|
I'm a geek, fan, and writer who lives in Portland, Oregon.
For more information about me, please see my
web page. If you have questions, comments, or just want to chat, you can send me e-mail. Or you can post a comment on my LiveJournal. |
|
We are coming to San Jose for the ECR@25 square dance fly-in, April 2-4, and have decided to stay on for a few days afterwards, returning on the 7th. Anyone in the Bay Area want to hang out April 4-7? We're also interested in crash space, and information about events happening during those days. Leave a comment below or email me at dlevine at spiritone dot com.
Posted 03/10/2010 22:32 [e-mail me] [post comment] [permalink]
At the moment we are at Potlatch in Seattle. So far we have had a delightful Chinese dinner with Janna Silverstein and Jack Bell, dim sum with Allen Baum and Donya White, and vegetarian Thai with Liz Argall and Julie and Greg Sardo. I also participated on a panel about "Writing the Other" with Ellen Klages and Nisi Shawl and hung out and talked with a bunch of other cool people.
We also spotted the May 2010 issue of Analog, containing my story "Teaching the Pig to Sing," at a Seattle magazine shop. My name's on the cover! (Yes, as far as the magazines are concerned it is now May. If you want a copy, run down to your local newsstand before June arrives at the beginning of April. This issue will also be available as an e-book in a variety of formats but I don't know when.)
The video of my Ignite Portland talk has been posted on YouTube:
Someone accidentally opened a fire door at the beginning of my talk, causing a loud alarm buzzer. This made me really flustered and I flubbed some of my lines (like calling the Viking rover Voyager and forgetting where Bianca came from) but I did manage to recover once the noise stopped. Everyone said I handled the interruption really well.
Many people in the audience were on Twitter and you can see some of their comments here. The Mars Society's Director of Operations called it "a very inspirational talk" and says she will be including it in the training videos for future crews.
You can see all 20 talks from Ignite Portland 8 on YouTube. My favorites are Why Wikipedians are the Weirdest People on the Internet and The Beginner's Guide to Psychiatric Hospitalization.
I also participated in a group discussion on Laptop Magazine's blog about Which Technology Makes You Feel Like You're Living In The Future?. Go over there, read it, and if you like it leave a comment. There may be more of these "Burning Question" discussions in the future if there's sufficient response.
Posted 03/06/2010 01:04 [e-mail me] [post comment] [permalink]
Having driven myself to a frazzle with rehearsing all day, I'm just heading out the door for Ignite Portland right now. If you're coming, bring a nonperishable food donation. If not, you can watch it live -- I'll be appearing in the second half of the show. Wish me luck!
Posted 03/03/2010 17:41 [e-mail me] [post comment] [permalink]
I wrote 500 words yesterday, and 500 words the day before, which is the first fiction I've committed this year. Nearly two months of writing time sacrificed on the altar of Mars, but I think it's a decent tradeoff given the learning and publicity I've gotten out of it. Still, it's good to get back to the actual writing, though I don't think I'll be producing any words today.
Although I haven't been writing much lately, my little paper children are still out there in the world working on my behalf. In summary:
- My nonfiction essay "How the Future Predicts Science Fiction" appeared in the final (alas!) issue of The Internet Review of Science Fiction. This essay is based on the talk I gave at the Library of Congress last year.
- The audio version of my story "Wind from a Dying Star" was podcast at Escape Pod. It's also available on iTunes. This story was my first professional sale (it originally appeared in the anthology Bones of the World, which is amazingly still available) and I'm still proud of it.
- There's a fascinating discussion of "Wind from a Dying Star" going on in the Escape Pod forums. I'm particularly touched by comment #17, from user Mobius04, which says of this story: "Know that you helped change one soldier's life for the better." (Go read the whole thing.)
- On the same day "Wind from a Dying Star" appeared, I sold another story to Escape Pod: "The Last McDougal's," which originally appeared in the January 2006 issue of Asimov's.
- I learned that Fangs for the Mammaries, including my story "Family Matters," will be published in September. Rich Horton liked my stories in the previous two volumes of this series.
- Finally, the expanded version of Wild Cards Volume One, including my story "Powers," is scheduled for November.
Posted 02/27/2010 13:40 [e-mail me] [post comment] [permalink]
I had a great interview on KATU-TV this morning and it is already available online!
My previous TV appearance is stil available, if you haven't seen it.
I think this may be the end of my 15 minutes of fame, for this round at least. I'll let you know if I get any more media attention.
Posted 02/26/2010 13:49 [e-mail me] [post comment] [permalink]
This page created and maintained by David D. Levine,
dlevine@spiritone.com.
Return to David's Science Fiction Writing Page