Scott Edelman
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©2025 Scott Edelman

Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  January 16, 2024  |  No comment


Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  January 14, 2024  |  No comment


Join Izzy Wasserstein for Kansas City BBQ in episode 216 of Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Eating the Fantastic, Izzy Wasserstein    Posted date:  January 12, 2024  |  No comment


It’s time to return to the World Fantasy Convention for a third culinary conversation from Kansas City following my dinners with Nina Kiriki Hoffman and Pat Murphy The guest you and I will be breaking bread with this time around is Izzy Wasserstein, who’s published fiction in Analog, Apex, Lightspeed, Fantasy, Fireside, and many other magazines, plus such anthologies as A Punk Rock Future, Resist Fascism, Future Fighting for the Future: Cyberpunk and Solarpunk Tales, Glitter + Ashes: Queer Tales of a World That Wouldn’t Die, and more.

Many of those stories have been collected in her marvelous short story collection All the Hometowns You Can’t Stay Away From, which was a Lambda Literary Award finalist. Her poetry collections include When Creation Falls and This Ecstasy They Call Damnation. Her forthcoming debut novella These Fragile Graces, This Fugitive Heart will be released by Tachyon in March, and you should preorder it right now.

We discussed the way Sarah Pinsker sparked her lightbulb moment, why it’s important for her to learn your chosen D&D character, which Star Trek: The Next Generation characters caused her to take her first stab at writing, the change she’d make in her life if she were independently wealthy, why we both miss those paper rejection slips from publishing’s pre-electronic days, the disconnect between the way we feel about certain stories of ours and how readers respond, the most important gift she was given by the Clarion writing workshop, our perverse love for second-person present-tense stories, how surprised she was when she sold a story to Analog, and much more.

Here’s how you can join us at Fiorella’s Jack Stack Barbecue — (more…)

Join Pat Murphy for lunch at “the single best restaurant in the world” in Episode 215 of Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Eating the Fantastic, Pat Murphy    Posted date:  December 29, 2023  |  No comment


2023 is almost over, but before the year ends, surely you have room for one more Eating the Fantastic meal — especially since it’s at what Calvin Trillin once called “the single best restaurant in the world.” Join me at Arthur Bryant’s BBQ for the second conversation coming to you from the Kansas City World Fantasy Convention, following last episode’s dinner with Nina Kiriki Hoffman.

My guest this time around is Pat Murphy, who won the Nebula Award for her 1986 novel The Falling Woman, plus a second Nebula the same year for her novelette, “Rachel in Love.” She also won the Philip K. Dick Award for her 1990 short story collection Points of Departure, and the World Fantasy Award for her 1990 novella, Bones. For more than 20 years, she  and Paul Doherty cowrote the recurring Science column in the Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction. She also co-founded the James Tiptree, Jr. Award in 1991. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg.

I’ve known Pat for a loooong time, and I can tell you exactly how long — we met on September 4, 1980, more than 43 years prior to the conversation you’re about to hear. If you want to learn exactly how and why I can pinpoint that date, well, the episode will reveal all.

We discussed the part of Robert A. Heinlein’s famed rules of writing with which she disagrees, why she felt the need to attend the Clarion writing workshop even after having made several sales to major pro markets, the occasional difficulties in decoding what an editor is truly trying to tell you, the importance of never giving up your day jobs, why she can’t read Dylan Thomas when she’s working on a novel, the differences between the infighting we’ve seen in the science fiction vs. literary fields, what we perceive as our personal writing flaws, a Clarion critiquing mystery I’ve been attempting to solve since 1979, the science fiction connection which launched her career at the Exploratorium, and much more.

Here’s how you can join us at Arthur Bryant’s BBQ — (more…)

Feast on crab fried rice with Nina Kiriki Hoffman in Episode 214 of Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Eating the Fantastic, Nina Kiriki Hoffman    Posted date:  December 15, 2023  |  No comment


The year’s almost over, but here at Eating the Fantastic, October’s World Fantasy Convention has only just begun.

The first of four conversations I brought back for you from Kansas City is with Nina Kiriki Hoffman, who aside from having sung the earworm “Feelings” with me more times than I can count, has either won or been a finalist for the Nebula Award, the Locus Award, the World Fantasy Award, the Theodore Sturgeon Award, the HOMer award from CompuServe, the Endeavour Award, the Mythopoeic Society Award, the James Tiptree Jr. Award, and the Philip K. Dick Award.

