Scott Edelman
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Have hot antipasto with Andy Duncan in Episode 85 of Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Andy Duncan, Eating the Fantastic, food    Posted date:  December 28, 2018  |  No comment


The final new Eating the Fantastic episode of 2018 is not only a last, it’s also a first. That’s because up until now, I’ve never invited a guest back to join me for a second meal, never repeated a guest — though K. M. Szpara — with whom I shared lunch in Episode 35 — did pop by for a few minutes as one of my 13 guests during Episode 39’s completely chaotic lightning-round Balticon Donut Extravaganza.

But now it’s time to revisit with Andy Duncan, whom you got to know in Episode 6, because there happens to be a great reason for doing so. Twelve great reasons, actually. And those are the twelve stories in his new collection An Agent of Utopia, published last month by Small Beer Press.

A new Andy Duncan collection is a wonderful thing, as proven by the fact his first collection, Beluthahatchie and Other Stories, published in 2000, won a World Fantasy Award. And that’s not the only award his fiction has earned, because “The Pottawatomie Giant,” which also won a World Fantasy Award, and “Close Encounters,” which won a Nebula Award, are two of the dozen stories in the new collection.

The last meal you shared with us allowed you to eavesdrop on a far-ranging conversation covering every aspect of his career up until early 2016, the kind of deep dive most of my episodes are, but it seems right that from time to time I should follow up for more sharply focussed discussions, and a conversation about a new collection nearly three years after our initial talk, chatting about this new milestone in his career, seemed as if it would be revelatory.

Andy celebrated the launch of An Agent of Utopia with a reading at Main Street Books, an independent bookstore on Main Street in Frostburg, MD, so if you keep listening after our meal at Giuseppe’s Italian Restaurant is over, you’ll be able to eavesdrop on that reading.

We discussed why it took a quarter of a century to bring the book’s lead story from title idea to completion, how he was influenced by the research regimen of the great Frederik Pohl, the way a short story is like an exploded toolshed, why he deliberately wrote a deal with the devil story after hearing he shouldn’t write deal with the devil stories, the embarrassing marketing blurb he can’t stop telling people about in bars, what caused a last-minute change to the title of one of the collection’s new stories, how he feels about going viral after his recent J. R. R. Tolkien comments, what he learned about himself from completing this project and what it means for the future of his writing, what it is about his most reprinted story which made it so, and much more.

Here’s how you can listen to our conversation at Giuseppe’s — (more…)

Episode 6 of Eating the Fantastic—with Andy Duncan—is now live

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Andy Duncan, Eating the Fantastic, food    Posted date:  April 15, 2016  |  No comment


Andy Duncan and I got together Wednesday at the Princess Cafe—where Harry and Bess Truman had lunch one Father’s Day more than 60 years ago—and recorded the sixth episode of Eating the Fantastic while seated in the same booth they’d once occupied.

Andy’s an award-winning writer many times over, having won a Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award, a Nebula Award, and three World Fantasy Awards. Plus he’s also been nominated for the Bram Stoker and Shirley Jackson Awards. His collections include Beluthahatchie and Other Stories (which came out in 2000) and The Pottawatomie Giant and Other Stories (published in 2011).

AndyDuncanScottEdelmanEatingtheFantastic

We discussed the profound influence of Richard Pryor on his writing, why he loves playing with real-world historical characters and events in his stories, what it was like to collaborate with Ellen Klages on their award-winning novella “Wakulla Springs,” what, if anything, writing teachers can teach, and more.

Here’s how you can join us— (more…)

Jeffrey Ford gets dolled up

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Andy Duncan, Gerry LaFemina, Jeffrey Ford, Sydney Duncan    Posted date:  March 28, 2015  |  1 Comment


Once I learned, only a few days before the event, that Jeffery Ford was going to give a reading at Frostburg State University as part of the Spring 2015 Reading Series at the Center for Creative Writing, I knew I had to be there.

Hey, it’s only 80 miles each way from the Eastern Panhandle of West Virginia where I live, and seeing Jeff only once or twice a year at cons is (as those who know Jeff know) definitely not enough. So on Thursday, I jumped in the Jeep and headed over to meet him at the home of Andy and Sydney Duncan, where we caught up for an hour or so before heading to dinner, and then on to the Lewis J. Ort Library, located on the campus of Frostburg State University.

