Posts Categorized: News

A screenshot of The PortalOver the past month or so, you’ve likely noticed the increase in Short Fiction coverage on A Dribble of Ink. This has been a deliberate move on my part, to fill a gaping hole in my knowledge of the genre. I’ve been doing my damnedest to catch up on some of the classic and contemporary stories published by some of my favourite authors.

Fittingly, a new online magazine called The Portal has recently opened and is looking to add to their review staff:

The Portal is an online review of short-form science fiction, fantasy, and horror that will launch at World Fantasy in October 2010. Although we do intend to review work in English, we will give equal emphasis to providing English-language coverage of short fiction markets, anthologies, and genre literary activities in many language communities around the world. Our goal is to publish at least one article from each region or language for which we have a bureau head in each monthly issue; bureau heads will write these pieces themselves or delegate them to fellow critics in their area. For regions with less activity, we’ll take quarterly or yearly reports from our coordinators. If you are interested in working with us, please send an inquiry letter and writing sample to thesffportal at gmail dot com.

There’s no content yet, but it promises to be an interested resource for those looking to gain a wider appreciation of the genre. Doubly so for their interest in covering SFF short fiction from every region on the planet, rather than focussing on the English-speaking countries. You can be sure I’ll be sending in an application and some samples of my own reviews, in hopes of joining their ranks.

In the meantime, if you’re a reviewer, or a reader looking to jump into the reviewing scene, send them a line and show them what you’ve got!

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The Hobbit by JRR TolkienVia /Film, Guillermo del Toro on leaving his position as director of the upcoming film version of JRR Tolkien’s The Hobbit:

In light of ongoing delays in the setting of a start date for filming “The Hobbit,” I am faced with the hardest decision of my life. After nearly two years of living, breathing and designing a world as rich as Tolkien’s Middle Earth, I must, with great regret, take leave from helming these wonderful pictures. I remain grateful to Peter, Fran and Philippa Boyens, New Line and Warner Brothers and to all my crew in New Zealand. I’ve been privileged to work in one of the greatest countries on earth with some of the best people ever in our craft and my life will be forever changed. The blessings have been plenty, but the mounting pressures of conflicting schedules have overwhelmed the time slot originally allocated for the project. Both as a co-writer and as a director, I wish the production nothing but the very best of luck and I will be first in line to see the finished product. I remain an ally to it and its makers, present and future, and fully support a smooth transition to a new director.

Peter Jackson, director of The Lord of the Rings trilogy, and producer of The Hobbit, confirms that del Toro will be staying on as part of the writing team:

Guillermo is co-writing the Hobbit screenplays with Philippa Boyens, Fran Walsh and myself, and happily our writing partnership will continue for several more months, until the scripts are fine tuned and polished…New Line and Warner Bros will sit down with us this week, to ensure a smooth and uneventful transition, as we secure a new director for the Hobbit. We do not anticipate any delay or disruption to ongoing pre-production work

Disappointment aside, the big question is who’ll fill del Toro’s shoes. The obvious choice, to me at any rate, is Jackson. Despite being a fan of del Toro, he’s always struck me as too dark a director for the project, and one of The Hobbits biggest strengths (and why I much prefer it to The Lord of the Rings, is its whimsical, storybook nature. That’s not saying del Toro couldn’t have pulled it off (and we know it’d have been stunning visually), but Jackson nailed the look and feel of The Lord of the Rings, and I have no doubt that he’d do justice to the spirit of The Hobbit.

UPDATE:

Looks like Jackson might direct after all, if no other suitable director is found:

Sir Peter Jackson says he will step into the breach and direct The Hobbit himself if it becomes the only way to ensure the US$150 million (NZ$219m) film is made after the sudden departure of director Guillermo del Toro.

Good news, if true.

Boneshaker by Cherie Priest

Down in the laundry room with the bloody- wet floors and the ceiling- high stacks of sheets, wraps, and blankets, Vinita Lynch was elbows- deep in a vat full of dirty pillowcases because she’d promised— she’d sworn on her mother’s life— that she’d find a certain windup pocket watch belonging to Private Hugh Morton before the device was plunged into a tub of simmering soapy water and surely destroyed for good.

Why the private had stashed it in a pillowcase wasn’t much of a mystery: even in an upstanding place like the Robertson Hospital, small and shiny valuables went missing from personal stashes with unsettling regularity. And him forgetting about it was no great leap either: the shot he took in the forehead had been a lucky one because he’d survived it, but it left him addled at times— and this morning at breakfast had been one of those times. At the first bell announcing morning food, against the strict orders of Captain Sally he’d sat up and bolted into the mess hall, which existed only in that bullet- buffeted brain of his. In the time it took for him to be captured and redirected to his cot, where the meal would come to him, thank you very kindly, if only he’d be patient enough to receive it, the junior nursing staff had come through and stripped the bedding of all and sundry.

None of them had noticed the watch, but it would’ve been easy to miss.

Cherie Priest’s Boneshaker, a tale of Steampunk Seattle beset by zombies, is hugely popular, into its seventh printing and collecting nominations for both the Hugo and Nebula Awards for Best Novel. It’s easy, then, to imagine the excitement building for the stand alone follow-up Dreadnought. To sate some of that exicement, Macmillan, the parent company of Tor Books, has posted the first chapter of Dreadnought for free on their website.

If you’re interested, Amanda Rutter, over at the lovely Floor to Ceiling Books, has interviewed me about, well… blogging! We talk about all sorts of things, from reviews and social networking, to voice and curmudgeonly (yet lovable) bloggers. We don’t talk much about books, really, but if you’re interested in hearing me stroke my blogging ego, you can read the interview here.

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You likely don’t know Justin Cronin by name. I didn’t, when I first caught wind of his absurd, multi-million dollar publishing deal (in place before the book was even done, but the upcoming release of The Passage looks to change that. Early reviews have been glowing, and Ballantine Books has been pushing the release. Hard. The video above, from Ballantine Books’ website, gives some background on the novel.

Will it be the next big thing? Crush Twilight? Grind James Patterson into the ground? Is the second coming of The Stand just around the corner? Who knows, but there are few novels given such an opportunity to do so.