Filed under Podcast • 17-05-2010 •
The fourth podcast from Abaddon & Solaris Books features an interview that I took part in at Eastercon in April. Here’s the blurb:
“Jenni Hill catches up with Jetse de Vries and Gareth L. Powell – respectively the anthologist of and one of the contributors to the upcoming Shine anthology – at EasterCon, and talks about the anthology and the convention. A good time was had by all.”
To download the podcast, click here.
Filed under My Writing • 22-05-2009 •
Here’s a snippet of an interview I gave yesterday to Ann Wilkes at Science Fiction and Other ODDysseys:
“I grew up at a time when the Cold War seemed likely to turn hot at any moment. We were shown “Protect and Survive” films at school, and I remember that the local doctor’s surgery had leaflets about nuclear fallout and guidelines for the disposal of relatives who’d succumbed to radiation sickness. As a teenager, it was a scary time. It was hard enough dealing with all the emotional stuff teenagers have to go through normally, without the added worry that the world was about to end. I guess a lot of that fear worked its way into my psyche. Part of me still expects society to fall apart at any given moment, and so those stories are to a certain extent an exploration and exorcism of that fear – a way of confronting my personal demons.”
You can read the full interview here: Interview with Gareth L Powell
Filed under My Writing • 25-03-2009 •
Morpheus Tales is a printed magazine of horror, science fiction, and fantasy. Its fourth issue will be published on 1st April and will contain, in addition to some short stories and articles, an interview with me.
The topics I discuss in the interview include:
- Breaking into the short story market
- Finding inspiration
- Turning ideas into stories
- Finding time to write
The interview came about after the magazine reviewed my short story collection back in November last year, calling it: “… one of the finest collections of SF short stories I have had the privilege of reading.”
Copies of Morpheus Tales IV can be ordered online via the magazine’s website: www.morpheustales.com
Filed under General • 02-03-2009 •
The fourth issue of Morpheus Tales will be released at the beginning of April. It will include an interview with me that I did with the magazine a little while ago, where I talk about my writing habits and the publication of my first short story collection, which Morpheus Tales reviewed a few months ago.
Read the review here: Link to Morpheus Tales
Filed under General • 05-11-2008 •
I’ve always been a little irritated by the attitude that on-line magazines are somehow inherently inferior to printed publications. Granted, there’s a lot of crap out there, but there are also some web publications with high standards and rigorous editorial processes – and these publications are redefining what it means to be a “professional” Science Fiction writer. It’s not all about cents-per-word anymore, it’s about readership.
It’s no longer possible to earn a decent wage writing short stories for traditional magazines, as it was for writers like Philip K Dick. Those days are gone and it’s a sad fact that as our audience finds other things to spend their money and attention on, printed Science Fiction magazines are seeing a steady decline in subscriptions. Frankly, in the UK it’s a lot easier for curious readers to Google an online SF magazine than it is for them to find a printed copy of one at their local newsagent.
Personally, I desperately hope the printed SF magazine market continues to survive in some form, but at the same time I also realise that if the next generation of prospective readers aren’t coming to us, it’s up to us to reach out to them. Without them, the genre will grow old and die. We have to set our stall where young and old alike can see and engage with it and if that means giving some of our work away on-line, then so be it. You only have to look at Google, Facebook, YouTube, Amazon and iTunes to realise the Internet’s fundamentally changing the way we communicate, the way we shop and the way we share information and interact with one another. As Science Fiction writers, we should be at the forefront of that revolution and if the printed magazines want to survive, they’re going to have to do something to attract that global audience.
As an example, I like the approach the publishers of ‘Interzone’ are using. They’re still publishing the print magazine but they’re also offering it for sale as an electronic download on ‘Fictionwise’, and releasing free podcast readings of the best stories on their website in order to get their content out to the widest possible audience in a convenient choice of formats.
(Reprinted from an interview with SF Crowsnest. Read the full thing here.)
