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:  November 11, 2019  |  No comment


Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  November 9, 2019  |  No comment


Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  November 9, 2019  |  No comment


Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  November 5, 2019  |  No comment


Devour Cthulhu with World Horror Grandmaster Ramsey Campbell on Episode 108 of Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Eating the Fantastic, food, Ramsey Campbell, Worldcon    Posted date:  October 31, 2019  |  No comment


It’s time to say farewell to Dublin, because as far as this podcast is concerned, the 77th World Science Fiction Convention is finally about to end. I previously invited you along to sit in on a Javanese dinner with the Nebula Award-winning Lisa Tuttle, share crab and eel with the Hugo Award-winning Cheryl Morgan, and brunch on the delightfully named dish Breakfast of Champions with Arcade Award-winning Maura McHugh. As for this fourth and final episode recorded during Worldcon, I can’t think of a better guest to bring live for you on Halloween than the great horror writer Ramsey Campbell.

Ramsey published his H. P. Lovecraft-inspired first book of stories The Inhabitant of the Lake and Less Welcome Tenants in 1964 when he was only 18, and hasn’t stopped since. He’s a two-time winner of the Bram Stoker Award, a four-time winner of the World Fantasy Award, and a TWELVE-time winner of the British Fantasy Award. He’s also received lifetime achievement World Fantasy and Bram Stoker Awards, and was named a World Horror Grandmaster. Previous guest of the podcast T. E. D. Klein called his collection Demons by Daylight “perhaps the most important book of horror fiction since Lovecraft’s The Outsider and Others.” High praise indeed!

We got together on the final day of Worldcon, long after the 4:30 p.m. closing ceremonies had ended. So instead of traipsing around to the usual dead dog parties, we had dinner at Rosa Madre, which I found via Eater’s list of the 38 Essential Dublin restaurants — where at one point as I looked across the table, it seemed as if he was nibbling on Cthulhu! (And sure, I know it was only baby octopus, and not the the Great Old One … but we horror writers like to dream.)

We discussed his early relationship with Arkham House editor and publisher August Derleth, who he might have been had he never discovered H. P. Lovecraft, how this master of unease is able to keep the sense of dread going for the length of a novel (hint: he’s not entirely sure himself), why he loves The Blair Witch Project, what it was like writing novels in the Universal monsters universe, how he felt when The Times listed The Doll That Ate its Mother as one of the silliest titles of 1987, how Twilight Zone editor T. E. D. Klein changed his life, our shared memories of the 1979 World Fantasy Convention, why he feels his attempts to write science fiction have been “clumsy,” the way he was made speechless on his first meeting with J. G. Ballard, why he admires Vladimir Nabokov, and much more.

Here’s how you can eavesdrop on our conversation at Rosa Madre — (more…)

Where you’ll be able to find me during the 2019 Baltimore Book Festival

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Baltimore Book Festival    Posted date:  October 25, 2019  |  No comment


The Baltimore Book Festival, one of my favorite literary events of the year, begins a week from today. And this time, it’s going a be a bit different than usual.

Because the date has been shifted from the end of September to the beginning of November, when it might be too chilly to wander Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, the SFWA-sponsored panels will no longer be outside in a tent but instead inside the Columbus Center at 701 East Pratt Street.

This will certainly change some of the feel of the event, where random passersby might be attracted to our open-air conversation, but I hope it doesn’t change its basic character.

Here’s where you’ll be able to track me down and hear me pontificate —

Friday, November 1

Plays Well With Others: Collaborative Worlds, IP, and Other Shared Worlds
2:00 p.m.
Writing has traditionally been a solo occupation, but there are plenty of opportunities these days to work in shared worlds, other people’s worlds, or even tag team fiction. What are some of the challenges of working with others, and who is doing it well? (I volunteered to play moderator for this one, because I am fascinated by collaboration, perhaps because it’s a thing for which I am totally unsuited and find baffling.)
with Bob Bates, Malka Older, Erin Roberts, Richard C. White, and Alison Wilgus

Recognize Me? Writing Real People and Other People’s Characters Into Your Fiction
5:00 p.m.
Many authors love writing non-fictional characters into their fiction. Others get a kick out of using characters from books. What’s the appeal? What’s fair use? When can you stray from the canon for that character?
with Lara Elena Donnelly, Ruthanna Emrys, Jeffrey Ford, Natasha D. Lane

Saturday, November 2

With the Lights on It’s Less Dangerous
7:00 p.m.
Talking dark fantasy and horror with some of the stars of those fields.
with Nino Cipri, Craig Gidney, Micah Dean Hicks, AC Wise

Sunday, November 3

Sandman to Saga: Great Comics & Graphic Novels for Adults
12:00 p.m.
Our panel weighs in on the comics you should be reading.
with Bill Campbell, Michael R. Underwood, Alison Wilgus

When not on panels, I’ll likely be in the audience to hear what the other participants have to say, except for when I’m off recording two episodes of Eating the Fantastic.

I hope to see you there!

Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  October 23, 2019  |  No comment


Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  October 23, 2019  |  No comment


Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  October 22, 2019  |  No comment


Head to Dublin for brunch with Maura McHugh in Episode 107 of Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Eating the Fantastic, food, Maura McHugh, Worldcon    Posted date:  October 17, 2019  |  No comment


It’s time to return to Dublin for the third of four mealtime conversations recorded during the 77th World Science Fiction Convention, following my dinner last episode with the Nebula Award-winning Lisa Tuttle and lunch with the Hugo Award-winning Cheryl Morgan.

Maura McHugh and I first met during the 2007 Yokohama Worldcon, where I was introduced to her by former guest of the podcast Ellen Datlow as one of the students she’d met at Clarion West, which Maura had attended after receiving the Gordon R. Dickson Scholarship. Her fiction and poetry have appeared in Jabberwocky, Doorways, Paradox, Goblin Fruit, and other magazines. She also writes comics, the most recent of which was The Dead Run, a five-issue Judge Anderson: PSI Division story for Judge Dredd Megazine. In 2015, she won Best Irish Writer of comic books in The Arcade Awards. She also published a book on Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me through the Midnight Movie Monograph series from Electric Dreamhouse Press and PS Publishing. Her most recent short story collection The Boughs Withered (When I Told Them My Dreams) launched at the Dublin Worldcon.

Do you notice anything unusual about the photo of Maura from our brunch at Herb Street? Look closely.

I took half a dozen shots of Maura, and did not notice until later in the day that in every one of the images she’d been photobombed by previous guest of the show Sarah Pinsker, who was just finishing up her lunch in the same restaurant with another previous guest of the show, Sheila Williams.

Maura and I discussed how the Clarion Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers’ Workshop sometimes makes people realize they shouldn’t be writers (and why that can sometimes be a good thing), how having lived in both Ireland and the U.S. affected her life and her writing, whether her attraction to dark fiction was ever a choice, what it was like getting to create comics in the Judge Dredd universe, how she decides whether ideas that pop into her head get transformed into comics or prose, her recent art project inspired by the works of Simone de Beauvoir, why she doesn’t speak much about works in progress on social media, what she learned pulling together the selections for her first short story collection, why Twin Peaks fascinated her so much she wrote a book about the show — and much more.

Here’s how you can eavesdrop on our conversation at Herb Street — (more…)

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