Robert J. Sawyer

Hugo and Nebula Award-Winning Science Fiction Writer

RJS events in San Francisco and Canada

by Rob - April 2nd, 2009


My 18th novel science-fiction novel, Wake, will be released in the United States on April 7, and in Canada on April 14.

In its starred review, denoting a book of exceptional merit, Publishers Weekly says, “The wildly thought-provoking first installment of Sawyer’s WWW trilogy explores the origins and emergence of consciousness. The thematic diversity — and profundity — makes this one of Sawyer’s strongest works to date.”

I will be making appearances in San Francisco and across Canada promoting the book. All events are free and open to the public — please come out and say hello, and please help spread the word!

# Bookstore Reading and Signing
Borderlands Books
866 Valencia Street
San Francisco, California
Monday, April 13, 2009, 7:00 p.m.
borderlands-books.com

# Bookstore Reading and Signing
White Dwarf Books
3715 West 10th Avenue
Vancouver, British Columbia
Monday, April 20, 2009, 7:00 p.m.
deadwrite.com/wd.html

# Bookstore Reading and Signing
Sentry Box
1835-10th Ave SW
Calgary, Alberta
Tuesday, April 21, 2009, 7:00 p.m.
sentrybox.com

# Bookstore Reading and Signing
Audrey’s Books
10702 Jasper Avenue
Edmonton, Alberta
Thursday, April 23, 2009, 7:30 p.m.
audreys.ca

# Bookstore Reading and Signing
Librairie Paragraphe Bookstore
2220 McGill College Avenue
Montreal, Quebec
Tuesday, April 28, 2009, 6:30 p.m.
paragraphbooks.com

# Ottawa Book Launch Party!
The Clock Tower Brew Pub
575 Bank Street
Ottawa, Ontario
Wednesday, April 29, 2009, 7:00 p.m.
Hosted by Perfect Books
clocktower.ca
perfectbooks.ca/index.html

# Toronto Book Launch Party!
Dominion on Queen (pub)
500 Queen Street East
Toronto, Ontario
Thursday, April 30, 2009, 7:00 p.m.
Hosted by Bakka Phoenix Books
dominiononqueen.com
bakkaphoenixbooks.com

# Bookstore Reading and Signing
McNally Robinson
1120 Grant Avenue
Winnipeg, Manitoba
Saturday, May 16, 2009, 2:00 p.m.
mcnallyrobinson.com/winnipeg-events

# Reading & Signing
Waterloo Entertainment Centre
24 King Street North
Waterloo, Ontario
Thursday, May 21, 2009, 7:30 p.m.
Hosted by Words Worth Books
(Free admission if you buy the book at the beginning of the event from Words Worth, or in advance from their store; otherwise, $10 to help defray facilities rental — tickets at the door or in advance at the store)
wordsworthbooks.com

# Bookstore Reading and Signing
Chapters
1425 Kingsway Road
Sudbury, Ontario
Monday, May 25, 2009, 7:00 p.m.
chapters.indigo.ca

# Bookstore Reading and Signing
McNally Robinson
3130 8th Street East
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan
Thursday, June 4, 2009, 7:30 p.m.
mcnallyrobinson.com/saskatoon_events

# Bookstore Reading and Signing
Book & Brier Patch
4065 Albert Street
Regina, Saskatchewan
Saturday, June 20, 2009, 2:00 p.m.
bookbrier.ca

More about WAKE

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

USA Today has first official Flash Forward picture

by Rob - April 2nd, 2009


USA Today yesterday had the first official photo from the ABC series pilot based on my novel Flash Forward (above; click for larger version; photo by ABC’s Ron Tom), and in their article they say:

There are still a few big bets [for the fall TV season]:

• ABC is spending $7 million on Flash Forward, an ambitious series based on the sci-fi novel that it hopes is the next Lost. (Everyone blacks out for 2 minutes and 17 seconds and has a vision of the future.)

The coverage at USA Today Online is here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Review of the Calculating God reissue

by Rob - April 1st, 2009


SciFi Dimensions has just posted a lovely review of my Calculating God on the occasion of it being reissued in trade paperback by Tor Books. The review concludes:

“If sci-fi is literature that leaves you thinking as it thoroughly entertains you, then Sawyer’s Hugo and Campbell Award finalist Calculating God is a paragon of the genre. Sawyer treats with heady themes that seldom are explored so well and so memorably. Don’t miss it.

You can read the whole review here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

FilKONtario

by Rob - April 1st, 2009

I’m Special Guest at FilKONtario this weekend in Toronto, Canada’s largest filking convetion. Come on out and join the fun!

I’m particularly thrilled because my friends Randy McCharles and Val King are coming all the way from Calgary for the con. W00t!

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

The interviewer speaks

by Rob - March 30th, 2009

K. Stoddard Hayes, who did the recent SciFi.com interviews with me about Flash Forward, has some nice things to say about the novel in her blog here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Audible.com and Starplex

by Rob - March 30th, 2009


W00t! I’m thrilled to announce that Audible.com has just bought audiobook rights to my novel Starplex — without doubt, the hardest hard-SF novel I’ve ever written.

Starplex was the only novel in its year to be nominated for both the Hugo and the Nebula, and it won Canada’s Aurora Award and CompuServe’s Homer Award, and was a finalist for Japan’s Seiun Award.

