Showing posts with label interviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label interviews. Show all posts

Aug 22, 2015

Kate Forsyth Answers 3 quick questions on The Beast’s Garden

Kate Forsyth’s latest novel is an Historical Thriller set during World War II. Based on a Grimm’s fairytale, The Beast’s Garden is a mix ofthe-beast-s-garden tense wartime espionage and enduring love. It’s a very human story, about what small groups of people can do and what we hope people would do when faced by an evil that is unacceptable.

 

1. What challenges or advantages does reworking a fairy-tale or folk tale present to you?

One of the biggest challenges in reworking a myth, or legend, or fairy tale, is that people often know the story, and so it can be difficult to build suspense, or to surprise the reader. I think suspense and surprise are two of the most crucial ingredients in any story, and so I spend a lot of time thinking about how I can subvert or confound readers' expectations, while still remaining true to the spirit of the story.   

2. The setting and characters of The Beast's Garden bring with it the added requirement of sensitivity due to the atrocities perpetrated by the Nazi's.  What was your greatest concern in dealing with the Holocaust as part of your fictional tale?

It was soul-harrowing research and soul-harrowing writing. I was conscious at all times of the need to show, as much as I could, the true horror of the Third Reich, while not losing sight of hope and love and the small acts of kindness and courage that helped to save a few - only a few - from the horror of the death camps. 

Isabel Allende says to write what must not be forgotten. I wanted badly to honour the lives of those who did their best to resist Hitler, even at the cost of their own lives. It's been a great relief to me that so many readers have contacted me, and told me that they found the book incredibly beautiful and moving as well as heart-rending and sad. 

3. Your Doctorate in fairy-tale retelling and your recent novels would suggest that you have a far greater exposure to the genre than most people.  What discoveries have you made about the genre that might surprise those of us who grew up on abridged versions of Grimm's tales?

It was fascinating to me to discover that fairy tales have their roots in ancient myths of death and resurrection, from the very dawn of human language - around 300,000 years ago.  I had not truly realised just how old such wonder tales are. 

 

I’d like to thank Kate Forsyth for taking time out of a relentless schedule to pen some thoughts for the blog. You can purchase The Beast’s Garden from all good bookstores or if you’re remote like me, Booktopia.


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Dec 17, 2014

Galactic Chat 61 with Kameron Hurley

So yes, a definite slow down in posting in December, what with reading for Aurealis and intermittent internet issues caused by goodness knows what. Still I am hoping to  conduct one last Galactic Chat interview for the year this evening and have it out for you prior to Christmas.  In the meantime here’s out latest Galactic Chat conducted by the wonderful David McDonald.

You can download the mp3 file from our Podbean site or play direct below.

This week David chats with award winning author and blogger Kameron Hurley. Kameron has been nominated for the Nebula, Clarke and the BSFA, selected for the Tiptree honour list and this year won the Hugo for Best Fan Writer.  Additionally, her essay "'We Have Always Fought': Challenging the 'Women, Cattle and Slaves' Narrative" also won the Hugo for Best Related Work.

Please enjoy their chat where they talk about the influences on her most famous trilogy( including a dodgy rental apartment with bugs), when authors should speak out on issues of poor or disadvantageous contracts and what's next on Hurley's agenda.

You can find Kameron at her website

Mar 28, 2014

Galactic Chat 44 with Dr Ben Peek

Fresh up today, I interview Dr Ben Peek:

This week we bring you an extended chat between Sean and Dr Ben Peek.  They talk briefly about his big news, the forthcoming fantasy trilogy beginning with The Godless (TOR UK), and how much a departure it is from his well known short works. 

They also talk about his highly acclaimed collection of short stories, Dead Americans and Other Storiesfrom ChiZine Publications.  Other topics include criticism of works in small communities, racism, and the effect of social media on discourse.

He is of course well known in Australia for his works most recently published through Twelfth Planet Press.

Note:  This podcast was recorded a day or so after the "Twitterstorm" (which in itself is a problematic term) since then there has been some interesting commentary on how events unfolded that do shed light on how early the scene begins to reset history or frame events.  Please consider reading The media spin machine at full power or This is totally not what happened | Cora Buhlert.

If you are a fan of Facebook we also have a worldwide giveaway running on our page for Jonathan Strahan's Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year Volume 8.

