Report Day Links

Today is report day, i.e. the students get their report cards, which also means a long weekend, because school doesn’t start up again until next Wednesday. And since today was the last day before the reports and the last session of this semester, I treated the girls of my afternoon class (there are only girls in that class for some reason) to cake and drinks at the bakery next to the school.

Plus, we actually had a couple of centimeters of snow overnight, which is almost a first in this wet and mild winter. If the snow sticks around, I’ll take a few photos tomorrow. What is more, my internet access has been spotty these past few days – probably something to do with those workmen digging up the sidewalk a bit further down the street. It does seem to have stabilized now – unless they start digging again tomorrow.

And now for some links: Continue reading

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Yet More on the Review Uproar

There is yet more on the current review controversy. So here is a whole lot of links on all sides of the issue: Continue reading

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More on the Reviews Dust-up

Yesterday’s post on genders and reviews got quite a bit of attention. So here are a couple of addenda to the Strange Horizons/A Theft of Swords part of the discussion: Continue reading

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Gender and Review Bias – 2012 Edition

Jennifer Weiner retackles the subject of major newspapers such as the New York Times ignoring women writers in their review sections, offering up plenty of data. There’s a shout-out to the New York Times‘s weirdly condescending portrait of Amanda Hocking and Jennifer Weiner correctly notes that the New York Times did not bother to review any of Amanda Hocking’s novels.

Meanwhile, Teddy Wayne replies at Salon that it’s male midlist writers who are truly suffering, because women buy more fiction and women’s fiction, chick lit and romance (because we know that women write exclusively in those genres) outsell most male writers except for the lucky few superstar literary writers. In short, it’s another “Oh no, why won’t someone think of the poor oppressed straight white men” whine. Unlike Jennifer Weiner, Teddy Wayne offers no data at all. The comments quickly degenerate into a gender war.

John Scalzi, bless him, calls Wayne’s article out for the idiocy that it is. His commenters largely agree and indeed the comments, at least those that I read, are free of complaints that women are ruining the SF and fantasy genre with their emotions and romance and sex scenes and insistence on female protagonists who can do more than cower. But then I suspect that Scalzi wouldn’t stand for such idiocy.

Meanwhile, there is a sort of mini-war going on between authors and reviewers at the moment with book bloggers and review sites feeling (rightfully) exploited and pressured by publishers, some authors feeling (understandably) upset at what they consider unprofessional reviews (though it is worth pointing out that no author ever complained about a 5-star review, no matter how unprofessional and misspelled it is) and some book bloggers feeling (understandably) upset at being belittled and dismissed by writers and pointing out what should be obvious, namely that reviews are for readers not writers.

In short, it’s business as usual. However, I did come across an really excellent statement with regards to the review wars that I would like to highlight. It can be found in the comment section of this Strange Horizons review of Theft of Swords by Michael J. Sullivan. Now reviewer Liz Bourke really, really did not like the book. In fact, she says that it narrowly missed being the worst book she ever read. She also offers plenty of examples and even quotes regarding what bothered her about the book. So the review is clearly not an unfounded attack on the book in question.

Now I haven’t read the book and frankly I’m not interested in reading it, so I have no idea whether the book is good or bad or something in between. However, plenty of commenters (though not the author, it must be said) show up to tell Liz Bourke that she is wrong, wrong, wrong about Theft of Swords and that she is being mean to the author and jealous and not qualified and whatever. There are also complaints that Strange Horizons hates “core fantasy”, i.e. fairly traditional epic fantasy and sword and sorcery (and who said that those subgenres were the “core” of the genre anyway?), before the comments thread completely degenerates into mudslinging.

Now the complaints that Strange Horizons supposedly hates epic fantasy are just silly, since everybody who has been hanging out in the SFF community for a while knows that Strange Horizons has very particular tastes and that they are not shy about stating their opinions. I rarely agree with their reviews myself (though I don’t post comments calling the mental health of the reviewer into question). And any publisher or author who submits a review copy to Strange Horizons should be well aware of their biases and that certain books probably won’t receive a favourable review there. So if you are likely to disagree with Strange Horizons and their tastes in speculative fiction, don’t read them and don’t submit books for review to them.

But the quote I really want to highlight is this bit by a British writer called E.M. Edwards, buried halfway down in the comment thread:

Sexual bias: female negative reviewers, or female reviewers full stop, get endlessly more vitriol in response to their reviews than male reviewers offering the same or even more acerbic criticism. This is not unique to the community here, but no more praiseworthy.

