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New England Science Fiction Association
February 21, 2015

Boskone 52: Flash Fiction Slam Results

The Boskone Flash Fiction Slam returned for its second year and this time judges and participants battled the early morning hours and a blizzard.

20150215_094346Six writers took up the challenge of writing and reading a short story in under three-minutes. A panel of esteemed judges offered critique for each author. Each story was rated on a scale of 0-4 with scores tallied to determined the winners.

The Boskone Flash Fiction Slam is also a regional qualifier to the New Hampshire Writers’ Project annual Three Minute Fiction Slam. The winner of the Boskone Flash Fiction Slam is invited to participate in the finals held NH Institute of Art on March 23, 2015.

20150215_105033This year’s winner is Kristabelle Munson with second place to RWW Greene and third place to M.Adrian Sellers.

Thanks to judges James Patrick Kelly, F.Brett Cox, Fran Wilde and Beth Meacham.

 

Special thanks to the six writers who participated: Robin Hansen, Elise Friedman, Deb McGutchen, Kristabelle Munson, RWW Greene and M. Adrian Sellers.

February 18, 2015

Boskone 52 in 20 Tweets

Registration Boskone 52

One of the best parts of Boskone is the people. We’re thrilled that so many of you took to Twitter to share you experience during Boskone 52. Here’s a round up of some memorable tweets.

February 16, 2015

Boskone 52 Saturday Night

If you missed Saturday night programming due to the impending blizzard, no worries. We have your recap of all the fun you missed right here. Boston may be cold in February but our laughter kept us warm.

Skylark Winner

Congratulations to Moshe Feder, the winner of the Edward E. Smith Memorial Award for Imaginative Fiction, also known as the Skylark Award.

Science Fiction Improv

The fine folks of the Science Fiction Theatre Company of Boston entertained the crowd using prompts collected or shouted out from the audience.

Science Fiction Theatre Company B52 Science Fiction Theatre Company B52 Science Fiction Theatre Company B52

Silly Poses

It was so popular at Boskone 51, we decided to do it again! Participants attempted to recreate some entertaining science fiction book covers. Hilarity ensued when authors recreated their covers from their own work, too.


20150214_214903 20150214_214812 20150214_215119 20150214_215044
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20150214_21574820150214_215648

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Can you guess this one?
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Or how about this?

Guest of Honor Reading

Saturday night capped off with a reading from Boskone 52 Guest of Honor, Steven Brust. He was joined by Skyler White for a special dual reading of their work together.

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February 9, 2015

Kaffeeklatches, Fan Tables, and Fun at Boskone

Two long-time favorites at Boskone are the Kaffeeklatches and the Fan Tables. Be sure to check out both and enjoy your time at Boskone. We’re looking forward to seeing you there!

Kaffeeklatches

B52Kaffeeklatsch

Kaffeeklatsches provide a wonderful opportunity to join your favorite new or returning program participants over coffee, tea, or soda for an informal roundtable discussion. Drinks are available in the Con Suite.

Each kaffeeklatch is 50 minutes in length and takes place in the Galleria on the raised platform at the back of the room.

Attendance is limited. Sign-up is required at Program Ops in the Galleria to secure your seat at the table. Sign-up sheets are available the day before the Saturday and Sunday kaffeeklatsches. However, the Friday kaffeeklatch sign-up sheets are available at the opening of the convention.

Schedule

Friday         
4:00 PM     Jordan Hamessley, Lawrence Schoen
5:00 PM     Jeff Bohnhoff, Vincent O’Neil
6:00 PM     Max Gladstone, Neil Clarke & Kate Baker

Saturday     
10:00 AM   Dana Cameron, Charles Lang & Wendy Snow-Lang
11:00 AM   Steven Brust, Steven Kelner & Leigh Perry (Tony Kelner)
12:00 PM   Joan Slonczewski, Andrea Hairston
1:00 PM     Charles Stross, Bob Eggleton
2:00 PM     Guy Consolmagno, Michael Swanwick
3:00 PM     Elizabeth Bear & Scott Lynch, Jo Walton
4:00 PM     Walter Jon Williams, Beth Meacham
5:00 PM     Walter Hunt, Myke Cole

Sunday        
10:00 AM   David Clements, Bruce Coville
11:00 AM   Ginjer Buchanan, Mur Lafferty
12:00 PM   John Langan, Jack Haringa
1:00 PM     Patrick & Teresa Nielsen Hayden
2:00 PM     Karl Schroeder


Fan Tables

Fan Tables are a great way to learn about upcoming Worldcons and Worldcon bids as well as other local conventions and groups. The people at the Boskone Fan Tables are waiting to talk to you, on the lower level, just outside the Galleria. Be sure to stop by and say hello.

