Showing posts with label Lisa L Hannett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lisa L Hannett. Show all posts

Dec 24, 2014

Galactic Chat 62 – Dr Lisa Hannett

As promised Galactic Chat brings you our last interview for the year, conducted by me with the wonderful Dr Lisa Hannett.

In this weeks chat, our last for the year, Sean talks with Dr Lisa Hannett about her upcoming mosaic novel, her recent release through Twelfth Planet Press with Dr Angela Slatter and Icelandic Medieval Literature.  

They also talk about the Australian Gothic, how Australians can be just as nice as Canadians and Lisa's fear of the scaly creatures of the shallows.  Please enjoy and have a safe and merry Christmas. 

 

You can download the mp3 via the download link on the Podbean site or play below.


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Nov 6, 2014

Cover Reveal - The Female Factory

femalefactory

Another awesome cover for what I am confident will be another great book in the Twelve Planets Series.  Congrats to Twelfth Planet Press for securing the artistic talent of Amanda Rainey and the writerly talents of Hannett & Slatter.

What is The Female Factory?

In The Female Factory, procreation is big business. Children are a commodity few women can afford.

Hopeful mothers-to-be try everything. Fertility clinics. Pills. Wombs for hire. Babies are no longer made in bedrooms, but engineered in boardrooms. A quirk of genetics allows lucky surrogates to carry multiple eggs, to control when they are fertilised, and by whom—but corporations market and sell the offspring. The souls of lost embryos are never wasted; captured in software, they give electronics their voice. Spirits born into the wrong bodies can brave the charged waters of a hidden billabong, and change their fate. Industrious orphans learn to manipulate scientific advances, creating mothers of their own choosing.

From Australia’s near-future all the way back in time to its convict past, these stories spin and sever the ties between parents and children.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction
  • Vox
  • Baggage
  • All the Other Revivals
  • The Female Factory

You can check out publication and order details here.


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Aug 6, 2013

Twelfth Planet Press News

tpplogoI am reliably informed that Cat Sparks, previously slated to bring us one of the Twelve Planets tomes, had to step away from the project – *le sigh*

but there is a silver lining…

the Evil Dr’s Brain i.e. Lisa Hannett and Angela Slatter have combined once again to give us something that will no doubt be delightfully good in their collection to be called Baggage.

And I notice that we have a name for Deb Kalin’s collection too - THE APPORTIONERS.

Livia Day fans will already be aware that the sequel to A Trifle Dead has been announced – you can fins out the details on DROWNED VANILLA here.


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Feb 15, 2013

Neglected Night Creatures

lisa-l-hannett-226x300Lisa L Hannet has released her second column over at This is Horror.  If you missed her first it can be found here. That was an excellent article lifting the lid in Australian Gothic. 

This article called On Behalf of Neglected Night Creatures briefly discusses the possibility of including less well known or well used night creatures in fiction.

 


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Dec 15, 2012

Midnight and Moonshine -The Otherworld Launch

 
 
A good number of writerly and readerly folk braved what could only be described as hellish weather to attend the Otherworld launch of Midnight & Moonshine by authors Angela Slatter and Lisa L Hannett.  Adelaide turned on 40 degree heat and about 5 mm of rain to make it positively tropical.
 
Where are the Norse gods when you need them eh?
Audience and dignitaries soldiered on though and Russ was able to ramble without being lynched.
 
 
After Russ said nice things about almost everyone in the room and thanked us all for supporting independent press and awesome aussie authors it was over to Kirstyn and Mondy Jason who did a wonderful job of introducing the writers and the text and finally launching the book.
 
 
 
Dr Slatter gave us a reading from near the beginning of the book, braving the trying conditions and keeping us all wrapt and envious of the characters in the icy Nordic
paradise.
The Dr Hannett gave us a reading set 1000 years in the future.  An interesting piece that to my ear seemed to tie in nicely with Dr Slatter’s, perhaps foreshadowing an intricately woven series of connected tales.
CAKE!!
Damn fine chocolate cake with the beautiful cover image by Kathleen Jennings
And before I forget a never before seen picture of the evil Dr Brain?  Not penned by Kathleen Jennings but nevertheless a lovely piece of comic art.

