus away from standard tropes.

The Bride Price takes us off earth and possibly several galaxies away to a single man in possession of a good fortune, and in need of a wife.  And in this future brides are made to order, contracted to the buyer before they mature to leave time for training. It’s a subtle commentary on the rich and women/people as a commodity. The moral is ( through I hesitate to use the term, as Sparks never preaches) is the suggestion that what is truly worth having, is worth working for.

In The Street of the Dead, Sparks captures Australian rural voice and mannerism (hard to do well without sounding like you are “puttin’ it on a bit strong”) particularly well as Australia suffers an odd alien invasion.  Indeed when she sets her stories in near future Australia I think she has a perfect ear for cadence and register.

The second in the Sammaryndan Stories, Sammarynda Deep takes place in Sammarynda.  Here we explore the other culture hinted at in Beyond the Farthest Stone.  We find out about the tradition of scarring oneself as an act of attaining honour

“When one attains true adulthood in Sammarynda,one must render upon oneself an honour. It may be a small thing
or a great thing. The choice is entirely one’s own.”

“That scar is my honour. When my time came I asked two friends to hold me down and a third to wield the scythe.”

The light of the moons cast a pearly luminescence on his skin. Mariyam frowned. “You chose to be scarred? Surely you can’t be
serious?” And then the truth of his words hit home. Jahira’s eye.Mariyam gasped, bringing her fingers to her lips.

It’s a delightful detail that is more than just window dressing for Sparks’ apocalypse and it’s central to this particular story. Some scars aren’t visible, some sacrifice is emotional. Sammarynda Deep is my second favourite, after A Lady of Adestan – a subtle twist waiting to slap the reader again.

Seventeen is a story about growing up and outliving ones usefulness as a rent-a-grandchild.  Again Sparks manages to make subtle comment on the rich without being preachy. I love the fusion of the ideas - the rich buying the relationships they can’t develop themselves and the edgy reality of street kids surviving by any means necessary, until they are used up and cast off.

Now, perhaps to break up the somewhat dark path the reader’s being treading, Sparks gives us a bit of a respite with All the Love in the World, a story that goes against the grain of most post apocalyptic stories in that the world hasn’t descended into savagery.  The drama in this story is much more that of interpersonal relationships and how far we will go for love. The Ramsey Street of the Apocalypse( hmmm though perhaps Ramsey street would descend into cannibalism)- which is not to imply that the story is cheap melodrama but more so that it focuses on a street cut off from the rest of reality.

Now after Sparks has finished her novel in the same world as the Sammarynda stories are set, I want a novel set around the piratical Dead Low.  Perhaps I am an old Browncoat at heart and just like the idea of pirates salvage operations in space.  The un-heroic side of space opera where it’s the little things that count, not necessarily fighting against the empire or facing off the Kodan Armada in a lone gunship.

In Arctica, Sparks displays her versatility with a tale of trans-dimensional refugees arriving in a 19th Century-ish Earth .  It feels steampunk but the focus on and treatment of refugees has me casting a sideways glance at our current political situation in Australia.  

I thought we had another Sammarynda story with The Alabaster Child, it certainly has that feel to it.  It is a wonderful story that leads the reader one way and then delivers a reveal at the end that changes the tone of the story entirely.  It has elements of a Western/ gold rush frontier story but becomes a story of discovery.

Holywood Roadkill has a kind of post-cyberpunk feel to it.  The corporations have won and the gap between haves and have nots is marked physically by the superhighway that cuts off the slums from Hollywood City.  Playing a game of real life Frogger our protagonists take an all or nothing chance to get into the city by crossing the highway.  This isn’t the polished chrome of the 80’s its the story of those that fall through the cracks and the realities that keep them there.

Scarp like The Street of the Dead, is a quintessential Australian, small town setting.  Society hasn’t descended into cannibalism but the local council has mutated into a patriarchal group of unelected gluttonous drunkards insistent on preserving the status quo(actually that may not be far from the reality).  The tension between the young and the old could be plucked from any rural Australian town,  the desire to escape from boredom and restriction. Likewise the landscape is decidedly Australian an isolation enforced by nature as much as the gun. 

