Next up–Philcon 2011

I hope you will join myself, Gordon Linzner, Diane Weinstein, and many other members of the Space and Time staff at the 75th annual Philcon, which will be held at the Crowne Plaza in Cherry Hill, NJ on November 18-20th. As this is a big anniversary for the convention, they’re hosting big guests, including legendary artist Boris Vallejo and the always-entertaining Cory Doctorow. Tickets and hotel rooms are still available…and yes, there will be a Space and Time panel!

Blame It On The Rain

For the folks eagerly awaiting Issue #115 — and wondering where the hell it is already — I’m afraid the elements interfered with our smooth road to print.  Due to the flooding of Hurricane Irene and the storms in its aftermath, people who needed to send content couldn’t because they had no electricity, while key personnel involved in assembling the issue found themselves evacuated or otherwise unable to work.  So, we are behind.

However, the good news is that everything is finally coming together and the draft of the issue is now in my Inbox awaiting my blessing. So, hang on…it’s coming!

Heading to Camp Necon

So, this weekend I am attending my first ever Necon in Rhode Island.  You can read all about it here.  A lot of Space and Time contributors and editors will be in attendance as well, including Gordon Linzner, Gary Frank, and Linda Addison.  If you’d like to join us, I understand there are still a few memberships left.

Hildy’s Balticon Schedule

Very close to the zero hour, my Balticon schedule for this weekend has finally arrived! If you are attending (www.balticon.org), I hope you’ll come by and wave in my general direction:

5/28/11 12:00 AM Duration: 01:30

Room: Salon A                       Track: Fan

Eye of Argon -  the Reading

Eye of Argon - the Play

“One of the genre’s most beloved pieces of appalling prose” presented in all its theatrical glory.

5/28/11 10:00 AM Duration: 00:50

Room: Salon D                       Track: Readers

A Cthulhu Out of the Hat

Writing Prompts for the Deranged

Panelists and audience write science fiction stories based on the items pulled out of a hat. Panelists will read their stories at the end, audience members will share their resulting stories at noon in the Con Suite.

5/28/11 1:00 PM Duration: 00:50

Room: Salon B                       Track: Fan

Whose program is it, anyway?

We’ll discuss, model, and generally dissect the questionable (and sometimes outrageous) behaviors exhibited by program participants (and the audience!) at diverse conventions. Come prepared to be bored by speakers, experience the effects of panel-hogging, see totally-random subject changes, attacks on the other panelists and the audience, and all those other behaviors that make for poor panel participation. We’ll share stories, advice, and solutions. (Note: while program participants certainly don’t have to come to this, it wouldn’t hurt to check it out, anyway!) Join us for the worst program item ever! (And-oh yes!-the audience gets to vote people off the panel every 10 minutes…)

5/28/11 3:00 PM Duration: 00:50

Room: Salon C                       Track: Film, TV, Film Making

Dr. Who Gab Fest

Fans gather to discuss all things Whoish.

5/28/11 5:00 PM Duration: 00:50

Room: Salon B                       Track: Fan

Readings from the Cthulhu Hat

The Deranged Bestow Their Works on the Rest

Run while you can! The audience members from the 10 AM Panel will be sharing their stories with all available victims. No guarantees of survival if Cthulhu is actually summoned.

5/29/11 2:00 PM Duration: 00:50

Room: Salon B                       Track: Readers

Good and Evil in Genre Literature

Do science fiction, fantasy and horror have underlying moral perspectives? What are they? Do they differ? If so, why?

5/29/11 4:00 PM Duration: 00:50

Room: Salon D                       Track: Film, TV, Film Making

Best SF TV Shows

Audience is invited to help the panel decide which Science Fiction television shows (a) are really science fiction and (b) and THE best.

5/30/11 1:00 PM Duration: 00:50

Room: Salon B                       Track: Readers

Hildy Silverman — Reading

Hildy Silverman — Reading

Help Japan: A Contributor’s Experience

By now, everyone is well aware of the multiple crises that have struck Japan. One of our contributors, author Mark Lee Pearson, lives in Japan. He responded to my query regarding his safety with a moving email, which he gave me permission to reprint here in the hopes it will encourage readers to contribute to the Red Cross’s efforts in that devastated nation. Please read about Mark’s first-hand experience and consider making a much-needed donation here: Red Cross.

As thanks, I will send you a link to a free .pdf copy of Issue 106, in which Mark’s excellent, surreal story Hideki Desu appears. Simply send an email to me at hildy@spaceandtimemagazine.com with your name and a copy of your receipt from your donation (the Red Cross sends them electronically), and I will send you the link. In addition, for every one or two year subscription received from now until the end of April, a dollar will be contributed to the relief efforts in Japan.

Here is Mark’s email (edited for relevance and space):

It is very kind of you to think about us at this time.  Everyone is being so kind. Luckily, I live in Kanagawa, which is a little West of Tokyo, so we didn’t get the worst of it.

I was teaching a class of 12 year olds when the earthquake hit.  The entire building shifted, everyone was knocked off their feet, and the quake seemed to go on forever. In fact it was two huge ones in close succession.  I was preparing myself for the worst.

I’ll never forget the experience, especially the look of dread on those kids’ faces.  And it was only a five on the Richter scale where we are.  It was closer to seven in places in the North.

As for the radiation, although traces of radiation have been found in Tokyo, we are nowhere near the critical zone, thankfully.  The British and American media have been in more of a panic than we have here. I think the main problem is that the Japanese government doesn’t tell the foreign media clearly the true situation about a lot of things.  This needs to be resolved in the future and they are working on it.

The entire infrastructure has been affected, but the only thing we are short of here is gas for the car, milk, bread, and cup noodles! Every day we thank God that we are all together and all okay. Unlike those affected in the North. My heart goes out to those thousands of people who lost their homes, families, and lives.

It is one thing to write about this kind of thing.  Another to live it.

A terrible, terrible tragedy.

The Red Cross is, of course, the best place to send money.  That’s what most people over here say, because it gets where it needs to be in the least possible time. And, judging by the way that many hospitals in the North are functioning right now, they need it yesterday. There are doctors and nurses working alone 24 hours a day in sub-zero temperatures, with no rest and appalling hygiene conditions–they have to clean the silt off the equipment before they can use it and there is nowhere near enough medication to go around! And it is not only that there isn’t enough to go around, the problem is getting help and support out to them. So many evacuation sites are in places that cannot be accessed.

There were more earthquakes today.  Only small ones.  Aftershocks. But it is mentally draining. Every small quake sets the heart racing and more than once I have found myself diving under the table for cover only to find it was a two or a three.  We are told to expect another big one soon.  I am constantly on the edge of my seat.  So are my colleagues, Japanese and American.

But, in spite of this, I am optimistic.  At least my family is together and alive and my house is still standing. As I say to everyone who expresses concern, it is not the problem of radiation that takes its toll on the majority of people in Japan, it is when the next quake will be.

Anyway, thank you for your continued interest and support. It sincerely means a lot.

Mark Pearson

Hideki Desu
Issue #106
Red Cross

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