 

You can play below or download here.

 

 


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Nov 3, 2013

Galactic Chat 37 Patty Jansen

Such a busy weekend I forgot to tell you all about the latest Galactic Chat:

This week Sean chats to Australian Speculative Fiction novelist Patty Jansen.  Patty  is a member of SFWA and winner of the second quarter of the Writers of the Future contest. She has published fiction in various magazines such as Analog Science Fiction and Fact, Aurealis, Redstone SF and the Universe Annex of the Grantville Gazette. She has also successfully self  published a number of novellas and novels. 

In this chat they talk about Patty's newest novel, Ambassador,  to be published by Australian Press Ticonderoga, the importance of diversification for any writer and current issues in the field, such as sexism and diversity

.

 DOWNLOAD

Patty's Website

Patty on Twitter

Purchase Options for Ambassador - here

Credits

Interviewer: Sean Wright

Guest: Patty Jansen

Music & Intro: Tansy Rayner Roberts

Post-production: Sean Wright

Feedback:

Twitter: @galactichat

Email: galactichat at gmail dot com


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Oct 21, 2013

Sean Williams On Matter Transmission and the World of Jump: Twinmaker

At the beginning of October I had a chat with Sean Williams about his new YA book Jump: Twinmaker you can listen to us talk here at Galactic Chat.  I had the opportunity to ask some follow up questions below:

Please enjoy:

 

1. Jump features Fabbers or fabricators, with more widespread use of 3d printing how close do you think we are to seeing technology like them?Sean Williams

On the one hand, you can see existing technologies like cheap 3-D printers and online libraries of downloadable 3-D models heading in exactly this direction, so it’s easy to believe it might be just around the corner. On the other hand, the sheer amount of data and fine-scale manipulation required to make things like food and the Mona Lisa seems far beyond us. The truth is probably somewhere in the middle. Printing objects in hard-to-supply places like space or a battlefield has obvious utility for organisations with enormous R&D budgets, so work is being undertaken right now that will eventually filter down to the mainstream. How long until I can fab a convincing steak that required no animal slaughter? I’d guess twenty years, plus or minus ten. The Mona Lisa? Probably sooner. A living person? A very long way off indeed.

2. What do think would be the most monumental change wrought by matter transference technology if it were to occur now?

That’s a hard question to answer because I suspect everything would change.

Our notion of space and time would shift, since being able to step literally anywhere in a moment or two removes all concept of “between” from everyday life. Once a city on the other side of the planet becomes closer in a very real sense to a destination two blocks away, where you might walk instead of d-matting, that leads to a fundamental restructuring of how we view the world. This goes beyond polyglot societies and complicated national identities. This speaks to how we inhabit the universe around us, and leads to powerful new metaphors for finding our place within it.

Then there’s the way we imagine ourselves as creatures with physical bodies and coherent identities inhabiting those bodies. Any device that can scan your every atom and rebuild you at will leads inevitably to the possibilities of copying, mutation and erasure, all of which put severe pressure on our sense of self. If you can change your physical form any time you like, who are you really? If you can make two or more identical versions of you, which one is really you? If you are deleted en route to your destination, are you really dead? This notion of what’s real and what not is relatively easy to answer when the matter we’re made of is mutable. When it is, we’re in a whole new, and very fascinating territory!

jump 3. Jump doesn't go into detail on economics, how does the world of Jump operate when you can live in Australia but go to school in the US, how do people make money when people don't have to pay for consumer items?

I talk a little about the economics in the world of Twinmaker in “Face Value”, a short story featuring characters who will appear in the sequel.

What lies at the heart of the economy of this world is that the one irreproducible commodity people can trade is time. You can make a thousand copies of a roast lamb dinner for no cost at all, but if you want someone to make you the original that the copy is taken from, that will cost you, because it takes time to cook the meal. So it’s the ultimate service economy, but with every transaction conducted electronically, of course; there’s no physical money since that could be easily copied too. It’s not fundamentally different from our world in some ways, but utterly different in others.

Governance reflects that. Things like passports and state borders don’t exist anymore, since they just can’t survive in the face of d-mat technology. This is something you’ll see a lot more of in the sequel. I don’t want to burden the books with the nuts and bolts of world-building, but I do want observant readers to know that they are there.

