Just got word that my cat Hobbes has died. She was perfectly healthy up until two days ago, when she went into kidney failure. Her sister Kzin died back in August. Both times while I was away. In her youth Hobbes was the proverbial fraidy-cat, spooked by loud noises, and she spent a lot of time hiding in the farthest reaches of the basement, where a small gap afforded her vantage of a narrow stretch of backyard, but in recent years she’d become extremely friendly, following me from room to room and clambering up on my hip and purring constantly. I’ll miss her terribly. For basically the first time in my life I’m without a cat.
Novel Disclaimer
Reading a lot of the angry fan reactions to the years-long wait between George R. R. Martin books, it struck me that a lot of readers seem to feel that by publishing a few books in a series, an author is entering into an unwritten contract with readers to produce more books in that series at a particular pace, and that if an author doesn’t do that he’s going back on his word or not doing his job. I suspect many authors don’t feel that by writing one or more books they’re entering into any sort of unwritten agreement with their readers to produce more books, let alone at a particular pace. Maybe it would help if everybody’s expectations were spelled out from the start. I wonder if books will start carrying software-style disclaimers:
THIS WORK OF FICTION IS PROVIDED “AS IS” AND ANY EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF TIMELY SEQUELS OR A SERIES CONCLUSION ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR OR PUBLISHER BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DISAPPOINTMENT (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, DISAPPOINTMENT OVER UNRESOLVED MYSTERIES; DISAPPOINTMENT OVER THE AUTHOR’S TIME-WASTING HOBBIES; DISAPPOINTMENT OVER THE AUTHOR’S DEMISE) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE READING OF THIS NOVEL, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DISAPPOINTMENT.
“Devil Car” by Roger Zelazny
Here’s a nice audio version of “Devil Car” by Roger Zelazny, which appeared in Galaxy magazine in 1965. It’s about a man who drives a heavily armed and armored AI car, which he uses to hunt down other AI cars that have murdered their drivers and now roam in packs across the wilderness.
Robert Sheckley Free Audio Stories Online
Lately I’ve been listening to some stories by Robert Sheckley (1928-2005), who Neil Gaiman calls “Probably the best short story writer during the ’50s to the mid-1960s working in any field.” The stories are very funny and clever, similar in tone to Douglas Adams. Here’s a list of what’s online:
(I’m still in the process of making them all links.)
From X Minus One (full cast adaptations from 1950s radio)
“A Wind is Rising” | “Early Model” | “Protection” | “Bad Medicine” | “Trap” | “Death Wish” | “Grey Flannel Armor” | “The Native Problem” | “Skulking Permit” | “Something For Nothing” | “The Seventh Victim” | “The Lifeboat Mutiny” |
From Librovox (stories read by volunteers)
“Hour of Battle” | “Cost of Living” | “Forever” | “Warrior Race” | “Ask a Foolish Question” | “Beside Still Waters” | “Leech” | “Warm” |
“Petrified Forest” | “On An Experience in a Corn Field” |
New Anthology Appearances
New books I’m in:
Auro: The Golden Prince by Dinofarm Games
Check out the cool new video for Auro: The Golden Prince, a turn-based strategy game currently in development by Dinofarm Games, makers of the fantastically fun and addictive 100 Rogues.
Also check out Episode 47 of my Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy podcast, which includes an appearance by Keith Burgun, lead designer of Auro and 100 Rogues.
Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast Episode 22 Interview with George R. R. Martin Transcript
Here’s a complete transcript of Episode 22 of Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy.
My Short Story “Beauty” to Appear in Lightspeed Magazine
My short story “Beauty,” a twisted modern-day retelling of “Beauty and the Beast,” will appear in an upcoming issue of Lightspeed. This is the story that I read at Borders last year. Here’s a snippet:
“Yeah, I mean, things used to be a lot better there, before the whole, you know…” He gestured at his appearance.
“Oh,” Nicole said. “So it’s…”
“A spell.” The beast nodded wearily. “Yeah. I actually used to be pretty handsome, if you can believe that.”
“So what happened?”
He lowered his voice. “I was cursed by an evil sorceress.” He held up his huge paws. “She turned me into this.”
Nicole gasped. “That’s horrible.”
The beast sighed. “Oh, it’s not so bad. I have some magic talking furniture that keeps me company. It’s enough, most of the time…” He closed his eyes and shook his head. “Look, I’m sorry, I don’t mean to … maybe I should go.” He started to get up.
“Wait,” Nicole said. “No. It’s all right, really.” She added, “I’ve never met anyone before who owned any magic talking furniture.”