Here is a list of the Fan Tables that are currently confirmed. You can find out more about the Fan Tables on Boskone’s website.

ConCertino The Northeast Filk Music Convention

June 19 — 21, 2015

DC17 Worldcon Bid

Washington, DC Worldcon Bid

Dublin in 2019 Worldcon Bid

Dublin2019 Worldcon Bid

Helsinki in 2017 Worldcon Bid 

Helsinki 2017 Worldcon Bid

MidAmeriCon II 2016 Worldcon

Worldcon |Kansas City, MO | August 17-21 2016

Montreal in 2017 Worldcon Bid

Montreal2017
Montreal 2017 Worldcon Bid

 Sasquan 2015 Worldcon

Sasquan
Worldcon | Spokane, Washington, USA | August 19-23, 2015

Star Trek: New Voyages/Phase II Fan Club

Star Trek: New Voyages/Phase II Fan Club

Register for Boskone today. Join us February 13-15, 2015

Register for Boskone!

Full Weekend Rates:

  • Adult rate: $60
  • College student rate: $40
  • K-12 student rate: $25

Day Rates:

  • Friday: $20
  • Saturday: $40
  • Sunday: $20
February 8, 2015

Get the Boskone 52 Program: Booklet, Grid & Ap

Get with the Boskone 52 program! The program was published online in mid January, but now we have a variety of other program tools for you to use when choosing what to attend and when to attend it. Here’s a list of the options so that you can choose what is right for you.

Bur sure to check out the fantastic evening programming on both Friday and Saturday nights. We’ll see you there!


Boskone Program Website

B52-Program-WebsiteReference the complete program for Boskone 52 on the website!


Pocket Program PDF

B52 Program Font CoverThe PDF of the Pocket program is now available!

Of course, we’ll have printed copies of the Boskone 52 Pocket Program for you to pickup, mark up, and carry around with you at the convention.

However, to get you started, you’re welcome to download a copy of the new Pocket Program PDF.

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Program Grid

B52PGridImageFor those of you who prefer not to carry around the printed Pocket Program, the Program Grid for Boskone 52 is now available as a PDF.

It’s a nice visual way to see what to attend and when.


Program Ap

Boskone 52 Program Ap by KonOpasBe sure to bookmark the Boskone 52 Program Application (designed by KonOpas for your smartphone, tablet or computer. This schedule will be continually updated as things change.

Many thanks to Eemeli Aro, Henry Balen, Peter Olszowka, Sharon Sbarsky, Alice Lewis & Tim Szczesuil for making this happen!

[Boskone 52 Program Ap by KonOpas.]


Register for Boskone today.

February 7, 2015

Mini Interviews: Bill Campbell, Neil Clarke, Carrie Cuinn

With less than a week until Boskone begins, we bring you the last of our Mini Interviews. However, this is just a taste of what’s to come next weekend. We hope you have enjoyed the interviews and this opportunity to get to know a bunch of our program participants who will be attending Boskone this year. It has been our pleasure to introduce them to you. And now, for our final batch of interviewees. Help us welcome Bill Campbell, Neil Clarke, and Carrie Cuinn. We look forward to seeing each of them and each of you at Boskone 52!