 

Many thanks to Sean for answering my questions.  You can buy your choice of three versions of Jump: Twinmaker (or all three if you really want to make Mr Williams happy) at Booktopia.


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Aug 13, 2013

Kate Elliot interview by Author Magazine

Kate Elliot who I reviewed here, was interviewed by Author Magazine.  Enjoy!


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Jul 26, 2013

Galactic Chat with Jo Spurrier

It’s that time of the week again and this week it’s my dulcet tones interviewing Jo Spurrier author of the Children of the Black Sun series.  You will find the show notes below but here’s the player and the download link if you prefer.

 

Show notes:

In this episode Sean interviews Australian Fantasy novelist Jo Spurrier. Jo's debut novel Winter be My Shield was nominated for an Aurealis and Norma K Hemming Award. In this interview they talk about why someone with a background in the sciences decides to write epic fantasy, the decision to write about a disabled character and where the Children of the Black Sun series sits in relation to the grim works of Martin and Abercrombie.

Jo's books can be found at:

Amazon (for internationals)

Booktopia (Australia)

Author Website: Jo's Facebook Author Page

Credits:

Interviewer: Sean Wright

Guest: Jo Spurrier

Music & Intro: Tansy Rayner Roberts

Post-production: Sean Wright

Feedback:

Twitter: @galactichat

Email: galactichat at gmail dot com


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Jul 19, 2013

Galactic Chat 22 Kirstyn McDermott

1400

David McDonald returns this week with another interview from Continuum 9.  In this episode he talks to Kirstyn McDermott, award winning author of Perfections and the recently released  Caution: Contains Small Parts, and co-host of the Writer and the Critic Podcast (fear not, this is a Mondy free zone).

In this episode they discuss the challenges of transitioning between short and long fiction, and the comeback of the novella. Kirstyn shares her thoughts on the changing face of the publishing industry and discusses her experiences with the ebook only release of Perfections. And, we hear Kirstyn’s tips on how you go about reviewing the work of people you know.

Play below or download here

 

You can purchase Perfections from Xoum, Amazon or Kobo

Caution: Contains Small Parts will be available from Twelfth Planet Press

Author Website: http://kirstynmcdermott.com/

Author Twitter: @fearofemeralds

Credits:

Interviewer: David McDonald

Guest: Kirstyn McDermott

Music & Intro: Tansy Rayner Roberts

Post-production: Sean Wright

Feedback:

Twitter: @galactichat

Email: galactichat at gmail dot com

 


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Jul 5, 2013

Galactic Chat 20 starring Margo Lanagan

1400 Well everything seems to have gone smoothly with the scheduled post and we now have the first in our regular season of the all new mostly weekly Galactic Chat.

Welcome back to the relaunched Galactic Chat.  In this episode Sean chats with Australian Award winning Fantasy and science fiction author Margo Lanagan.  They talk about her nomination for the inaugural Stella Award and what that nomination meant for her and perhaps the speculative fiction genre in Australia.

They also delve into Margo's fascination with folktale and its consistent popularity for authors and readers alike. Sean admits that Margo has the ability to break him and make him cry with the emotional gravity of her work and finally they talk gritty fantasy and why women don't share that podium with George RR Martin or Joe Abercrombie.

You can go to the Podbean site and subscribe.  You can search for us on the iTunes directory and give us some stars or you can play in the player below or you can download here.

 

 

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Jan 3, 2013

Galactic Chat Episode 19: Ellen Klages

GCLogoIn this episode you will be relieved to hear Alisa’s voice instead of mine while she interviews Ellen Klages:

Ellen Klages’ short fiction has appeared in science fiction and fantasy anthologies and magazines, including The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Black Gate, and Firebirds Rising. Her story, “Basement Magic,” won the Best Novelette Nebula Award in 2005. Several of her other stories have been on the final ballot for the Nebula and Hugo Awards, and have been reprinted in various Year’s Best volumes.

[read more]

It’s a very good interview by Alisa, asking some interesting questions and I am now going to have to hunt down some work by Ellen.

You can stream from the player below or download here


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Oct 27, 2012

E-Book Revolution Mini-Podcast: Inteview with James Alan Gardner

EbookReolutionLogoEm Craven from Ebook Revolution Blog has another of her interviews with Fantasy authors who will be attending the World Fantasy Convention in a week or so.

Please check out her interview with James Alan Gardner.

