In the News: The Obama Story, Larsson’s Lady Friend

From TNR: Did Oprah get Dickens all wrong?

Laura Miller on why we love consuming literary clichés.

Narrative problem? Call in the experts: Margaret Atwood and Sam Lipsyte workshop President Obama’s political storyline.

Seven Stories Press will publish a memoir by Stieg Larsson’s life-partner, Eva Gabrielsson.

For sale: an orange Mini Cooper filled with seventy-five Penguin books and a dashboard signed by Garrison Keillor, Geraldine Brooks, Michael Pollan, and Sue Monk Kidd.

What Lord Byron can teach us about literary celebrity.

Former NPR news analyst Juan Williams will write about free speech in the first of two books to be published by Random House’s Crown imprint.

Rousing verse: do poets belong on the front lines or the sidelines of political protests?

Elaine Showalter reviews Susan Cheever’s new biography of Louisa May Alcott.

Posted on Dec 16th, 2010 by Eileen Reynolds in Dickens, Elaine Showalter, Eva Gabrielsson, In the News, Juan Williams, Lord Byron, Louisa May Alcott, Margaret Atwood, NPR, Obama, Oprah's Book Club, Penguin, Sam Lipsyte, Seven Stories Press, Stieg Larsson, Susan Cheever, cars, free speech, narratives, politics

Winding the Mainspring

The Antikythera mechanism (main fragment) via Marsyas from Wikipedia

Antikythera mechanism fragment via Marsyas from Wikipedia

By Jay Lake

Mainspring dropped into my lap fully formed. At least in a sense. Book ninjas did not deliver the manuscript to my desk all complete and nicely formatted, of course. Doing that is the work of any novelist. But the idea, now there is another story.

I’ve always been fascinated by clockwork, machines, lost technology. The Antikythera mechanism is one of the coolest things I’d ever heard of. The orreries of the eighteenth century are marvels of design and execution.

Such hubris, to render the universe in a handful of gears and bright brass balls. Forward in time we have the Babbage engine and the complex world of fine watchmaking. Like many people, I feel a magpie attraction to things which fit together, slide round one another, the tiny gears and giant cogs of life.

Grand orrery in Putnam Gallery via Ragesoss from Wikipedia

Grand orrery in Putnam Gallery via Ragesoss from Wikipedia

These days, all that has gone from a metaphor of precision to a metaphor for the supposed unrelenting drudgery of modern times. Charlie Chaplin said it best, perhaps.

So here I have gears in my head, and a sense of them in the world at large. And here I am at the Oregon Coast Professional Writers’ Workshop, an irregular series of very intense programs put on by Kristine Kathryn Rusch and Dean Wesley Smith, with an assist from Loren Coleman and a rotating cast of peripatetic industry pros. Kris and Dean spent a day hammering book proposals into our heads, then told us to produce two proposals overnight, for discussion and review.

Being me, I produced six. Wrote each of them in a different way, too. Mainspring was one of those six. All the gears in my head, and two millennia of mechanical history, coalesced as one forty-five minute stretch of writing out of an evening’s fevered work.

It was all there right at the beginning—Hethor, the Wall, the gears of heaven. Making it work was another issue entirely. When it came time to write the novel, I read books on the history of clockmaking, timekeeping, calendars. From them I salted the names of minor characters with the great timekeepers and horologists of history. I consulted with an aerospace engineer as to how best to arrange the heavens. His response was mind-bogglingly complex, albeit gorgeous. Then I threw his advice away because reality is no excuse, especially when writing science fantasy. I bought a desktop miniglobe so I could trace Hethor’s journey and know which hand the African coast was on at any moment.

In other words, like any novel, the writing process was almost as epic as the story itself. But the idea was always there. What if Creation were real, the Renaissance conception of God the Watchmaker in place and to hand? Yet He Himself was absent? That would be the opposite of our world, where faith is a matter of, well, faith, and God is for the most part seen only by those looking for him. In my world, there are no atheists, only dissenters. And everything runs like the clockwork of proverbial wit.

Still, it all rises from the overread and overfed imagination of the child I was and the man I became. And that all came to me one night in a flash. Which I am convinced is how the best ideas work.

Mainspring (978-0-7653-5636-9, $7.99) is the first book in the Clockwork Earth series. The series continues with Escapement (978-0-7653-5637-6, $7.99) and Pinion (978-0-7653-2186-2, $7.99). Jay Lake can be found online at jaylake.com.

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From the December issue of Tor’s Steampunk newsletter. Sign up to receive our newsletter via email.

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Posted on Dec 15th, 2010 by torforge in Clockwork Earth, Jay Lake, Mainspring, Newsletter, Science Fiction, Steampunk, Tor steampunk newsletter

Tom Clancy’s penthouse digs get bigger

tom clancy ritz-carlton residences

I’d hate to play poker with Tom Clancy, who, based on his penthouse spending spree, seems to be an "all-in" type of guy.

The Baltimore Sun’s Jamie Smith Hopkins reported today that the novelist has increased the size of his home at the Ritz-Carlton Residences in Baltimore — from three penthouse condos to six. He bought the additional properties this fall for almost $2.2 million, a fraction of what he paid per square foot just last year. That increases his square footage from about 12,000 to just over 17,000.

Just how big is that? Jamie provided some interesting comparisons in her story and post on the Real Estate Wonk blog: It’s equivalent of seven average-sized new U.S. houses. And it’s big enough to hold a fire station with 12 trucks, an arena-league football field or a Las Vegas nightclub.

Based on my high school math skills, he would need 42,700 copies of his latest thriller, "Dead or Alive," to cover the floor of his manse.



Posted on Dec 15th, 2010 by Dave Rosenthal in Uncategorized

Golden Globe nominations for 2011: a bookish view

goden globe nominations alice in wonderland

The Golden Globe nominations for 2011 were released today, and they feature a number of literary adaptations, including "Alice in Wonderland."

"The King’s Speech" led all contenders with seven nominations, including best drama. Its the story of speech therapist Lionel Logue, who helped the tongue-tied Duke of York overcome his problems and become kingly material. To continue our seasonal festivities, I’ll give away a copy of the book by Mark Logue and Peter Conradi. For a chance to win, just leave a comment about your favorite to win best motion picture, drama, category: Black Swan, The Fighter, Inception, The King’s Speech or The Social Network.

Other bookish nominees include the HBO series "Boardwalk Empire," which was adapted from Nelson Johnson’s book of the same name. It’s up for best TV series, drama.

Nominees in the category for best TV movie or mini-series include "The Pacific," which drew from Eugene Sledge’s memoir "With the Old Breed" and Robert Leckie’s "Helmet for My Pillow." Nominee "Temple Grandin," drew from the memoir "Thinking in Pictures."



Posted on Dec 14th, 2010 by Dave Rosenthal in Uncategorized

Seventh Son e-book now available for $2.99

Seventh Son e-book by Orson Scott Card is currently on sale for only $2.99!*

About the book: American Library Association “Best Books for Young Adults”

From the author of Ender’s Game, an unforgettable story about young Alvin Maker: the seventh son of a seventh son. Born into an alternative frontier America where life is hard and folk magic is real, Alvin is gifted with the power. He must learn to use his gift wisely. But dark forces are arrayed against Alvin, and only a young girl with second sight can protect him.

Includes an excerpt of Orson Scott Card’s new novel, The Lost Gate!

*on sale for a limited time only

Filed under: News

Posted on Dec 13th, 2010 by torforge in Alvin Maker, Orson Scott Card, Seventh Son, Tor Books, ebook, news