Bill Campbell

Bill Campbell is the author of Sunshine Patriots, My Booty Novel, and Pop Culture: Politics, Puns, “Poohbutt” from a Liberal Stay-at-Home Dad and Koontown Killing Kaper. Along with Edward Austin Hall, he co-edited the groundbreaking anthology, Mothership: Tales from Afrofuturism and Beyond. Campbell lives in Washington, DC, where he spends his time with his family, helps produce audio books for the blind, and helms Rosarium Publishing. For more information, visit Bill’s website, follow him on Twitter @bcampbellauthor, and friend him on Facebook. What are you looking forward to at Boskone? Well, this will be my first Boskone, and what I’m really looking forward to is the sense of envy I’ll have during the whole thing. Looking over the program, there are a lot of writers I’ve enjoyed or heard great things about. I’d like to hear them speak, but I’ll be in the Dealer Room most of the time. Maybe they’ll take pity on me and drop by to say Hello. What are you working on now? What excites or challenges you about this project? Wow, good question. Well, as a publisher, I’m working on all of Rosarium’s releases. We’ve kind of exploded this past year and have a lot of books and comics coming out this year. It’s keeping me pretty busy. As an editor, I’m working with Nisi Shawl to finish up Stories for Chip, the anthology dedicated to Samuel R. Delany, and I’m also working with John Jennings and Jason Rodriguez for our benefit comic book anthology, APB: Artists Against Police Brutality. As a writer, I’m working on a comic book with the immensely talented, Ashley Woods called Baaad Muthaz, it’s a spaceploitation about a group of women who are pirates, smugglers, and a James Brown revival band. The main challenge in all of these projects is getting sleep. How would you describe your work to people who might be unfamiliar with you? Not for the feint-of-heart. But pretty damned funny.

Neil Clarke

Neil Clarke is the Editor-in-Chief and Publisher of Clarkesworld Magazine (clarkesworldmagazine.com). His work at Clarkesworld has resulted in countless hours of enjoyment, three Hugo Awards for Best Semiprozine and four World Fantasy Award nominations. He’s also a three-time Hugo Nominee for Best Editor (Short Form). In 2012, Neil suffered a near-fatal “widow-maker” heart attack which led to the installation of a defibrillator and a new life as a cyborg. Inspired by these events, he took on his first non-Clarkesworld editing project, Upgraded, an all-original anthology of cyborg stories published earlier this year. He currently lives in NJ with his wife and two sons. For more information, visit Neil’s website, follow him on Twitter @clarkesworld, and friend him on Facebook. What are you looking forward to at Boskone? It takes something special to get me to head north in the winter. I enjoy the panels, but for me Boskone is more about the people than anything else. What event or experience stands out as one of those ‘defining moments’ that shaped who you are today? The most recent thing would have to be my heart attack at Readercon two and a half years ago. There’s nothing like a brush with death to remind you what’s important in life. It shapes everything I’ve done since. What are you working on now? What excites or challenges you about this project? I’m still working on Clarkesworld Magazine (clarkesworldmagazine.com). Our hundredth issue was published in January and I’m looking forward to what adventures the next hundred will bring. It never gets boring. For example, we’ve recently partnered with Storycom in China to start regularly publishing Chinese translations in each issue. It took us months to work out the logistics, but I’m really excited to have the opportunity to introduce English-speaking audiences to these works. The response from our readers has been amazing and now we have plans to expand those efforts to other languages as well.

Carrie Cuinn

Carrie Cuinn is an author, editor, bibliophile, modernist, and geek. Her work often references and subverts classic science fiction, blending SF tropes with feminism, anti-colonialism, hard science, myth, magic, poetry, and more. Recent stories can be found at Unlikely Stories, Daily Science Fiction, Chaosium, and in her latest collection, Women and Other Constructs (June 2013). She founded Dagan Books, Ltd. in 2010, publishing SF/F anthologies, novellas, and Lakeside Circus, a quarterly magazine of very short fiction. In her spare time she listens to music, watches indie films, cooks everything, reads voraciously, and sometimes gets enough sleep. Visit Carrie’s website, follow her on Twitter @CarrieCuinn, and friend her on Facebook. What is it that you enjoy most about Boskone? For me, Boskone is a perfect mix of pop culture and fandom combined with intelligent and thought-provoking literary panels and discussions. I’ll meet fans that often feel more comfortable approaching me — or any of the other guests and panelists — than they seem to be at other conventions. I can see friends, be social, and connect with folks I may not see again for another year. At the same time, a large percentage of the attendees are fellow professionals, so even when we’re enjoying a relaxing moment, we tend to talk shop. I get a lot out of those conversations, especially from writers who’ve been in the business much longer than I have. I love being able to share information and stories with the audience during the panels I’m on, and I have learned something new from each one of those panels as well. In short, it’s entertaining enough that I know I’ll have a great time, and still professional enough that I know it won’t feel like a vacation, or worse (a waste of time). What are you working on now? What excites or challenges you about this project? I have several short stories and poems that I hope to find a home for this year, and as someone who considers themselves more of a short story writer than anything else, I think I’ll always be working on a new story idea or revising an older one until I’m happy with it. For me, the most challenging project I’ve committed to this year is the non-fiction book about the history of printing presses. It’s an extension of my academic work, and it’s going to require a lot more research before I’ve got a good rough draft, but it’s exciting too because I have a chance to share the personal stories of the people who propelled what I consider to be humanity’s greatest technological achievement. I get to highlight the contributions of artisans who developed the press, and moveable type, long before Gutenberg put his name on it. I get to educate readers about the vital roles played by women, and by people of color, in not only developing the tech but also protecting the early presses, and advancing the cause of the printed word. If you could recommend a book to your teenage-self, what book would you recommend? Why did you pick that book? Nathan Ballingrud’s North American Lake Monsters. My teenage self read a lot of horror, especially Stephen King and Clive Barker. From them I learned important lessons about telling entertaining stories, about going from point A to point B to point C and still having the reader care about the story by the time you get there. But Ballingrud would have taught me about style. He would have taught me that the sort of story I most love to tell — where there’s far more going on than the central conceit, and not all of it gets explained by the time the end languidly but definitively rolls around — is a damn fine way of storytelling. If I’d known that, I could have spent more time being myself (as a writer), even when that only makes sense to me.