It was a wonderful night and when refrigerated aircon was discovered in the restaurant on the ground floor the group absconded to Brunelli’s for some great pizza. 

I rounded off the night with dinner companions my wife Alison, Jason Nahrung, Kirstyn McDermott and a groovy hat wearing Sean Williams.  Much bookish chat was had


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Dec 7, 2012

Midnight & Moonshine Launch–Adelaide

moonJust a reminder folks that Drs Slatter and Hannett will be launching their book Midnight and Moonshine in Adelaide on the 14th of December.  I shall be going of course to get my hands on a signed copy and to chat with some fine folk of speculative fiction disposition.

The details:

14 December
6pm for a 6.30pm start
South Australian Writers Centre
2nd Floor, 187 Rundle Street


Note: If you can’t make it you can still get a personalised copy if you order at indiebooksonline before 8 December (UTC)the book will ship 17 December and should reach most of Australia in time for Christmas. (International orders welcome, though sadly they can't guarantee a shipping or receiving date for overseas orders).

Order here


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Dec 5, 2012

The Aussie Invasion–Clarkesworld 75

cw_75_700

Checkout the latest Clarkesworld which features some great content from Aussie writers Thoraiya Dyer and Lisa L. Hannett

There’s a good article about genre and literature, communication and subculture by Daniel Abraham, good enough to keep me reading on the laptop screen and to not have to resort to the ereader i.e. very though provoking.

You can read all Clarkesworld content online free but if you want to support the magazine and the writers and artists it features you can shell out for a subscription for your ereading device.


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Nov 5, 2012

World Fantasy Awards are in for 2012

 

Locus Online has the results from the Word Fantasy Convention.  The winners for each category are below if you wish to see the full list please go here.

Novel:

  • Osama, Lavie Tidhar (PS Publishing)

Novella:

  • “A Small Price to Pay for Birdsong”, K.J. Parker (Subterranean Winter 2011)

Short Story:

  • “The Paper Menagerie”, Ken Liu (F&SF 3-4/11)

Anthology:

  • The Weird, Ann & Jeff VanderMeer, eds. (Corvus; Tor, published May 2012)

Collection:

Artist:

  • John Coulthart

Special Award Professional:

  • Eric Lane, for publishing in translation – Dedalus books

Special Award Non-Professional:

  • Raymond Russell & Rosalie Parker, for Tartarus Press

The World Fantasy Awards Lifetime Achievement Winners for 2012 are Alan Garner and George R.R. Martin.

Now I can’t really be disappointed at these results.  Really it’s a celebration of the genre and for people to have been nominated is almost as good as winning.  The warm glow one gets from being recognised is some times more important than sales or taking home a bust of Lovecraft.

I secretly hoped that Kathleen Jennings might win in the Artist Category and that Lisa Hannett’s Bluegrass Symphony might take out the collection category.  Maybe next year.

To the winners, congratulations.


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Oct 21, 2012

Writerly Update plus resources

 

owlFirst an update on me and my writing.  Some readers may remember that I attended a Workshop run by Lisa L. Hannett, at the South Australian Writers centre.  It was a a good decision for a number of reasons:

  1. Lisa is good at what she does
  2. Fear of social failure ie not having something to show the workshop, really works for me
  3. It introduced me to a couple of folks with who I clicked
  4. I may have a writing group (if they’ll have me)
  5. I have a finished and increasingly polished story that I will send out to be joyfully rejected by the Short Fiction market

So a post apocalyptic/realist horror (groan) tale tentatively called Of Sorrow and Loss may be on its way to a paying outlet near you (on its way and likely coming back, but hey, rejections are par for the course).

So remembering the wise words of a fave short fiction author of mine, Peter M Ball, who incidentally wrote a piece for Lisa Hannett’s blog called Know Your Rights. I am setting out with best intentions, to treat this writing in a business like fashion. To manage my submissions formally with a database tracking submissions and noting down what rights I have sold.  I may have to write 15-20 stories before one gets published but it’s the mind-set that counts.

