Showing posts with label Simon Petrie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Simon Petrie. Show all posts

Jul 17, 2013

Sir Julius Vogel Award Winners 2013

queen-of-iron-years The Sir Julius Vogel Awards are awarded each year at the New Zealand National Science Fiction Convention to recognise achievement in New Zealand science fiction, fantasy, horror, and science fiction fandom. They are commonly referred to as the Vogels. [Wikipedia]

You may remember my review of Simon Petrie’s novella double.  But in case you don’t here it is.

This years winners are as follows:

Best Novel
Queen of Iron Years
Lyn McConchie and Sharman Horwood
Kite Hill Publishing

Best Youth Novel

The Prince of Soul and the Lighthouse
Frederik Brounéus
Steam Press

Best Novella / Novelette
Flight 404
Simon Petrie
Peggy Bright Books
Appears in Flight 404/The Hunt for Red Leicester

Best Short Story

“Hope is the thing with feathers”
Lee Murray
Royal Society of New Zealand

Best Collected Work
Mansfield with Monsters
Matt and Debbie Cowens
Steam Press

Best Professional Artwork

Les Petersen
for the Cover of Light Touch Paper, Stand Clear
Edited by Edwina Harvey and Simon Petrie
Peggy Bright Books

Best Professional Production/Publication

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey: Chronicles – Art and Design
Daniel Falconer
WetaNZ

Best Dramatic Presentation

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
Peter Jackson, Philippa Boyens, Fran Walsh, Guillermo del Toro

Source and Fan Awards found here


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Jul 8, 2013

eBook Review – Next Edited by Simon Petrie and Robert Porteous

next Next is a themed anthology produced by the Canberra Speculative Fiction Guild and edited by Simon Petrie and Robert Porteous.  The theme centres around the following concept:

Next suggests ‘change’, perhaps, but it doesn’t have to invoke change, it can simply be an account of cause-and-effect. Sometimes it’s the absence of change, the sense of inevitability, that gives the story its terrible power and its resonance.

Or it might be a rite-of-passage; of invention and exploration; of the testing and transgression of boundaries; or a story laden with doom or hope or just the inevitability of inescapable repetition. Yup, this theme is a theme for all seasons; it’s a cut and come again theme that can mean pretty much whatever people want it to mean.

Now despite what may appear to be a rather open theme this collection hangs together very well.  I doffs me hat to the editors for their selections and the collation of the work.  There’s some well known writers with absolutely cracking work and some new faces with a good tale to tell.  I didn’t love every story( and outside of single author collections I think that’s the norm) but overall I enjoyed the experience.  I will pick out the highlights, not necessarily the best stories in the collection but certainly the ones that were most interesting.

Possibly my favourite is the anthology opener The Ninety Two by Claire McKenna.  

When the devil died (aged forty-five, heart attack from overtraining, keeled
over on the Nuggets Crossing five kilometres into a ten kilometre run), he was
wearing his number ninety-two guernsey, and even then nobody wanted to
touch it, or him, because if there was ever a man averse to kindness or tenderness
it was Beaufort Kinsey. So they stood in the middle of the road instead, eighteen
dumbfounded men watching him die, and not one lifting a finger to help.

A story that manages to mix small town rural culture,football and horror.  Claire is a graduate of Clarion South and I think that this work is extremely polished, and hits just the right tone, never over playing the aspects of bogan culture it so openly shines a light on.  I think if you like the sort of work that Karen Warren produced in her Through Splintered Walls, you’ll love Claire McKenna.

I have read editor Simon Petrie’s work before and I did wonder if his penchant for humour and gags influenced the inclusion of Martin Livings’ Cause and Effect, which I wasn’t so sure whether to chortle or groan over.  Well written and played very well Mr Livings.

