Intergalactic Roll of Honor

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FLINX TRANSCENDENT

ALAN DEAN FOSTER

It’s been a long time since I’ve worked on two novels simultaneously. One is, of course, FLINX TRANSCENDENT. As promised, it will tie up as many loose ends in the history of Flinx’s life as possible. The eventual final manuscript looks like it will run 130,000-140,000 words….a little less than double a normal-length book. Should be enough to satisfy everyone….even those readers who have waited 35 years to see how certain things turn out.

Ha! Only 35 years after I read the first one… this is great news.

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IGN: Weitzes Conjure Elric

May 29, 2007 - Filmmaker siblings Paul and Chris Weitz may segue from The Golden Compass to another long-awaited fantasy epic, Michael Moorcock’s The Elric Saga. Universal optioned Elric in 2003 for the Weitz brothers to adapt.

“Of the great classic fantasy series it’s the one that hasn’t been done yet,” Chris Weitz informed EmpireOnline.com. “My brother Paul and I liked those books growing up and we’ve met Michael Moorcock and he trusts us to take those books forward.”

The Weitz brothers will produce Elric via their Depth of Field shingle. While no director has been set yet, Chris added, “I’d really like it if my brother directed them.”

The Elric books might be terrific movies. I say might because the visuals (albino Elric, mystical sword) could easily overcome the interior perspective which is really the best part of the Elric books.

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FOXNews.com - George Lucas Calls ‘Spider-Man 3′ Silly; Cate Blanchett Looks Great - Celebrity Gossip | Entertainment News | Arts And Entertainment

Lucas told me he has seen all the summer movies since his company, Industrial Light and Magic, does most of the special effects. The only one they didn’t work on was “Spider-Man 3.” What did he think of it?

“It’s silly. It’s a silly movie,” he said. “There just isn’t much there. Once you take it all apart, there’s not much story, is there?”

Well, it’s not “Star Wars.”

“People thought ‘Star Wars’ was silly, too,” he added, with a wink. “But it wasn’t.”

Ahem. Star Wars is a great movie. But it is silly.

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UK readers: READ THIS

Petition to: recommend Terry Pratchet for a Knighthood for his services to literature.

We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to recommend Terry Pratchet for a Knighthood for his services to literature

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News in Science - New Earth-like planet ‘habitable’ - 25/04/2007

Astronomers say they have found the first Earth-sized world circling its mother star at a distance suitable for life.

It also has good prospects for liquid surface water, believed to be a key ingredient for life.

“This planet will most probably be a very important target of the future space missions dedicated to the search for extraterrestrial life,” says Dr Xavier Delfosse, with the Grenoble Astrophysical Laboratory in France.

It will be years before more sensitive instruments are developed to glean additional clues about whether life exists on the planet.

Xavier Bonfils, an astronomer with the Lisbon Astronomical Observatory in Portugal says:

“It is not possible with current telescopes and instruments yet. But in the next decade, we may have the tools to answer this question.”

The planet, which is about 50% larger than Earth, circles a star in the constellation Libra known as Gliese 581, about 20.5 light-years away.

Astronomers have previously found a Neptune-sized world circling Gliese 581, as well as strong evidence for a third planet about eight times the mass of Earth.

The new planet, which is the smallest planet beyond our solar system found to date, circles its star 14 times closer than Earth orbits the Sun.

But because Gliese 581 is smaller and colder than our Sun, the system’s so-called habitability zone, where liquid water and thus life is possible, is closer to the mother star than in our solar system.

Astronomers estimate the mean temperature of the newly discovered planet to be 0-40°C.

Lead researcher Dr Stephane Udry with Switzerland’s Geneva Observatory says:

“Water would be liquid. Models predict that the planet should be either rocky, like our Earth, or covered with oceans.

One thought flashed through my mind when I read this: Thank God.

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Jim Baen in hospital

Dar Kush: Bad News-Supereditor Jim Baen in hospital

I just heard that Jim Baen, one of the most influential editors inthe science fiction field, had a stroke, and has been in a coma for the last twelve hours. No more information at this time, but those of us who consider ourselves friends, or have admired the vast contribution he has made to the field, well…if you believe in prayer, this would be a good time.

This is awful news. Baen has made an enormous contribution to science fiction.

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Variety.com - Trekkies have a new leader

Paramount is breathing life into its “Star Trek” franchise by setting “Mission: Impossible III” helmer J.J. Abrams to produce and direct the 11th “Trek” feature, aiming for a 2008 release.

Damon Lindelof and Bryan Burk, Abrams’ producing team from “Lost,” also will produce the yet-to-be-titled feature.

Project, to be penned by Abrams and “MI3″ scribes Alex Kurtzman and Roberto OrciRoberto Orci, will center on the early days of seminal “Trek” characters James T. Kirk and Mr. Spock, including their first meeting at Starfleet Academy and first outer space mission.

