Yog's Notebook, blog edition

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Saturday, October 20, 2007

 

Yog on break

We're very sorry to announce that Yog's Notebook is on hiatus indefinitely. We'll be posting announcements here and on our mailing list as soon as we're ready to start up again. Please don't send us submissions in the meantime, as we will be unable to review them. Thank you.

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

 

Author Interview: Mathew Russell

Mathew Russell wrote "Electric Judas", about an android's attempt to understand his creator.

Q: What's the best thing you've read recently?

A: American Gods by Neil Gaiman.

Q: What motivates you to write science fiction or horror?

A: Dreams mostly, and also the ways in which the past effects the future.

Q: What's lurking under your bed?

A: The bogeyman. He's trapped beneath the rubbish I have under there and keeps yelling for someone to help him out.

Q: Do you have any hobbies or interests outside of writing and sf/horror?

A: History, Art, Technology, Music and sleeping in.

That's the last of our summer authors. We've really enjoyed the stories in this issue, and hope you will too.

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Friday, August 10, 2007

 

Author Interview: Stephen Couch

Stephen wrote "Foo Boxen", a story about putting Schroedinger's Cat to the test, which appears in our summer issue.

Q: What's the best thing you've read recently?

A: Graveyard People: The Collected Cedar Hill Stories
Vol. 1
, by Gary A. Braunbeck: A crust of speculative fiction wrapped around a mantle of bleak, lightless despair, wrapped around a near-Pyrrhic core of hope and redemption, from one of the modern masters of the short form.

Q: What motivates you to write science fiction or horror?

A: I can't switch off the part of my brain that constantly asks, "What if...?" I think it's inextricably linked to the part of my brain that craves the Macaroni & Cheese Pizza at Cici's, because I can't seem to turn that off, either...

Q: What do you hope the future will be like?

A: I genuinely hope we can evolve out of our current cultural tendency to encourage and reward sociopathic behavior. We can be, both as a species and as individuals, so much more than just apologists and enablers for the sociologically toxic among us.

Q: What's lurking under your bed?

A: Almost always an ankle-clawing cat.

Q: Do you have any hobbies or interests outside of writing and sf/horror?

A: I run an award-winning audio drama production company, Strange Interludes; I also sing in a cover band from time to time.

Q: Do you have a website you'd like our readers to see?

A: www.stephencouch.com

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Wednesday, August 8, 2007

 

Author Interview: Glynn Barrass

Glynn wrote "The Necronomicon Cookbook" for the summer issue, a poem about some very curious cooking experiments.

Q: What's the best thing you've read recently?

A: Sphere by Michael Crichton - one of the the most sinister novels regarding
contact with alien life forms I've read.

Q: What motivates you to write science fiction or horror?

A: I sorely need to get what's in my head onto paper otherwise I'm sure it'll
explode.

Q: What do you hope the future will be like? Or is there something that was
predicted to happen that you wish really had? (jet cars, food pills, or...?)

A: Invasion and subjugation by evil alien overlords.

Q: What's lurking under your bed?

A: Way too much un-vacuumed dust!

Q: Do you have any hobbies or interests outside of writing and sf/horror?

A: Does sleeping count as a hobby?

Q: Do you have a website you'd like our readers to see?

A: Not yet, but I'm working on it.

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Sunday, August 5, 2007

 

Author Interview: Kaylea Hascall Champion

Kaylea's contribution to the summer issue is a story about first contact and hubris called "KuiperGate".

Q: What's the best thing you've read recently?

A: I really enjoyed Ines of My Soul by Isabel Allende; it changed the way I look at colonial history.

Q: What motivates you to write science fiction or horror?

A: I am fundamentally motivated by ideas—speculative fiction in all its forms provides a terrific opportunity to explore and to question.

Q: What do you hope the future will be like?

A: I could get preachy or sappy about it all, but it comes down to this: I hope that the future is messy, but with clean public bathrooms.

Q: What's lurking under your bed?

A: Four half-finished novels....and they're getting hungry!

Q: Do you have any hobbies or interests outside of writing and sf/horror?

A: Most weekends will find me obsessively doing one of the following: playing computer games, digging in my chaotic garden, entertaining my dogs, or sewing fabulous new clothes for myself and others.

Q: Do you have a website you'd like our readers to see?

A: Sure, folks can go to http://www.kaylea.net.

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Wednesday, August 1, 2007

 

Author Interview: Simon Petrie

Simon wrote "Three-Horned Dilemma", a story about a man with a triceratops problem. It appears in our summer issue.

Q: What's the best thing you've read recently?

A: My left brain reckons Nova Swing by M. John Harrison, but my right brain would go for Simon Haynes' Hal Spacejock.

Q: What motivates you to write science fiction or horror?

A: Long lists of other things I really should be doing.

Q: What do you hope the future will be like?

A: Inhabited, but some days I wonder ...

Q: What's lurking under your bed?

A: From the looks of it, a dust bunny stud farm.

Q: Do you have any hobbies or interests outside of writing and sf/horror?

A: I'm interested in (and have done research in) "astrochemistry", which sounds like sf but is probably even stranger. I also have an unhealthy interest in obscure Sixties rock groups.

Q: Do you have a website you'd like our readers to see?

A: Not a proper 'Simon Petrie' website, no. I'm a member of the Andromeda Spaceways publishing co-op, which is at http://www.andromedaspaceways.com/.

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Tuesday, July 31, 2007

 

Author Interview: Jessica E. Kaiser

For our summer issue, we asked each contributor a few questions about their writing and interests. Partial answers appeared on the contributors page, but I thought it would be fun to share their full responses. Check back over the next week (give or take a few days) to see all of the interviews.

Here's what Ms. Kaiser, author of "Back to the Classifieds", had to say:

Q: What's the best thing you've read recently?

A: The Atrocity Archives, by Charles Stross, was probably the most recent book I’ve read that I would unreservedly recommend. But I bet that’ll have changed to something else by the time this is published.

Q: What do you hope the future will be like? Or is there something that was predicted to happen that you wish really had? (jet cars, food pills, or...?)

A: The running joke between my friends and me is “Where’s my flying car?” from all the science fiction of the Golden Age that promised us flying cars by the early nineties (and all we got was this lousy gas crisis), but what I’m really excited about is all the news stories about Mars lately. I mean, water on Mars! Giant cave systems! Every time I read something about it, I feel like I really am living in The Future.

Q: What's lurking under your bed?

A: There is absolutely nothing lurking under my bed. I know this because I check on a regular basis to make sure. As a kid, I used to worry that there were zombies hiding out under there, waiting to grab my ankle with a skeletal hand the second I dangled my foot over the edge of the bed too long. Every night, I took a flying leap into my bed to make sure the zombies couldn’t get me.

Now, as an adult, I realize that’s ridiculous, because, as everyone knows, the monsters are hiding in closets. This is why I cannot sleep unless all closet doors are firmly closed. Leaving them open is just asking for trouble (“trouble” in this case being a euphemism for “being disemboweled”).

Q: Do you have any hobbies or interests outside of writing and sf/horror?

A: I don’t have as many hobbies as I should, because… well… there are so many books. I have a very low resistance to books calling my name. But I rollerblade, make chain mail jewelry, and belly dance. Additionally, I make fantastic bread. It’s a short list, but as I said, you can blame all the publishers who keep putting more books on the shelves for me to buy.

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