Author Interview Series #41 – Joe Haldeman

If you’ve been reading science fiction for any length of time, you know the name of Joe Haldeman, one of the Elder Masters of science fiction. He’s the author of numerous novels, but the one I know, and the one he’s best known for, is The Forever War, a story about how war changes the soldier so completely that he can never go back to the way things were. With two long, slogging wars still ongoing, today’s reality makes the book as current now as it was near the close of the Vietnam era. I remember this book as oneContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #41 – Joe Haldeman

Author Interview Series #40 – Lisa Mantchev

Need I reiterate that one can meet the most interesting people at Cons? In the very final interview with folks I was fortunate enough to meet at World Con, allow me to introduce an up and coming new writer in the spec-fic community, Lisa Mantchev.  At the Weird Tales party, I encountered a statuesque woman attending the official Weird Tales table and showing off a unique selection of intriguing art.  Another one of those, “Oh, you’re a writer, too?” conversations later, and we arrive here at this interview. I know I’ll be looking for her book, Eyes Like Stars inContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #40 – Lisa Mantchev

Author Interview Series #39 – Elizabeth Moon

Some years ago, a friend shoved a trilogy of books called The Deed of Paksennarion, by Elizabeth Moon, into my hands. It had a great main character named, of course, Paksennarion.  Since that time, I’ve watched Elizabeth Moon’s books explode across bookstore shelves, and she has since branched off into space opera and hard SF, winning a Nebula Award for her book The Speed of Dark. I also happen to know that she sings in a really big choir and was stressing about getting it just right when I contacted her about this interview. Getting it just right is somethingContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #39 – Elizabeth Moon

Author Interview Series #38 – Tobias Buckell

Best wishes go out for a speedy recovery this week to the subject of our interview, Tobias Buckell.  Soon after we conducted our interview, Toby suffered a heart embolism that left him hospitalized.  Such a medical condition is actually one of the dangers of the writing life. Spending long hours planted in a chair with little physical activity puts a person at risk for blood clots, so get out there and exercise, people! Tobias Buckell is a professional blogger and speculative fiction writer, born and raised in the Caribbean on numerous tropical islands, and has successfully published stories in severalContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #38 – Tobias Buckell

Author Interview Series #37 – Cynthia Felice

Now, nearing the end of 2008, I’m finally coming to the end of the interviews with authors I happened to encounter at the World Con back in August.  I sat in on a panel on where various authors discussed the business end of writing professionally, and one of them was Cynthia Felice.  When I asked her if she would be willing to give an interview, she quite graciously agreed, in spite of the fact that she very rarely grants interviews. So I feel fortunate and honored to have her grace the little 1s and 0s that give shape to BloggingContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #37 – Cynthia Felice

Author Interview Series #36 – E. E. Knight

E. E. Knight is a relative newcomer, even though, like most authors, he’s been writing for a LoOoOng time. I was most intrigued by how his path through a series of publishing house nightmares led to a mass market deal.  As a veteran of publishing house nightmares myself (see the Cautionary Tales Part 1 page link nearby and the link in the post immediately below), I applaud those authors who are not deterred by the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune. Since he finally shepherded Way of the Wolf into a mass market deal in 2003, he’s released seven novelsContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #36 – E. E. Knight

Author Interview Series #35 – Elizabeth Bear

Elizabeth Bear won the 2008 Hugo Award for Best Short Story for her story “Tideline,” which is about a sentient robotic battle tank and its relationship with a human child.  I didn’t get the chance to meet Elizabeth Bear at World Con this year, but I was pleased that at least someone I voted for actually won. “Tideline” also won the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial award for Best Short Story.  She also took home the John W. Campbell award for Best New Writer in 2005.  So it seems that while she hasn’t been neck deep in the industry for all thatContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #35 – Elizabeth Bear

Author Interview Series #34 – Francis Hamit

We’re approaching the end of a long string of authors whom I met at World Con in August. This week we meet Francis Hamit, a gentleman and a scholar who’s just released his novel The Shenandoah Spy. As a history buff myself, I can certainly appreciate a great story set in a meticulously researched milieu. The history of spying is a fascinating topic that goes back millennia, and the American Civil War has been underrepresented in espionage fiction, overshadowed in recent decades by the Cold War and then the War on Terrorism. His new book certainly sounds like something outContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #34 – Francis Hamit

Author Interview Series #33 – Carrie Vaughn

As a perfect horror-ific bracket around Halloween to accompany Ramsey Campbell’s interview last week, I bring you Carrie Vaughn. One of the cool things about SF/F/H fandom is that one can meet the most unexpected people at a con … and still not know who they are.  At the Omaha Science Fiction Festival last July, I met Carrie Vaughn briefly, when everyone is moving from panel to panel, but at the time, I had no idea who she was.  Dummy me. Then, at World Con in August, I attended the Weird Tales magazine party, and here was the same womanContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #33 – Carrie Vaughn

Author Interview Series #32 – Ramsey Campbell

Just in time for Halloween, I would like to present a fantastic interview with the Grand Master of Horror, Ramsey Campbell. Few authors, unless their last names are King or Koontz, can match the number of awards he was received in his long writing career, the Bram Stoker Award, World Fantasy Award, British Fantasy Award, and the list goes on. I encountered his work in my late teens, around the time I discovered H. P. Lovecraft–since much of Campbell’s work is so closely intertwined with Horror’s beloved Bard of Arkham.  I read his novel The Hungry Moon way back then.Continue readingAuthor Interview Series #32 – Ramsey Campbell

Author Interview Series #31 – Tom Trumpinski

Surrounded by glowing green aliens, strings of eerie, phosphorescent green Xmas lights, platters of snackables, and a unique beverage that could probably peel the paint off ’65 Buick without anyone noticing, including the Buick, I happened to meet a fellow in a cowboy hat named Tom Trumpinski. It was one of the numerous room parties at World Con, and this room looked like a landing site for the UFO faithful. Turned out it was a party hosted by a group lobbying for a future World Con to be held off-planet. As so often happens at such parties, we struck upContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #31 – Tom Trumpinski

Author Interview Series #30 – Matt Rotundo

I was pleasantly surprised back in July at OSFest, the Omaha Science Fiction Society’s inaugural convention, when I met another genre author from around these parts named Matt Rotundo. We sat on a couple of panels together, wherein I discovered that this guy I had never previously heard of was racking up quite a number of significant short fiction sales in the top genre markets, most notably Writers of the Future and Orson Scott Card’s sci-fi magazine, Intergalactic Medicine Show. Then we happened to cross paths again at World Con, where–seriously–everybody in the genre publishing industry goes, has gone, orContinue readingAuthor Interview Series #30 – Matt Rotundo