He glanced at her hopefully, then sat back down again.
They chatted for a long time, then she walked with him back to his apartment, and he invited her up for a drink. The apartment was small, and kind of a mess.
“I should straighten up a bit,” said the beast.
“No, it’s fine,” Nicole assured him. She glanced through a doorway into the kitchen. “Where’s the magic furniture?”
He lumbered into the living room and turned on his tiny television. “That’s it.”
She stared. “That’s just a television.”
“It talks,” the beast said weakly.
“But … that’s not magic at all.”
He settled down on the couch and hung his head in his paws. “I know,” he moaned, “I haven’t got any magic furniture. I haven’t got anything.”
“Hey,” Nicole said softly. “Don’t worry. It’ll be all right.”
John Joseph Adams Armored Anthology Cover
Here’s the cover for Armored, which includes my short story “Power Armor: A Love Story.”
Metro North Melee
So Friday night I rode Metro North home from Manhattan. I’m sitting all the way in the first car, which tends to be the quietest, and just as the train is pulling out of Grand Central a guy sits down across the aisle from me. He glances back over his shoulder once or twice, then says, “Man, that guy just hit me.”
I look up, then glance toward the back of the car, but don’t see anyone. “What guy?”
There are doors connecting each car, and each door has a window in it. The guy is looking through those windows into the next car. “Look, that’s him there. Look.”
I lean out into the aisle. As the train moves through the tunnels it bends, so that the windows aren’t aligned, but I catch a glimpse of a guy in white in the middle of the next car. “Who is he?”
“I don’t know,” says the guy sitting next to me. He’s in his thirties, short, a little stocky, maybe of Indian descent, with a shaved head and stipples of acne scars across his cheeks. He’s dressed in dark colors, jeans and a lightweight zip-up sweatshirt. He looks a bit like the captain who dies at the beginning of Star Trek (2009). His name, I learn later, is Bob.
He says, “I was getting on the train, right, and I kind of bumped into him, and I said I was sorry, but he just sort of grabbed my face, like this, and shoved me back. See, that’s him right there. He’s coming.”
I stand to block the aisle, but Bob says, “No, man. Don’t get involved. Really. It’s cool. Sit down.”
Reluctantly, I sit back down. I’m thinking that maybe blocking the aisle will spark a confrontation and make things worse, or draw unwanted attention to Bob. He has a styrofoam container on his lap, Indian or Mexican food.
He shakes his head. “You know what? If he hits me he hits me. What can I do?”
He turns to face the window and tries to look inconspicuous as the other guy comes down the aisle toward us.
The guy is big and beefy, dressed in work boots and a white T-shirt. Maybe of Irish descent. Probably a construction worker, from his build and dress. He’s about sixty, with a full head of white hair, and was maybe handsome once, but now sort of looks like a crazy pirate. He passes by Bob, and for a moment I think everything’s cool, that the guy’s just looking for a seat.
Then the guy catches sight of Bob out of the corner of his eye, and without a word he turns and punches him in the cheek. Bob’s food goes flying and he holds up his hands as the guy punches him again.
I leap up and wrap my arm around the guy’s throat and try to drag him back, but he’s probably got a hundred pounds on me. Still, Bob manages to scramble up from his seat and into the aisle. The guy lunges at Bob, still punching him, as I try to hold the guy back. Behind Bob, the conductor, a short young guy, shouts, “Hey! Hey, guys! No fighting on the train.”
Bob falls onto his back, and the crazy guy falls on top of him, with me still squeezing the guy’s throat. Bob is punching back now, and screaming, “What the fuck, man? Why are you hitting me?” Crazy guy keeps punching with his right hand, and since my right arm is around his neck I can’t stop him. I let go of his neck and try to grab his arm, but it’s an awkward position and I can’t do much. The conductor is still yelling, and so are a bunch of people behind him.
Finally Bob scrambles out from under crazy guy and stumbles to his feet, and the conductor grabs him and pulls him away. I stand up and back off. Crazy guy is still on the ground between us, and Bob is screaming, “That guy just fucking attacked me for no reason!” and the conductor is saying, “I know, I know. Just calm down.”
Crazy guy pulls himself to his feet. He turns on me, and his eyes look totally insane. There’s a cut between his eyebrows, and his face is slick with blood. He’s an inch or two taller than me and a lot heavier, and I can see that he’s about to take a swing at me. Up until now I’ve been too surprised to be scared, but now I’m scared. I back away, holding up a hand and saying, “Man, you need to calm down.”
