adelaidesean: (quantum lolcat)
Not all of these titles were released this year, but that’s when I discovered them, so that’s where they sit for me. In an ambient world, everything is autobiographical.
  1. Insen - Alva Noto + Ryuichi Sakamoto
  2. Astral Currents - Telomere
  3. Vrioon - Alva Noto + Ryuichi Sakamoto
  4. Earthlight - David Parsons
  5. The Tudors: Season One - Trevor Morris
  6. Yolo - Tetsu Inoue
  7. Aftermath - Aes Dana
  8. Transcendence - Alpha Wave Movement
  9. Dynamic Stillness - Steve Roach
  10. Ghost Opera - Kamelot (not ambient in the slightest!)
I spent two solid weeks out of fifty listening to this music, which highlights what an important influence eMusic--the source of all but two of these albums--has been on my life.

I also love recommendations. Is there anything out there I should be listening to? Anything I have missed out on?
adelaidesean: (grattis)
Thanks to the awesome efforts of [livejournal.com profile] angriest, Hope #2, the fundraiser fanzine helping the victims of the Victorian bushfires, is now out. It contains (among many other excellent things) my story "The Haunted Earth", which was inspired by a dream Shane Dix's son, Sam, had when he was a wee lad. The story was written in June, 1993, and has never been published before. I was reminded of it while teaching Clarion in January, when a story submitted for critique by Mac North turned out to have a very similar premise, as happens sometimes. I dug it out, found it surprisingly readable, and submitted it to Hope in the, well, hope that it would find a home. I'm very pleased it has.

This is my second story this year, and neither of them has appeared in print, per se. Hope is being distributed electronically at the moment (iirc) and "A Longing for the Dark" is only available as a reading by yours truly at Terra Incognita. Future releases, however, will be more traditionally distributed.

They are, for the record:
The Scarecrow (Broken Land, book 3, out now!)
The Grand Conjunction (Astropolis, book 3)
"A Glimpse of the Magnificent Structure (and the Threat it Entails)" (Godlike Machines)
"The Inevitable" (The New Space Opera 2)
"Ungentle Fire" (The Dragon Book: Magical Tales from the Masters of Modern Fantasy)
"The Spark (A Romance in Four Acts)" (Australian Legends of Fantasy)
adelaidesean: (pink pills)
The awesome Jay Lake posted overnight on the power of persistence. Psychotic persistence, to use Jay's phrase. Successful writers don't have super powers. They just have that, and if you've got it too, you'll get there. Probably.

I offer myself as a case in point. This is a special year for me. Two decades ago, I started writing seriously--that is, with the intention of becoming a full-time writer. I had no idea how long it would take. The ten-year deadline I sometimes talk about--that I would give up if I didn't have a book in print in that time--was hanging over me, and burning under me were the fires of determination.

In 1989 I wrote thirteen stories, only two of which were ever published, much later, and one novel--When the Cow Came Down, unpublished (and so may it remain forever).

A decade after that, I dropped my last shift at the legendary CD Shop and went full time. In 1999, I wrote five short stories, three of which were published, one novella, and one and half contracted novels, The Dark Imbalance and The Stone Mage & the Sea.

In the ten years since then (not counting 2009), I've written and published almost three million words of fiction.

People talk about love of the craft, honing the art, living the dream, et hoc genus omne. That's all important. But psychotic persistence makes possible the impossible.

I used to say that if I'd known how hard it would be--that it would take ten long years before I made any kind of dime out of this lark--then maybe I would've given up.

The truth is that I wouldn't have given up. I couldn't have. And besides, if hard work is all it takes, then that's a genuine comfort. It's easy to work hard at something I love. Take out "psychotic" and put in "passionate" and you'll get the idea. If you feel the same way, then maybe you're well on the way too.

"What did you write today?"
adelaidesean: (abort!)
I'm pleased to report that a novella "The Spark (a Romance in Four Acts)" joins several other large-ish pieces I have coming out in or around 2009. "Spark" clocks in at 20k and concludes one of the story arcs left hanging at the end of The Scarecrow (due March). The story picks up about five years after that book's end, with the characters facing challenges they never imagined as kids. I've just learned that it will appear in Australian Legends of Fantasy (edited by Jack Dann & Jonathan Strahan), and I'm very excited about that.

"Spark" is one of two stand-alone tales related to the Broken Land Series. The other is the 10k "Ungentle Fire", which is set just before "Spark" and due appear in The Dragon Book: Magical Tales from the Masters of Modern Fantasy (Gardner Dozois & Dann).

The other stories aren't fantasy. "The Inevitable" will appear in The New Space Opera II (Dozois & Strahan), while "A Glimpse of the Magnificent Structure (and the Threat it Entails)" is due in Godlike Machines (Strahan), both around the middle of the year. At 10k and 25k respectively, they're related to a new space opera idea I've been noodling with in the last few months. It's based on an old story, "A Map of the Mines of Barnath"--and you can expect a spoken word version of that work sometime in 2009 too, just to refresh your memory.

(While I'm talking about spoken word stuff, I've recorded "A Longing for the Dark", a stand-alone excerpt from Geodesica: Descent, for Terra Incognita, and that will be coming out in March too.)

The other big release in 2009 is The Grand Conjunction (May), which will wrap up the Astropolis series once and for all. I've just finished the page proofs and I'm very excited at how it turned out. If you thought the scale of the first two books was big, this might do your head in. Mine is still recovering from writing it.

So that's the year ahead. It's a little less hectic than 2008, for which I'm grateful. Unless you count all the deadlines looming ahead, of course...

----------------
Listening to: Telomere - Idiochrome
adelaidesean: (russian egghead)
Been white-noised by busy-ness.

Will return to normal soon.

Hoping to see lots of smiling faces at the Aurealis Awards bash this weekend.

Are you going?
adelaidesean: (aurealis head)
The family and I celebrated New Year's Day by strolling through the Adelaide Botanic Garden, a delightful place better known for its relationship to the Kew Gardens than for its cyborg menaces:



We escaped, but only just. Who knew that's what man'kin looked like on the inside?

Anyway, this is just a short post to say that I'll be off the air for most of January. Have a great month--productive or relaxing or something else entirely, depending on what you're up to. I'll drop a note here and there when I can, and I hope to see many of you at the Aurealis Awards ceremony on the 24th. Au revoir!

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