A fantastic day

All day long, and even since late last night when I think it first happened, I’ve had what I think is maybe the single itchiest mosquito bite on the inside of my left leg. It’s driven me quite mad throughout the day.

But this evening, despite all that, I went back to the Center for Fiction in Manhattan for a panel discussion on Why Fantasy Matters. It was about as interesting, but a lot more on point, as the utopia/dystopia panel on Monday. I’m a big fan of Kelly Link, and I quite enjoyed Naomi Novik’s first Temeraire book. And if I’ve yet to read anything by Felix Gilman and my experience with Lev Grossman’s writing has been less than terrific, everybody had a lot of interesting things to say about the genre. Including Grossman, who I actually quite like as critic of (and apologist for) fantasy, and whose much better known novels I may just have to pretend don’t exist. (Seriously, if I haven’t made it clear, I hated The Magicians.)

Two things I particularly liked. First, Grossman’s acknowledgment that “one thinks a lot of grandiose and unacceptable things as one is starting a novel.” And Novik’s writing advice: find writing that you like and critique it. I find this is one of — possibly the only, but certainly one of — the benefits of having a slush pile, as I do with Kaleidotrope. Figuring out why a piece of fiction does or doesn’t work, and putting that critique into words, can be valuable experience for a writer. (It also doesn’t hurt to see the other side of the rejection letter. It’s almost never fun for anybody.) You can learn just as much, if not more, from giving critique as from receiving it, Novik said (to a nodding Kelly Link beside her).

There are a few more events this month at the Center that I may be going to, but that’s it for this week. Onward to a perfectly ordinary, realistic Thursday.

If the world ended on a Monday, would anybody notice?

I wish I’d worn a jacket today.

It got cooler unexpectedly — although unexpected only if you discount the fact it probably ought to have been cooler a whole lot sooner, that days with highs of 80 degrees (something like 25 Celsius?) maybe aren’t the norm for late September or early October. But just a week ago, I was wearing short-sleeved shirts to work, and I didn’t think I needed more than the long-sleeved shirt (plus T-shirt beneath) I decided to wear today. It was a little cool, but I figured once the sun came up, I’d be fine.

And I was, but I kind of wish I’d worn a jacket. The sun didn’t come up all that much.

Metaphorically, though, it came up pretty nicely.

Oh, sure, there was that police shooting around the corner from my office. I mean literally around the corner. It happened last night apparently, and today it was just a crime scene investigation that had the block cordoned off and blocked to traffic. But still: yikes.

Otherwise, though, things were good, even for a Monday. I discovered first thing that Kaleidotrope had again been reviewed in Locus. The review, of the past two issues, is kind a mixed bag — Rich Horton singles out a couple of stories for praise, but he’s not uncritical of them — but it was still great to see the zine reviewed in those pages. (Even if the physical pages proved exceptionally difficult to track down. I eventually purchased the PDF direct from Locus, decided to re-up my lapse subscription in the process.)

Then this evening, after work, I attended a short panel discussion ostensibly on Utopia/Dystopia at the Center for Fiction. It was the start of a month-long series on fantasy and science fiction at the Center, most of which I’m actually (right now) planning on attending, and it was interesting, if not exactly what was advertised. Though authors Anna North, Kathleen Ann Goonan, and Charles Yu seemed to be, occasionally, trying to steer the conversation back towards all things utopian and dystopian, I’m not sure moderator DongWon Song was on the same page as everyone else. The discussion, for the most part, was a lot broader, about being a science fiction writer and the differences (real and market-imposed) between it and “mainstream” or “literary” fiction.

As such, it was interesting, but nothing especially new. The debate over where genre begins and ends, the benefits and drawbacks to writing within it, has been raging for years.

Still, it was interesting. Charles Yu’s How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe was one of the best books I read last year, and I enjoyed Goonan’s Queen City Jazz well enough years ago. (I thoroughly gave up on the first of the sequels just this year, however, and I felt a little guilty about that sitting there. I may feel guiltier on Wednesday, when the panel on fantasy includes Lev Grossman.) I’d never heard of North before, though I thought she spoke quite knowledgeably about science fiction, and she seemed the most determined to (subtly but repeatedly) steer the conversation back towards the end of the world.

No small surprise since that’s kind of what her book is about.

Still, these seemed like good people to be talking about utopia and dystopia and the contrast between the two. That what they mostly discussed seemed closer in spirit to the topic of Margaret Atwood’s upcoming talk — one of the few Center events this month I think I won’t be attending — was amusing, especially since it was only back in March that I went to hear Atwood herself speak about utopias and dystopias. (She favors the term of her own coinage, ustopias.)