So to help with that process I looked up a nifty piece of software created by Simon Haynes, author of the Hal Spacejock sci-fi comedy series and professional programmer.

It’s called Sonar3 (get it navies use sonar to track subs, authors send out submissions, ah forgeddit).  It’s free and fairly intuitive to use.  It was written specifically for the Speculative Fiction Short Story market but it has some application beyond that (tracking non-fiction articles etc).

Go here and check it out.

If you’re in the novel writing business it’s also worth checking out yWriter5 another free bit of software that provides much the same sort of facility as Scriviner. With less time required to upskill oneself and costing nothing.


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Sep 25, 2012

This writer’s life update

seanandSome astute and attentive readers (hi Mum and Dad) may remember that I attended the Short Story course run by the wonderful Lisa L Hannett over the past fortnight.

IT WAS A BLAST

Though the early mornings ( I had a three hour drive to the course) and the bad nights sleep due to excitement had me zombie-fied by the end of the day.

This Saturday gone was the last of the workshop days and really the business end of things.  Lisa had the delightful task of critiquing seventeen short stories in the space of two weeks.  While the rest of us were broken into groups and had to read and critique the 4 other members work.

I realised two things:

1) A writer really needs this sort of experience /methodology built into their writing.

2) There are some damn fine talented writers out there and some stories I want to see published.

My group consisted of people who had; previously had flash fiction published, had plays published and performed, were being mentored by a well known Australian novelist.

So no pressure right?

My story attracted some really good critiques from Lisa and the group and now I just have to glue my bum to the seat and get on with the task of really shaping this story into something that I will be proud of.

The other benefit was meeting likeminded people with diverse reading and life experience and making connections.

Thanks to the SA Writer’s Centre and Lisa Hannett for putting on the course.


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Sep 23, 2012

Midnight and Moonshine - Adelaide Launch

moonAs there are two authors Angela Slatter and Lisa L. Hannett it’s only fitting that there should be two launches, they aforementioned Brisbane Launch and the better one, which will be in Adelaide (better because I will be there of course).

Time und Date:

Friday, December 14, 2012 at 6pm.

Location:

SA Writers’ Centre, 2nd floor, 187 Rundle Street, Adelaide, South Australia

Honoured Guests and Ceremonial Launchers:

Kirstyn McDermott and Jason Nahrung.

RSVP 

editor@ticonderogapublications.com by December 3.


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Sep 13, 2012

Midnight and Moonshine Launch

moonListen up you Brisbane peeps, Angela Slatter and Lisa L Hannett will be launching their book Midnight and Moonshine published by Ticonderoga in your town on the eve of Friday 30th November at the wonderful Avid Reader in West End - 193 Boundary Street,  West End QLD 4101

Launching will be the wonderful Kate Eltham, Brisbane Writers Festival CEO.

Go over to Angela’s blog for the details.  And be prepared to book early.

 


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Sep 8, 2012

Unintentional Silence

vampirehouseIt’s amazing how having no internet connection feels like having ones arm cut off.  Ok, well maybe it doesn’t quite but you get the picture.  I live on a farm, a lovely rural setting.  It’s generally quiet, except around harvest and wonder of wonders we can actually get the internet here (mobile 3g). 

So for 3 years it’s been pretty ideal.  I use Skype to talk to my far flung family, watch ABC IView, keep my finger on the pulse of what’s happening in Australian Spec Fic land.

Not as of Thursday though.

My first thought was Zombie Apocalypse, when I couldn’t get a signal in the man cave/library.  On rare occasions when I have had signal issues before the usual fix has been to move locations to the back room or more drastically, sit outside (thank goodness for lap tops eh). The problem usually rectifies itself anyway.

So its Saturday night and I have:

  • uninstalled/reinstalled the USB dongle
  • wondered round the back paddock
  • called the Internet company and asked if said Zombie Apocalypse had happened
  • been informed that rumours of a Zombie Apocalypse are highly overstated and that being 17km from the mobile tower I shouldn’t be getting a signal anyway(theoretically)

Apparently everything seems to be running fine on their end. But they have sent me a new dongle and asked me to test the laptop in another location, before they ring Optus and ask them to check their tower.

