All our Januaries

“That’s right, Lloyd, I’ve been away but now I’m back.”

And how were all our Januaries this year, anyway?  Does anyone else observe a little tradition of startled angst as the end of the month passes them, muttering “oh, shit, the year’s one-twelfth over and I’ve done NOTHING!” to themselves?

Actually, weirdly, now I come to have typed it, it occurs to me that this is the first year in a while that I haven’t done that.  Well, I did it, but slightly self-consciously and for the sake of a little performance, not from really meaning it.  I haven’t made a running leap into 2012, exactly, but I like to think I’ve accomplished a brisk and purposeful-looking saunter.

I even managed some pace at the end of last year, believe it or not, and you won’t, because the blog through December was a whistling void, without form or word count.  (And I even took notes all through the epic CRDL Roller Derby grand final, and never blogged it!  Sorry about that.)  I’d gone for a hard burn on the latest novel project (coming out later this year, details hopefully public later this  month), powering through a hundred thousand words and change in… well, way shorter a time than I usually take, which is because it was probably the most enjoyable novel-writing I’ve ever done.  I’m trying to be more conscientious about taking breaks to rest my hands and eyes, and I have never, ever before found myself thinking “aw, man, three more minutes of break?  I wanna get back into that scene…”  I just hope it has the same effect on your collective selves when you read it.  That done I kicked down a gear to do some editing and revision and lots of lovely, lovely reading, zooming through books by Glenda Larke and Joyce Chng.  And then, good grief, it was Christmas.  A house packed to the gills with D’s relatives, a mound of presents and a short sharp hailstorm while we all ate Christmas Eve lunch out on the veranda.

The new year was a trains, planes and automobiles sort of affair.  D and I rode the train up to Sydney on the thirtieth, flew across to New Zealand on New Year’s Eve and sat a deathbed vigil for 2011 on the floor by the hotel room’s window-wall, watching the fireworks explode around Auckland’s central tower.  After that cue a few days of motoring about the North Island: Coromandel Peninsula (gorgeous scenery and a twisty road make for nerve-wracking driving: oh, that’s beautifAGHWATCHTHEROAD oh, that’s beautifAGHWATCHTHEROAD) and then to Matamata to visit the Hobbiton set and on to Rotorua.  What a surreal place: the steam plumes drifting up from the undergrowth and the stink of brimstone percolating through the whole town, enormous pools of water at a gently fizzing boil like freshly-poured champagne, and little waterfalls steaming as if they had just been poured from a kettle.

Also, a traditional Maori village, and hangi.  Oh, wow, hangi.  Don’t go through life without having eaten hangi.

The rest of the visit was mainly for this year’s FWOR retreat, held at Kerikeri toward the north end of the island.  Two weeks at the Nine Muses homestead, newly acquired by FWOR members Russell and Kylie and soon to be in business as a professional writers’ retreat and artists’ colony.  It was the perfect venue to lose track of two weeks in: a big, luxurious house in a pocked of landscaped parkland, including a rainforest gully, seventeen-metre waterfall and swimming hole.  And a whole separate studio in its own meadow, which I colonised for my own.

By the first week of the thing I had a new novel pitch finished and away, and had broken the first ground on the new manuscript, a fantasy project that will have another thousand words or two added to it when I finish this blog post and go home.

Here’s where I’m writing this, by the way. Somewhere across the Pacific, John Scalzi has felt derisive for a moment and doesn’t know why.

This feels a bit odd, to be honest.  It’s the first thing in quite a while that I’ve started purely on spec, with no pitch, contract and deadline, just the trust that I’ll find a publisher who likes it once it’s done.  That change in approach has been enough to stall me once or twice before now, I admit, but I’m feeling nice and upbeat about this one.  So far.  Let’s see how we go.

Two Black Library projects on the go, too, both Warhammer 40K, neither of them novel-length, both with their challenges.  One’s in with the editors at the moment, and the other is actually the other file open on my laptop at the moment, which I was working on before the delicious and entirely carbohydratastic rosemary/sea-salt bread arrived.