E.M. Edwards completely hits the nail on the head, because I strongly suspect that the issue is not so much Strange Horizons posting a negative review of a traditional epic fantasy novel but that a woman dared to express her distaste for a certain kind of macho fantasy fiction. Especially considering that Liz Bourke has given measured but negative reviews to other gritty macho fantasy novels before and received a similar reaction (I blogged about this here). We all know that SFF is still very much a boys’ club and that women daring to offer counter opinions on books by male authors, particularly if those books are beloved in the genre, often get slammed for it. Look at the recent dust-up about Mur Lafferty finding that she cannot stand the Chronicles of Thomas Covenant and Black Gate Theo taking her to task for it (and later me for blogging about it).

Some of the uproar about the negative review of A Theft of Swords seems to originate in the fact that author Michael J. Sullivan started out as an indie writer and was later picked up by a traditional publisher, an indie publishing success story I somehow missed (though I think I have run across the author before, probably on the Kindleboards, since the name seems familiar). Hence, some people accuse Strange Horizons of having an anti-indie bias.

However, consider this: Would there have been a similarly massive uproar if a male reviewer had written a snarkily negative review of the works of the other indie fantasy author gone traditional, namely Amanda Hocking? Nope, because a man slamming fantasy written by a woman would only have been natural.

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Reconsidering my place in the local literary scene

After two days of concentrated teen drama (two fifth-graders hitting each other with fallen branches found in the schoolyard and a crying fourteen-year-old lamenting that nobody likes her), I spent last night at the bilingual Brückenschläge reading at the Café Ambiente, a popular venue for readings and literary events in Bremen. German crime and short fiction writer Anette Freundling and Irish poet Terry McDonagh read excerpts from their works.

It was a very nice reading and I had the chance to see some old acquaintances from the university days again. The audience turnout was rather low, though, because of a rival event at the university and the oncoming storm (no, not this oncoming storm).

Finally, the reading also made me consider my place in the local literary community. Now I have been hanging around at the fringes of the Bremen literary scene for years, particularly the English language literary scene, attending readings and working for newleaf. As someone who primarily writes genre, I never quite fitted into a scene driven primarily by literary fiction and poetry, though we also have a pretty strong crime fiction community (only in German alas).

Yesterday night, however, I was struck by how different my path is from that of the other writers present. Because I’m not just the lone genre writer among literary writers and poets, but I also publish my work mainly digital and mainly myself these days, while the other writers publish mainly in print and mainly small press. Plus, my audience and focus is a lot more global than theirs. Of course, e-books are still a tiny part of the market in Germany, though growing, and literary fiction is still largely print in the US as well. Besides, poetry collections are not easy to do in e-book form, though I may try it one day just for the heck of it.

It also struck me that at Pegasus Pulp I’m doing all the work myself that a small army of volunteers used to do at newleaf. Though the experience gained at newleaf has also been invaluable for getting Pegasus Pulp off the ground.

Talking of which, at the Pegasus Pulp blog, I’m looking at the neverending debate about exclusivity with regards to KDP Select and the new iBooks Author software from Apple.

And at the ABC Buhlert blog, I’m looking at the global switchover to renewable energy.

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Internet Blackout Day and an event

Upon arriving at this blog, you will probably have noticed a strange splash page, because this blog is participating in the internet strike against the American SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act). Don’t worry, the site will continue to be accessible and you only get to see the screen once. For more information, read this and write to your congressperson, if you’re American.

Over at the Pegasus Pulp blog (once you click past the Stop SOPA screen), I have a longish post on international e-book markets and the impact of Amazon on established booksellers with a tangent on the incredible rudeness of the sales staff at Douglas perfumeries. Yes, it actually makes sense in context.

Finally, if you’re in the Bremen area, check out Brückenschläge, a bilingual reading featuring German writer Annette Freundling and Irish poet Terry McDonagh at the Café Ambiente on Thursday, January 19.

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Some Musings on the Golden Globes

The Golden Globes have been awarded and once again prove how completely out of touch I am with what is considered good film and television these days. Because I have no idea what half the nominated films and TV shows are and actively dislike the other half. In fact, I posted almost the same thing on the same event last year, so it’s a definite pattern.

That said, The Artist, which won best film and best actor in the comedy/musical category as well as best score, looks like a lovely film, which might even tempt me to see it in the cinema rather than wait for DVD/TV. And in this age of CGI and 3D, how can you not admire anybody brave enough to make a black and white silent film? Particularly since so many people flat out refuse to ever watch a silent film or even a black and white film, because they don’t grasp that the limitations were part of the art form.

