Scott Edelman
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Scott Edelman, Media Whore

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Kenneth Patchen    Posted date:  April 30, 2008  |  No comment


I just received a review copy of the New Directions reissue of poet Kenneth Patchen’s The Walking-Away World. I’m not sure why, since at first glance it seemed unlikely that I would have anything to say about the volume that would help publicize it. The illustrated poetry inside is a far cry from science fiction or fantasy, and so I’m not sure what the PR department was thinking, since there’s no hook that would cause me to review the book in either Science Fiction Weekly or SCI FI magazine.

Then I read the introduction, since I enjoy reading writing about writing, regardless of the genre. It turned out to have been written by Jim Woodring, the cartoonist of the surreal wordless series Frank. I can only assume that he was chosen because of the parallels between his work and the three picture-poems of Patchen’s which are gathered here.

So the reason I’m sharing about The Walking-Away World is due to an anecdote Woodring shares in his introduction, one which relates to the recent brouhaha concerning the proper way to respond to bad reviews. Since I have no one-star Amazon reviews of my work and therefore can’t respond to this fiasco the way John Scalzi did, I figure this is the least I can do. (more…)

Celebrating Jack Williamson’s centennial

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Jack Williamson    Posted date:  April 29, 2008  |  No comment


Jack Williamson was born 100 years ago today, and we should all pause for at least a moment to remember the humble science-fiction Grand Master who published in nine consecutive decades.

MeandJackWilliamson

My own feelings about Jack were laid out in an editorial titled “Celebrating Science Fiction’s Living National Treasure,” which I wrote about him for the March 5, 2001 issue of Science Fiction Weekly. I don’t think that I could improve upon those thoughts now. One paragraph reads:

In a more just culture, Jack Williamson would be treated as the Japanese treat their elders who are masters of a given art—painters, calligraphers, writers. He would be officially named as a “living national treasure.” Jack certainly qualifies as that, which is, I think, a more comfortable thing to be after all than Mount Rushmore. Jack Williamson deserves that honor not just because he has taught me how to create compelling science fiction, but also because Jack has taught me—with his honesty, his endless wonder and curiosity at the universe, his rare ability to continue to grow and change with each passing year where others would have petrified, and his graciousness for the generations of SF writers and editors who have followed him—how best to live a life.

The above picture was taken in 2003, on the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the publication of Jack’s first short story, “The Metal Man,” in the December 1928 Amazing Stories. I’m holding a copy of that magazine, which I’d just had him autograph. It now hangs framed in my office, where it inspires me each day.

I last saw Jack in 2006, shortly before his 98th birthday, and though his body was weakening, his amazing mind was as alive as ever. It almost seemed as if he could go on forever, but, of course, he could not. I wish he could be with us still, continuing to point the way.

Today I miss him a little more than usual. So please join me in missing him, too.

Nebula Awards weekend: Monday

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Nebula Awards    Posted date:  April 28, 2008  |  No comment


I’d thought I was done with the 2008 Nebula Awards weekend, and that it was done with me, so I started out the morning packing, figuring that once I was done I’d spend the few hours until my airport shuttle working in the room. Then the phone rang and I heard the mellifluous voice of Connie Willis. She was about to have breakfast with Cynthia Felice and Joe and Gay Haldeman over at the Driskoll Hotel, and wanted to know if I’d recovered enough from our feast of the night before to be able to join them.

Never one to pass up such an invitation, I changed into less scruffy garb to be worthy of both the company and the locale. The food was excellent, and was also, in one instance, art. Gay’s waffle was cooked in the shape of the great state of Texas! I don’t know why she was the one so blessed, because the rest of our food was just shaped like, well, food.

As usual, the topics of conversation varied widely, and included House, The Office, Steinbeck, Mencken, Herodotus, Hemingway, Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip, Father Coughlin, Clay Shirky’s recent essay about the true reason for the rise of the sitcom, and more. Then we toured the hotel, where Connie and Cynthia made a new friend, as you can see below.

ConnieCynthiaNebulas

And that, now that I’m back home, is definitely the end of the 2008 Nebula Awards weekend!