So other than weep for the loss of modern convenience I have also attended a short story workshop with Lisa Hannett as lecturer.  It’s a two day course split over two weeks and I am hoping to have a finished and critiqued story at the end of it.

I should use the time productively and write.

Fingers crossed this message gets through.


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Aug 27, 2012

Personal Development–Short Story Writing

bluegrass-symphonyI have come to the conclusion that I work better under a deadline.  I am currently at work on two manuscripts, but they long term projects that are vey easy to dodge and make up excuses for.

So I have signed up to attend Lisa L Hannett’s short story workshop being run through the SA Writer’s Centre.  It’s a two day course split over two Saturdays,  a fortnight apart.

Week 1 we’ll be looking at craft and week 2 we’ll be looking at each other’s work.  So I figure this will put me under some pressure to pull my finger out.  Hoping fear of failure and potential social embarrassment will motivate me.

Who is Lisa Hannett?

Lisa L Hannett is an Adelaide resident hailing original from our Commonwealth cousin Canada.  She's been published in Clarkesworld Magazine, Fantasy Magazine, Weird Tales, ChiZine, Shimmer, Steampunk II: Steampunk Reloaded and the Year's Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2010, among other places.

She has won three Aurealis Awards, including Best Collection 2011 for her first book, Bluegrass Symphony (Ticonderoga). She’s currently working on her first novel Familiar and is about to release Midnight and Moonshine, co-authored with Angela Slatter(pronounced slay-ter).

Lisa is a graduate of that hothouse of talent - Clarion South.

You can hear Lisa and Angela Slatter talk on Writer and the Critic Episode 22

South Aussie peeps can still book by contacting the SA Writers centre via their website.


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Aug 24, 2012

Podcasts coming out my ears

…which is a good thing of course.  And I couldn’t even complain if I wanted to, as I do contribute to the problem field.

heartSo coming up in the next week or so, depending on the team’s work commitments will be a Galactic Chat with the talented Tor Roxburgh, author of The Light Heart of Stone, which I reviewed here.

So keep your ears open or perhaps go and subscribe to the podcast and work your way through the back catalogue.

But wait there’s more.

Mondy Ditmar and Chronos award wining Ian Mond of Writer & The Critic/Shooting the Poo Podcast and Hugo Nominated Jonathan Strahan of Coode Street have teamed up for an audio version of the Last Short Story Project (yes, the audiophile Mr Mond graced us,skype podcasting community, with his presence).  You can check out and subscribe to their new podcast here.

PD*3141165Author Kirstyn McDermott and winner of more awards than Ian Mond 1  has released the latest Writer & the Critic featuring the writing team of Angela Slatter and Lisa L. Hannett as they discuss Michael Crummey’s Galore and Alan Moore’s Voice of the Fire. 

You can stream below or download it here

 
 

1. A joke that Ditmar Awards night attendees might remember


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Aug 13, 2012

Pre-Orders on Midnight and Moonshine are go!

midnight-and-moonshine-webThe Doctors Brain (Lisa L. Hannett and Angela Slatter) teamed up to deliver Midnight and Moonshine.

Lisa and Angela have each won Aurealis awards for their separate collections and a little birdy tells me that the equally award winning Kathleen Jennings will be doing the cover art for this collection.  As if I couldn’t tell from the distinctive cover art ---->

Here’s the copy:

The gods are dead, but will not be forgotten.
When Mymnir flees Ragnarok, she hopes to escape all that bound her to Ásgarðr — a heedless pantheon, a domineering brother, and her neglectful father-master, Óðinn. But the white raven, a being of memory and magic, should know that the past is not so easily left behind. No matter how far she flies, she cannot evade her family…

From fire giants to whispering halls, disappearing children to evening-wolves, fairy hills to bewitched cypress trees, and talking heads to moonshiners of a special sort, Midnight and Moonshine takes readers on a journey from ninth century Vinland to America’s Deep South in the present day.

