Clarke Awards for 2006

End of the World Blues - Jon Courtenay Grimwood
Nova Swing - M John Harrison
Oh Pure and Radiant Heart- Lydia Millet
Hav - Jan Morris
Streaking - Brian Stableford
Gradisil - Adam Roberts
 
There are interviews with both Jon Courtenay Grimwood and M John Harrison. Both are taken from my earlier blog but they discuss these books.
No Tags
addthis_url [...]

BSFA Awards for 2006

The shortlists for the 2006 British Science Fiction Association (BSFA) awards were announced yesterday, 14th January, as follows:
Best Novel
Darkland - Liz Williams (Tor)
End of the World Blues - Jon Courtenay Grimwood (Gollancz)
Icarus - Roger Levy (Gollancz)
The Last Witchfinder - James Morrow (Weidenfield & Nicholson)
Nova Swing - M. John Harrison (Gollancz) 
 Best Short Fiction
The Djinn’s Wife, Ian [...]

Dangerous Worlds - Wee Free Men by Terry Pratchett

I have a confession: I rarely read Pratchett. I used to but I felt it all went through a bit of a lull until recently in the adult books. My wife gave me Wee Free Men (and the other two but they will be the subject of later posts) and I sat and devoured it [...]

Rage against the Skin- The Black Tattoo by Sam Enthoven reviewed

The Black Tattoo, Sam Enthoven’s debut novel, is a book of fits and starts. But more anon.
Jack and Charlie are knocking around London when they are drawn into a dark battle which may involve the Earth. Crispy duck is an odd dish to have. In a mysterious room above a theatre, they are given a [...]

Celestial Arachnids - Philip Reeve’s Larklight

Philip Reeve’s Mortal Engines series marked him as an outstanding author who could get his head around outlandish engineering and fantasy, bringing the two together in a wonderful state. Larklight carries on the obsession with floating domestic spaces but this time he has a floating house in space. There’s a real feeling of Victoriana, mainly [...]

Of Infinite Attics and Rediscovered Time - Garry Kilworth interviewed

Growing up, when did you first get interested in SF/Fantasy

Since I first started to read. It was only the classic authors at first - Wells, Haggard, Poe, etc - only later did I get into sf, in my 20’s - I just didn’t know it was there before then. But one of my greatest influences [...]

The Puppeteer of the Land - Steve Cockayne interviewed

When did you first get interested in SF/Fantasy? Ever since I started to read, I have enjoyed stories that take place in imaginary worlds. Alice in Wonderland, Winnie the Pooh, Henry the Green Engine, Swallows and Amazons – these were the books that were my earliest influences. I read a lot of SF in my [...]

The New World Order according to Ben Jeapes

Growing up, when did you first get interested in SF/Fantasy?I used to think it was an over-abundance of Trek, Dr Who and Thunderbirds, and that’s what I told everyone. Then eBay came along and I bought some old Countdowns out of curiosity. Countdown was a weekly comic that inherited the mantle of TV21, which published [...]

Borrowing Time

Garry Kilworth really ought to be better known rather than being the open secret in fandom. Why? I suggest you read Attica. It is very good and wonderfully old fashioned. Jordy, Alex and Chloe are ever so slightly bored in that way only children can have in holidays. Chloe gets talking to the strange elderly [...]

Talking Heads - David Marusek interviewed

Growing up, when did you first get interested in SF/Fantasy?
 
I wasn’t really aware of the genre until already an adult (which is probably the reverse order for most people). As a child I avidly read stories about knights, battles, the Crusades. It was only many years later when I tried my hand at writing fiction [...]