This is probably good news…

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Phobos Entertainment - Features - 100 SF Books - Index

An interesting list.

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Across the Universe - Science Fiction - ‘Counting Heads,’ by David Marusek - New York Times

As that lone subway traveler who still occasionally rides to work brandishing a dog-eared edition of “A Canticle for Leibowitz” or “The Illustrated Man,” I realize I’ll never enjoy even a fraction of the social standing afforded to the umpteenth passenger who is just now cracking open a mint-condition copy of “The Kite Runner” or a fresh paperback of “A Million Little Pieces” purchased after it was discredited, and I don’t expect this to change any time soon.

But what truly shames me is that I cannot turn to any of these people, or to my friends, or to you, and say: Whether you read books because you have a genuine, lifelong passion for literature or because a feisty woman in Chicago tells you to — you should pick up this new work of science fiction I just finished reading, because you will enjoy it as much as I did.

I cannot do this in good conscience because if you were to immerse yourself in most of the sci-fi being published these days, you would probably enjoy it as much as one enjoys reading a biology textbook or a stereo manual.
And you would very likely come away wondering, as I do from time to time, whether science fiction has strayed so far from the fiction category as a whole that, though the two share common ancestors, they now seem to have as much to do with each other as a whale has to do with a platypus.

Sigh. The New York Times discovers science fiction, sixty years too late, and way too defensively.

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Author David Brin Blesses Jim Baen’s Universe, Urges Fans to Help Save Science Fiction
Hugo Award-winning science fiction author David Brin urges fans to subscribe to new online science fiction and fantasy magazine, Jim Baen’s Universe for quality fiction and to help save science fiction.

Winston-Salem, NC (PRWEB) February 21, 2006 — Multiple Hugo and Nebula award-winning David Brin ( author of the Uplift series, The Postman, and others) has thrown his reputation behind a new SciFi magazine, Jim Baen’s Universe.

Brin says he’s been unimpressed by other SF&F e-zines, but “this time things are very different.” Brin goes on, “Imagine what such a magazine would have to be like, in order to make you hunger for it, month after month. I think you just envisioned Universe, brought to you by the legendary science fiction impresario, Jim Baen and edited by the inimitable Eric Flint.”

The editor of this commercial venture is none other than Eric Flint (1632 and others). The authors list is a who’s who of modern SF&F (Alan Dean Foster, Cory Doctorow, Catherine Asaro, L. E. Modessitt Jr., and of course, David Brin). A complete list of authors who have been signed up for this venture is at www.baensuniverse.com.

Brin goes on to say, “Certainly, I’ve decided to trust them with some of my latest, first-run stories… and a serialized novel that I’m sure you’ll find to be my funniest ever.”

All of that is great, Brin says, but best of all a major raison d’être for Universe is to provide a place for new authors to get started, and established authors to make a living (another is to revive short SF). The quality of the stories already committed is awesome, and they’re still bringing SF&F giants aboard.

Jim Baen and Eric Flint believe that they can provide an unprecedented value proposition (starting with over 150,000 words per issue, twice a standard novel size), and you only have to look at Baen’s existing DRM-free distribution and Free Library to know that these guys already have been successful at publishing without encryption.

Why is this necessary at all?

Eric Flint explains: “In decades past, it was the size and health of the magazines that allowed new writers a place to be published, gave mid-list writers a place to hone their craft, and allowed very popular and well-established writers to move easily from short fiction to novels and back again as they developed their fascinating and imaginative settings. The range of magazine markets also meant that an exceptional story could still be published even if it was beyond the then-boundaries of acceptable SF.

“Today, that’s almost completely vanished. The economics of modern paper publishing and distribution have hammered the magazines badly, and the decline of short form SF has hurt the field as a whole. When once science fiction and fantasy was a cheap refuge from reality for bright teenagers, now the ticket to entry is a full-length novel — often enough, at hardcover prices.”

“If you want to stand up and be included in the movement to help save science fiction,” says publishing legend Jim Baen, “drop in, subscribe, and join the club! You know you want to!”

Jim Baen’s Universe is published as a bimonthly online magazine beginning in June of 2006, with up to 150,000 words per issue, making it far larger than a typical magazine. The magazine can be read online, or in a variety of downloadable formats, including Acrobat PDF, Mobipocket, Microsoft Reader, RTF, and others.

As with all of Baen Publishing’s electronic offerings, Jim Baen’s Universe is published completely unencrypted and without any Digital Rights Management schemes or copy protection.

This is a tremendous endorsement from one of the best science fiction writers of the 80s and 90s. It’s exciting to read that he’s going to feed his stuff into Baen’s Universe.

It is a bit disconcerting, though, that this good news has to be spun as part of a movement to help save science fiction.

Does it really need saving? Apparently so…

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