The collection will be released as both a Limited hardcover signed by all contributors (100 numbered copies) and a Trade paperback.

In related news, that I tweeted yesterday, Lisa L. Hannett's debut collection, Bluegrass Symphony, is a nominee for the World Fantasy Awards


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Aug 9, 2012

World Fantasy Award Ballot Out

Obviously the organisers were spurred on by The Coode Street Podcasts last airing.  But without further ado, please cast your eyes over the following:

Edit: A special shout out to Lisa L Hannett  (a South Australian) published by Ticonderoga (from Western Australia). Not forgetting Charles Tan, blogger and commentator from the Philippines.

 

World Fantasy Award Ballot

Novel

Those Across the River, Christopher Buehlman (Ace)
11/22/63, Stephen King (Scribner; Hodder & Stoughton as 11.22.63)
A Dance with Dragons, George R.R. Martin (Bantam; Harper Voyager UK)
Osama, Lavie Tidhar (PS Publishing)
Among Others, Jo Walton (Tor)

Novella

•  "Near Zennor", Elizabeth Hand (A Book of Horrors)
•  "A Small Price to Pay for Birdsong", K.J. Parker (Subterranean Winter 2011)
•  "Alice Through the Plastic Sheet", Robert Shearman (A Book of Horrors)
•  "Rose Street Attractors", Lucius Shepard (Ghosts by Gaslight)
•  Silently and Very Fast, Catherynne M. Valente (WSFA Press; Clarkesworld)

Short Fiction

•  "X for Demetrious", Steve Duffy (Blood and Other Cravings)
•  "Younger Women", Karen Joy Fowler (Subterranean Summer 2011)
•  "The Paper Menagerie", Ken Liu (F&SF 3-4/11)
•  "A Journey of Only Two Paces", Tim Powers (The Bible Repairman and Other Stories)
•  "The Cartographer Wasps and the Anarchist Bees", E. Lily Yu (Clarkesworld 4/11)

Anthology

Blood and Other Cravings, Ellen Datlow, ed. (Tor)
A Book of Horrors, Stephen Jones, ed. (Jo Fletcher Books)
The Thackery T. Lambshead Cabinet of Curiosities, Ann & Jeff VanderMeer, eds. (Harper Voyager US)
The Weird, Ann & Jeff VanderMeer, eds. (Corvus; Tor, published May 2012)
Gutshot, Conrad Williams, ed. (PS Publishing)

Collection

Bluegrass Symphony, Lisa L. Hannett (Ticonderoga)
Two Worlds and In Between, Caitlín R. Kiernan (Subterranean Press)
After the Apocalypse, Maureen F. McHugh (Small Beer)
Mrs Midnight and Other Stories, Reggie Oliver (Tartarus)
The Bible Repairman and Other Stories, Tim Powers (Tachyon)

Artist

•  John Coulthart
•  Julie Dillon
•  Jon Foster
•  Kathleen Jennings
•  John Picacio

Special Award Professional

•  John Joseph Adams, for editing - anthology and magazine
•  Jo Fletcher, for editing - Jo Fletcher Books
•  Eric Lane, for publishing in translation - Dedalus books
•  Brett Alexander Savory & Sandra Kasturi, for ChiZine Publications
•  Jeff VanderMeer & S.J. Chambers, for The Steampunk Bible

Special Award Non-Professional

•  Kate Baker, Neil Clarke, Cheryl Morgan & Sean Wallace, for Clarkesworld
•  Cat Rambo, for Fantasy
•  Raymond Russell & Rosalie Parker, for Tartarus Press
•  Charles Tan, for Bibliophile Stalker blog
•  Mark Valentine, for Wormwood

Info on the award can be found here

 


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Jun 5, 2012

2012 Snapshot Interview– Lisa L. Hannett

 

Lisa Hannett burst onto the scene with Bluegrass Symphony, a debut collection that had only one previous published story.  SA Arts have recognised her talent and given her a grant that will allow her to bring us more dark tales of the weird.

bluegrass-symphony-webThanks Lisa for taking the time to answer my questions:

  • You released a collection through Ticonderoga Press called Bluegrass Symphony which was very well received at home and abroad.  What current projects are receiving the attention of your fiendish intellect? And do you feel the pressure to produce an absolute stunner again?

