SF/F Commentary

SF/F Commentary

Poll Results: Which eReader is the best on the market today?

A few weeks ago I put up a poll about eReaders to see what you all thought were the best on the market.  Now for the results: 27% said the B&N Nook 53% said the Amazon Kindle 7% said the Sony Reader 13% said the iPad 0% said the Cruz Reader, the Kobo, and Mobiles I’m somewhat amused by these results.  There’s been a lot of talk in the last year or so about how great mobile phones are for reading books, ad yet nobody selected that as an option from the list.  I suspect this is because many of you subconsciously or consciously took “the best” to also mean “the best suited for the job.” But that’s a guess on my part. Note:  I’m surprised the Nook is so low on the list.  It’s #2, but being an proud and happy owner of one of those little devices, I have to admit that it’s really a wonderful thing.  I think it’s the best of the ones I’ve seen so far. Anywho.  Thanks for voting!  There will be a new poll up later today!

SF/F Commentary

The Skiffy and Fanty Show #20 is Live!

Another episode!  This week should be a little more serious than in the past: Controversy attacks, and we’re on top of it like a fly waiting until the last second to get the leftovers from the dung beetles. This week we talk about Harlan Ellison’s last convention appearance and the problem (or lack thereof) of consumer activism in the science fiction community. Plus, the episode is full of gender stereotypes, ridiculous arguments made by other people, and general insanity. We had fun making it, and we’re sure you’ll enjoy listening! Okay, so maybe the description doesn’t make it sound all that serious, but trust me when I say we get down and dirty in our main segment.  You can listen or download the episode here (we’re also on iTunes).

SF/F Commentary

The Hard Working Writer Should Be a Hard Writing Writer

The last few years have been really interesting for writers and readers alike.  Publishers, writers, self-publishers, and others have been pushing for the view of the writer as one who must not only write, but do everything else too.  While I understand why this vision is necessary (published authors have to sell books and all that), I am also opposed to it in principle.  The only thing that should be important to the writer, in my opinion, is the writing.  Selling books, gaining fans, and so on are important, but secondary items. These things are not part of the vision I want to cling to.  I would love to live in a world where the hard writing writer is the one who gets the attention, because telling a good story is more important than anything else.  Period.  Stop telling me about learning how to market yourself and all that mumbo jumbo.  I get it.  Writers have to do this, and it’s something I know I’ll have to learn how to do out of necessity too, but the purpose of writing is to write and develop one’s craft.  There’s a reason a lot of writers (particularly big name ones) have yet to tread into the self-publishing world:  they’d rather spend the time needed to promote their material doing the act of creation itself.  The time one could spend on the Internet and in bookstores trying to push books onto people could be spent writing two or three more books, and getting better at doing them too. As a reader, I care more about seeing my favorite writers get better at doing what they love than I do about ad copy and whether a writer is a brilliant marketer (sometimes I find brilliant marketers annoying, actually).  We have enough crappy novels with barely serviceable prose flooding the shelves as it is; we don’t need more.  We need better novels.  You can tell a riveting story with strong writing.  Hell, there’s no reason why literary novelists can’t take all those skills they’ve developed learning how to craft sentences and beautiful images and apply them to the kinds of exciting stories that people love to read. But maybe I’m naive.  Do people really dislike reading more beautiful prose styles in general?  I don’t mean difficult prose, but prose that is more than bare bones, that uses wonderful metaphors and images, digs into the souls of its characters, and so on.  Is it equally naive to want the hard writing writer to become the norm? Maybe I’m just frustrated, partly because there is a childish backlash in the SF/F community against the suffering literary fiction world (yes, it’s childish to point and laugh at the people who used to do the same thing 50 years ago), and partly because I’m tired of seeing publishers, self-publishers, and everyone else pushing writers and readers to adopt or desire the “hard working writer” persona.  That’s not what writing should be about. But everyone is acting out of necessity, I guess.  It’s sad, but there it is…

SF/F Commentary

Book Giveaway: The Man Who Loved Books Too Much by Allison Hoover Bartlett

Guess what? I have two copies of The Man Who Loved Books Too Much by Allison Hoover Bartlett to give away to two lucky readers in celebration of the upcoming trade paperback release.  I reviewed Ms. Bartlett’s book some time back and loved it.  And, of course, if you don’t know what the book is about, here is the synopsis: Unrepentant book thief John Charles Gilkey has stolen a fortune in rare books from around the country. Yet unlike most thieves who steal for profit, Gilkey steals for love–the love of books. Perhaps equally obsessive is Ken Sanders, the self-appointed “bibliodick” who’s driven to catch him. Following this eccentric cat-and-mouse chase with a mixture of suspense, insight and humor, Allison Hoover Bartlett plunges the reader deep into a rich world of fanatical book lust and considers what it is that makes some people stop at nothing to posses the titles they love. Yes, the book is awesome, fascinating, and a bit of good fun.  Details for how to win are below: The giveaway is only open to U.S. readers (sorry, this isn’t my rule) and will close on my birthday:  October 6th, 2010. To enter, you must do one of the following: Leave a comment on this thread telling me something about your most valuable book (personal or economic), OR Send me an email with the same thing. Make sure I have a way to contact you to get your address. You can earn additional entries by doing any of the following: Twitter about this giveaway.  Put @shaunduke in the message so I can track it.  (1 extra entry) Blog about this giveaway.  Leave a link in your comment.  (1 extra entry) Put this giveaway up on Digg, Stumbleupon, or some other social network.  Leave links in your comment.  (1 extra entry each). Review my blog on Amazon.com.  Let me know that you did in your comment.  (5 extra entries) Review The Skiffy and Fanty Show on iTunes.  Let me know that you did in your comment.  (5 extra entries) That’s it!  Simply enough, right? Good luck!

SF/F Commentary

Strange Keywords People Arrive Here Through

In the interest of humor, I present to you the oddest search terms/phrases that have led people to this blog at one point or another (with commentary): how to clean satin bags (Because there is an overabundance of things related to satin bags on this blog; just look at my “Cleaning For Cross Dressers” label) “craig herbertson” (I have no idea who this is) i hate jk rowling (I’ve apparently become the dispenser of author hate here; I guess it makes sense, since I did say this) scifi cat (At least it’s scifi based…) toodrunk satin blogspot (Maybe they were looking for “too drunk satin blogspot,” or “toodrunk” is a word I’m simply unfamiliar with; I suspect it’s drunkenese for “why am I drunk googling?”) “remember you’re a one-ball” (I will, thank you.) nirlum (Nak nak nulu bol ock ock to you too.  That’s Ewok for “WTF?”) “verses on st. andrews” (Because nowhere is better to go for your Biblical learning than WISB) intrigued by something (How deliciously vague…) norp (Seriously, what’s with the weird words?) “i am afraid that we cannot keep” (How deliciously specific…) “i now pronounce you someone else” (Well, thank you…) “shaving my head” “locks of love” (I did something like that once; the next year, we were in two different wars…go figure) “sniffed his armpit” (…) does sean astin have asthma? (I find it amusing that some people think he might have asthma because he played an asthmatic in a movie.  To which I say, “If he had asthma, he would have known how to use an inhaler correctly in The Goonies.  That is all.) explain obsessions (No.) explain the laser technology? (No.  Read a book.) felt crippled (I’m sorry…I really can’t help you with that.) gerbil food list (Because clearly you have something against hamsters…) limitations of primates (They have none.  They are our masters.  Bow before the ape king!) There are many more, but I think that’ll tide you over for the evening. What is the weirdest search term you’ve ever seen as a referral on your blog or website?  Let me know in the comments.

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