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Posts Tagged ‘Appearance’

A Second Look at my ConQuesT 2013 Schedule

No Comments » Written on May 10th, 2013 by
Categories: News
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And lo, if I’d only looked a little closer at the materials they sent me (thanks, Kat), I’d have realized that the additional details of who and what were actually there. And so, without further ado, here’s my new and improved schedule.

Friday, May 24th:
3:00 – 4:00 p.m. – (Salon C) – Publishing Challenges/Changes
The Publishing Industry is ever changing. Come and listen as our panelists discuss the ups, downs, new and old.
E. P. Beaumont, Bradley Denton, Selina Rosen, and Lawrence M. Schoen (m)

5:00 – 6:00 p.m. – (Imperial) – Liars’ Panel
Come and watch the best BS these panelists can come up with!
Bradley Denton, Janice Gelb (m), Trudy V Myers, and Lawrence M. Schoen

Saturday, May 25th:
11:00 – 12:00 p.m. – (Embassy ) – Theme’d for Your Pleasure Podcast
Join Chris for another round of one of the best Podcasts on the net. Anything can happen, and probably will!
Bradley Denton, Chris Garcia (M), John Picacio, Lawrence M. Schoen

1:00 – 3:00 p.m. – (Salon C) – Hadley Rille Books Showcase
Come and be entertained by a variety of short Readings by Hadley Rille authors. Autograph opportunities available!
M.C. (Mary) Chambers, Karin Rita Gastreich, Chris McKitterick, Mark Nelson, Eric Reynolds, Lawrence M. Schoen, Nathaniel Williams

Sunday, May 26th:
10:00 – 11:00 a.m. – (Monarch) – Linguistics in Sci-Fi
Shaka, When the Walls Fell! Join our panelists as they describe various forms of communication used by characters in our favorite stories, shows, and movies.
James K. Burk, Terri-Lynne DeFino, Lawrence M. Schoen (M)

11:00 – 11:30 a.m. – (Regency) – Reading/Q&A/Autographs
I’ll read from my recent collection (Nov/2012) of stories about the Amazing Conroy, a space-faring stage hypnotist, and his animal companion Reggie, an alien buffalito that can eat anything and farts oxygen.

It’s been too long since I’ve been back to Kansas City, and I’m looking forward to enjoying another visit to ConQuesT. No tornadoes this time though, okay?

A First Look at my ConQuesT 2013 Schedule

No Comments » Written on May 8th, 2013 by
Categories: News
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Later this month, mere days after I return from San Jose, CA and this year’s Nebula Awards conference, I’ll be winging off to Kansas City, MO for some barbecue, a visit with my publisher, and the convention mortals call ConQuesT (and no, I have no idea why they use medial and final majuscules, just accept it).

Friday, May 24th:
3:00 – 4:00 p.m. – (Salon C) – Publishing Challenges/Changes [MOD]

5:00 – 6:00 p.m. – (Imperial) – Liars’ Panel

Saturday, May 25th:
11:00 – 12:00 p.m. – (Embassy ) – Theme’d for Your Pleasure Podcast

1:00 – 3:00 p.m. – (Salon C) – Hadley Rille Books Showcase

Sunday, May 26th:
10:00 – 11:00 a.m. – (Monarch) – Linguistics in Sci-Fi [MOD]

11:00 – 11:30 a.m. – (Regency) – Reading/Q&A/Autographs [MOD]

As of right now, I’m not sure what some of these titles mean (I must have known once upon a time, right? I signed up for them, didn’t I?), nor who my co-panelists are. But there’s time yet to get it all worked out. When we do, I’ll post an update here.

Theoretical Lunacon 2013 Schedule

3 comments Written on March 14th, 2013 by
Categories: News
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If you’re attending Lunacon this weekend (i.e., tomorrow) you may already be aware that programming has not yet gone out to the participants. This will doubtless make for all sorts of “fun” at the convention.

That’s the bad news. The good news is word has gotten out that individual participants can go online to the same database questionnaire they filled out to become panelists, and find their schedules waiting for them.

Assuming that the schedule there is correct, here’s what I think I’m doing at the con this weekend:

Friday, March 15th:
20:00 – 21:00 | Grand Ballroom ? |Meet the Pros
 This wasn’t actually on my schedule, but I’m going to assume there will be such an event, and that I’ll show up for it.

