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Monday, 10 August 2009
...and my inner word nerd smiles...

... Cory Doctorow used the word "suasion" on Twitter today. In a post having to do with a parent who objected to his book Little Brother - not because of the teen protagonist's attempts to subvert homeland security, not because of the explicit descriptions of torture, no. Because of the off-camera loss of virginity. Then he couldn't respond to the parent because of a school firewall that blocked anything with the word 'sexual' in it.

So, yeah, all that too. But I was jazzed that he used the word 'suasion.' On Twitter. Which is usually so jammed with #s and shorthand it's bloody unreadable. 

Oh, yeah, and there's something kind of iffy about a school that won't allow the word 'sexual.' Isn't school supposed to be where we all get The Talk these days?


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 12:59 PM EDT
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More on colour
This post on Alas, A Blog fires another salvo in the whole racefail argument I've been vaguely tracking, and does it in a really clear way. Reminds me of Ursula Le Guin's complaint when she spoke here in the spring, about the editions of A Wizard of Earthsea that made Ged (described in the book as a reddish sort of guy) blond and blue-eyed...

Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 12:44 PM EDT
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Sunday, 9 August 2009
More on sequels

Following up on that earlier post about sequels to established classics - I've run across an interesting article about J.D. Salinger's lawsuit to try and block the publication of a book called 60 Years Later: Coming Through the Rye.

The description from the article: "There is no question that "60 Years Later," written by Swedish humorist Fredrik Colting under the pen name "John David California," is based on "Catcher in the Rye." The hero, Mr. C., is clearly the alienated teenager Holden Caulfield, now an old man (who leaves a retirement home to go to New York, echoing Holden's flight from boarding school). A few other characters from the Salinger novel also appear, along with original ones - and with Salinger himself. Indeed, on the copyright page, the book is described as 'An Unauthorized Fictional Examination of the Relationship Between J. D. Salinger and his Most Famous Character.'"

The article looks at what, if anything, is the point of some readings of copyright law - should you be able to block the publication of a book like Wide Sargasso Sea? - and also talks about the importance of borrowing in creativity (in much the same way as Cory Doctorow talks about inviting his readers to remix and remake his work: he says that art that's not meant to be transformed is just plain outdated in this century.)


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 1:34 PM EDT
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Friday, 7 August 2009
AUGH!

It's official: The new "Canada Periodical Fund" will not be providing funding to magazines with less than 5,000 circulation, or to any literary or arts magazines. If you can hack it, read this post at the Quill & Quire, and the comment attached. Note the funding disparities even before this slash, in 2007-2008: Canadian Poetry, $56 in funding (yes, $56) - Chatelaine, about $2.5 million. Million.


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 12:08 PM EDT
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Language, and other updates

(Erratum: The "Hobbit" sequel is apparently an Internet myth. I'll take the word of Kevin McKeever on this, who is the marketing guy from Harmony Gold who I saw at Otakuthon last weekend. What? Misinformation on the Interweb? Oh nos!)

I've had two Literary Landscape shows since the last post, and I meant to reflect on them. Maybe even post them. But somehow it didn't happen. 

I thought when I started hosting the show that 30 minutes would be just fine - more than enough. Now, I'm starting to think as I walk away from an interview that it would have been great to have another half hour to talk about stuff. 

For example: I spoke to Marie Bilodeau last night about her latest book, Warrior of Darkness, the second in a fantasy trilogy. I know Marie (we're friends) so interviewing her was a strange feeling, but we got into an interesting conversation about writing in a second language. Marie's first language (could you have guessed?) is French, and in fact she claims her English was terrible when she was in junior high and high school. Now, she writes her novels in English. I'm interested in that, and in how it affects your writing. I was interested in her process: I also wanted to talk longer about French genre writing, which seems to be quite different from English genre writing. And I didn't get to get into the ghettoization of genre. 

Ah well. Next time. 


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 10:51 AM EDT
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Friday, 31 July 2009
Addendum to yesterday

Kate Heartfield (who will be hosting the Dune event on the 17th) just posted a short piece on her blog about the same subject - with the added mention of the *shudder* Jackson/del Toro "Hobbit" sequel (rumoured to be about the events between The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings - here is not the place to geek out about how weird that sounds.)

