Maybe your book 'second cousins' will find the way to Hollywood someday as 
well? I guess it was the film that made Martin famous:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MdSPFJcxCNM

-J.



Sent from AndroidDouglas Roberts <[email protected]> wrote:Thanks for the 
honorable mention, Steve!

BTW, I'm now qualified to give seminars, workshops, etc. that provide clinical 
proof of how rapidly your book sales can (will!) fall off a cliff without a 
pretty aggressive, ongoing marketing plan.

--Doug
-- 
Doug Roberts
[email protected]
[email protected]
http://parrot-farm.net/Second-Cousins

505-455-7333 - Office
505-670-8195 - Cell


On Fri, Jul 20, 2012 at 2:43 PM, Steve Smith <[email protected]> wrote:
Jochen -

I met George when I used to hang with some of the local  (NM)  SF authors, I've 
since dropped out of that crowd.

I also hosted a series of events at LANL during the 1998 Nebula awards...  At 
that event I even met a woman (SF/F Author who claimed to have accidentally 
started the Society for Creative Anachronism when she invited all of her 
friends and aquaintences and colleagues to her house in Berkeley to celebrate 
her recent       Masters in Medieval Studies and they all showed up in period 
costume and weaponry....   I can't remember her name now and could not 
corroborate her story.

George is a lot like many of the SF/F authors I know...  only a bit more 
successful than most.  I found George to be a self-important curmudgeon long 
before he hit it bigtime (while he was producing the work that he would hit it 
bigtime with!)...  so I can't imagine that has decreased.  The Game of Thrones 
series (even before it got picked up by HBO) was very powerful even though it 
is not my usual fare.  George also initiated and edited a series of 
collected/themed short stories known as "the Wild Card" stories which in my 
opinion presaged (or inspired, or informed) the "Heroes" HBO series.  These are 
(I think he's still cranking them out) very good examples of collaborative 
fiction as well...  

We (NM) recently (2006) lost the legendary Jack Williamson at the ripe young 
age of 98... he came to NM by way of covered wagon just around 1912/statehood 
(age 4).   He was incredibly prolific right up until his last few years, and 
managed to get credit for many neologisms from Science Fiction as documented in 
the Oxford English Dictionary.... including my favorite "contra-terrene" 
(anti-matter).  He also told a great anecdote about being visited by the FBI 
during the Manhattan project because of one of his stories' reference to "Atom 
Bombs"...  he got them off his back by referring them to a much older (1932?) 
story with the same ideas...  I recommend his first novel in the "Humanoid" 
Series... I think it was called "With Folded Hands" (what goes awry when you 
make the perfect robotic servants whose directives are roughly those that 
Asimov is given credit for... "Allow no human to come to harm"...   taking this 
to the extreme they became a kindler, gentler version of the Borg or the 
Berserkers.

We also lost the similarly legendary Roger Zelazny who was a long time resident 
of Santa Fe and most famous for his series referred to as "The Amber 
Chronicles" I think.  Zelazny was also much loved for the writing workshops he 
taught in the area.

Steve (S.M.) Stirling is another prolific Santa Fe author.  He has several 
collaborators who he publishes with, including the well known name of Anne 
McCaffrey ("The Ship who Fought).  Most of his works are military SF, Post 
Apocalyptic and Alternate History.   I enjoy the last the most.

Stephen C. Gould and Laura Mixon are perhaps my favorite "writing couple"... 
Stephen's work hit it "big time" when one of his juvenile novels, "Jumper" was 
made into a movie (disappointing result as such endeavors often are) a few 
years ago.  They wrote a great collaborative novel together for those here 
interested in collaborative efforts.   Laura is a very powerful Cyberpunk (my 
measure of the theme of her work) Author in her own right and collaborator on 
an Interactive Storytelling engine (Storytron).  Laura and/or Stephen might 
even be members of this or the SFX Discuss list.  I hosted them at SFX for a 
"blender" on interactive       storytelling a few years ago.

Walter Jon Williamson is another of my favorites...   His work touches on 
Cyberpunk (HardWired in particular) but manages to be very highbrow technically 
despite the lowbrow tropes such as "Space Opera".   I haven't seen anything 
from him lately, but I'm sure he's still working...

Other SF names from the immediate are that might also be recognized include:  
Fred Saberhagen, Sage Walker, Patty Nagel, Sally Gwylan ...  

And of course, there is the ever-famous annual SF Confention in Albuquerque 
called the "Bubonicon" after the unfortunate disease, "Bubonic Plague".

Oh, and then of course, we have Doug!  

- Steve



A colleague came up today with a book from George R.R. Martin. They say he is 
the American Tolkien, so I decided to read one of his books, 'Game of Thrones'. 
Has someone actually met him? He lives in Santa Fe and seems to be cool.

-J.



Sent from Android


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