There were some unique takes on fairy tale and myth – Edwina Harvey's Next Cried the Faun is playful with a nudge and a wink and a good follow up to Livings’ piece. By comparison The Wooden Heart by Tracie Macbride, explores darkness, human sexuality and the peril inherent in dealing with the Fae.  Prophesy and fairytales don’t always have human benefit at their centre. 

Daniel Coleman’s Gambler’s Blues is another tale that should make readers feel uneasy about wishing to find a pot-o-gold at the end of the rainbow, harking back to those stories of the wee folk who are more out to ensnare you, than bring you good fortune.

Vandiemansland,by Ian McHugh and Ned Kelly and the Zombies by Craig Cormick were good explorations of Australian history with speculative fiction elements.  Vandiemansland was spoiled to some extent by my viewing of a movie by the same name, they cover similar themes and I felt I may have been desensitised by the viewing of the later to some of the historical aspects of McHugh’s work. In saying that though, I think that McHugh has hit the tone spot on. Cormack's work was an interesting mashup of a much used subgenre with an iconic and much over studied Australian folk hero and it comes out of that mix better  than its genre forbears would dictate- a delightful what if.

Gillian Polack’s Someone’s Daughter gave me flashbacks to an M R James adaptation.  Polack’s writing style in this piece manages to evoke an otherworldliness, a detachment from reality that compliments the story perfectly.

Stories in the Square and When Money Talks are steampunk infused and give the reader of that subgenre common touchstones with fresh and interesting tales.

Alan Baxter’s Quantum Echoes, displays his growing versatility, stepping away from dark fantasy and giving us dark futurism instead.  Helen Stubbs in Casino Five inverts cultural perceptions, and preconceptions, making subtle commentary on workers rights.

It’s a large and diverse collection that I am just scratching the surface of -  Janeen Webb has a heartbreaking story and Kris Ashton’s The Midway Hotel hits a little close to home with my long commute to work. I could go on.  But what you want to know is – is it worth laying money down for.  At $5 from smashwords you are getting a great deal.  I’d pay double that easily for the quality found in this collection.

 

This book was received free of charge, if you would like to purchase a copy head here.


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Apr 3, 2013

Ditmars 2013–Best Collected Work

Epilogue_lg_mediumA category dominated by the dedicated (some say slightly unhinged) folk that dedicate their lives and mortgages to bringing us collections of short fiction, a section that speaks of love of the genre. They unearth and support neophyte writers, connive with mistresses and masters of craft to bring us work that might not fit less imaginative markets.

I own all the works on the list, but in what sounds like a familiar tune, I haven’t had time to read them all.  The Twelve Planets are nice, bite sized collections easily devoured the others in the list, particularly the last, are treasure troves that really do need time to sit own and ponder over.

So I have read Cracklescape, Through Splintered Walls, Light Touch Paper…, and have dipped in and out of the others. 

And the difficulty here as in some other sections is that they are almost all different beasts. I don’t know that you can really compare them other than to try and go with an intuitive gut feeling about which one made the greater impression.  A method that invariably leaves books I have barely read at a disadvantage.

Best Collected Work
————————————————————————

  • Cracklescape by Margo Lanagan, edited by Alisa Krasnostein (Twelfth
    Planet Press)
  • Epilogue, edited by Tehani Wessely (FableCroft Publishing)
  • Through Splintered Walls by Kaaron Warren, edited by Alisa Krasnostein
    (Twelfth Planet Press)
  • Light Touch Paper Stand Clear, edited by Edwina Harvey and Simon
    Petrie (Peggy Bright Books)
  • Midnight and Moonshine by Lisa L. Hannett and Angela Slatter, edited
    by Russell B. Farr (Ticonderoga Publications)
  • The Year’s Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2011, edited by Liz
    Grzyb and Talie Helene (Ticonderoga Publications)

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Mar 31, 2013

Ditmars 2013 – Best Novella or Novelette

crackle And it turns out I have read everything in this category and still would have if Jason Nahrung’s Salvage had been a sentence or two shorter and fallen into it.  And it’s further proof that having read everything doesn’t help with your voting.  I suspect that there are many worthy reads within the eligibility list, the trouble being  access to them, some hidden away in collections and time to read them.