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Register for Boskone today. Join us February 13-15, 2015

Register for Boskone!Registration Rates:

  • Adult rate: $60
  • College student rate: $40
  • K-12 student rate: $25
  • Friday: $20; Saturday: $40; Sunday: $20
February 4, 2015

Mini Interviews: Valerie Frankel, Steven Sawicki, and Marshall Ryan Maresca

Boskone draws participants from far and wide and this year’s convention is no different. From California to New York to Texas, take a peek at Mini Interviews from a few of our traveling friends.

Valerie Frankel

Valerie Estelle Frankel has won a Dream Realm Award, an Indie Excellence Award, and a USA Book News National Best Book Award for her Henry Potty parodies. She’s the author of over 20 books on pop culture since 2012, including From Girl to Goddess: The Heroine’s Journey in Myth and Legend, Buffy and the Heroine’s Journey, Winning the Game of Thrones, Katniss the Cattail: A Guide to Names and Symbols in The Hunger Games, An Unexpected Parody, Teaching with Harry Potter, Joss Whedon’s Names, Sherlock: Every Canon Reference You May Have Missed in BBC’s Series 1-3, and Doctor Who – The What, Where, and How. Come explore her latest at VEFrankel.com. Check out Valerie’s blog, follow her on Facebook or follow her on Twitter @valeriefrankel.

What is it that you enjoy most about Boskone?

I have never been to Boskone. However, I have been to Baycon, Loscon, and other local sf and f cons put on by the fan groups so everyone can discuss and celebrate the works out there, from classic to recent. They’re always a blast. I love chatting with both the famous authors and the fans who love the same things I do.

What are you working on now? What excites or challenges you about this project?

Oh WAAAAY too many. I’m writing two different Doctor Who guides (should be done any minute) and editing two different anthologies of essays on Joss Whedon. Plus I have an Outlander and Myth book that may come back from one publisher any minute, and another on themes in Whedon that may ALSO come back for a DIFFERENT publisher any minute. And I’m writing a presentation on Game of Thrones. And producing audio books of some of my more popular works. And distributing some new ebook samplers. As for challenges, keeping it all straight and making sure everyone gets their questions and requests dealt with. All this ends up feeling like a squash match—things fly at my head, I serve them back, they fly at my head again. So it goes…

From a fan perspective, what new book, film, TV show, or comic are you most looking forward to seeing/reading?

Avengers 2 is likely going to be a good one—everyone has high hopes from a great combination of writers, actors, and creators. Plus I need to write an Avengers book by then that’s been a long time formulating. Not so sure about Ant Man…we’re never getting a Black Widow film, are we?

Steven Sawicki

Steven Sawicki is a writer, reviewer, screenplay writer, producer, race car driver who has been professionally involved in SF and fantasy for more than 25 years. Visit Steven’s website or follow him on Twitter @Steven_Sawicki.

How would you describe your work to people who might be unfamiliar with you?