Nebula Awards weekend: Sunday

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Nebula Awards    Posted date:  April 28, 2008  |  No comment


Sundays at conventions and conferences are always lazy days, and this is particularly true during Nebula Awards weekends. With no scheduled programming, Sunday tends to be spent primarily in the bar, hospitality suite, and restaurants, and that was how I spent the day, except for the hours I returned to my hotel room to either work on Science Fiction Weekly or update this blog.

I wandered over to the Hickory Street Bar & Grill with Mike Marano and Laura Domitz for brunch. Mike and I know the insides of each other’s heads far too well, but I’d never had a chance to catch up that intimately with Laura before, which is strange, considering that, as I learned over waffles, we’d been at many of the same conventions in the early ’70s, including the first Star Trek convention. While we exchanged convention war stories, Mike got along so well with our waitress that it almost felt as if Laura and I were intruding, but as far as I could tell, no phone numbers were exchanged.

Between bunch and dinner I hung out with Connie Willis and Liza Groen Trombi in the bar, oohing and aahing over baby pictures (and a video) before Liza headed for home. (more…)

Nebula Awards weekend: Saturday

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Nebula Awards    Posted date:  April 27, 2008  |  No comment


I started Saturday by brunching with the Dell Magazines gang for the annual combined Analog AnLab Awards/Asimov’s Readers Awards breakfast ceremony. I was seated at a long table at Ancho’s restaurant between Connie Willis and Liza Groen Trombi and across from Nancy Kress, Jack Skillingstead, and Trevor Quachri. The food was fine (though only Connie was enthusiastic about the grits), and the conversation was compelling (as usual). What was unusual this year is that we seemed to expend a great deal of energy before the awards were handed out trying to convince Nancy not to steal one of the miniature milk bottles that contained the cream for her coffee.

Though Nancy will try to tell you that I have a larcenous soul, do not believe her—I am the most honest of men. I was merely far more creative in suggesting the many ways in which she could exercise her thieving inner nature. Connie was equally horrified by both of us, however, which raises the question&#151which is worse, the thought or the deed? The egger-on or the eggee?

After brunch, Gabrielle Faust, Michael Marano and I visited two unique museums—the Museum of Natural and Artificial Ephemerata and the South Austin Museum of Popular Culture.

EphemeraVisit

The Museum of Natural and Artificial Ephemerata is meant to replicate the experience of visiting wunderkammern&#151those curiosity cabinets popular in the 17th century which were the precursors of our modern museums—and of dime museums, in which fraudulent fabulations were often exhibited. You could find on display as part of the museum’s Impermanent Collection a taxidermy pheasant given by John Wayne to a member of one of his film crews, a fudge eyeball handed out by George Bush, Sr. one Halloween during trick or treating, and rivets from George W.G. Ferris’ first ferris wheel. The patter offered by curator Jill Hirt during our tour was as much fun as the exhibits themselves. I enjoyed our visit so much that I’m thinking of offering to loan them a key once bent by Uri Geller when visiting the offices of Marvel Comics. (more…)

Nebula Awards weekend: Friday

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Kij Johnson, Mary Turzillo, Nebula Awards    Posted date:  April 26, 2008  |  No comment


I began Friday by sneaking out of the hotel to once more absorb at little bit of Austin culture. I decided to hit the Austin Museum of Art, which turned out to be having an exhibit titled “New Art in Austin: 20 to Watch,” featuring original works by local artists.

You already know how I feel about much of what passes for modern art based on my February 20 visit to New York’s Museum of Modern Art, but there were actually a few people whose work I found intellectually stimulating, notably Jill Pangallo and the team of Jen Hirt and Scott Webel, who create as the collective the Museum of Natural and Artificial Ephemerata. Those latter two turn out to have their own gallery here in Austin, and I intend to make it over there Saturday after lunch.

I then returned to the hotel, where I found the following battle in progress between competing Nebula nominees Jennifer Pelland and Mary Turzillo.