Saturday, March 16th
10:00 – 10:30 | Bartell | Reading
 Start your Saturday off by listening to me read from my Nebula Award nominated novella “Barry’s Tale.”

11:00 – 12:00 | Oak | So You Want To Create & Sell an Ebook (M)
 Neil Clarke and I talk about the tools, techniques, and best practices involved in creating and distributing ebooks. WARNING: It’s extremely likely this panel has been canceled and/or removed from my schedule.

1:00 – 2:00 | Poplar | Less Sh*tty Second Drafts (M)
 Russ Colchamiro, Laura Anne Gilman, Michael A. Ventrella, C.E. Lawrence and I will discuss how authors figure out what’s not working in a manuscript and what might be likely to fix it.

2:00 – 3:00 | Poplar | Finding a Needle in the Slushpile (M)
 Despite the somewhat unspecific title, this panel is actually supposed to be about finding the gold amidst the dross of self-published fiction. It’s a thankless task and I will have April Grey, Neal Levin, Mike McPhail, and Andrew Porter grumbling along with me.

Sunday, March 17th
10:00 – 11:00 | Westchester Assembly | Autographing
 Please bring me something to sign as I hang out with Tim Rodriguez and James Daniel Ross.

11:00 – 12:00 | Poplar | Generic Alien Language Panel (M)
 Walter Stutzman, Ariel Cinii, and I will start with the basic question of how to represent alien language in fiction and jump off from there on related issues in language, linguistics, and philology.

12:00 – 1:00 | Birch | Hugo Worthy Fiction
 Lisa Padol, Byron P. Connell, Alex Shvartsman and I blow smoke about what we think will make the final ballot (assuming it hasn’t been announced by this time).

My shoulder-riding plushie, Barry, has once again been given no programming. First the college of cardinals slight him, and now this. Nonetheless, he will be in attendance in his role as the convention’s unofficial, eponymous, Nebula nominee. Mind you, he doesn’t know what any of those words mean.

2013 Appearance Schedule Update

No Comments » Written on February 28th, 2013 by
Categories: News
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For those of you out there who are stalking me are wondering when or where our paths may cross, I’ve just done a major overhaul of my 2013 schedule.

Probably the biggest news is that I’ll be spending Memorial Day Weekend in Kansas City, MO, returning the glory that is ConQuesT. What can I tell you, these people know how to throw a friendly, welcoming convention, and I’ve been away for too long.

It’s also worth noting that Kansas City is home both to my publisher, Hadley Rille Books, as well as some of the best beef around. I mention this here, in this oh-so-public-forum, on the off chance that my publisher/editor will realize what a great opportunity this will be for him to take me out to dinner. (I’ll let you all know how that works out).

The other big news is the date of the Klingon Language Institute’s 20th annual conference. Seriously, twenty years of Klingon speakers coming together from all over the world! Dunqu’.

But before any of those (or the subsequent events on the list) happen, you can find me in a couple weeks at Lunacon in Ryebrook, NY, and a month later at TrekTrax in Atlanta, GA.

Tom Doyle at PSFS this Friday

No Comments » Written on January 29th, 2013 by
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The Philadelphia Science Fiction Society (PSFS) meets this Friday night at 9:00 p.m. and their guest will be author Tom Doyle. Here’s the official blurb from PSFS:

“Tom Doyle writes science fiction and fantasy in a spooky turret in Washington, DC. He grew up in East Lansing, Michigan, so when he attended the Clarion Writers’ Workshop there in 2003, it was like coming home. He lived in Japan for over a year and has traveled widely. In 2004, he visited Ireland for the celebrations of the hundredth anniversary of Bloomsday, and that experience contributed greatly to his 2012 Writers of the Future story.

Tom won the 2008 WSFA Small Press Award. He has published stories in Strange Horizons, Futurismic, Aeon, and Ideomancer, among others. His essays on science fiction and millennialism have appeared in Fictitious Force and Strange Horizons, and in the book The End That Does. Paper Golem Press has published a collection of his short fiction, The Wizard of Macatawa and Other Stories. Tom has appeared on the Hour of the Wolf radio program and the Fast Forward TV show, and he has given a presentation on L. Frank Baum at the Library of Congress.”

