4.30.2011

GOBLIN QUEST by Jim C. Hines



I just finished Goblin Quest by Jim C. Hines, and I can't wait to get my hands on the next book in the series. 

Jig, a goblin, is an unlikely but strangely likable protagonist and an even stranger goblin. As a goblin, Jig is a runt and a weakling. He has been relegated to muck duty, a chore usually performed by goblin children. However, Jig's lack of strength has caused him to rely on - gasp - his brain and smarts for survival, which is what makes him likable. Jig is a great character and makes the book worth reading.

While reading, I felt as if I were still rolling twenty-sided dice with friends on Sunday afternoons attempting to save the world from some evil or another. I didn't even try to resist seeing my friends in the Hines' characters. Instead, I laughed when the wizard and the fighter bickered and the dwarf attempted not to take sides. I also laughed when the elven-thief failed to check for traps when picking a lock (just like my wife) and almost died. Such good times.

However, the culture clash was the most entertaining. While Jig was being towed around as a guide by the adventures, several cultural misunderstandings occur. The one that I appreciated most was a discussion what is done with the dead and fallen. Jig and his fellow goblin patrol was just slaughtered by the adventures, and the adventures wondered what happened to the dead in the caverns. Jig''s first thought was that he was full (as in not hungry). Wonderful! Yes, I was reading with an all too human point of view. Now, however, I was ready for and wanting more such moments... 

...More such moments that I hope to find in the next two books.   

Hines, Jim. C. Goblin Quest. New York: DAW, 2006. Print. 

Jar of Hearts - Christina Perri

4.24.2011

Tattoo #6: File-eared Tree Frog (Polypedates otilophus)

From Top-Left to Bottom-Right: 1) Shaved My leg
2)  Stencil Placement 3) Outline 4) Black Shading
5) Color Shading
6) Finished


File-eared Tree Frog (Polypedates otilophus)

I've been wanting new ink since the last one healed. I guess that's the way it goes for an addict, but none of the images I'd come across spoke to me.

Two years later, I've taught twenty sections of Environmental Science, each of which I started with a presentation about frogs. Frogs are fragile. Intrinsically, frogs are beautiful and enjoy a niche within food webs as both predators and as prey. Instrumentally, they provide population control for pests and can serve as a bioindicator, reveling the presence of toxic pollutants. Starting out each of my classes by lecturing on frogs, on their value and fragility allowed me to quickly introduce and immerse students in both the language of Environmental Science and engage students in an environmental problem quickly.

To learn more about the environmental problems and the importance of frogs, I suggest starting with CGEE's: A Thousand Friends of Frogs. Two good presentation resources include, Frog Malformities and Frogs as Bioindicators.

Alas, the strange circumstances that have allowed me the opportunity to teach Environmental Science have dissolved like Cinderella's dress and her pumpkin carriage. It's been a good run, and I feel lucky to have had the chance to study and converse with students about how human systems and environmental interact. Thus, this tattoo is celebration and remembrance of my time as an instructor of environmental science. Perhaps, it is also a wish, a desire to seek out such circumstances where I will again be able to discuss the importance of frogs. (I just realized, not that I had planed it, but I had the tattoo done on Earth Day 2011 - a strange and wonderful coincidence.)

About the source material:

Tim Laman, a wildlife photojournalist, took an stunning closeup shot the File-eared Tree Frog (Polypedates otilophus), which is native to the Sumatra and Borneo rain forests. Laman's original picture is located in his Rain Forest at Night archive. Laman also has a wonderful blog that you can follow, Tim Laman Blog. To find out more about the File-eared Tree Frog, visit the frog's bio-page on Ecology Asia.

4.11.2011

Inez Wick - Reviewers Wanted

Print - $14.00
PDF - $6.00
Have a blog? Like to review books? Like free books? - does that sound like you? If it does sound like you, send me an email: aaronwilson01 [at] gmail.com

I'm looking for a few reviewers that would like a free copy of The Many Lives of Inez Wick. To get a free copy, you will need to agree to review the book or at least publicize it's existence and link to the Lulu.com product page.