She won the 2008 Nebula Award for Best Short Story for “Trophy Wives,” and her novel The Thread That Binds the Bones won the Bram Stoker Award for first novel. Other novels include The Silent Strength of Stones (a sequel to The Thread That Binds the Bones), A Fistful of Sky, and A Stir of Bones. Her novella ‘”Unmasking,” published in 1992 by Axolotl Press, was a finalist for the 1993 World Fantasy Award. Her novella “Haunted Humans” was a finalist for the 1995 Nebula Award for Best Novella and on the same ballot as her novelette”The Skeleton Key,” shortlisted for Best Novelette.

We discussed the way a ghost story which left her wanting more led to her taking her writing more seriously, her early reactions to reading Robert A. Heinlein and Ursula K. Le Guin, how the Clarion workshop convinced her she could have a career as a writer, the way she wanted to grow up to be a combination of Ray Bradbury and Zenna Henderson, what she learned about characterization from Samuel R. Delany while at Clarion, the major difference she saw between the horror and science fiction communities during the early days of the Internet, how my perception of the arc her career was affected not by what she wrote but by what she sold, the lesson Ellen Datlow taught her which she passes on to her students, and much more.

Here’s how you can join us at Lulu’s Thai Noodle Shop — (more…)

Snack on spanakopita with Neil Clarke in Episode 213 of Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Eating the Fantastic, Neil Clarke    Posted date:  December 1, 2023  |  No comment


It’s time to return to the Rockville, Maryland convention Capclave for a second episode of Eating the Fantastic, following my Peruvian lunch with Alex Shvartsman. This time around you’re invited to dinner with Neil Clarke, who’s best known as the editor and publisher of the Hugo and World Fantasy Award-winning Clarkesworld magazine, launched in October 2006. Clarkesworld has been a finalist for the Hugo Award for Best Semiprozine four times (winning three times), the World Fantasy Award four times (winning once), and the British Fantasy Award once (winning once).

Neil himself is also an eleven-time finalist for the Hugo Award for Best Editor-Short Form (winning twice), three-time winner of the Chesley Award for Best Art Director, and recipient of the 2019 Kate Wilhelm Solstice Award from SFWA. In the seventeen years since Clarkesworld Magazine launched, stories that he’s edited have been nominated for or won the Hugo, Nebula, World Fantasy, Sturgeon, Locus, BSFA, Shirley Jackson, WSFA Small Press, Stoker, and various other awards.

He also  edits Forever — a digital-only, reprint science fiction magazine launched in 2015. His anthologies include: Upgraded, Galactic Empires, Touchable Unreality, More Human than Human, The Final Frontier, Not One of Us, The Eagle has Landed, and the Best Science Fiction of the Year series. His latest anthology, New Voices in Chinese Science Fiction (co-edited with Xia Jia — who was a guest of this podcast way back in Episode 50 — and Regina Kanyu Wang), was published in July.

We discussed how Clarkesworld was born (and what he wishes he’d known back when the magazine launched), the motivation behind his unrivaled response times, the irresponsible impact of AI on science fiction and what he’s doing to help ameliorate it, how he proactively analyzes submission data to make sure he receives stories from diverse voices, the differing effect of the pandemic lockdown on first time vs. established authors, why it’s hard for people to sell him a time travel story, his problems with Star Trek‘s transporter, the true meaning of rejections, why reading science fiction in translation is so important, Lester del Rey’s prophetic warning about the provincialism of U.S. fandom, and much more.

Here’s how you can join us at Mykonos Grill — (more…)

For your consideration — my 2023 short fiction

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  my writing    Posted date:  November 24, 2023  |  No comment


Since all the cool kids are making eligibility announcements, so shall I!

I published four stories this year — three science fiction and one fantasy.

Here’s how you can find them. Note that two of the stories have links so you can read them for free right now.


“A Man Walks Into a Bar:
In Which More Than Four Decades After My Father’s Reluctant Night of Darts on West 54th Street I Finally Understand What Needs to Be Done”

First up — my most personal story ever, a valentine to my father which was published in the January issue of Lightspeed — “A Man Walks Into a Bar: In Which More Than Four Decades After My Father’s Reluctant Night of Darts on West 54th Street I Finally Understand What Needs to Be Done.” If you’ve ever wondered how I got to be the person you’ve come to know, this will explain it all for you.


“The Letters They Left Behind”

My second 2023 publication also appeared in Lightspeed —this time the August issue. “The Letters They Left Behind” is the tale of a deep-space encounter with aliens which I understand caused some readers to shed a few tears — but in a good way.


“The Lessons Only a Jelly Bean Can Teach”

“The Lessons Only a Jelly Bean Can Teach,” a short story from the point of view of an Artificial Intelligence, appeared in Pulphouse #22.