Full disclosure, I published Tom’s short story collection. I did it because I think he’s a brilliant and extremely talented writer. But even better than that, he does a reading that is nothing short of awesome! So, if you’re anywhere near Philadelphia on Friday, or can get there, you need to go to Tom’s appearance at PSFS.

Oh, one more thing that PSFS didn’t know was happening when they invited Tom to be their feature speaker on Friday: He just signed a three book deal with Tor. Congratulations, Tom!

PSFS will be meeting at the University of Pennsylvania’s International House, located at 3701 Chestnut Street, in Philadelphia, PA.

I can’t be there because I’ll be up in New York doing a hypnosis thing. So, tell Tom I sent you. Thanks.

My Almost Certain (and you won’t get another update) Immortal Confusion Schedule

No Comments » Written on January 16th, 2013 by
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I’ll be heading to the airport on Friday morning before dawn (a fact which my wife, who will be driving me there, is less than pleased with). I’ll touch down in Atlanta a bit after 8:00 a.m., and then quickly back in the air to eventually land in Detroit just past 11:00 a.m. From there, I’m assured it’s just a quick hop, skip, and jump (or cab ride if the hotel doesn’t have a shuttle — note to self: check that out before Friday morning!) to find myself at the glory that will be Immortal Confusion.

To the best of my knowledge, here’s my “official” schedule:

Saturday, January 19th:
10:00 a.m. – The End
What makes a satisfying conclusion? Do we wrap up all loose ends, or leave some plot threads deliciously unexplored in the hopes of returning to them in future volumes? Does the desire for sequels sometimes rob us of a more permanent and concrete end to a story? This panel explores how hard it is to finally lean back and write “the end.”
Catherine Shaffer (M), Christian Klaver, Maria Dahvana Headley, Michael J. Sullivan

3:00 p.m. – Make Me Immortal
Why make a character immortal? Is this shorthand for power? Temptation? How does the addition of an unending life span change a character’s perspective – or that character’s function in a story? Can the addition of immortality rob a story of its immediacy and consequence, and how can that be avoided?
Catherine Shaffer (M), Diana Rowland, Laurie Gailunas, Steven Harper Piziks

4:00 p.m. – Reading
I’ve been assigned this session along with Peter Orullian. Perhaps we’ll take turns reading. Perhaps we’ll each read the other’s work. Perhaps we will strip down to our unmentionables and wrassle (not to be confused with “wrestle”) to see who gets to use the entire time period for his reading.
Peter Orullian

5:00 PM – Mass Autograph Session
You bring the books, we’ll bring the pens, and then we rush at one another from opposite sides of the room and collide in a frenzy of signings! Or… maybe they’ll give the authors tables to sit at. Yeah, that could work too.
Everyone!

7:00 p.m. – Please Do The Research
Fantasy and Science Fiction both seem very easy to fake. After all, anything is possible, right. When spaceships warp across the galaxy at physics-defying speeds, or wizards transform glib warriors into puggles with the wave of a wand, little things like food, word origins, or animal husbandry can seem a little nit-picky. However, readers may not have transmogrified a foe into a dog, but a lot of people have ridden a horse. Taking the time to learn all there is to know about the realities of fantasy or science fiction often strengthens a story. It will also help avoid common problems that our panelists will discuss, with helpful examples.
Amity Thompson, Howard Andrew Jones (M), Maria Dahvana Headley, Ron Collins

8:00 p.m. – Pop Culture In SF/F
Fantasy has its urchins, sci-fi the dilettantes…but what about everyone else? When crafting a world either fantastic or futuristic, what do we imagine that the common folk would do for fun? What news or events would they discuss? Would they know what village produced the most heroes, or debate the thrust/weight ratio of government warships? Would there be a general popular culture in an imagined past? Could we avoid one in an imagined future? Does the addition of these elements do more than aid verisimilitude?
Brian McClellan, Dr. Phil Kaldon (M), Holly McDowell, Sam Sykes

Which means I’ve got both Friday and Sunday free to hang out with people in the bar, grab a bite here and there, schmooze, and shill for award nominations. Also, these would be ideal times for you to come up and get your photograph taken with Barry!