Formats: 1) book: I don't have many copies, so first come / first serve. 2) PDF: I can provide as many of these as I get requests.

Also, I'm available to for interviews, so help me get the word out!    

4.07.2011

PEACEMAKER, PEACEMAKER, LITTLE BO PEEP by Jason Sanford @jasonsanford

I consider myself lucky in many aspects of my life, but I don't usually win anything. Thus, I was felt very lucky to have won a copy of sold out issue of Interzone 231: the Jason Sanford special issue. The special issue contains not one but three stories by Sanford and an interview with Sanford, so I feel very lucky indeed.

The first of Sanford's three stories in Interzone issue 231 is "Peacemaker, Peacemaker, Little Bo Peep." I just finished reading the story last night before bed, and I dreamt a dream of violence. Such a dream, if I were a character in Sanford's story would have meant my death by the hands of those who trilled for peace. Aptly named trillers because they make a harsh trilling sound, as they purge those who dream of violence from the face of the earth.

See, according to Sanford's vision, there are three types of people: wolves, those who murder; sheepdogs, those who serve and protect; and sheep, those who would never dream using violence to solve a problem, including the protection of loved ones. In this world, the sheep dream of peace - a world free of wolves and sheepdogs. They dream of a world free from those who see violence as an solution to problems. Ironically, in order to free the earth from both wolves and sheepdogs, the sheep round up and mass execute both the wolves and sheepdogs alike. In a world of only sheep, who dream the true dream of peace, would humanity survive the invasion of a hostile race from another planet? Sanford's story does not answer that question, only posses it toward the end:
"Doesn't take another predator to know you attack the sheep when they are peaceful," he said. "The creatures who tricked us with this dream of peace will be coming. I suggest keeping your eyes on the up and up" (Sanford 27). 
"Peacemaker, Peacemaker, Little Bo Peep" is an amazing story from beginning to end. Sanford's vision of this traumatic and violent world is well rendered so that the reader can focus on the action and heart felt emotions of the main character and narrator, Sergeant Ellen Davies. Sergeant Davies is a mother, a wife, and a cop. Just before the trilling started, she had made an arrest that should have secured her career. She caught a serial killer. However, the tirllers, the sheep, treat her the same was as the killer. They are rounded up and taken out to the swampy river to be execute because they do not dream the true dream of peace.  Thus, a killer - a wolf - and a cop - a sheepdog - become unlikely traveling companions in  a world completely gone crazy.

If Hollywood is looking for new ideas - which it seem they truly need these days -, I think that they should look no further than Jason Sanford's short stories, especially "Peacemaker, Peacemaker, Little Bo Peep." If you can find a way to get your hands on Sanford's story, your in for a treat. However, if you are not able to find his story, make sure to check out his blog for information about his other work, including a new ebook Sublimation Angles.

Sanford, Jason. "Peacemaker, Peacemaker, Little Bo Peep." Interzone. Issue 231, November/December 2010. TTA Press. Print. 19 - 27

4.06.2011

Book Event April 14th - @Cifiscape vol 1: The Twin Cities

Okay Twin Cities, here is your chance to meet and greet seven (which, yes, includes me) amazingly fresh and local science fiction writers.

The Event Details: Cifiscape - Publication Party

The Book House in Dinkytown
Thursday, April 14th
7pm - 9pm

According to event page: "We warmly welcome you to join us on Thursday April 14th, at The Book House in Minneapolis, because Cifiscape and the Book House are having a publication party. There will be some paintings of Bicycle knights (I'm serious actual oil paintings) Wonderful creative writers speaking about their art, AND a passionate community book shop fighting against Mass-Market paper backism. Really, what more could you ask for from an evening? Oh, did I mention cheese?

Come meet the authors and the team behind Cifiscape vol. I. Come share in imagining our future in the Twin Cities."


If you're not sure that you want a copy or want to attend, check out my reviews of the stories in the collection. Sorry, I didn't review the story that I have in the collection. I felt that would be kind of weird. But let me tell you, the collection is amazing (my story included!). 

I hope to see all of you there to cheer me on at my first publication party! 


