Tag Archive: john c. wright

Oh, and About the Wright Dust-Up

At the end of the day, with the Wright fiasco and his sudden withdrawal into a shell of his own making after someone posted links to his screed on Wikipedia and it stuck, pulling his posts down after him, I can only say:

at first ai was like  ...an den i lold

And because my blog is also turning into my personal web scrapbook, here is Catherynne M. Valente’s wonderful open letter. Oh, and also Hal Duncan’s wonderful open letter. And Jeff VanderMeer’s post where I first heard of all this.

(Previously at the beginning of this blog post:)

I said over at Tor.com in a comment on Jason Henninger’s post about outrage and artists that I would drop an author who said/did things that trigger me. For me, it’s mental self-preservation until I get to the day when I no longer have that hair-trigger in my head.

What does trigger PTSD for me is an odd thing; finding out that an author abused their own children would do it, but even an author who expresses the wish that, for instance, “all Asian women should be rounded up as sex slaves to white males”1, doesn’t.

People actually doing certain things, on the other hand, are what get me. Actually committing genocide, beating wives, abusing children in any way…. those are the lines for me in the end.

I guess it comes down to the fact that my father was what can only be described as libertarianism taken to an extreme with an extra strong dose of every ‘-ist’ you can think of, but it was the abuse that stuck out in my mind. The rest was a somewhat secondary concern.

I’m not saying that everybody should think like I do, nor am I saying that this is the best way to react to such things, nor am I saying there is anything good and admirable here, nor am I even saying that actions “mean” more than words, nor am I saying that words cannot hurt people. (My father’s emotional abuse was, in some ways, worse than his physical abuse.)

I need to get back into making ebooks. It’s been a crazy couple of weeks.

  1. No one has said this that I know of, though there are people who have a pattern in their work that all but screams this when looked at as a whole. []

Review at Tor.com: Federations

Federations

To boldly go where none have gone before.

To explore new worlds and encounter new civilizations.

To war, love, hate, seek justice and make peace in the depths of space and on the fringes of time.

Also, there is a hamster.

These are the stories of Federations, edited by John Joseph Adams and written by 23 writers.

Continue reading…

Watching the Skies: Tor eBook watch for 7/31, part 2

While we’re all waiting for the various eBook deals for Tor to pass, here’s some Kindle material from the “free e-book bonanza” authors that’s available right now.

Part 1 is here. Part 3 comes tomorrow. Meanwhile, here’s part 2.

David Drake (Lord of the Isles)
Jane Lindskold (Through Wolf’s Eyes)
Harry Turtledove (The Disunited States of America)
Karl Schroeder (Sun of Suns)
  • Permanence – Stand-alone science fiction novel
  • Special: Ventus – free directly from Karl Schroeder’s site
Peter Watts (Starfish)
John C. Wright (Orphans of Chaos)

Fun Facts About Tor’s Free eBooks Authors, Part 2


Photography: tvol

More about some of the authors featured at Tor’s Freebies Bonanza. Here was part 1.

Onwards…

Reiffen’s Choice – Fantasy – Book 1 of a Series
by S. C. Butler

I don’t know if he likes bears in real life, but he does like writing about shape-shifting ones. Also, he writes a monthly column for SF Novelists, with entries like Why I Like Jane Austen and E.E. “Doc” Smith.

Sun of Suns – Science Fiction – Book 1 of a Series
by Karl Schroeder

Among other things (like being a cool user of Plone), he’s involved with technological foresight work for the Canadian government.
You can also get another novel of his, Ventus, for free at his website.

Four and Twenty Blackbirds – Alternate History – Book 1 of a Series
by Cherie Priest

Gal blogs a lot; hooray for writers-what-are-bloggers! And also she’s got a really good About page, as well as columns over at SF Novelists.

Spirit Gate – Fantasy – Book 1 of a Series
by Kate Elliott

Here’s another site of hers with great articles related to writing. She’s also been featured on John Scalzi’s The Big Idea series.

Starfish – Science Fiction – Book 1 of a Series
by Peter Watts

He knows cool stuff about marine animals! His older novels and short stories are available on his site for download under the Creative Commons License. PDFs are available for all, and MobiPocket for the books.

Touch of Evil – Fantasy – Book 1 of Series
by C. T. Adams and Cathy Clamp

A dynamic duo in paranormal romance, it’s rare that two authors can work in tandem so well. (They each have also published separately.) Cathy also wrote a list of articles about writing.

A Shadow in Summer – Fantasy – Book 1 of a Series
by Daniel Abraham

His short story, The Cambist and Lord Iron, is 2008 Hugo nominee. He has a great deal to say about fiction and writing.

Orphans of Chaos – Fantasy – Book 1 of a Series
by John C. Wright

His blog is quite fun to read and I highly recommend it. Bloggers try not to bore; he doesn’t seem to have that problem.

The authors of books 18 – 24 will be covered tomorrow.

And now I shall go cuddle with my Kindle.