James is a Canadian science fiction author with a Bachelor and Masters degree in Applied Mathematics (yeah, he knows what he's talking about!). He has published science fiction short stories in a range of periodicals, including The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction and Amazing Stories. In 1989, his short story "The Children of Creche" was awarded the Grand Prize in the Writers of the Future contest.

[Read On]

 

 
You can download the file direct here

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Oct 20, 2012

Interview with fantasy author Elaine Isaak

EbookReolutionLogoEm Craven provides us with another podcast interview with this year’s World Fantasy Con’s attendees.  This particular podcast interview is with Elaine Isaak:

Elaine Isaak is the author of The Singer's Crown, The Bastard Queen and Eunuch's Heirs and numerous short fiction. At the beginning of her career she attended the Odyssey Speculative Fiction Workshop.  In response to having two children around when she first began sending The Singer's Crown to publishers, she wrote faster and as of 2012 has  just finished her thirteenth novel. You can find out more about Elaine here.

[Read on]

You can subscribe to Emily’s podcasts here. You can download the podcast here.  Or you can play it below:

 


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Oct 17, 2012

E-Book Revolution interviews Ian Tregillis

EbookReolutionLogoEm Craven has dedicated herself to fitting in as many mini podcasts with guests of World Fantasy Con, as she can before she jets off to the convention herself (have I mentioned green-with-envy, me that is?).

She was able to get some air time with Ian Tregillis’ whose Bitter Seeds I reviewed last month.

 

Here’s a snippet of the show notes:

Today's World Fantasy author is Ian Tregillis. In 2005, Ian attended the Clarion Writers' Workshop. After Clarion, and thanks to Walter Jon Williams, he was welcomed into New Mexico's disproportionately large community of professional science fiction and fantasy writers.

Although he often feels like a minor league batboy inexplicably mistaken for a professional baseball player, he has shared critiques with, and worked alongside, a long list of New Mexico writers including WJW, Daniel Abraham, Melinda Snodgrass, S. M. Stirling, Ty Franck, Victor MIlán, Sage Walker, and George R. R. Martin.

[Read on]

You can download the podcast here or play in the player below:

You can subscribe to Ebook Revolution by going here


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Oct 12, 2012

Meet the Author–Sean Williams

sean_profile1Emily Craven, from The Ebook Revolution Blog is hosting a Meet the Author Webinar this coming Tuesday with Australian Sci-Fi Novelist Sean Williams.

Date: Tuesday 16th of October 2012
Time: 7:30pm (Australian Central Time)

You need to register for the webinar here.  You’ll also be invited to think of some questions to ask Sean.

Be quick as there are a limited number of spaces.


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Sep 18, 2012

Galactic Chat 15: Tor Roxburgh


GCLogoThis week  I  interview Australian Fantasy novelist Tor Roxburgh, author of The Light Heart of Stone.

Tor has long history in publishing Non-Fiction and Teen romance but Light Heart of Stone sees her delving into her life long love of fantasy and science fiction. 

ABC Radio Ballarat said of The Light Heart of Stone, that It’s very Australian. A lot of fantasy novels are very European, even very British… but this is very much Australian.” 

In the podcast Tor and I discuss the journey from traditional publishing to self publishing, the Australian themes that flow through The Light Heart of Stone and the fresh and engaging ideas that make the book an original work of Australian fantasy fiction.


Tor can be found online at The Light Heart of Stone website or on Twitter.

You can play from the player below or download here.


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Aug 6, 2012

Incoming–Trudi Canavan Review and Interview

 

Trudi-Canavan-72dpiJust a short post to let you know that sometime later in the week there will be an Interview with Trudi Canavan,(it’s in post production now) up at Galactic Chat

Trudi’s The Traitor Queen , third book in the Traitor Spy Trilogy is due out on the 14th of August.

I have also finished reading book one of the trilogy, The Ambassador's Mission so I hope to have a review up around Friday.

 

Books being read this week:

David Brin’s, Existence

Rowena Cory Daniells, Besieged


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Jun 28, 2012

Snapshot 2012 Index

SnaphotLogo200512Readers will no doubt remember the Snapshot series that I participated in just prior to leaving for Continuum 8.  I did my best to try and read/comment on all the other interviews but had to give it away around interview 60. 