Filed under Reviews • 01-11-2008 •
Gareth D Jones has written a good review of The Last Reef for SF Crowsnest, and he’s picked out a few of the stories for special mention:
The collection includes fifteen stories that range from present day accounts that barely touch on speculative themes to far-future epics that span the gamut of classic SF tropes but each time add something new. An example of the latter is ‘The Redoubt’. There was real emotional depth here as a young couple are offered the chance to send a digital copy of themselves on a universe-spanning voyage to the end of time. The scope of the concept and the agonising debate made it just fabulous.
While on a brutal punishment detail repairing a bridge, ‘Pod Dreams Of Tuckertown’ where he grew up. The background concerns mysterious aliens that have taken control of the Earth, but they are irrelevant to Pod and his dreams of escape and revenge. It’s a stark story that captures the raw emotions of the characters and the desperation of their situation.
‘A Necklace Of Ivy’ is a realistically rendered tale set against the backdrop of a mysterious alien plague sweeping through Cornwall. A young couple are making their way out of the county in advance of an army curfew, but make the mistake of stopping for one last break. The realistic dialogue and briefly sketched description make it a compelling little story.
‘Hot Rain’ is what could be described as a hard-boiled detective story, set in the exotic locale of Rio where a young girl has been cloned and kidnapped. It’s a fast-paced thriller with enough high-tech elements to make it stand out from the seemingly regular background.
My favourite of the collection is ‘Arches’, a story that initially appears to be a variation on ‘Stargate’, as purple arches appear across the world and people disappear through them to unknown destinations. The military do get involved, but random civilians also find themselves travelling to other planets for a variety of reasons. The scope of the story suddenly becomes apparent when the mechanism of travel is discovered and the whole concept suddenly becomes epic in scale. I found it truly captivating.
‘Flotsam’ is set against the same background as the title story ‘The Last Reef’, the reefs being artificially intelligent organic super-computers that are being quarantined and destroyed to protect humanity. As Europe sinks under the rising seas, two scientists formerly involved in this work meet up in what I found to be an intriguing location where hard decisions have to be made.
The issue also contains an interview with me that you can read here
Filed under My Writing • 27-10-2008 •
Both SF Crowsnest and Strange Horizons have reviewed my book, The Last Reef. The latter review will be posted to the Strange Horizons website on Friday, while the former will be in the November issue of SF Crowsnest, which will also feature an interview with me. This interview comes hard on the heels of the two interviews I have recently given to Interzone and Concept Sci-Fi, but this one is a little longer and more in-depth than the previous two, and in it, I talk about: the future of printed SF magazines; using the web to attract new readers to the genre; and the necessity to unlearn everything you were taught at school in order to find your own voice as a writer.
Filed under My Writing • 22-10-2008 •
Today, I’ve given an interview to SF Crowsnest, where I talk about the future of printed SF, the advantages of online publication, the things I’ve learned from writing flash fiction, and the compulsion I have to keep going back and revising the stories I’ve written. It should appear in next month’s issue, and I’ll post a link when it goes live.
Filed under My Writing • 27-09-2008 •
Gary Reynolds of Concept Sci-fi interviewed me recently regarding my forthcoming novel, Silversands. We discussed the process of novel writing, the lessons I learned from writing mine, and the possibility that books will become shorter in the future to better compete with other forms of entertainment.
The full interview is now online here.
Filed under Copywriting • My Writing • 23-09-2008 •
Today’s been a busy day. I wrote a press ad for a new client (a local restaurant chain) and they liked it. The ad will shortly be appearing in a number of local magazines. I also answered some quesitons and supplied a profile of myself for a forthcoming interview with Concept Sci-Fi - which I believe will be published in a week or so (keep watching the site). After that, I caught up on some admin and even found the time to finish reading “Blindsight” by Peter Watts – which is an excellent book for anyone interested in psychology, the senses and what it means to be self aware.
Of course, I still have a pile of further things to do – including stories for two forthcoming anthologies, the opening chapters of two new novels, and a half-written collaboration with another Interzone author. Not to mention finding clients, earning money, etc…