An announcement about Illogicon III

1 Comment » Written on January 11th, 2013 by
Categories: News
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If you’re anywhere near the greater Research Triangle area this weekend, I encourage you to drop in at Illogicon II, which opens today, Friday, about noon and runs through Sunday, January 13th.

It promises to be an awesome convention, which isn’t hard given GoHs like Tim Powers and Garth Graham, not to mention having Mark Van Name along as Toastmaster.

Now, I know what you’re thinking. You’re saying to yourself, “hey, that’s fine, but why is he talking about Illogicon II when the subject line reads Illogicon III? And what’s the big announcement?”

Thanks, I’m glad you asked. Ahem.

!!! THE ANNOUNCEMENT !!!

I will be one of the GoHs at Illogicon III

The convention will run January 10-12, 2014, and registration for that convention will begin today at this year’s convention.

So go ahead and sign up this weekend, and you can have a full year of anticipation because I’ll be bringing both Klingon and Buffalitos to this con (and maybe even Klingon Buffalitos)! Rumor has it there will even be prizes randomly awarded to someone registering this weekend.

A First Look at my Immortal Confusion 2013 Schedule

No Comments » Written on January 3rd, 2013 by
Categories: News
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This month I’m going to Detroit, MI, for Immortal Confusion. It’s my first time at this con, and it sounds like it’s going to be a blast. Here’s what they have me scheduled for:

Saturday, January 19th:
10:00 a.m. – The End
What makes a satisfying conclusion? Do we wrap up all loose ends, or leave some plot threads deliciously unexplored in the hopes of returning to them in future volumes? Does the desire for sequels sometimes rob us of a more permanent and concrete end to a story? This panel explores how hard it is to finally lean back and write “the end.”

3:00 p.m. – Make Me Immortal
Why make a character immortal? Is this shorthand for power? Temptation? How does the addition of an unending life span change a character’s perspective – or that character’s function in a story? Can the addition of immortality rob a story of its immediacy and consequence, and how can that be avoided?

4:00 p.m. – Reading
I’ve been assigned this session along with Peter Orullian. Perhaps we’ll take turns reading. Perhaps we’ll each read the other’s work. Perhaps we will strip down to our unmentionables and wrassle (not to be confused with “wrestle”) to see who gets to use the entire time period for his reading.

5:00 PM – Mass Autograph Session
You bring the books, we’ll bring the pens, and then we rush at one another from opposite sides of the room and collide in a frenzy of signings! Or… maybe they’ll give the authors tables to sit at. Yeah, that could work too.

7:00 p.m. – Please Do The Research
Fantasy and Science Fiction both seem very easy to fake. After all, anything is possible, right. When spaceships warp across the galaxy at physics-defying speeds, or wizards transform glib warriors into puggles with the wave of a wand, little things like food, word origins, or animal husbandry can seem a little nit-picky. However, readers may not have transmogrified a foe into a dog, but a lot of people have ridden a horse. Taking the time to learn all there is to know about the realities of fantasy or science fiction often strengthens a story. It will also help avoid common problems that our panelists will discuss, with helpful examples.

8:00 p.m. – Pop Culture In SF/F
Fantasy has its urchins, sci-fi the dilettantes…but what about everyone else? When crafting a world either fantastic or futuristic, what do we imagine that the common folk would do for fun? What news or events would they discuss? Would they know what village produced the most heroes, or debate the thrust/weight ratio of government warships? Would there be a general popular culture in an imagined past? Could we avoid one in an imagined future? Does the addition of these elements do more than aid verisimilitude?

Sunday, January 20th:
4:00 p.m. – Fandom vs. Social Media
Geek culture has become somewhat ubiquitous these days, and with its ascendancy, some of our pastimes and obsessions have really gone mainstream. With that comes criticism – some valid, some less – and with critique an almost inevitable fandom backlash. Is it good that some of our favorite things have become too big to easily evaluate in a critical way? Does the legitimacy gained by the popularity of a Game of Thrones come at the price of being able to point out some of its flaws, and is this a worthwhile trade when considering the vitality of the genre?

At this point, I don’t know who my co-panelists are, but there are so many amazing authors coming to this convention that the possibilities are staggering. Oh yeah, I’m going to have a good time.