The Sleeping and the Dead I had previously read in Gilgamesh Press’ Ishtar and was my favourite in that collection, though it was a close call with works from Warren and Biancotti included with it.  It is gruesome and decidedly post apocalyptic gothic, featuring Necromaidens with a fetish for bones.

A good chunk of this collection is post apocalyptic but Sparks manages to deliver such a variety of post apocalyptic settings that I think The Bride Price is a good place to start for anyone wishing to take on that particularly well done sub genre – an exemplar on how to make those stories original and interesting.  The other stories clearly display a versatility in the wider science fiction genre.  In short I think Sparks can deliver meaty science fiction with a subtle side dish of social comment whichever setting she chooses. If this is your first experience of Sparks you won’t want it to be your last - I experienced a sense of sorrow when I reached the end of The Bride Price, so immersed was I the stories she had created.

You can buy The Bride Price here.

You can buy various Agog Press titles here .

This review was based on an advanced reading copy.

This post first appeared on Adventures of a Bookonaut.


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awwbadge_2013[4]This review is part of the Australian Women Writers Challenge 2013.  Please check out this page for more great writing from Australian women..

May 28, 2013

X6 – eBook Release

X6newCropKS-713x1086-196x300 Coming later this year from Coeur de Lion, the critically acclaimed collection, X6 will be released in digital format.  It features 6 tales from some of Australia's best Specfic authors: Margo Lanagan, Paul Haines, Terry Dowling, Cat Sparks, Trent Jamieson and Louise Katz.

To check out the buzz around this collection when it launched in 2010 go here.

Some choice comments from the link above:

“Wives,” by Paul Haines, is a tour de force: a dystopian science fictional horror story which will alternately shock you, disturb you, and break your heart. - Richard Larson, Strange Horizons, August 2010

“Heart of Stone,” Cat Sparks, X6 – a tightly constructed, plot-driven X-Files style mystery, this one starts out as a quirky character piece but builds up to proper thriller proportions. Like the Haines piece, this novella has a really strong Australian voice to it, through setting and also character and dialogue - Last short story on Earth, October 2009

‘If X6 only contained Margo Lanagan’s rich and evocative fantasy “Sea-Hearts”, you’d be getting more than your money’s worth! But this volume of short novels by veteran editor Keith Stevenson weighs in with over 170,000 words by multiple award winning authors such as Terry Dowling and Cat Sparks … and fiery, up-and-coming “young Turks” such as Trent Jamieson and Paul Haines. Ranging from the sublime to disturbing in-your-face noir, X6 is a brilliant cartogram of what’s happening in Australian genre fiction.’   Jack Dann – multi-award winning author, and editor of Dreaming Again.

 

On the reputation of Wives and Sea Hearts alone I would buy this.  Wives in particular, is spoken of with such high regard among readers and writers in the Australian scene that the collection would be worth it for that story alone.  Then you have the novella Sea Hearts that formed the seed of Margo’s award winning book of the same name (Brides of Rollrock Island for readers in the Northern Hemisphere). But ice that cake with Sparks and Jamieson and you have a rather rich desert.


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Aug 2, 2012

Twelfth Planet Press at Melbourne Writers festival

Kerry Greenwood (author of the Phryne Fisher Mysteries) will be Launching the Twelve Planets Series this Sunday 26 August at the Yarra Building, Federation square, Melbourne. 

You’ll also get a chance to meet some of the Twelve Planets Series authors( lovely people all)

It’s free.  Yes free.

Check the postcard below:

 

tpp-mwf-invitation

H/T Kirstyn McDermott


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Jun 3, 2012

2012 Snapshot Interview– Cat Sparks

I’d like to welcome Cat Sparks as the third interviewee in my 2012 Snapshot series of interviews.  As you can see below Cat is insanely busy and I thank her for taking the time out of her day to answer my questions.

 

  • ishtarYou were recently able to participate in Margaret Atwood's Time Machine Doorway Workshop, and Ishtar by Gilgamesh Press has featured prominently in Awards. What's on the boil for Cat Sparks at the moment?

Boil is definitely the correct term. Currently I feel like I’m living in of those nightmares where you’re desperately trying to run forward but moving in slow motion. Or a bug trapped in amber -- take your pick. I’m finishing up the graphic design/photography for the Aurealis Awards. I have a grant-funded novel due in November, a Twelve Planet Press story suite due in October, a collection coming out through Ticonderoga next year which requires two new stories.