4.03.2011

KAWATARO by Alec Nevala-Lee @nevalalee

I was excited to see the new issue of Analog on the kitchen counter when I got home from a short trip to Palm Desert, CA. I was even more excited to see Alec Nevala-Lee's name on the cover. To understate my appreciation for Nevala-Lee's fiction, I enjoy his fiction's focus on environmental problems.

I first ran into Nevala-Lee's fiction in the September 2009 issue of Analog, and I loved his Monkey-Wrench Gang inspired story, "The Last Resort" (read my review). I highly recommend following the career of this rising science fiction rock star. His novel, The Icon Thief, will be out in February 2012.

Caution! Spoilers! I suggest reading Nevala-Lee's story instead of my review. "Kawataro" is a mystery, and I can hardly write about the story without letting the cat out of the bag. Okay, you've been warned.

"Kawataro" is a mystery firmly grounded in an environmental problem, a problem that would not exist except for limitations in our (human) ability to equitably provide food security. Food security is an environmental concept that describes a persons access to nutritious calories. When a person or a population suffers from food insecurity, that person or population usually is struggling to obtain sufficient calories, iron, or iodine. In the United States to battle iodine deficiency, iodine was artificially added to salt. When the body suffers from an iodine deficiency, the thyroid gland increases in size, hair can fall out, skin can yellow and develop scales, and in some rare cases cause madness.

Nevala-Lee's mystery of the river dwelling Kawataro hinges on iodine deficiency symptoms. I applaud the research that went into the story, but not the research that went into the effects of iodine deficiency but also into the linguistic anthropology needed to round out the deaf fishing village in Japan. But I'm getting ahead of myself. The monster, the Kawataro is myth told to children of frog-like creatures - water spirits - that live in the village's rivers. It is said that the Kawataro kill disrespectful children and drink the children's blood. The myth is so prevalent in the village, a picture hangs in the local bar and stone statues litter the walkways. Thus, I ask the question: which came first, the Kawataro myth or locals suffering from iodine deficiency? Either way, what a great story.

Nevala-Lee's "Kawataro" mystery reminds me a little of H.P. Lovecraft's "Shadow Over Innsmouth," which also featured frog-like or fish-like humanoids. Also, in Nevala-Lee's "Kawataro," the reader is shepherded by an outsider, Hakaru, a documentary camera operator. In H.P. Lovecraft's "Shadow Over Innsmouth," the outsider is later revealed as a returning native. Meanwhile, in Nevala-Lee's "Kawataro," Hakaru works with Dr. Nakaya, a linguistic anthropologist, who is later outed as a villager. Dr. Nakaya is in the village studying and documenting a new and evolving indigenousness form of sign language, and Hakaru is there to film interactions between the children who practice the new language.

The documentation of the indigenousness form of sign language is a misdirect in the mystery. The children are creepy and silent (a.k.a Children of the Corn, except Japanese). The children are always around the next corner and always watching and communicating in a form of sign only they understand. The main conflict that starts the story rolling is that the village school must integrate with the closest city so that the government can save money. Dr. Nakaya is fighting the integration because it would mean and end to the indigenousness form of sign language and her research. Because Dr. Nakaya is seen as an outsider and interested in the children, she is quickly blamed for the murder of the school's biggest integration advocate, Miyamoto.

As the investigation into Miyamoto's murder progresses, Hakaru talks to locals who are willing to reveal that Miyamoto's murder is only one of several. It doesn't talk long for the murder to catch up with Hakaru and his snooping. Moreover, Hakaru, possessing more environmental and health knowledge than I gave him credit, is able to link the recessive gene for deafness, the myth of the Kawataro, and iodine deficiency symptoms to catch the killer before it (...um) he strikes again.

Make sure to get your copy of the June 2011 issue of Analog before they're gone, so you can read this gem of a story. While you're at it, you can follow Nevala-Lee's blog, Alec Nevala-Lee and Twitter, @nevalalee.

Nevala-Lee, Alec. "Kawataro." Analog. Dell Magazines, June 2011, Vol. CXXXI, No. 6. Print