From The Terminator to Back to the Future to Richard Curtis’s new film About Time, movies love time travel – but it’s strictly for men. Anna Smith wishes she could…Continue readingWhy can’t women time travel?
If you had to quickly flee both your home and country, what one thing would take with you? It’s a question that too many people around the world actually have…Continue readingWhat one thing would you take?
31 Day Blog Challenge, #17 Back in 2002, I was writing prolifically for Swans, an online webzine, much of it was pretty focused on the real world and more specifically…Continue readingMy Proudest Moment
Shari Mullulane has a delightful blog named — Old Bat’s Belfry — which offers “Fantasy Book Reviews, News and Author Interviews.” A few year’s back (May 28, 2009 for the…Continue readingOld Bat’s Belfry interviews me
Kurt Vonnegut called the semicolon a “transvestite hermaphrodite representing absolutely nothing.” He was wrong, James Harbeck says. Among the latest shocking news in the world of lexicography is that “tl;dr”…Continue readingIn defense of the semicolon
In yesterday’s blog salad (what I call the blogs I fill with short linked items that interest me), I had something from the Edinburgh book festival about authors’ favorite words.…Continue readingMy favorite word? I can only pick ONE?
A video alphabet: At the Edinburgh international book festival, The Guardian has been asking writers such as Alasdair Gray, Neil Gaiman and Ruby Wax to come up with their favorite…Continue readingAuthors’ favorite words
…on the edge of a book Colleen Theisen at the University of Iowa has shared an amazing gif she made that demonstrates something called fore-edge painting on the edge of…Continue readingHiding a painting in plain sight…
…especially if they’re first editions. This suggestion from BuzzFeed gladdens my heart — give the happy couple a book, specifically a signed first edition of one of their favorites. However,…Continue readingBooks Make Great Wedding Gifts…
When SF writer Isaac Asimov visited the New York World’s Fair of 1964, he pondered “What will life be like, say, in 2014 A.D., 50 years from now? What will…Continue readingWhat Asimov got right — and wrong