The novel I have been working on in one form or another across the past seven years has just bounced back from my agent AGAIN with a long and comprehensive list of rewrite requirements. Plus, you know, my Cosmos job and I’m tutoring at a writing retreat in June and I’ve just begun a Doctorate. Lucky I quit my graphic design job cos I definitely don’t have time for that stuff anymore.

 

  • You figure prominently in the scene over a number of years as both and editor and writer. What work of your own from the last decade do you look back on and say - yes that was a highlight?

Editing & publishing the Agog! anthologies was a definite highlight, although I probably didn’t feel that way at the time. A couple of authors have since credited me with kick starting their careers. The press made a difference & made its mark, but it definitely hobbled my own writing output, both in terms of quality and quantity.

My own favourite stories are probably ‘Hollywood Roadkill’ from On Spec, 2007; ‘All the Love in the World’ from Sprawl, 2010 and ‘The Sleeping and the Dead’ from Ishtar, 2011.

 

  • agogYou have just embarked on a Doctorate, what does the near future hold for you in terms of your writing?

 
The near future holds nothing but writing, rewriting, reading and data mining bibliographies. (see answer to Q 1 for details). I have definitely bitten off more than I can chew but I’m going to keep chewing anyway. My one true superpower is persistence. Never give up, never surrender, as they say…

 

  • You are widely published and contribute so much more to the scene than some might suspect. What recent work by your Australian peers has impressed you?

Kim Westwood’s The Courier’s New Bicycle. I’ve been a big fan since buying a story of hers for Agog! Smashing Stories back in 2004. Kim’s work is that winning combination: style and substance struggling for equal space.

Also noteworthy are the complexities displayed in Tansy Rayner Roberts’ Creature Court series. Tansy’s work impresses me because I always swear I’m not interested in reading ‘that kind of stuff’, yet I end up reading and enjoying it anyway. Mind you, right now anyone who can produce a novel that doesn’t suck impresses me (again, see answer to Q1).

Kathleen Jennings is another one, definitely a quiet achiever, the absolute antithesis of the human spambot set. I remember Kathleen from cons of yore, shyly sidling up to collect local authors’ signatures. Her art is popping up in all sorts of prestigious international places these days. Good stuff and utterly unique.

And finally, Amanda Rainey’s graphic design. Her work is simply stunning.

 

  • AgogSSTwo years on from Aussiecon 4, what do you think are some of the biggest changes to the Australian Spec Fic scene?


Everything is now online and super fast. Hoary old arguments that used to fester over months now boil, brew and spew in the space of a single afternoon, mostly on Twitter and Facebook, Live Journal having fallen by the wayside. The community has ascended from the corporeal world like a plague of malcontented ghosts. I can’t help but feel many of us may have lost something valuable in our media-savvy quest for what is widely being misunderstood as ‘professionalism’. The tsunami of writers’ self-promotional spam is aggravatingly mind numbing, like a giant plasma telly notched up to eleven blasting all adds, no program content.

Why do you want to be a writer if all you ever have to say is LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME LOOK AT ME!!! Writing is first and foremost about content. Without content, you’re just sucking up pixels and my time.

More books are being produced now than ever before, a direct result of improved digital printing technology. There are good sides to this -- and bad. There was a time when an author needed to make a reasonable number of pro sales before scoring a collection.

Newer writers used to read mags and anthologies with the intention of learning the score and improving their own chances of being included in the next one. No need to read anything anymore, just upload your stories straight to Smashwords or wherever. Does the elimination of gatekeepers make you a better writer? I doubt it.

The 2012 aether overfloweth with podcasts! This is an excellent development, especially for busy types like me as they are the perfect accompaniment to one’s exercise routine. My two favourites are Jonathan and Gary’s Coode Street and Galactic Suburbia.


Cat Sparks’ Bio:

Cat_Sparks

Cat Sparks is fiction editor of Cosmos Magazine. She managed Agog! Press, an Australian independent press that produced ten anthologies of new speculative fiction from 2002-2008. She’s known for her award-winning editing, writing, graphic design and photography.