The nominees are:

Best Novella or Novelette
————————————————————————
* “Flight 404”, Simon Petrie, in Flight 404/The Hunt for Red Leicester (Peggy Bright Books)
* “Significant Dust”, Margo Lanagan, in Cracklescape (Twelfth Planet Press)
* “Sky”, Kaaron Warren, in Through Splintered Walls (Twelfth Planet Press)

 

Comments:

I reviewed Flight 404 here. A good hard science read, where that science is the backdrop, it influences story but is not THE story. My final thoughts on it were:

I really enjoyed this story, felt that that the character was an honest and positive representation of a transgender person and I was captive to the mystery and story right until the end.

Significant Dust is my favorite from Cracklescape, which I reviewed here.  Not my favourite Lanagan short, that honour goes to singing my sister down but as I said in the review of Cracklescape:

Significant Dust was the story that had me reaching for the tissues.  It’s not quite so gutting as my favourite Lanagan, Singing My Sister Down, because there’s a hopeful ending or at least Margo has left enough room for me to imagine one.

Kaaron-SpinteredWalls-011 Sky was part of a fairly even collection, each of the stories presented something of value to me and I don’t have a feeling of Sky standing out above and beyond the others.  Here’s the review for Through Splintered Walls that contains the novella.

Of those that didn’t make it on to the ballot that I have read and that I think really stood out were "Elyora", by  Jodi Cleghorn, in the Review of Australian Fiction.  I am not sure the novella hit a wide enough audience.  I think it sits well in the Australian Gothic Horror genre as outlined in Dr Hannett’s article for This is Horror.  If you’re fans of Nahrung or McDermott I encourage you to check out Elyora, which will be republished this year by a UK publish under a different title and with a longer prologue.

The second is The King’s Man by Rowena Cory Daniells (though I’m not sure it was published in Australia or if that even matters by the rules) its a novella set in the KRK universe.  It’s gritty, largely self contained at still manges to carry the emotional punch of Daniells’ much larger novels. 

 

 


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Oct 8, 2012

Book Review–Flight 404 / The Hunt for Red Leicester by Simon Petrie

404

Flight 404/ The Hunt for Red Leicester is a new release from Peggy Bright Books.  A science fiction novella double, it’s a curious mix that showcases the divergent talents of Simon Petrie.

Flight 404 is a serious and compelling tale of a transgender pilot, sent to lend help to a search and rescue mission.  Her ship’s trajectory takes her back to the home world she escaped.  She must solve a mystery, and face relationships long abandoned.

I am tempted to label it hard sci-fi with heart, but it does contain some hand-wavium around faster than light travel (for the purists out there). It gets “harder” around the limitations on communications and in system travel.

Sufficed to say, space is dangerous and big but the real danger always seems to have humanity involved.

I really enjoyed this story, felt that that the character was an honest and positive representation of a transgender person and I was captive to the mystery and story right until the end. 

More in this vein Mr Petrie please.

The Hunt for Red Leicester is cheese to Flight 404’s chalk. It’s science fiction comedy along the same lines as Douglas Adams or Simon Haynes. 

Our hero Gordon Mamon has awoken, bound and gagged in the ladies toilet on the Space Hotel/ Space Elevator Skyward 270. Oh and there’s a dead Cheese magnate, Lord Havmurthy in one of the cubicles.  It’s up to Mamon to solve the case as hotel police are preoccupied.  There’s a solid plot that the comedy hangs off and the puns are groan worthy. I loved it.  A perfect counterbalance to the heavier tale told in Flight 404.

You mileage may vary, but I felt that the length of this piece was spot on.  Short enough to appreciate the humour and not grow tired of it.  If more of this writing is your thing Simon also has a separate collection titled The Gordon Mamon Casebook.

These novellas were provided free of charge by the author.


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