I move into the area by the doors, where there’s more room, and crazy guy follows me, but slowly, somewhat dazed. The conductor comes over and stands beside me. It seems to occur to crazy guy that an altercation with the conductor might involve some serious jail time. He wanders away to the far end of the car and stands there, wiping blood out of his eyes.
There are a bunch of other people there, a man and a woman and some kids, and for a moment I’m afraid they’re friends of crazy guy and are going to join the fight. One of them approaches, a white guy with a mustache, average build.
“Do you know that guy?” I say.
“No,” he says.
Bob is still screaming. His voice is almost cracking with emotion. “Come over here and hit me again! You crazy fuck! Come over here and hit me again!”
I really wish he would stop doing that. For a moment it seems inevitable that crazy guy is going to wade back in. Then crazy guy starts yelling back. “You ran into me!”
“I bumped you accidentally,” Bob yells. “And I said I was sorry. You crazy fucking asshole!”
“And you’re a fucking … “ Crazy guy pauses. I get the sense he’s trying to come up with a racial slur, but isn’t sure which one might apply. “…piece of shit!” he finishes.
“You fucking hit me, asshole!” Bob yells. “And look at you, bleeding like a little bitch! Come on, try it again. Try it again!”
The woman is trying to calm Bob down. She says repeatedly, “Do you have a family? Listen, do you have a family? For their sake just walk away.”
By now the fire seems to have gone out of crazy guy. He’s standing in his end of the car, shaking his head and shrugging, acting drunkenly nonchalant about the taunts, as if he’s above all this.
“Come on,” the conductor says to Bob, ushering him back.
“I didn’t do anything,” Bob says. “That guy just hit me.”
“I know,” the conductor says. “Come on.”
Bob says, “Can I get my food at least?”
The conductor surveys the remains of Bob’s food, which looks like it’s been hit by a bomb. “Your food…” He shakes his head. “It’s gone, man.”
The conductor leads Bob away, and I gather up my things and follow after them. They pass through the next car, and then into the one after that. At the far end of that car they pause, and the conductor says, “Have you been drinking?”
“Look, I’m not going to lie to you,” Bob says, “Yes, I’m drunk. But I’m not that drunk, and I didn’t do anything to that guy. He just hit me for no reason.”
“I can be a witness,” I say. “I saw the guy hit him. It was completely unprovoked.”
“All right.” The conductor turns back to Bob. “The police are going to meet us at the next stop, all right?”
“No, man,” Bob moans. “I didn’t do anything. I just want to go home.”
“I know,” the conductor says. “Do you want to press charges?”
“No, I don’t want to press charges,” Bob says. “I just want to go home.”
I keep glancing back toward the front of the train, but there’s no sign of crazy guy. A few minutes later we pull into the Harlem-125th Street station. The doors open and two uniformed cops come aboard. Young guys. One of them, a tall, pale, skinny guy with black hair and a cynical gaze, approaches. “Is this the guy?” he says, looking at Bob. The conductor nods.
The cop says, “So what happened?”
Bob explains about bumping into the guy as they were boarding the train, and how the guy shoved him, and then came over and attacked him. Bob says, “And he flashed some sort of badge at me. He’s a firefighter, I think. Like, what the hell does that mean?”
“All right,” the cop says. “Step off the train.”
“No, man,” Bob moans. “I don’t want to get off the train. I just want to go home.”
“Well, you shouldn’t have been fighting then,” the cop snaps. “Come on.”
Bob follows the cop out onto the platform, and I stand in the open doorway, watching. The cop questions the conductor, then questions Bob. An announcement comes over the PA apologizing for the delay.
I step out onto the platform. The other cop goes looking for crazy guy, but returns a short time later, exasperated that the conductor didn’t tag along to point out crazy guy. That cop and the conductor head off toward the front of the train. The first cop asks Bob for ID.
The other cop emerges from the train at the far end of the platform with crazy guy in tow, and questions him.
The first cop says to Bob, “He just hit you? You didn’t do anything?”
“No, man,” Bob says. He gestures at me. “This guy here, I don’t even know this guy at all. He can tell you.”
The cop says, “You’re a witness? You saw what happened?”
I say, “Yeah, I saw where the gentleman hit him on the train here.”
The cop turns back to Bob. “Do you want to press charges?”
“No, man. I don’t care. I forgive him. I just want to go home.”
Finally the cop says, “All right.” He holds up a bulky black device with a slip of paper showing. “Sign here.” Bob signs.
The conductor returns. He says to Bob, “You want to get back on the train? That guy’s off. You want to get back on?”