PellandTurzillo

We won’t learn until Saturday night whether Jennifer’s “Captive Girl” or Mary’s “Pride” will take the trophy in the short fiction category, or whether one of their talented competitors such as David Levine, Karen Joy Fowler, Andy Duncan, or Vera Nazarian will win, but since I think that literary competitions should always be resolved by fisticuffs in hotel hallways, I have to believe that Jennifer and Mary have the edge. (more…)

Nebula Awards weekend: Thursday

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Nebula Awards, O. Henry    Posted date:  April 25, 2008  |  No comment


The 2008 Nebula Awards weekend began for me in Baltimore rather than Austin, because I ran into Peter Heck and Jane Jewell at BWI. We were all taking the same Southwest flight, and since that airline has no assigned seating, we were able to commandeer a row and entertain each other along the way, sometimes by chatting, but mostly by snoring, since we’d all had to get up around 4:00 in the morning to make our unexpectedly shared flight.

We also shared a cab to the Omni Austin Downtown, and we arrived there ravenous. We took the concierge’s recommendation for a good Tex-Mex restaurant, the Iron Cactus. Since I don’t drink, I wasn’t able to appreciate the range of tequilas they had—almost 100 different varieties—but the red snapper was worth the walk.

Since the opening events for the weekend wouldn’t start until later in the day, I decided to spend the afternoon wandering Austin, something I hadn’t managed to do at all when I was here for the 2006 World Fantasy Convention. My first stop—the O. Henry Museum.

EdelmanOHenry

O. Henry lived in Austin for 16 years, and in this house from 1893 to 1898. Austin was where he became known for his embezzlement rather than for his writing, and was sentenced to five years in a federal prison. Which basically means that this was the place where he decided that since he was unlikely to ever get rehired at a bank, he’d might as well head off and give writing his all. (more…)

I get Buzzed

Posted by: Scott    Tags:      Posted date:  April 24, 2008  |  No comment


Fifteen years ago, long before I started working for the SCI FI Channel, I was on the SCI FI Channel.

SCI FI Buzz, which was then the Channel’s equivalent of 60 Minutes, did a short feature highlighting me on the occasion of the first anniversary of Science Fiction Age magazine. It was taped at ConFrancisco, the 1993 World Science Fiction Convention in San Francisco, and ran in December of that year.

I don’t know how you’ll feel about watching this, but I wince a little, not just because there’s a little bit more of me, but also because there’s a little bit less.

More, because I was heavier then. Less, because I was trying so hard to present myself as a calm talking head and not bounce around in my chair or talk with my hands that I seem more subdued than my usual bouncy self. I was trying to be too cool about it all. I appear too coy and sedate, and with the quiet manner of speech on display here, I remind myself of Jason Alexander playing George Costanza.

You might feel differently. In fact, I hope you feel differently. But however you feel, the clip is too good a piece of history not to share.

How Paul Di Filippo stole from Louis Armstrong

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Paris Review, Paul Di Filippo    Posted date:  April 23, 2008  |  No comment


As I’ve shared here before, Paul Di Filippo has for years been sending me envelopes decorated with collages culled from old magazines, newspapers, and comic books. Here’s yet another example of his envelope art, which sends a Lady in Red searching for me through a casino.

If only I could manage to look that debonair in reality!

AnotherPaulEnvelope

But thanks to the Spring 2008 issue of The Paris Review, the secret of Paul Di Filippo’s inspiration has been revealed at last! (more…)

One way of dealing with rejection

Posted by: Scott    Tags:  Paris Review    Posted date:  April 22, 2008  |  No comment


The Spring 2008 issue of The Paris Review includes an interview with Leonard Michaels conducted back in 1986. Michaels died in 2003, and this marks the interview’s first publication.

Michaels was the author of (among other things) the short story collection I Would Have Saved Them If I Could and the novel The Men’s Club.

He had this to share about his reaction to feedback on an early novel:

Was it at Michigan that you wrote a novel in a month?

I wrote the novel in New York. One editor read it and took me to dinner at the Yale Club. I was dying to hear what he thought of my novel He said that from his office window he could see into another office, across the avenue, where every night a man laid his secretary on his desk. Then he said, Your novel should be published, but not by me. I dropped all the copies into the incinerator chute of my parent’s apartment building.

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