It does my little heart good to see, though, that she also loved Robin McKinley's Damar books. (Oh, and lor' bless Wikipedia: I didn't know Robin McKinley and Peter Dickinson were married! That explains so much about my childhood.)


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 4:03 PM EDT
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Thursday, 30 July 2009
Sequels and Returns

What's with the sudden bloom of 'authorized sequels' to series whose original authors are dead? H, the companion to Wuthering Heights, might have kicked it off in the mainstream eye, but then there were more...in the last year I've come across (because I run the Writers Festival's young readers program) Before Green Gables, and Return to the Hundred Acre Wood. Tim Burton's doing a (sorta) sequel to Alice in Wonderland. The Writers Festival is hosting Brian Herbert in a couple of weeks, who, along with Kevin J. Anderson, has been continuing his father's Dune series. Christopher Tolkien recently re-released The Children of Hurin as a seperate book (it was originally one of the fragments in Tolkien's The Silmarillion, which was itself posthumous.) Eoin Colfer, of Artemis Fowl fame, has written the official 6th book in the increasingly erroneously named Hitchhiker's Guide To the Galaxy Trilogy. (You can listen here to one of my favorite recently discovered YA authors interviewing him about it.)

I'm not sure what it's all about... just something I've been noticing (especially working with YA.) 


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 12:12 PM EDT
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Wednesday, 29 July 2009
Third Wall Theatre cancels Woyzeck

This is kinda sad... Third Wall's had to cancel the final show of their 2009-2010 season, Woyzeck, because although subscription sales were really high this year, individual ticket sales dropped too far to make it feasible. Damn that economic downturn. I thought when times are hard, people head to entertainment... oh, right, you can go to a movie for $13 and a play's usually more like $30. But still. What if we banned movies for a couple of months? Now there's an economic stimulus. People would be forced to buy books and go to plays.

Anyway, I digress. The thing is, this means that you can get a subscription to Third Wall Theatre for the other two shows (Old Times and As You Like It, the latter with that really interesting dedicated Shakespeare Troupe of theirs) for $50. Check out Third Wall here - they're one of my favorites. Pick up a subscription! Cheap seats and the chance to support a great group.


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 11:59 AM EDT
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Thursday, 16 July 2009
The Copyright Thing

I'm once again re-reading Cory Doctorow on internet copyright, file sharing, and all the other things that he has such controversial stuff to say about. Mostly because I'm gearing up to bring him to Ottawa schools with his book Little Brother, which (at the risk of gushing) is possibly the best YA book I've read in years. Because it's fun, because - to paraphrase Neil Gaiman - it makes me wish I was a teenager so I could read it and then go save the world, and because it's really important to remember that the technology we live with comes with a responsibility to understand it so that it can't be used against us.

And I checked out the multitude of available formats to download the book in, and found myself rereading Cory's statement about copyright and why he makes all his books available free under a Creative Commons license. 

To snag one quote at random from this thought-provoking and oddly exciting foreword/manifesto: "If you're not making art with the intention of having it copied, you're not really making art for the twenty-first century. There's something charming about making work you don't want to be copied, in the same way that it's nice to go to a Pioneer Village and see the olde-timey blacksmith shoeing a horse at his traditional forge. But it's hardly, you know, contemporary. I'm a science fiction writer. It's my job to write about the future (on a good day) or at least the present. Art that's not supposed to be copied is from the past."

Yeah, some things are going to have to change in the face of 21st century technology - and that's not a bad thing. It just means business models have to be reworked . . . which probably hurts the people living off the business models as they are, but as Darwin said, "It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent, but the most adaptive to change."


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 3:37 PM EDT
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Tuesday, 14 July 2009
The night of conflicting schedules

Augh!

Tonight: The Dusty Owl Play Date, my usual weekly dose of creative juice, is at 8:00. Voices of Venus is presenting Jessica Ruano at 7:00. Ruthanne Edward will be telling spooky strange stories at the Tea Party at 7:00. And Sean Moreland's 'Last Dance At Zaphods' is apparently kicking off around 10:00. 

I can only physically do two of the above. Augh.


Posted by Kathryn Hunt at 11:19 AM EDT
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