The wonderful Tehani (correct me if I am wrong) has put together an index list for future reference, and to enable you to read interviews from your favourite authors.

You can find that index here.


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Jun 6, 2012

Snapshot 2012 Interview–Trent Jamieson

Trent kindly managed to crawl half dead from his sick bed to bring you this interview.  Thanks Trent and get well soon.

  • NightsEngines-144dpi-198x300You have delivered 5 books in two years, a pretty amazing feat.  What are you currently working that you can tell us about?

Thanks, 5 in two years isn't too bad, but I don't think I could keep working at that pace for much longer. That said, I've about five or six different books competing for attention. Which one ends up on top is matter for my back brain - though one is starting to edge the others out, and it's a BIG book.

I'm not contracted for anything new at the moment, which is at once delightful and scary. I think I might actually write a couple of short stories in the next few months. Four years of teaching short story writing kind of bled the joy out of it for me (and made me too self conscious) but I'm getting it back at the moment.

 

  • Looking back over your career what are some of the high points that you can look back on with pride?

Selling my first story, Threnody to Eidolon - that was such an important moment for me. Editing Redsine, and getting a chance to edit Kirsten Bishop's The Etched City - I love that book - I still think it's one of the best fantasy novels ever published in Australia - and while I don't think I did much to make it better, I learnt so much.

Selling my books, and discovering that I could actually write novels, you know, actually finish them. The Death Works books were so much fun to write, and finally seeing Roil in print was a highlight, too, as was getting to finish the story. I'm still amazed that people have published these stories. You don't often get a chance to live a dream, and I've been lucky enough to do so five times now.

 

  • I suspect that you might want to take it easy for a little while, but looking ahead what would you like to see Trent doing in the next 5 years?

Honestly, if I finish a couple of things I'm working on now and they come out even half as well as I want, I'll be happy.

I'd love to write comics, I've gotten back into the habit of reading them lately, Joe Hill's Locke and Key is amazing, and I love Scott Snyder's American Vampire series.

Whatever I do, I'd like to think I'd still be writing. And, hopefully, getting better at it.

I'd like to think my best work is ahead of me: and that it will surprise me.

 

  • Now that you have time to read and are not buried under rewrites or edits, what work of your Australian peers has impressed you?

That's just a cruel question!

I'm still behind in my reading, and if I start mentioning names I'm going to forget someone, and most of my peers are my friends.

Roil-72dpi1What's impressed me is the sheer quantity of good work being produced, and the wonderful small presses we have. Twelfth Planet, Ticonderoga, ASIM, Aurealis, and that's just scratching the surface. There's a real range and character to our small press scene. And they are publishing books of real merit.

 

I honestly believe that the small press is the heart of our scene, if it's healthy then writers can grow and develop, and write the brave wonderful things that make good stories. It's an awesome time to be a writer because you know if you sell a story you're going to get some serious editorial input - and that's important. Beyond that it's an awesome time to be a reader of Australian Spec Fic - all tastes are catered for, and catered for so well.

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

I don't know if there have been big changes to the scene so much. The market has in some ways contracted - there's less bookstores selling Spec Fic - and expanded, there's so many more avenues for publication. I really feel that the e-book exploded last year and we're still dealing with the shrapnel. There's definitely been a couple of years of consolidation in the scene, I don't feel that there was a flagging of energy with publishers after Aussiecon, that instead they've built and continue to build. There's also a sense that we seem to be much more part of the international scene, a lot of writers are making their careers selling internationally rather than locally.

And Paul Haines is gone, I don't know if we have anyone quite like him, and I don't know if we ever will. We should have had decades more of Paul's stories.

 


Trent’s Bio:

Photo on 2012-02-23 at 22.55Trent Jamieson is a multiple Aurealis Award winner for short fiction, he has taught short story writing at the Qld University of Technology, and Clarion South.

His Death Works Trilogy is available from Orbit books. Roil, and Night's Engines the two books of the Nightbound Land Duology are available from Angry Robot.

His webpage is at www.trentjamieson.com


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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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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2012 Snapshot Interview–Satima Flavell

 

  • mythic200You have been heavily involved with Specusphere for some time. Most recently though, the zine has published its first book, Mythic Resonance. What can you tell us about that?