And… well, okay.  There’s a stack of stuff from the last couple of months to talk about, really, some of which I’ll have to leave for a bit and some of which I can go into now, except that even as a quick recap this is really turning into something rather vague and rambly and trying to cover everything at once will only make it worse.  There will be more posts to tackle it all in.  Better that way.

In the meantime, if anyone’s left out there, how about your year?

Games Day Australia 2011

I shall not even attempt to reconstruct a coherent narrative for the maniacal, exhausting blur that was Games Day Oz 2011.  It wouldn’t work.  Instead, I’ll try to bring back and record some impressions in more or less the chronological order that they happened.

(Yes, I know that Twitter is excellent for doing this sort of thing as it happens.  While I am on Twitter now  – @FullyNocturnal, if you’re minded to seek me out there – I don’t have a smartphone and wasn’t updating for a while.  I even got a reminder email from Twitter pointing that fact out.)

Anyway.

Read more

Sunday evening shrapnel

A few bits and pieces while I take a few minutes off from the tough work of waiting for the apple pie to be ready.

Vertigo!

I trawl around WordPress’ selection of blog themes every so often and sometimes preview one or two of them, but the new “Vertigo” theme is the first one that caught my eye as much as my previous one did.  Improvement, or not?  Let me know in the comments.

Black Library!

I am reminded by some chatter elsewhere online that my Necromunda novel Junktion is now available as part of a new omnibus of Underhive stories from BL’s print-on-demand line.  Accompanying it are two other novels from that setting: Survival Instinct, a tale of Mad Donna Ulanti by gaming overfiend Andy Chambers, and C S Goto’s Salvation, for my money one of the most enjoyable and literary of the Necromunda books.  Also in there are a trove of Necromunda shorts going back to the old INFERNO! days including “Badlands Skelter’s Downhive Monster Show!”, my first ever professional sale.

If you want to know more about it, check out this review from the MIT Science Fiction Society from when the book first came out.  And if that puts you in a review-reading mood, here’s one for the Enforcer omnibus that I really liked.  Not just because it says nice things, although it does and I appreciate them, but because it’s a real buzz to see how the reviewer just gets so much of what I was thinking about and trying to do with the Calpurnia stories.  It’s very cool to get a reader who’s so much on the same wavelength like that.  (One small thing, though: the recycling of the Crossfire artwork for Legacy is something Amazon did for their page and never corrected.  Legacy does have its own cover art.)

Roller Derby!

As I write this (probably, more or less), Canberra’s own Vice City Rollers are kicking arse at the Eastern Region Roller Derby, where they have apparently racked up two decisive victories out of two matches.  Much congratulation for our all-star team, and while we count down the fortnight to the next CRDL match (Brindabelters vs Surly Griffins, see you there!), we’ve got some highlights from the last high-octane bout available courtesy of Channelvision.  Here’s the first half, here’s the second half, with a tip of the hat to Roulette Rouge for the link.

Pie’s ready.  Gotta go.

Assorted literary shrapnel

I’ve got two weeks off work coming up, so  you’d think that at some point in there I’ll be able to come up with some sort of substantive post, yes?   We’ll see.  In the meantime a few writing-related bits and pieces.

Game-design guru and Black Library stablemate Robin Laws puts down some thoughts on Where Bad Writing Advice Comes From.  I particularly like the remarks about switching between creative and critical mindsets, and how it can mess up your work when you mis-time those switches.

The table of contents for the latest Year’s Best Australian Fantasy and Horror have been announced.  Congratulations to all whose work was selected, but I shall single out fellow CSFG members Kaaron Warren, R J Astruc and Gillian Polack whose Baggage anthology has three of its stories selected for inclusion; congrats also to FWOR colleague Alan Baxter and to Dirk Flinthart, con acquaintance and sometime commenter here.  There are many other excellent names in the ToC and I’m looking forward to reading the collection.

Contests!  This one’s more for the artists than the writers, but I can’t pass up the chance to show around this amazing cover for Nathan Long’s latest novel:

He’s looking for the best fan art, either in the form of 2-d art or an actual converted and painted 28mm miniature, representing the character of Ulrika, with a bunch of prizes.  Click the link above to go through to his blog and get the details – you’ve got until the end of May.