Most of my work deals with perceptions of reality.  i think we all see things a big differently. This comes out most in my Damn Aliens work–both the novellas and the reviews they do for Fantastic Stories fo the Imagination online.

From a fan perspective, what new book, film, TV show, or comic are you most looking forward to seeing/reading?

I’m really waiting for a hard science fiction book or movie.  I’d love to see Asimov’s Foundation done or something similar.

What are you looking forward to at Boskone?

Definitely the people who attend. It’s the only reason for going.

Marshall Ryan Maresca

Marshall Ryan Maresca is a fantasy and science-fiction writer, as well as a playwright, living in South Austin with his wife and son. His first two novels, The Thorn of Dentonhill and A Murder of Mages will be released by DAW Books in 2015. His work also appeared in Norton Anthology of Hint Fiction, in Rick Klaw’s anthology Rayguns Over Texas. He also has had several short plays produced and has worked as a stage actor, a theatrical director and an amateur chef. He is represented by Mike Kabongo of the Onyxhawke Agency. Visit Ryan’s website or follow him on Twitter @marshallmaresca.

What are you looking forward to at Boskone?

The big thing, for me personally, is this will be the first conference I’ll be attending after Thorn of Dentonhill is released. So that’s going to be a real thrill. Beyond that, Boskone has an incredible line-up of participants this year, and I’m quite excited to be a part of it.

What are you working on now? What excites or challenges you about this project?

Right now I’ve got quite a few things in different stages of development. The big thing I’m working on is the sequel to A Murder of Mages,which is giving me the opportunity to do macro-level worldbuilding on a micro scale. The city of Maradaine is very cosmopolitan, and it’s filled with cultural enclaves from different parts of the world. So the big challenge is showing how my protagonists navigate the complexities of these different cultures right up against each other, without it just becoming a Worldbuilding Travelogue.

How would you describe your work to people who might be unfamiliar with you?

Thorn of Dentonhill, and the follow-up novel A Murder of Mages, are both mixes of high fantasy and urban fantasy. They’ve got the deep, epic secondary worldbuilding of high fantasy with the street-level focus of urban. Thorn involves a magic student who becomes a vigilante to wage a one-man war against a drug lord, and Murder follows two constabulary inspectors as the work to solve a series of ritualized murders.

February 1, 2015

Check Out the Special Features in Boskone 52’s Program

Part of the fun in putting together the program for a science fiction and fantasy convention like Boskone is finding the intersections between spec fic literature and notable dates on the calendar that inspire interesting topics for discussion. We are excited about these upcoming discussions! You still have time to pick up your Boskone membership online, and get ready for some great panels. We’ll see you there!

Friday13thFriday the 13th!

Friday, 8:00 PM
Friday the 13th: When Sequels Run Amok
On Friday, March 13, 2015, the 13th movie in the Friday the 13th franchise will be released. As a genre, horror movies seem prone to extended franchises. (Okay, so Friday the 13th falls far short of the 23 James Bond movies.) Still, on this ominous Friday the 13th, we pause to consider this likewise significant date and the release of the cursed-number movie and wonder when — and whether — enough is too much for this and other horror movie franchises?
Jack M. Haringa (M), Christopher Golden, Paul G. Tremblay, Mallory O’Meara

Valentine’s Day

ValentinesDaySaturday, 11:00 AM
Mythic Love and Epic Romance
Some of the greatest love stories come from ancient mythology, such as Psyche and Cupid or Odysseus and Penelope. However, great love stories that span the fantastic and (in some cases) the centuries also come in more modern tales, featuring couples such as Sarah Connor and Kyle Reese, Bella and Edward, Wesley and Buttercup, Dr. Frankenstein and Elizabeth, and Count Dracula and Mina. What do these tales of love and romance tell us about love? What do these epic love stories tell us about ourselves? And why are we drawn to them?
Darlene Marshall (M), Debra Doyle, Max Gladstone, Chris Jackson, Ada Palmer

Saturday, 2:00 PM
Paranormal Romance Before It Was Cool
Paranormal romance is one of today’s hottest genres, but it wasn’t always that way. Panelists discuss the origins and early works that built the foundation for today’s paranormal romance genre. What are some of the foundational works? What and who should you be reading from the early days of paranormal romance? Why did it take off like it did?
Leigh Perry (M), Melissa Marr, Darlene Marshall, Carrie Vaughn

Literary Anniversaries

Celebrating its 275th anniversary, Beauty and the Beast (HTML*) was originally published in 1740 by French author Gabrielle-Suzanne Barbot de Villeneuve.