Mythic Resonance was a project we’d been considering for some months before we finally decided to take the plunge and actually call for submissions! It was quite a challenge, as none of us except Stephen Thompson, our editor in chief, had ever been closely involved with an anthology before. However, we each had our own strengths – Amanda Greenslade is a fine graphic designer and layout person. The rest of us had a variety of experiences in structural editing and Sue Hammond is one of the best copyeditors around.

Choosing the stories was a challenge, but in the end we found a collection of tales we all liked and that blended well with each other as representative of the theme. We were looking for new takes on old tropes, and we certainly got them! Sue Burzstynski’s ‘Brothers’, for example, delivers a fun rewrite of Snow White, while Tom Williams’s re-telling of the tragic tale of Gelert, the faithful hound, is sad enough to bring a tear to the eye.

I think we ended up with an enjoyable bunch of stories, and so far, reaction from readers and critics has been positive. You can find Mythic Resonance in various formats, both print and electronic, on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and iTunes

 

  • Whether through writing or reviewing, you have remained a constant in the scene. Looking back over the last 10 years, what changes have most affected you and your speculative fiction writing or commentary


Ten years ago, I was a free-lance editor specialising in academic papers, but due to my online presence within the SF community and my deepening interest in the speculative genres, that has gradually shifted. These days my editing commissions are nearly all SF.

The boom in self-publishing has also played a part in the shift of emphasis, of course, and I’m pleased to see that many self-publishing authors are now not rushing to put their first drafts up on Smashwords, but are seeking professional editing services first. I now specialise in doing ‘mini-assessments’ for less experienced writers, so my work involves not just editing but a fair bit of mentoring as well, which I enjoy very much.

 

  • There was mention of a fantasy novel in one of your bio's - what does the future hold for Satima Flavell?

Well, I’d like to think it involved a nice contract with a major publisher, but with the publishing industry being in a state of flux, it appears that the bigger houses are not buying very much at all. Furthermore, epic fantasy, my chosen sub-genre, is not nearly as popular as, say, paranormal romance, so perhaps eventually I shall join my clients and self-publish! In the meantime, I’m enjoying both writing and editing as the fancy takes me.

 

  • Being involved in a zine gives you a unique knowledge of the local scene. What recent Australian works have you loved or admired?


The nice thing about being a reviewer is that the publishing houses send me lots of lovely freebies, so I do get a good overview of what’s being written and what is selling. Furthermore, I was on the Fantasy Short Story Panel for the 2011 Aurealis Awards, so I read more short stories last year than ever before – some 170-odd! Of that number, there were at least thirty that deserved to be shortlisted, but sadly, the rules stipulate that the final list can only contain five stories.

Two were by Margo Lanagan, an Aussie author whose work I love because of her ability to get into the hearts and minds of some very interesting characters. Other faves of mine, on the novel front, are Glenda Larke, Juliet Marillier, Karen Miller and Marianne de Pierres, but of course there are many others and the list could easily go into double figures!

 

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


Well, vampires still seem to reign supreme, but I think there is starting to be a swing away from them. We are seeing some highly original stories in other sub-genres, especially steampunk, from overseas as well as from Aussie authors. The biggest change is, as I’ve touched on earlier, the tendency toward self-publishing.

The standard of self-published work is, on average, storming ever upward, with the result that the practice now carries far less stigma than it did even two years ago. What’s more, it means that cross-genre stories, and outright eccentric ones that conventional publishers wouldn’t dare take on, can all find their own niche. This has got to be a good thing because it means readers have more choice. And we must never forget that the story begins and ends with readers. No readers, no industry – and no fandom! ‘Nuff said!


Satima’s Bio:

2011-10-16Satima_FB

From a background in the performing arts, principally dance and music, Satima switched to writing in these areas a couple of decades ago.

A regular contributor to magazines such as Dance Australia and Music Maker, she was dance critic for The Australian in Perth for several years.

She is now Reviews Editor for The Specusphere, a webzine for the speculative fiction community, and she also undertakes freelance editing commission.


A life-long love of fantasy eventually led her start writing it, and she is now working on the obligatory trilogy. Apart from reading, writing, editing and reviewing fantasy, Satima’s interests include astrology and family history. She also enjoys participating in Shakespearean readings and writing the odd bad sonnet.


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:


Did you enjoy this interview? Would you like to read more? You can subscribe to the blog through a reader,by Email or Follow me on twitter.

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