A graduate of the inaugural Clarion South Writers’ Workshop, she was a Writers of the Future prize winner in 2004. She has edited five anthologies of speculative fiction and more than fifty of her short stories have been published since the turn of the millennium.

Cat has received a total of seventeen Aurealis and Ditmar awards for writing, editing and art including the Peter McNamara Conveners Award 2004, for services to Australia’s speculative fiction industry. She was the convenor of the Aurealis Awards horror division in 2006 and a judge in the anthologies and collected work category in 2009.

She is currently working on a biopunk trilogy and a suite of post-apocalypse tales set on the New South Wales south coast.

Her story ‘All the Love in the World’ is reprinted in Hartwell and Kramer’s Years Best Science Fiction, Volume 16.

In January 2012 she was one of 12 students chosen to participate in Margaret Atwood’sThe Time Machine Doorway workshop as part of the Key West Literary Seminar Yet Another World: literature of the future. Her participation was funded by an Australia Council emerging writers grant.

[Photo: Selena Quintrell]


SnaphotLogo200512This interview was conducted as part of the 2012 Snapshot of Australian Speculative Fiction. We’ll be blogging interviews from 1st June to 8th June  and archiving them at ASif!: Australian SpecFic in Focus. You can read interviews at:


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May 14, 2012

eBook Review – Ishtar (Eds.) Amanda Pillar & K.V. Taylor

ishtar

Ishtar is a collection of novella’s written by three of Australia’s top female speculative fiction writers.

Indeed, the collection itself has been nominated for both an Aurealis and a Ditmar, and the individual novellas have picked up nominations in both awards as well.

Published by Gilgamesh press 1. for the rather paltry sum of $5.95 in ebook form, it’s well worth the money.

The Tales

The stories in Ishtar, as the title suggests, centre on the Assyrian Goddess Ishtar, goddess of fertility, war, love, and sex.

The first novella, The Five Loves of Ishtar by Kaaron Warren is set in Ancient Assyria.  The story is told by successive generations of washer women indentured to the Goddess as she is wife or partner to 5 great men, beginning with the deity Tammuz. 

The story is written in the first person, and the language is somewhat stilted (though not in a negative sense).  I think Warren is trying to create a text that feels mythic and reserved, not quite biblical but certainly encouraging more formal tone:

My goddess Ishtar had five great loves in her thousand years of living. Many lovers; so many even I lost count, I, who can tell you the number of girdles in every household in the city. But five men she loved, and five times she risked all for love.

I’ll admit that this tale took me the longest to get into.  The repetition of the form , however, the continuity of generations of washer women telling the story, gave me both a sense of history and gradually drew me in.

The second novella was Deb Biancotti’s And the Dead Shall Outnumber The Living and is set in present day Sydney. It’s a police procedural  that morphs into a surreal dark fantasy where the goddess Ishtar appears again, flexing her powers.

She crouches and grips the edge of a drain outlet, peering in. The stench is unbearable. Every shitting, vomiting junkie in the city crammed into one room couldn’t smell this bad. The body looks like a sack pushed up against the grate, spread out, blocking nearly the whole outlet. Water rushes around it, making the skin ripple. It’s naked, and the dark hairs on its chest and arms and legs, the dark V of hair around its genitals, are pressed flat by the weight of water. The insides must’ve floated away by now, out to sea.

“Kids thought it was a balloon or a clown suit or something,” Tarling says. “Until the face rolled round and looked at them.”

“Counselling?” Steve asks.

“Oh, years of it, I’d imagine,” Tarling says.

I am a fan of Biancotti’s work in Bad Power and the writing echoes that same beat cop, police procedural with an edge of dark fantasy, only in this instance it’s more than an edge.  The ending is…unconventional perhaps, but fits into the whole package beautifully.

The final novella is Cat Sparks’ The Sleeping and The Dead. It gave me visions of a post apocalyptic gothic wasteland - Necromaidens with a fetish for skulls…

She watches nuns dancing in the dust, spinning and twirling as if the stuff’s not killing them. Necromaidens. Fallout wraiths. Praising absent gods for their blisters as well as their dreams. Like her, they have no formal training. Their cult has grown organically, exponentially as the years have dragged. Anna became conscious of the neatness of the skulls long before glimpsing the girls’ demented Tinkerbell antics around the gritty edges of Truckstop’s barbed perimeter. She might have dismissed the girls as ghosts — the barren landscape groans beneath the breathless, phantom weight of them, but no, the nuns are solid. As solid as forty-five kilos of half-starved girl can get.