Friday, 3:00 PM (free to public)
Beauty and the Beast
Disney adapted “Beauty and the Beast” into an animated film 25 years ago, but where did this age-old romantic story begin? What other stories of mythic love and romance have survived the ages? Are these old fairytales and myths derived from tales of “Cupid and Psyche” or “East of the Sun/West of the Moon?”
Priscilla Olson (M), Chris Jackson, Peadar Ó Guilín, Jane Yolen, Greer Gilman

Celebrating its 150th anniversary, From the Earth to the Moon (HTML) was originally published in 1865 by French author Jules Gabriel Verne.

Saturday, 10:00 AM
From the Earth to the Moon — and Beyond!
A hundred and fifty years ago, Jules Verne’s From the Earth to the Moon surveyed the difficulties of building a giant space gun to propel three people to Luna. Fast-forward to today, when NASA is shooting to land people on Mars by 2035. Panelists discuss the challenging realities of space exploration — from getting off the ground to getting there to getting home.
Jordin T. Kare (M), Guy Consolmagno, Jeff Hecht, Walter H. Hunt, Ian Randal Strock

Celebrating its 50th anniversary, Dune was originally published in 1965 by Frank Herbert.

Saturday, 1:00 PM
Dune — 50 Years later
Frank Herbert’s Dune, published in 1955, was an epic science fiction saga that won the Hugo Award and the Nebula Award in 1966. Now, 50 years after its publication, we look back at the legacy left by Frank Herbert and his unique vision of a feudal interstellar society that was rocked by political machinations, contentious religious orders, and a very lucrative spice trade — and giant worms! How has this seminal work held up over time? What place might it take in the science fiction hall of fame? Panelists also discuss the impact that Dune has had on their own work as well as on the development of science and science fiction.
Kenneth Schneyer (M), Scott Lynch, Beth Meacham, Joan Slonczewski, Walter Jon Williams, Karl Schroeder

Celebrating its 25th anniversary, Good Omens was originally published in 1990 by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman.

Saturday, 2:00 PM
25 More Years of Good Omens
Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman’s novel Good Omens has had 25 years of success. Now there is talk again that a six-part TV series is in development. What will it take to bring the book to the small screen? Are we missing out on a big-screen experience? And how did the BBC do with the recent radio play? How might the adaptation of the novel deviate, or what areas might it more fully develop? Are there good omens for this project happening in other media?
Vincent O’Neil (M), Ellen Asher, Mur Lafferty, Darrell Schweitzer

Celebrating its 100th anniversary, The Metamorphosis (HTML*) was originally published in 1915 by Franz Kafka.

Saturday, 4:00 PM
The Children of Metamorphosis
A hundred years ago, Gregor Samsa awoke from uneasy dreams to find himself transformed into a gigantic dung beetle. Franz Kafka was a fairly obscure writer at the time, but his fiction has since helped to transform literature as it challenged preconceptions about what could be done and how it might be done. What other stories of personal “metamorphosis” have since been published that echo or reflect Kafka’s masterpieces? Panelists discuss “Metamorphosis” (1915), Franz Kafka as an author, and his literary legacy.
James Patrick Kelly (M), F. Brett Cox, Sarah Langan, John Langan, Darrell Schweitzer

Based on Dune by Frank Herbert, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary (see above).

Saturday, 10:00 PM
The Jodorowsky Effect
Alejandro Jodorowsky, a Chilean filmmaker, author, and surrealist, influenced some of the greatest cult SF/F works of the last 60 years. He directed the first midnight cult film (El Topo), his comic series The Incal inspired The Fifth Element, and he spearheaded a failed effort to film Dune — “the greatest SF movie never made.” Jodorowsky’s production art for Dune inspired Star Wars, Alien, Heavy Metal, Raiders of the Lost Ark, and others. His other work is also critically acclaimed and hugely influential. Panelists discuss Jodorowsky’s legacy, his “Psychomagical Realism, ” and his influence on contemporary work.
Paul Di Filippo (M), Carrie Cuinn, Daniel M. Kimmel, Don Pizarro, Steven Sawicki


gutenberg*Links to an HTML file that is published as part of the Project Gutenberg database.

