Scott Edelman
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Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  March 2, 2023  |  No comment


For your Hugo Awards Best Fancast consideration: Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Eating the Fantastic, Hugo Awards, Worldcon    Posted date:  March 1, 2023  |  No comment


Earlier today, the Chengdu Worldcon opened nominations for the Hugo Awards, the Lodestar Award for Best Young Adult Book, and the Astounding Award for Best New Writer. If you’re eligible to nominate this year, I hope you’ll take my 2022 short story publications into consideration — but I’d ask that you please consider Eating the Fantastic in the category of Best Fancast as well.

Last year, I invited you to eavesdrop on 27 meals with amazing creators, welcoming you to the continual culinary conversation I’ve been having since I attended my first convention at age 15.

Here are links to all 2023 episodes so you can decide whether the podcast — which I launched in February 2016 — is to your taste. Pick a guest who calls to you and join us at the table!

Breakfast on Eggs Benedict with Fonda Lee in Episode 162 of Eating the Fantastic

Dig into duck with Usman T. Malik in Episode 163 of Eating the Fantastic

Nibble noodles with Daryl Gregory in Episode 164 of Eating the Fantastic

Brunch with two-time Hugo Award nominee Natalie Luhrs in Episode 165 of Eating the Fantastic

Eat enchiladas with Bram Stoker Award-winning writer Paul Tremblay in Episode 166 of Eating the Fantastic

Share deep-fried wontons with Library of Congress curator Sara Duke in Episode 167 of Eating the Fantastic

Pig out on pork BBQ with Paul Witcover in Episode 168 of Eating the Fantastic

Chow down on butter chicken with Paul Kupperberg in Episode 169 of Eating the Fantastic

Uncover Alex Segura’s secret identity in Episode 170 of Eating the Fantastic

Join John Appel for a dry-aged burger in Episode 171 of Eating the Fantastic

Brunch with writer Steven R. Southard on Episode 172 of Eating the Fantastic

Share sushi with the award-winning writer Wen Spencer in Episode 173 of Eating the Fantastic

Grab dinner with Gwendolyn Clare during Episode 174 of Eating the Fantastic

Join David Gerrold for a breakfast buffet on Episode 175 of Eating the Fantastic

Dig into dumplings with Patrick O’Leary in Episode 176 of Eating the Fantastic

Catch up with Sam J. Miller over khachapuri in Episode 177 of Eating the Fantastic

Brunch on Eggs Benedict with Michael Jan Friedman in Episode 178 of Eating the Fantastic

Join writer David Ebenbach for cheesecake in D.C. on Episode 179 of Eating the Fantastic

Meet Max Gladstone for a Mexican meal in Episode 180 of Eating the Fantastic

Chow down with Wesley Chu in Episode 181 of Eating the Fantastic

Come to Chicago for lunch with Carol Tilley in Episode 182 of Eating the Fantastic

Dig into dim sum with the Nebula Award-winning Eileen Gunn in Episode 193 of Eating the Fantastic

Munch Carnitas Benedict with the award-winning Michael Swanwick in Episode 184 of Eating the Fantastic

Eavesdrop on Oghenechovwe Donald Ekpeki in Episode 185 of Eating the Fantastic

Bite into blood sausage with Tim Waggoner in Episode 186 of Eating the Fantastic

Dive into dim sum with Randee Dawn in Episode 187 of Eating the Fantastic

Take a seat at the table in Little Italy with Al Milgrom in Episode 188 of Eating the Fantastic


Should your eavesdropping entice you to listen to future episodes, subscribe at the iTunes store or via the show’s RSS feed of http://eatingthefantastic.libsyn.com/rss to download them to the device of your choosing.

Thank you for your consideration!

Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  March 1, 2023  |  No comment


Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  February 28, 2023  |  No comment


Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  February 27, 2023  |  No comment


Get crabby with writer Jennifer R. Povey in Episode 192 of Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Eating the Fantastic, Jennifer R. Povey    Posted date:  February 24, 2023  |  No comment


I attended Boskone last weekend, where I recorded three new conversations I’ll be sharing with you, but before we get to those, let’s pay a visit to the previous weekend’s Farpoint, where I had lunch with Jennifer R. Povey at the Ashland Cafe in Cockeysville, Maryland, which offers excellent diner food and great pie.