To pick a favourite

It’s hard to pick a favourite out of these three, viewed as three parts of a whole they are both wonderfully distinct yet dovetail into each other smoothly.  We have a mythic retelling, a police procedural and a post apocalyptic tale but it does feel like one continuous tale told from different perspectives. 

The Sleeping and The Dead probably edges in front as my preferred story but it’s close.  I have a penchant for the post apocalyptic.

Hits the mark

Ishtar fits Gilgamesh Press’ vision beautifully.  Here we have three quality writers giving us their take on Assyrian myth, breathing life into a culture that underpins our own. Ishtar steps from the pages; a living, breathing, sensual and violent goddess – come and meet her.

If you like your fiction dark and your women powerful don’t go past Ishtar.


1.Gilgamesh Press is an imprint of Morrigan Books. Gilgamesh Press has a vision to promote awareness of the Assyrian people and their history through literature.


awwc2012This review is part of the Australian Women Writers Challenge 2012.  Please check out this page for more great writing from Australian women.

 

 


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May 10, 2012

Cover Candy–Ticonderoga and Twelfth Planet Press

First up is Cat Sparks’ cover for her upcoming book The Bride Price from Ticonderoga.  If I am reading the press release correctly, Cat has done the cover herself and its kick–arse.

the-bride-price-web

and missed early in the week was Cracklescape from Margo Lanagan and Twelfth Planet Press.

crackle


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Apr 8, 2012

Goodreads giveaway for Ishtar

ishtarI am overjoyed to have found out that I am the winner of a hardcopy of Ishtar after participating in a competition on Deborah Biancotti’s blog. 

I had actually gone out and purchased the ebook version from Smashwords owing, I contend, to subliminal messaging in Deb Biancotti’s post.

Ishtar is edited by Aussie editor Amanda Pillar, and contains three novellas written by Australian women writers. 

Here’s the description lifted from Smashwords:

This novella collection is powerful, sexy and very, very deadly.


'The Five Loves of Ishtar': Kaaron Warren


Follow the path that the goddess Ishtar takes through the eyes of her most devoted worshippers, her washerwomen. Sharokin, Atur, Ninlil, Shamiran, Ninevah and Ashurina share in their goddess' loves, losses and triumphs, as kingdoms rise and fall in the Land of Rivers.

'And the Dead Shall Outnumber the Living': Deborah Biancotti


In modern-day Sydney, male prostitutes are dying. Their bones have turned to paste and their bodies are jelly. As Detective Adrienne Garner investigates the deaths, she finds rumours of strange cults and old gods whose powers threaten her city and, ultimately, her world.


'The Sleeping and the Dead': Cat Sparks


Dr. Anna remembers little of her life before the war, merely traces of the man she used to love. When three desperate travellers rekindle slumbering memories, she begins a search that takes her to Hell and beyond. A search for love and, ultimately, enlightenment.

The collection has been nominated for an Aurealis Award. If you’re keen on reading good speculative fiction, or you are at a loss for works to read for the AWW2012 challenge you can:

Enter in the Goodreads giveaway here or if you simply can’t wait, shoot over to Smashwords and pick it up. Ishtar is only $5.95


“I sing for my supper, cause it makes me feel so good”

I have been nominated to run in this years fan fund for the National Science Fiction Convention to be held in Melbourne.

If you appreciate the work that I do in Australian Speculative Fiction Fandom and you have a spare $5, you can vote for me here and help send me to the National Conference.

Monies raised go towards this and subsequent years funding.


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Mar 8, 2012

Cat Sparks and Patty Jansen picked up by Ticonderoga

Cat_SparksTiconderoga Publications recently picked up Cat Sparks short story collection, tentatively called The Bride Price which will be launched at next year’s National Science Fiction Convention  at Conflux in Canberra.

If you don’t know of Cat you should check her out here.