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 Click Here to Register for Boskone today!

January 30, 2015

Join Us for the Multi-Author Book Party at Boskone!

We’re very excited to share that the Multi-Author Book Party at Boskone is returning for a second year! It’s going to be a lot of fun with some great authors and a bunch of new books to celebrate, and we hope you’ll be there to join us for a fantastic event.

Multi-Author Book Party at Boskone
Date: February 14, 2015
Event Time: 6:30-7:50 pm
Location: Galleria

Mark your Boskone schedules now for a fun event with some great authors and exciting books!

B52-BookParty

Participating Authors Include:

  • Ken Altabef — Alaana’s Way: The Calling
  • E.C. Ambrose (Elaine Isaak) — Elisha Magus: Book Two of the Dark Apostle
  • M L Brennan — Tainted Blood
  • LJ Cohen — Time and Tithe
  • Valerie Estelle Frankel — Joss Whedon’s Names
  • Betsy Grant — Adventures of Point-Man Palmer in Vietnam
  • Walter H. Hunt — Elements of Mind
  • Toni L.P. Kelner (Leigh Perry) — Dead But Not Forgotten: Stories from the World of Sookie Stackhouse(editors, Charlaine Harris and Toni L.P. Kelner); and The Skeleton Takes a Bow
  • Ken Liu — The Grace of Kings
  • Marshall Ryan Maresca — The Thorn of Dentonhill
  • Henry V. O’Neil — Glory Main and Orphan Brigade: Books One and Two of the Sim War
  • Ammi-Joan Paquette — Princess Juniper of the Hourglass
  • Roberta Rogow — Mayhem in Manatas
  • Lauren M. Roy — Grave Matters
  • Darrell Schweitzer — The Emperor of the Ancient World
  • D. Lynn Smith — Gates of Midnight, Issue #2 Chosen
  • Erin Underwood — Geek Theater
  • Jo Walton — The Just City

Boskone’s Multi-Author Book Party will take place in the Galleria. Authors will have their new books, swag and knickknacks on hand to celebrate their new releases with fans and friends alike. Come check out these awesome new books and meet the authors before heading off to your next event!TiptreeAwards

And no party is a party without cake, or at least cupcakes! So, in true fandom style, we’re also holding a “spec fic cupcake bake sale” run by B. Diane Martin to benefit the Tiptree Awards. These amazing cupcakes are handmade and donated by Joanna and Frederic Norton. Here’s a picture taken by Seanan Maguire of some of the Norton’s cupcakes from last year (2014). They were a real hit!

Note: All donations received from the Tiptree Bake Sale will be sent to the  James Tiptree, Jr. Award Council as donations to help support their non-profit organization.

Boskone2014-Cupcakes
Cupcakes for the Tiptree Awards Bake Sale

We are looking to making this a fun and festive event for everyone. Please share this post with your friends and other fans who would enjoy hanging out and chatting with some amazing authors about their new books!

… and don’t forget to mention the cupcakes!

Congratulations to all of our authors and their new books!

Enjoy! Celebrate! Read!

at Boskone’s Multi-Author Book Party.

 Click Here to Register for Boskone today!

January 28, 2015

Mini Interviews Chris Golden, Mallory O’Meara, and Darrell Schweitzer

Boskone’s appreciation of science fiction and fantasy also expands to horror fiction, including his year’s Official Artists, Charles Lang and Wendy Snow-Lang,  known for horror illustration as well as science fiction illustration. Today’s Mini Interviews feature horror aficionados Christopher Golden, Mallory O’Meara, and Darrell Schweitzer who often wander through shadows and dark spaces within speculative fiction. Check out what they’re looking forward to in 2015.

Christopher Golden

Christopher Golden is the New York Times bestselling, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of such novels as Of Saints and Shadows, Strangewood and Snowblind. His novel with Mike Mignola, Baltimore, or, The Steadfast Tin Soldier and the Vampire, was the launching pad for the Eisner Award-nominated comic book series, Baltimore. As an editor, he has worked on the short story anthologies The New Dead and Dark Duets, among others, and has also written and co-written comic books, video games, screenplays, and a network television pilot. Golden was born and raised in Massachusetts, where he still lives with his family. Visit Chris’s website, like him on Facebook , or follow him on Twitter @ChristophGolden.