Poet Gerry LaFemina, the Director of the Frostburg Center for Creative Writing (who’d joined us for dinner), introduced Andy …

AndyDuncanFSU

… who then introduced Jeff, who read his story “Word Doll,” from the anthology The Doll Collection, edited by Ellen Datlow. (more…)

Three videos from the World Fantasy Convention

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Alaya Dawn Johnson, Andy Duncan, Kelly Link, Video, World Fantasy Convention    Posted date:  November 11, 2014  |  No comment


As those who’ve followed me for any length of time know, if I’m at a reading or panel, and I have the permission of those involved, I’ll record the event and toss it up on YouTube. My earliest such video was of Cory Doctorow back in 2010, and since then I’ve added more than 100 others. So I, of course, captured the three readings I attended at last weekend’s World Fantasy Convention.

On Friday, I watched as Alaya Dawn Johnson read from her YA novel Love is the Drug.

(more…)

10 photos from SFWA’s 2003 Nebula Awards weekend

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Andy Duncan, Bill Shunn, Ellen Datlow, Nebula Awards, Neil Gaiman, science fiction    Posted date:  May 19, 2013  |  No comment


The Nebulas Awards banquet was held last night in San Jose, and usually, I’d have been there. But this year, I wanted to attend the the March George Formby Society Convention in Blackpool, and so something had to give—which meant the Nebulas as well as this year’s World Horror Convention in New Orleans were out.

So I amused myself this weekend by looking back two years to my photos from 2003 Nebula Awards weekend and sharing them on Twitter, but thought I should gather them together here as well.

So get ready to flashback to a gentler, more innocent time …

2003NebulasScottEdelmanBillShunn

Scott Edelman (with butterfly) and Bill Shunn

(more…)

A photo in desperate need of a caption

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Andy Duncan, Ellen Datlow, Locus, Nebula Awards    Posted date:  February 8, 2013  |  No comment


I ran across this photo over at Locus of me and Andy Duncan and Ellen Datlow (with Wil McCarthy in the background) at the 2001 Nebula Awards in Los Angeles, and all I could think was … now there’s an image in desperate need of a caption!

So, friends, it’s up to you to provide one. What could it be that we’re discussing so intently? And more importantly …

ScottAndyEllen

What exactly is Ellen measuring with her fingers?

5 photos from my third day at the 2012 World Fantasy Convention

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Andy Duncan, Elizabeth Hand, F. Brett Cox, Michael Marano, World Fantasy Convention    Posted date:  November 4, 2012  |  1 Comment


And once again, I’ve been having too much fun at the World Fantasy Convention to have any time left over for a full write-up, so these five photos will have to stand in for the details, which I hope to share in a full report in the future.

Hanging with Andy Duncan and Brett Cox

  (more…)

Dinner with the Duncans

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Andy Duncan    Posted date:  May 3, 2010  |  No comment


We headed over to Berkeley Springs last night, halfway (sort of) between our West Virginia home and the Frostburg, Maryland stomping grounds of Sydney and Andy Duncan, and had dinner at Panorama at the Peak restaurant (which happens to be the best restaurant in town). It felt good, as Andy put it, to for once see each other without wearing name tags.

There was plenty of great food—braised lamb shank for me, North Carolina crab cakes for Irene, West Virginia pan-fried trout for the Duncans—and great conversation.

We talked about blizzards (because whenever two or more gather, weather must be discussed, right?), NaNoWriMo, whether or not I should finally attend the International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts, Alzheimer’s, cluttering, Readercon, our writing (of course!), Eddie Lawrence’s novelty record “The Old Philosopher” (which I mangled badly trying to explain), Sydney’s recent sale to an anthology of Alfred Hitchcock poetry, and much more.

Here are the happy wanderers after we cleaned our plates and paid our bill.

DinnerwiththeDuncans

Do we look sated in both mind and body? I think that we do.

A frost in Frostburg

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Andy Duncan, Gregory Frost    Posted date:  February 22, 2008  |  No comment


I braved the elements last night to go hear Gregory Frost read an excerpt from his new novel, Shadowbridge, at Main Street Books in Frostburg, Maryland. I joined Greg, along with Frostburg transplants Sydney and Andy Duncan, for dinner beforehand at The Sand Springs Restaurant and Saloon. Even with the falling snow, a decent crowd turned up for the 7:30 reading, which began when Andy took the podium to introduce Greg.

FrostburgDinner

The most important thing I learned last night? The title Sydney intends to give to the account of her life spent with Andy, which I will leave to her to reveal to the world when the time is right.

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