 

 


author-photo-mediumAnd just of the presses- Patty Jansen will have her science fiction thriller novel, Ambassador published in late 2013 .

I have interviewed Patty and reviewed some of her works below:

eBook Review–Whispering Willows by Patty Jansen
eBook Review–Luminescence by Patty Jansen
eBook Review - His Name in Lights by Patty Jansen

Mar 6, 2012

“It's as if I've taken [festival] heroin, and now I can't ever have it again.”

 

Such is my feeling towards the Adelaide Festival.  I was able to take one day off work and take a 6 hour round trip in travel time, to get to hear one of my favourite authors and Queen of the Festival, Margo Lanagan talk. 

I could have stayed the entire week (indeed I am contemplating doing that next year).  I very briefly entertained the thought of camping in the park.  Such is the power that being around writers and book loving folk.

Kudos to the organisers who set up the sound stages at the Pioneer Women's Park, there were two stages, not 100 metres apart going all day and no feedback or interference whatsoever. 

My only other recent experience of author talks was at Brisbane Supanova where authors were tucked away in an alcove under the main hall, it had the acoustics of a concrete car park.

Some photo’s taken of the festival by the multi talented Cat Sparks. Thankfully without me in them.

Coffee and the best day ever

So my morning began having coffee with the soon to be famous Cat Sparks1 who kindly bought me coffee and who just so happened to be sharing a table in the park with Margo Lanagan, and Kelly Link.  So for about the first 10 minutes I was having an internal dialogue with myself that went something akin to:

Sean: “Hey it’s Cat Sparks, Margo Lanagan and Kelly Link”

Sean2: “Shut up I am trying to listen to the conversation and sound intelligent”

Sean: ”But It's OMG! CAT SPARKS, MARGO LANAGAN and KELLY LINK”

and then I got over myself and enjoyed the conversation.  Thank you Margo and Cat.

Cat had to leave to catch a flight home, but before she did she introduced me quickly to Kate Eltham of the Queensland Writers Centre (who doesn’t look as blue as her Twitter avatar) and a tired English chap who had been kept awake by a snoring Ian Mond. Rob was his name.  Such a gentleman, very concerned about the fact that I might be perspiring and about to faint - I was wearing a jumper (it was mild day but by English standards, probably close to the temperature of the surface of the sun).

Halfway through the conversation I realised I was talking to Rob Shearman of Dalek fame.  I had missed out hearing he and Ian Mond talk at the sold out Dr Who talk. So I was stoked to have a quick chat.

Mid morning we learned of the passing of Paul Haines, a wonderful man, a superlative writer, a human being, that from all accounts was taken too soon.2

With Margo’s talk set for the afternoon I listened in to the various “literary” authors speaking before chuffing off to the city for some lunch.

Ushered

Upon my return I was ushered by a usher for standing in the isle – apparently blocking peoples exit.  But as Michael Cathcart finished talking to Alan Hollinghurst I ploughed through the crowd to steal a chair in the centre.

And who should be behind me but Jason Nahrung and Kirstyn McDermott.  So after a blinder of a talk by Margo Lanagan and Michael Crummey (you should get his latest book : Galore) I enjoyed bookish talk with some other authors who I admire.  We passed through the book tent whereupon our wallets and purses got lighter and our book laden arms got heavier.

And now, I know it’s a writers festival and it’s not that far fetched to expect to bump into writers, but upon exiting the tent we bumped into the Dr’s Brain or more commonly known as Dr Angela Slatter and Dr Lisa Hannett

A very entertaining mauling of the Twilight series was begun with some improvised hand puppeteering by Kelly Link’s husband.  Unfortunately all good things must come to an end and I had to rush off and secure some flights to England before I could hear the end of it.

I bumped into the lovely Kelly Link, later on King WIlliam Street and she very kindly signed the Steampunk anthology she had edited3 . Authors are the coolest people.

It was an absolute blast of a day.  A big thank you to the authors I met who shared their time and thoughts with me.  I have some treasured memories. I feel honoured and privileged to have shared your company.

Regards

Sean

Post Festival Rehab


1. Well she’s famous to us in the specific community but going by her awards alone she deserves to be known more widely – check out her bio here 

2. Paul had been suffering cancer.

3. Somehow I missed the entire table devoted to her novels


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