“An Invitation for the Uninvited”

“An Invitation for the Uninvited,” my only 2023 fiction which crosses over from short story to novelette territory, appeared in the anthology Qualia Nous 2. This alien invasion story, though new, took me several decades to figure out how to write.


Barring any last-minute surprises, those four are it for my 2023.

Thanks for reading!

Polish off a Peruvian lunch with Alex Shvartsman in Episode 212 of Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Alex Shvartsman, Eating the Fantastic    Posted date:  November 17, 2023  |  No comment


This episode serves up the first of two conversations I captured last month during Capclave in Rockville, Maryland. My guest this time around is Capclave regular Alex Shvartsman, with whom I’ve pontificated on many panels over the years.

Shvartsman is the author of the new fantasy novel Kakistocracy, as well as The Middling Affliction (2022), and Eridani’s Crown (2019). More than 120 of his short stories have appeared in Analog, Nature, Strange Horizons, Fireside, Weird Tales, Galaxy’s Edge, and many other venues. He won the WSFA Small Press Award for Short Fiction in 2014 and was a three-time finalist for the Canopus Award for Excellence in Interstellar Fiction. His translations from Russian have appeared in The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Clarkesworld, Tor.com, Asimov’s, Analog, Strange Horizons, and elsewhere.

He’s also the editor of the Unidentified Funny Objects series of humorous SF/F, as well as a variety of other anthologies, including The Cackle of Cthulhu, Humanity 2.0, and Funny Science Fiction. For five years he edited Future Science Fiction Digest, a magazine that focused on international fiction. And on top of all that, he’s one of the greatest Magic: The Gathering players ever, ranking way up there in tournaments from 1998-2004, something I hadn’t known about him even though I’ve known him for years.

We discussed how intimations of mortality got him to start writing fiction, what he learned as a pro player of Magic: the Gathering which affected his storytelling, why he set aside his initial urge to write novels in favor of short stories, which U.S. science fiction writers are more famous in Russia than their home country, the reason his success as a writer and editor of humor came as a surprise, why he feels it’s important to read cover letters, the secret to writing successful flash fiction, his “lighthouse” method of plotting, and much more.

Here’s how you can join us at La Canela, a Peruvian restaurant which has long been popular with Capclave attendees — (more…)

Your context-free comic book panel of the day

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  context-free comic book panel    Posted date:  November 12, 2023  |  No comment


Binge BBQ with the legendary Mike Gold in Episode 211 of Eating the Fantastic

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Eating the Fantastic, Mike Gold    Posted date:  November 3, 2023  |  No comment


The pros who attend Baltimore Comic-Con tend to be so tightly programmed it’s nearly impossible for me to spirit anyone away to chat and chew during the con itself. So I’m extremely pleased I was able to convince the legendary Mike Gold to head out for dinner the night before the con began.

Gold entered the comic industry as DC’s first public relations manager. But as I was astounded to discover, he did some PR earlier than that — as the media coordinator for the defense at the Chicago Conspiracy trial, acting as the intermediary between the press and the likes of Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin, when he was only a teen.

After DC, in 1983, he launched First Comics, where he edited Howard Chaykin’s American Flagg, Mike Baron and Steve Rude’s Nexus, Jim Starlin’s Dreadstar, Mike Grell’s Jon Sable Freelance, and many other classic series. Then after his move back to DC in 1986, he edited such titles as Legends, The Shadow, The Question, Action Comics Weekly, Green Arrow: The Longbow Hunters, Blackhawk, and others.

In 2006, he co-founded ComicMix, and in 2011, he received the first Humanitarian Award from the Hero Initiative. And — since he’s five years older than I am — meaning I would have read Fantastic Four #1 at age six, and Mike at eleven, five years counting for a lot back then — I enjoyed digging into our differing perspectives about the early days of comics.

We discussed the way his hiring at DC Comics was all Neal Adams’ fault, how the guerrilla marketing he learned from Abbie Hoffman helped him quadruple direct market sales, the Steve Ditko Creeper cover which sent a not-so-secret message to publisher Carmine Infantino, why editor Murray Boltinoff compared Marvel Comics to the Beatles (and not in a good way), which staffer was “the most disgusting human being I’d ever met in my life,” how First Comics was born, his secret weapon for getting creators to deliver their work on time, our differing contemporaneous exposure to Fantastic Four #1 (and how his related to Merrick Garland), the way an off-hand comment led to a classic John Byrne comic, how the comic book field is like a donut shop, and much more.

Here’s how you can join us at Heritage Smokehouse — (more…)

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