Noonan defended her most recent novel, which apparently posits an alternate history, as not a utopia, as if that in and of itself was a dirty word. Changing some things just creates new problems, she said — I think rightly — which led later into a discussion of whether utopias are even possible. The odds of something terrible happening, even if it’s not specifically another ice age (North) or nanotech gone wild (Goonan) or “time travel as a means of regret” (Yu), are a lot better than a perfect world. The real world, after all, isn’t perfect, and it’s full of fallible people.

In many stories, in fact, dystopias are the price the characters (and/or world) pay for the creation (or failed creation) of someone else’s utopia. Perhaps every dystopia is simply a failed utopia, or the nostalgia for a lost one. Specific examples cited by the authors (and by the one audience member who really asked a question about the topic) included Ursula K. Le Guin’s “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas,” Sheri S. Tepper’s The Gate to Women’s Country, H.G. Wells’ The Time Machine, Atwood’s own The Handmaid’s Tale. These are often utopias at first glance — Wells’ Eloi, for instance, who live a life of comfort and ease — with a dystopia lurking beneath — the Morlocks, literally beneath, toiling in slavery underground. Or they are stark dystopias — Atwood’s repressive Republic of Gilead — brought about when someone — in this case the leaders of Gilead — attempt to impose their brand of utopia on the world. As North pointed out, the villains in dystopias tend to think they’re creating utopias, much like supervillains in comics.

“There’s always a mad scientist,” added Goonan.

Yu’s book, by contrast, is more a “personal dystopia,” or rather “not a dystopia, but just a super-sad universe.” Still, he talked about being liberated in his writing when he actually created that universe, gave it structure, form, and rules. “I was bound by my own constraints,” he said, and that’s what was so freeing as a writer.

So, in all, it was an interesting evening, if not exactly what I’d been led to expect. I didn’t stay for the book signing or wine reception afterward, but I’m glad I went all the same.

Even if, on the walk back to my subway, I kind of wish I’d worn a jacket.

It’s thunder and it’s lightning

Leave it to the Long Island Railroad and Mother Nature — or, rather, the LIRR’s complete inability to cope with any little thing Mother Nature throws at it — to take what was an ordinary, even boring day and turn it into something special.

It rained this afternoon. Weather in New York has been weird lately, making me all the more nostalgic for the fall weather I experienced in Alberta. The very early fall weather, warm by local standards, but it’s just about October and we’re still walking around in short sleeves here in New York. We had a week when I wasn’t uncomfortable wearing a long-sleeve shirt, maybe even a light jacket early in the morning or late at night. But that changed, and it’s been almost as humid as it was a month ago. We’ve had heavy fog, and today, I’m still running the air conditioner.

So it rained, a lot, but not for long, and not so much that you would expect it to cause any issues with the evening commute. It had stopped altogether by the time I actually left the office at 5 PM.

Oh, but you say, you’re not taking into account lightning. You don’t need a lot of rain for lightning. Well I just need the LIRR to take lightning into account…but apparently that’s asking too much. Because you’re right, it was lightning that screwed tonight’s commute.

I got to Penn Station, same as usual, to find it particularly crowded — especially considering that the trains had been less crowded this morning, thanks possibly to a number of people staying home for Rosh Hashanah. It quickly became apparent that no trains were leaving, except maybe to Port Washington, thanks to signal trouble between Manhattan and Jamaica Station in Queens. (The Port Washington line doesn’t go through Jamaica and so wasn’t affected.) But I wasn’t taking an over-crowded train to Port Washington, which, without traffic, is easily a half hour’s drive from home.

I eventually squeezed my way through to the 8th Avenue subway, after the transit cops started shutting the gates and blocking other entrances/exits. And I took a very long subway to Jamaica, where I managed to get onto a very crowded train headed to my station — and only just managed to squeeze myself off when we reached that station.

All told, it only took about an extra hour for me to reach my destination, but it was a long evening that involved way too much pushing through crowds and way too much of the Long Island Railroad being its usual self. (This isn’t exactly the first time this has happened. Or even the first time it’s happened recently.) Word is, they’ve since fixed the situation, manually resetting all the affected signals and re-opening Penn Station, so hopefully tomorrow morning’s commute will be nothing special.

But I dunno, with the weather we’ve been having… We could go right from summer into winter’s heavy snow. And the LIRR has proven they’re none too good at dealing with snow.