I’ve got a couple of projects on the go at the moment. Last December, I received a grant from the wonderful folks at Arts SA, which has allowed me to take a big chunk of time off this year to focus on writing my first novel, The Familiar.

At the same time, I’ve also been completing Midnight and Moonshine, a collection of interconnected short stories that I’m co-writing with Angela Slatter, which will be published by Ticonderoga in November 2012.

It’s been great working on two major projects at once: when one book is giving me trouble, I can swap to the other one, which gives the back-brain some time to nut out whatever problems I’m having with the narrative. It’s also fantastic working with Angela on the collection — we’ve been having a great time putting these stories together, which relieves the ‘second album’ syndrome a bit.

So, to be honest, any pressure I feel to produce “a stunner” is all self-inflicted; I never feel like people are waiting with bated breath for my next piece, or that they want me to live up to some unknown/unquantifiable expectation. It’s more that I want every story I write to be better than the last — and it’s when I think I’m not quite reaching that goal that I feel pressure. The best way I’ve found to overcome that sort of anxiety is to just keep writing (here’s hoping it never stops working!)

  • Speaking of Bluegrass Symphony, it was your debut collection and described by Jeff Vandermeer as a first salvo? Did it feel like it was going to have the impact that it did?  What's your fondest memory of inflicting it on the world?


This question is so hard to answer! Bluegrass Symphony is my first book, a series of stories that are all set in the same weird world — and only one of the pieces had previously been published elsewhere. So I didn’t have the comfort of knowing they’d been published before and that they’d already been successful in other anthologies or magazines. The book was all new, so I had no real way of knowing how it would be received. It could’ve been a huge hit or a huge miss. But I really enjoyed writing the stories, and I definitely hoped readers would like the pseudo-Southern setting and the characters as much as I did.

As for fondest memories: I was so excited that Bluegrass was featured on ‘The Writer and the Critic’ podcast alongside Rob Shearman’s Everyone’s Just So So Special — I adore Rob’s short stories, so I thought that was totally cool. And winning two Aurealis Awards (for Best Collection and Best Horror Short Story) was just mind-blowing. The whole night felt like a dream.

  • You have a rare gift for the "weird" in short form.  Do you feel as though you might attempt a novel or novella or are you content to chill and unsettle you readers with subtle horror in short sharp bursts?

Thanks! I love reading weird stories, so I’m naturally drawn to writing weird things as well. And as I said, I’m now working on my first novel, The Familiar, which is a dark fantasy story about witches that is more fantasy than weird — but having said that, I’m apparently really bad at judging how dark and/or weird my stories are, so it might be more weird than fantasy. Who knows? There are a few stories in Bluegrass that I think of as quite “happy” tales, but I’ve had several people tell me that they find these ones the creepiest in the collection… At any rate, yes, I am branching out into longer narratives but I’ll never stop writing short.

I adore short stories — when done right, they can be perfect narrative entities. They carry so much power, so much impact in so few words. I also love that you can push the boundaries with short stories; you can offer readers intense, unsettling, subtle, chilling, horrific bursts that you might not be able to sustain for a novella or novel length story. In my “spare” time, I’m working on a mosaic novel called Lament for the Afterlife, which I hope will find a medium between both forms: the short ‘chapters’ will carry the impact of weird short stories, but the overarching narrative will rely on having all of the pieces working together to make a longer whole.

  • I am a subscriber to your blog and you offer wonderful support to your peers and to new writers.  What current works by Australian Speculative Fiction authors have you marked down as must reads or what Australian works have impressed you?


I’m so glad you’re enjoying the blog! Even though we’ve got such a thriving speculative fiction community here in Australia, when it comes to actually sitting in front of your computer and putting words on the page, you can sometimes wind up feeling isolated and a bit lonely. Enter: the internet! Although the web can be really distracting when I’m trying to write, it can also be a great way to share writing advice, to give each other a boost when it’s needed, etc. I am having such fun with the ‘Tuesday Therapy’ series — and I sometimes feel like the advice we get every week is designed specifically to kick me back into action on my novel. Hopefully it has the same effect on other people!