How would you describe your work to people who might be unfamiliar with you?

I write what inspires me, from horror (SNOWBLIND) to SF thriller (June 2015’s TIN MEN) to comics (BALTIMORE) and graphic novels (CEMETERY GIRL with Charlaine Harris). I’m incredibly fortunate to be able to work across genres and mediums, and I never forget how fortunate.

From a fan perspective, what new book, film, TV show, or comic are you most looking forward to seeing/reading?

I’m giddy with anticipation for Benedict Cumberbatch in DOCTOR STRANGE. If I could go back in time and tell my twelve year old self that one day these movies would be made and they would be amazing…twelve year old me would never believe it. Book-wise, I’m lucky to have read and blurbed several amazing 2015 releases that I’m thrilled for other people to read, including Tim Lebbon’s THE SILENCE, Pierce Brown’s GOLDEN SON, and Naomi Novik’s UPROOTED.

What is it that you enjoy most about Boskone?

Boskone has so much to recommend it that I can’t name just one thing. I love the dealer’s room and the art show, love the kaffeeklatsches that I’ve taken part in and just wandering, bumping into people. But overall, Boskone’s panels are its best feature. They are routinely the most interesting and in-depth panels at any convention I attend.


Mallory O’Meara

Captain of the Arkham Horror Book Club, producer with Dark Dunes Productions, and cohost of the Miskatonic Musings podcast, Mallory O’Meara is a New England native and unashamed book sniffer. Visit Mallory’s website, friend her on Facebook, follow her on Tumblr or follow her on Twitter @sexoskeleton.

How would you describe your work to people who might be unfamiliar with you?

I produce films as part of the Dark Dunes Productions team – a company dedicated to creating original horror, sci-fi and fantasy films that employ practical – non-computer-generated – special effects to tell a story. We specifically focus on monsters, people in make-up and creature suits, and puppets – our passion!

What are you working on now? What excites or challenges you about this project?

The film I am currently producing with Dark Dunes Productions is called Yamasong: March of the Hollows and is an all practical puppetry film with an original story inspired by Japanese mythology. Think “The Dark Crystal” meets “Princess Mononoke”. It’s an extremely exciting project and will be the first major, feature-length puppet film made in the U.S. since “”Team America”” came out over ten years ago (non-Muppet, that is). We are incredibly thrilled to bring the world of puppetry to new
audiences.

What are you looking forward to at Boskone?

I am looking forward to Boskone for the variety of people, both fans and professionals, that it attracts. It’s a smoothly-run con at a great venue with relevant and interesting paneling – you can’t go wrong!

dschweitzerDarrell Schweitzer

Author of The Mask of the Sorcerer, the Shattered Goddess, etc. and about 300 stories. Most recent collection, The Emperor of the Ancient World. Former co-editor of Weird Tales. Active anthologist.

How would you describe your work to people who might be unfamiliar with you?

I would describe my work as camped out right on the fantasy/horror borderland, dark more often than not, sometimes in contemporary settings, sometimes in never-neverland. Of late I have been writing an increasing number of explicitly, if hopefully subtly Lovecraftian stories. I can be funny too. I believe my “Kvetchula” is still the leading Jewish vampire story ever written by a Gentile. Right now I am trying to write a story for Joshi’s BLACK WINGS 5.

From a fan perspective, what new book, film, TV show, or comic are you most looking forward to seeing/reading?

I am always looking forward to James Morrow’s next novel, whatever it is.

What are you looking forward to at Boskone?

There’s so much to enjoy about Boskone it’s hard to know where to begin. I do not enjoy the weather. Boskone is cold and far away, but it is always worth going to and I wouldn’t miss it. I appreciate the quality of the programming, and the level of the “conversation” which makes up the entire convention. It is open to everyone, and to every point of view, but maintains a certain level of intelligence. I often find that if my panel ideas are deemed too “intellectual” for some conventions, I can always pass them on to Boskone, where they run without difficulty.I appreciate, too, that Boskone doesn’t take itself too seriously. The musicals and theatrical productions, such as last year’s dramatic reading of WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE’S STAR WARS help lighten the tone.