Tuesday

I neglected to mention yesterday one of the other weird things that happened, that made the day feel just slightly more unreal that usual. This week marks the United Nations General Assembly, and since our office is only a couple of short blocks from the UN itself, there’s been an increased police presence in the neighborhood. To the point that the streets between 2nd and 1st Avenue are blocked entirely, by both police barricades and officers, except to people working at or around the UN itself.

Our office is on 3rd, the UN is on 1st, and on nice days, I often eat my lunch in a little parklet — basically just a few benches in a building’s courtyard — in between. But not yesterday. “Where you going?” the police officer asked me, as I clearly wasn’t wearing an ID badge. “I guess not over there,” I said. I found another park to eat my chicken sandwich in.

I also received confirmation that my 3-Day Novel submission was received. To which my first thought was, oh yeah, I wrote a 3-day novel. It’s actually all kind of a blur. I still haven’t even re-read it, but I guess this means somebody’s going to. That’s got to be a tough job, reading and judging all of those novels written feverishly over three days. I suppose you score points just for being comprehensible after a certain point.

And that’s about it for today: more about yesterday. We had a roundtable discussion/presentation this afternoon on commissioning new textbooks, which isn’t strictly speaking something I do in my day-to-day, but I am involved in the process as a development editor, and there’s been some weird overlap at times. (I’m not an acquiring editor, but with a few revised editions from our inherited backlist, I’ve kind of become one at times.)

It was too rainy to really go looking for parks to eat my lunch in, but you still can’t miss the police presence in the neighborhood, directing car and foot traffic alike. Today’s the day the General Assembly really kicks off, and with the talk likely to center around Libya and Palestine, it’s little wonder security has been beefed up.

Still plugging away at edits for Kaleidotrope‘s next issue, still not getting enough writing of my own done. But the week is still young…ish.

I will not buy this Monday, it is scratched

I was more than a little convinced, for most of the morning, that today was really just an elaborate practical joke, or perhaps just an unusually vivid dream. It seemed just off enough that I was occasionally looking for hidden cameras or pinching myself in order to wake up.

Part of that’s just a product of the past few days. We had a little bit of a health scare here at the household recently, enough that my sister and her husband came to visit over the weekend, but everything seems to be significantly better now. (It’s funny, but just typing that now made me feel significantly better.) The weekend, my first full one since returning from Canada, was kind of a blur, and I’m kind of glad to have put it behind me.

But it was also the day itself, which started with a bizarre e-mail from Netflix CEO Reed Hastings, “apologizing” for their recent price hikes — which I’ve grumbled about here and elsewhere myself — and detailing the company’s plans to split itself in two.

This is quite honestly the worst thing they could have done. While they claim they’re “done with” pricing changes, that’s only now that the new rates have already gone into effect. They’re taking what was a costly and increasingly less certain product — Netflix has been losing studio deals left and right, and their streaming catalog is looking less appealing every day — and they’ve made it twice as difficult to navigate. The new DVD-by-mail side of the business, named (rather poorly) Qwikster, won’t be tied to the streaming-only Netflix in any obvious way. Customers who opt for both options, like I currently do, will have to navigate two completely separate websites and will receive two completely separate bills. And there’s every indication that Qwikster’s being created just so it can be spun off and sold somewhere — probably not very far — down the line.

Somehow Hastings and company think this is what customers (and investors) didn’t like about the recent price hike. I stuck with them through all of that — I didn’t change or cancel my plan, despite the grumbling — but I’m seriously eying the door right now. I’ve been a customer of theirs for more than ten years now, but I think this might just be the end of the road.

The day just got more Monday-ish after that. I missed my morning train — the later one, the one that’s usually my aw-let’s-sleep-in-a-little back-up — and then got on a subway headed downtown instead of up when I arrived at Penn Station. I figured it out pretty quickly, but wound up on the local instead of the express going back. I wasn’t very late to work or anything, but it was a weird start to the day.

And then the fire alarms at the office… It was almost like being at the old office, where they went off all the time, with only occasional information relayed about why.

By noon, though, the day had more or less righted itself — as much as a Monday can, I suppose — and I carried on as usual. This evening, I finished Anne Lamott’s Bird by Bird, which really has some wonderful writing advice in it. It’s warm, patient, and funny, at times feeling revelatory without being especially ground-breaking. I mean, her best advice — and Lamott admits its not even hers — is write. Put one damn word in front of the other. I didn’t quite do that myself this evening, as I still have a fair amount of line-editing that needs to be done if I’m going to get an issue of Kaleidotrope out before November, but I at least dug out my notebook and started re-reading the story I’ve been working on. Now that the weird Monday — and the health crisis — have passed, I’d like very much to get back into the swing of it, writing again.