As for Australian must-reads: ooooh, there are so many! Definitely Debris by Jo Anderton — I gobbled it up and cannot wait for the next book to come out! Madigan Mine by Kirstyn McDermott — awesome, awesome Australian gothic/horror. The Arrival by Shaun Tan (not a novel, but I don’t care! It’s incredible.) Sourdough and Other Stories by Angela Slatter — beautiful fairy tale-ish world, unbelievable writing. Kim Westwood’s The Courier’s New Bicycle. The ‘Old Kingdom’ trilogy by Garth Nix (Sabriel, Lirael, Abhorsen). Kaaron Warren’s Dead Sea Fruit collection. The Memory Cathedral by Jack Dann. Tender Morsels by Margo Lanagan. All of Peter M Ball’s short stories (go to his website for the links). I could go on — I have barely even touched on the awesome Australian writing that I’ve enjoyed recently — but I’ll leave it at that for now.

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

Podcasts. They’ve been around since Aussiecon4, of course, but seem to have really boomed in the past two years. ‘The Writer and the Critic’, ‘Galactic Suburbia’, ‘Coode Street’, ‘Pangalactic Interwebs’ — I am hooked on all of them. I love that these podcasts are getting so much attention, both at home and overseas, and that they are such great ambassadors for the Australian speculative fiction community. And the megapodcasts at cons are so much fun!


Lisa’s Bio:

lisa-l-hannett1Lisa L Hannett lives in Adelaide, South Australia -- city of churches, bizarre murders and pie floaters.

Her short stories have been published in Clarkesworld Magazine, Fantasy Magazine, Weird Tales, ChiZine, Shimmer, Steampunk II: Steampunk Reloaded and the Year's Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2010, among other places.

Her first collection, Bluegrass Symphony (Ticonderoga) won the Aurealis Award for Best Collection 2011. Midnight and Moonshine, co-authored with Angela Slatter, will be published in 2012. Lisa is a graduate of Clarion South. You can find her online at http://lisahannett.com and on Twitter @LisaLHannett.


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:

http://thebooknut.wordpress.com/tag/2012snapshot/ http://kathrynlinge.livejournal.com/tag/2012snapshot/ http://helenm.posterous.com/tag/2012snapshot http://bookonaut.blogspot.com.au/search/label/2012Snapshot http://www.davidmcdonaldspage.com/tag/2012snapshot/ tansyrr.com/tansywp/tag/2012snapshot/ www.champagneandsocks.com/tag/2012snapshot/ http://randomalex.net/tag/2012snapshot/  http://jasonnahrung.com/tag/2012snapshot/                             http://mondyboy.com/?tag=2012snapshot


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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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Oct 7, 2011

A …what do call a grouping of Podcasts?

Regular readers will already be subscribed to these wonderful podcasts(and if they aren’t they should go and give themselves a very good talking to).

Warning: Contains Nuts

The Book Nut is the brainchild of Fablecroft proprietor Tehani Wessely it covers fiction for children and young adults with a focus on Australian material.  Tehani’s  a teacher librarian, publisher and literary awards judge.

This weeks podcast is a discussion with Australian speculative fiction author Tansy Rayner Roberts.  They cover speculative fiction for children and young adults the reason why speculative fiction should feature in any library or family collection.

You can stream it using the embedded player below or download it directly here.

 

Duelling Banjo’s

This month’s Writer and the Critic covers Lisa Hannett’s newly released Bluegrass Symphony and Rob Shearman’s, Everyone’s just so so special.  These two have possibly the best podcast chemistry going in Australia at the moment well worth a listen just for their on air interactions.

You can stream it using the embedded player below or download it directly here


Cue shameless plug

I have finally got my own podcast site up and running.  The first post links to my interview with Kelley Armstrong for Galactic Chat.  I do, however, have some interviews lined up that will be forming part of The Bookonaut Podcast proper.

You can find the link in the navigation bar above or subscribe to the show here


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