I’m also happy that the Iranian film A Separation won the Golden Globe for the best foreign language film (The Artist, though French, apparently doesn’t count as a foreign language film, since it’s silent). Not because I am particularly interested in an Iranian divorce drama, though it won the Golden Bear and an acting award at last year’s Berlinale as well, but because winning international awards will protect the director, who is considered politically radical in his own country, from persecution. And besides, it’s good to see Hollywood set aside political prejudice (though the Golden Globes are awarded by the foreign press association i.e. not Americans) and give an award to a film from an “Axis of Evil” country.

Finally, I’m also pleased that Idris Elba won for his performance in Luther, a show I enjoyed very much (and he kicked some bloke from Downton Abbey out of the game, too), and that Peter Dinklage won for playing Tyrion Lannister in Game of Thrones, because he’s awesome. And I like George Clooney a lot, though I don’t care for most of the films he makes, so I’m okay with him winning for a film I’ve never heard of. Besides, it’s better than Leonardo di Caprio taking home yet another award for playing yet another historical figure whose name begins with an H.

But the rest? It was probably inevitable that the grossly overrated Downton Abbey would take home an award, since I seem to be the only person in the universe who doesn’t like that Edwardian tripe. And while I’m pleased to see that British productions received quite a few nominations in the TV categories, they really couldn’t come up with something better to nominate than terminally dull fare like The Hour, Page 8 (both about journalists, print and TV respectively) or Appropriate Adult (I wouldn’t have thought it possible to make a dull film about the Fred and Rosemary West case, but apparently it is)?

The big American winner in the TV categories is something called Homeland which stars the quite likable Damian Lewis and the tolerable Claire Danes and yet doesn’t sound like something I would watch.

Finally, while I understand that given the high cancer rates in the US, American TV producers feel the need to make shows dealing with that reality and featuring protagonists with terminal cancer (Breaking Bad and The Big C respectively), I don’t understand why those protagonists have to be so damned unlikable that a regular viewer of either show is probably looking forward to their demise. What is more, this year’s Golden Globe awards, for which the stars of both shows were nominated, illustrate the perils of having a protagonist who’s dying from the first episode on. Because upon seeing both shows and their stars in the nomination list, my first reaction was, “Crap, that stuff is still running?” Because I’d thought the protagonists would have died long ago, given they each only had a few months to live at the start of their respective shows. So if you must make a show whose protagonist is terminally ill and dying, make it a miniseries and not an open ended multi-season drama.

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Cora blogs somewhere else yet again

Still no post here, because I was busy with something else. However, I have got a round-up of links to news stories about nuclear and alternative energy (Yeah, I know. Exciting) at the ABC Buhlert blog. I know that I keep neglecting the ABC Buhlert blog, but I don’t run across interesting news items for that blog all that often and besides, I’d hoped that my father would at least occasionally post over there, since it’s his site and company rather than mine.

Anyway, stand by for more Misfits recaps and a new Pegasus Pulp e-book coming soon.

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A Quick Shout Out to Pegasus Pulp

No post on the main blog for today, but you can head over to the Pegasus Pulp blog and read how the Guardian discovered indie publishing.

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Another interview with Cora, some indie publishing links, Channel 4 occupies Alan Moore, more on gender in SFF and Downton Abbey saves traditional publishing

First of all, I am interviewed at the Indie Book Lounge today, so head on over and check it out. If you want to read some of my past interviews, they are archived at the Interviews page.

I’ve also got an overview of interesting indie publishing links over at the Pegasus Pulp blog.

Channel 4 News did a report about Alan Moore and V for Vendetta and even took Alan Moore to meet the protesters. This is a very nice video, and how cool is it to see a mainstream news program discuss comics?

YA author Malinda Lo responds to Kate Elliott’s musing on gender roles and the challenges they present to the writer (linked here).

The New York Times has an article about publishers trying to cash in on the inexplicable popularity of Downton Abbey in the US by plugging Edwardian and WWI set historical fiction and historical memoirs as Downton Abbey tie-ins.

Still, this should be good for popular historians and historical fiction authors writing about the Edwardian period. If we get good reprints of popular fiction from the first two decades of the twentieth century in the bargain, great. Though we are likely also to see an uptick in World War I set stories, which isn’t something I look forward to, since World War I settings are one of my absolute fictional dealbreakers. Though I called it right last August that many Americans don’t know a whole lot about World War I and thus would have issues with those aspects of the plot.

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