If you’re more into steam and springs than snow and fangs, check out the Angry Robot steampunk contest.  They’re after the coolest steampunk thing you can send them (it has to be something of yours, no snurching other peoples’ creations), with the best gadget/model/costume/haiku/whatever winning a steampunkified Kindle with a bunch of AR steam-themed books loaded onto it.

That will have to do you for the moment.  It’s time for me to enter a digestive torpor while I deal with entirely too much chicken panang curry.

Scatterthought

Odds and ends that have stuck in my mind over the last couple of days.

  • My body clock says it’s nine-thirty at night, but there’s yellow-pink sunlight shining on the front of the wing and we’re flying into the dawn at nearly a thousand kilometres an hour.
  • There are so many things about coming into New York that make me think of Sydney.  Humidity, the sharp smell and granular texture to the air that speaks of too much car exhaust, the unexpected greenery by the road and crawling up the lamp posts.  That there’s so much that seems familiar makes the differences jump out more: the thicker, boxier builds of the houses with their different angles, the shapes of the cars, the shopfront churches.
  • Guy at a shop with a T-shirt depicting a scowling Calvin and the caption of “New York Attitude!”.  That’s the only place I’ve encountered said attitude so far.  Plenty of cheerful, helpful, friendly people.
  • Which was the strip club Kevin Rudd was in trouble for again?  I’m trying to remember which of the Gentleman’s Clubs advertised on taxi roofs it was.
  • Heavily built-up cities of which Manhattan is the archetype seem to mostly get portrayed two ways: a wall-like skyline in the distance or closeups of single buildings.  What’s interesting when you’re in amongst it, though, is the way the buildings interact in the near to middle distance, the colours and textures of the wall – tinted plate glass, dirty brown brick, grey-white concrete, the shapes they make together and the shapes of the spaces between them.  Well, it’s interesting to me.

Once again I’m blogging on the eve of an early departure: taking the train to Montreal first thing in the morning.  If anyone reading this is going to be there, I’ll be on a signing table from one-thirty on the Saturday afternoon (that’s a change from the Friday evening slot in the original program – at that time I’ll be at the Angry Robot launch party).  More later.

Scatterthink

I’ve been mulling over a couple of longer posts, but tonight I’m down with the vanguard of the new winter bugs so you get a scatterthought instead.

  • I’ve left it a bit late to join in spreading this particular bit of news, but in case you missed it the excellent Angry Robot has hired the equally excellent Dan Abnett as one of their growing cadre of writers.  Dan’s a great writer and a great guy – keep your eye out for Triumff and Embedded via Angry Robot’s site or from Dan’s own (from which a lot of you are arriving here anyway, if my referrer list is any indication).
  • An interesting development: buying co-operatives are springing up to help people get in on home solar energy systems before the government rebate on them runs out later this year.  These are the sort to be used by homes already on the grid, that actually run your meter backward if they generate more than you’re using.  Here’s one being organised through a local group called See-change, and there’s another project in the Cooma region with a firm called Pyramid Power.  If this interests you then have a look around in your own areas and see if there’s one running (the rebate ends in a couple of months) and if there’s not one near you I’m sure it wouldn’t be hard to start one.
  • In the window of a shop in the Canberra Centre today was a giant floor-to-ceiling photo of a buff, naked male model with a text balloon over his crotch saying “Stimulus packages welcome here!”.  I wonder how much more of that sort of advertising I’ll see over the next month or two.
  • The thought occurs that that paragraph above might bring me in some rather interesting Google traffic.  If there’s anything particularly amusing I’ll post it.
  • Via the ACT Writers’ Centre newsletter (I had a look on the National Library website but couldn’t find anything about this): 
  • 6pm Tuesday 28 April
    A Monster at Heart: The Romances of Frankenstein
    Friends Lounge, National Library of Australia
    Join a group of fellow booklovers as Dr Rich Pascal of the ANU provides a new perspective on the literary classic Frankenstein.  Following the lecture participants will break into groups to discuss the book further over a glass of wine.
    $10 Friends of the National Library, $15 non-members.

I had another one, but I’ve forgotten it.  Bleah.  Ill.  Bed.