Povey has made numerous appearances in Analog, and her short fiction has also appeared in such magazines and anthologies as Daily Science Fiction, Bards and Sages Quarterly, Zombiality,  99 Tiny Terrors, First Contact, You’re Not Alone, and many others.  Her novels include the four books in the Lost Guardians series — Falling Dusk (2016), Fallen Dark (2017), Rising Dawn (2017), and Risen Day (2018) — as well as the stand-alones Transpecial (2013), Araña (2019), The Lay of Lady Percival (2019), Firewing (2020), and The Friar’s Tale: A Novel of Robin Hood (2020) She also has a number of credits in the RPG industry, having written or co-written supplements for Fat Goblin Games, Rite Publishing, Dark Naga Games, Flaming Crab Games, Avalon Game Company, and others.

We discussed how the pandemic altered the timing of her newly begun five-book science fiction series, why she once had to rethink a novel after getting 20,000 words in, the reason series detectives are rarely the true protagonists in their own stories, our differing reasons for taking issue with J. K. Rowling, her Star Trek fan fiction origins, how to avoid sequel fatigue when writing long series, techniques for avoiding self-rejection, her unusual journey to getting published in Analog, how 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea changed her life, the  Doctor Who episode which altered her existential understanding of the universe, how her archeological training helped her fiction, what writers get wrong when depicting horses, how it’s possible for pantsers to write novels, the time she horrified a Klingon in a convention bar, the divisive nature of “ship wars,” and much more.

Here’s how you can join us — (more…)

Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  February 17, 2023  |  No comment


Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  February 16, 2023  |  No comment


Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  February 15, 2023  |  No comment


Contemplating a new science fiction collection

Posted by: Scott    Tags:      Posted date:  February 14, 2023  |  No comment


I haven’t published a short story collection dedicated solely to science fiction since What We Still Talk About in 2010, and because I’ve written so many stories since then featuring time travel, deep space, transhumanism, the post-apocalypse, and other tropes central to the genre, it’s time to start thinking about pulling one together.

My first collection, These Words Are Haunted, focusing on horror, came out in 2001, and was followed by What Will Come After, spotlighting zombies, in 2010. Then came that SF collection What We Still Talk About, also in 2010. In 2018, I published Tell Me Like You Done Before, a collection honoring the writers who helped mold me, a mix of multiple genres. My most recent collection from 2020, Things That Never Happened, was a dark fantasy collection, though horror bleeds into it as well.

But so much has happened since that 2010 SF collection — including the publication of my two Analog stories, the first of which only occurred after 44 years of trying — that I’d like to gather them together for you in a more permanent form.

Here are the possible candidates for inclusion, along with their word counts, presented in the chronological order of their original publication, with no attempt to order them as they might appear in such a project —

“The Man Without the Blue Balloon and the Woman Who Had Smiles Only for Him” — 5,660
originally published May 2016 in Postscripts 36/37

“101 Things to Do Before You’re Downloaded” — 5,850
originally published in 2016  in the anthology You, Human

“After the Harvest, Before the Fall” — 11,600
originally published in the January/February 2017 issue of Analog

“Pity This Busy Monster Not” — 6425
originally published September 2017 in the anthology Adam’s Ladder

“How Val Finally Escaped from the Basement” — 9,425
originally published in the November/December 2017 issue of Analog

“Opossums and Angels” — 5,350
originally published in my 2018 collection Tell Me Like You Done Before

“The Stranded Time Traveler Embraces the Inevitable” — 2,730
originally published March 2019 in the anthology If This Goes On

“Five Years Later” — 6,700
originally published August 2019 in The Unquiet Dreamer: A Tribute to Harlan Ellison

“I Shall But Love Thee Better” — 10,600
originally published March 2021 in the anthology Prisms

“Lost Out There in the Stars” — 9,150
originally published published in the Spring 2022 issue of Parsec

“What Tomorrow Has to Say” — 5,000
originally published in the Summer 2022 issue of DreamForge

“The Time Traveler’s Assistant Discovers What Could Have Been” — 5,100
originally published on the 2022 summer solstice in Underland Arcana #7

“Learning to Accept What’s to Come” — 6,350
originally published in the November 2022 issue of Apex

“The More Loving One” — 6,950
originally published December 2022 in Proton Reader #2

“The Letters They Left Behind” — 7,450
forthcoming in Lightspeed

“The Lessons Only a Jelly Bean Can Teach” — 2,600
forthcoming in Pulphouse

That’s just under 107,000 words, not counting any previously unpublished story which should be tossed into the mix, always a fun feature of a new collection. And even if I kick out “Opossums and Angels,” to avoid duplicating anything from a previous collection, that’s still plenty to work with.

As you can tell by the fact two of the stories above have yet to appear, I’m in no hurry to make this happen, for I believe six months would have to pass from their original publications before I’m allowed to repurpose them. But it’s definitely something I’d like to make happen in 2024 if possible.

Stay tuned!

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