“Yeah,” Bob says, and we step back onto the train. The doors close and the train starts moving again. A well-dressed older couple is sitting nearby, and the woman is staring at us with a mix of suspicion and curiosity, and making no effort to be subtle about it.
The conductor passes us, and Bob tries to hand the guy his ticket, but the conductor waves him off. “No, don’t worry about it.”
When the conductor’s gone, Bob says, “Thanks, man. If you hadn’t been there I might have been in a lot of trouble with the cops.”
“Yeah, sure,” I say.
“What’s your name?” he says.
“David,” I say, and we shake hands. “What’s yours?” I ask, and he tells me.
He says, “Sorry, man. I didn’t mean to get you involved in this.”
“No, it’s fine,” I say.
“You go sit down,” he says. “I’m fine.”
“No, I’ll stay here,” I say. “I’m not doing anything.”
He sighs. “Am I bleeding?”
“Yeah.”
“Where?”
“Your cheek there,” I say. “I think there’s a spot on the back of your neck too. Turn around. No, the other way. Yeah, right under your ear there. There’s a little cut.”
He groans. “Am I bruised?”
“Yeah.”
“Where?”
“Like, the whole side of your face.”
“Yeah,” he says. “I can feel it. Man, how am I going to explain this?”
I grimace sympathetically. He talks through the circumstances that led to the initial collision again.
I grin at him. “You’re tough, man. You stood right up to that guy. You didn’t take any shit from him.”
“Yeah,” he says. “Damn it. His first punch got me right in the jaw there. That really messed me up. I would have done a lot better if it weren’t for that. If I wasn’t drunk it would have been a different story.”
I’m thinking that he acquitted himself pretty well, considering that the other guy was three times his size and came away with a face covered in blood.
“Sorry to get you involved in this, man,” he says.
“No, it’s fine,” I say.
“You should go sit down,” he says. “Relax.”
“All right.” We shake hands again. I pat his shoulder. “Stay strong, man.”
As I make my way back to my seat, I pass the conductor, who says, “Thanks for the assist, man.”
Twenty minutes later, as the train is pulling into White Plains, Bob appears in the aisle beside me.
“David,” he says. “Thanks again, man.” He shakes my hand.
“Yeah, no problem,” I tell him.
He makes his way out onto the platform. The doors close, and the train starts moving again.
My Story “The Trial of Thomas Jefferson” on the Journey Into… Podcast
My short story “The Trial of Thomas Jefferson” was just released as a full-cast audio production on the Journey Into… podcast. This story, which I wrote as a teenager, originally appeared in the July/August 2003 issue of Cicada magazine. Also watch for my story “Red Road” in an upcoming episode of Journey Into…, starring me as a talking mouse.
Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy NYC
I created a Facebook page for fans of Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy who live in the New York area to get to know each other and trade info about upcoming events. Join us!
My Story “The Ontological Factor” in Cicada Magazine
Here’s the cover of the September/October issue of Cicada magazine, which includes my humorous short story “The Ontological Factor,” about a nervous philosophy student who finds himself in a house full of doorways to other worlds. Go ahead and order a copy.
Interview on the Read It and Weep Podcast
I’m called in as a science fiction expert in Episode 108 of Read It and Weep, a podcast that reviews terrible books, movies, and TV shows.
Kzin
Very sad day. Heard from grandma that my cat Kzin has died while I was away in California. I’ve had her since I was 17.
“The Skull-Faced Boy” Layout
Here’s the nifty layout for my story “The Skull-Faced Boy” in the upcoming anthology Z: Zombie Stories.
Hugo Award Nominations
Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy made a respectable showing in the Hugo Awards this year with 13 nominations. 35 would have put us on the final ballot. Remember that podcasts are eligible for the Hugos in the “Best Related Work” category, so be sure to nominate all your favorite podcasts next year.
Worldcon Hotel
So I just looked up the hotel I’ll be staying at for Worldcon and, um, holy crap. Looks pretty nice. I’ll be there Thursday through Sunday. If you see me there say hi.
Charles Vess Illustrates My Story “Three Deaths”
Here’s the illustration by Charles Vess that will accompany my story “Three Deaths” in the upcoming anthology Under the Moons of Mars: New Adventures on Barsoom. Vess is a legendary fantasy illustrator (for example, he collaborated with Neil Gaiman on Stardust), so it’s very exciting to have him do a piece for one of my stories.
“The Skull-Faced Boy” in Z: Zombie Stories
Here’s the cover of Z: Zombie Stories, a YA anthology from Night Shade Books that includes my story “The Skull-Faced Boy.” And look, I even made the cover!
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