This brings to eleven the number of my novels that have, or will have, unabridged audiobook editions. I’m absolutely thrilled, needless to say.

Asimov’s Science Fiction: “Sawyer’s latest should gladden the hearts of readers who complain that nobody’s writing real science fiction anymore, the kind of story that has faster-than-light spaceships and far-off planets and interstellar combat and all the neat things they gobbled up so greedily when `Doc’ Smith was dealing them out. Here’s a story with plenty of slam-bang action but no shortage of material to attract thinking readers, either. Sawyer deftly juggles half a dozen sweeping questions of cosmology (not to mention everyday ethics and morality) while keeping the story moving ahead full speed. His scientific ideas are nicely integrated into the plot, yet they also hint at larger metaphorical levels. Enjoy.”

Analog Science Fiction and Fact: “Mind-boggling. A complaint often heard these days is that there’s not enough `sense of wonder’ in today’s science fiction. Robert J. Sawyer’s Starplex ought to lay that complaint to rest for quite a while.”

Gregory Benford, author of Timescape: “Complex but swift, inventive but real-feeling, with ideas coming thick and fast. For big-time interstellar adventure, look no farther.”

The Halifax Chronicle-Herald: “Starplex appears to be traditional science fiction — it takes place aboard a spaceship, and several characters are extraterrestrial — but it’s actually a rumination on several very deep questions, including: Where did we come from? Where are we going? And the deepest of the deep, Is there a God?”

Library Journal: “An epic hard-science adventure tempered by human concerns. Highly recommended.”

Science Fiction Chronicle: “Excellent hard SF, with Sawyer tossing stars, people and time travel around with reckless abandon. One of the best SF novels of the year.”

Sci-Fi Weekly: “An audacious engineering effort that makes Larry Niven’s Ringworld look like a high-school science project.”

The Toronto Star: “Here, at last, is an ambitious attempt to exploit the possibilities that the genre is capable of.”

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Nick Matthews’s Ad Astra photos …

by Rob - March 30th, 2009

… are here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

SciFi Watch on Ad Astra

by Rob - March 30th, 2009

See David Halpert’s blog here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Ad Astra

by Rob - March 30th, 2009

Ad Astra, Toronto’s annual general-interest SF convention, wrapped up today.

It was one of the best Ad Astras in years, and I had a great time. Highlights included drinks Friday night with David G. Hartwell, Kathryn Cramer, Terence M. Green, Merle Casci, and their children; giving a standing-room-only reading from Wake, a great panel today on ebooks, and a Robert J. Sawyer newsgroup luncheon.

Herb Kauderer took some photos of the luncheon:


Hayden Trenholm, Elizabeth Trenholm


Margaret Chown, Al Katerinsky


Robert J. Sawyer


Sally Tomasevic, Marcel Gagné

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Ottawa and Toronto book-launch parties for Wake

by Rob - March 26th, 2009


Penguin Canada is giving me two big Canadian launch parties for Wake:

  • Book Launch & Birthday Celebration
    The Clock Tower Brew Pub
    575 Bank Street
    Ottawa, Ontario
    Wednesday, April 29, 2009, at 7:00 p.m.
    Book sales provided by Perfect Books
    clocktower.ca
    perfectbooks.ca
  • Book Launch
    Dominion on Queen (pub)
    500 Queen Street East
    Toronto, Ontario
    Thursday, April 30, 2009, 7:00 p.m.
    Book sales provided by Bakka-Phoenix Books
    dominiononqueen.com
    bakkaphoenixbooks.com

(I was born in Ottawa, and I live in Greater Toronto.)

Click here for a printable copy of the Toronto invitation (not that you need one to attend — all are welcome at both events!)

I’ll also be in Vancouver, Calgary, Edmonton, Saskatoon, Regina, Winnipeg, Sudbury, Waterloo, and Moncton. See here for info about those events.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

This year’s Hugo and Campbell nominations

by Rob - March 26th, 2009


I was out of town (in Florida) when the Hugo nominees were announced for this year. I’m sure you’ve all by now seen the list of nominees.

It’s a good list, and my hat’s off to all the finalists (sincerely — I had nothing that was eligible last year).

I’m particularly thrilled, though, by the nominations of James Alan Gardner for best novella, and my writing student Tony Pi for the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer.

(That’s my Hugo trophy for Hominids above; this year’s design hasn’t been unveiled yet.)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Ad Astra begins tomorrow

by Rob - March 26th, 2009

I try to make it to as many major regional SF conventions in Canada as I can each year. This year, I’ll be at VCON in Vancouver, Con-Version in Calgary, Keycon in Winnpeg, the World Science Fiction Convention in Montreal, and, of course, at Toronto’s Ad Astra, which begins tomorrow (not to mention Toronto’s FilKONtario the following weekend, at which I am Author Guest of Honour).

And — you heard it here first, folks: special last-minute guests at Ad Astra this year: Dr. David G. Hartwell, Hugo Award-winning senior editor at Tor Books, and Kathryn Cramer, multiple Hugo Award-nominated co-editor of Year’s Best SF, The Hard SF Renaissance, and The New York Review of Science Fiction.

I’ll be doing a reading from Wake Saturday at 1:00 p.m. in the Crowne Room; the rest of my programming schedule is here.

Ad Astra website.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

ZTreeWin 2.0

by Rob - March 26th, 2009

My favorite Windows file manager, ZTreeWin, has just been updated to version 2.0, and now supports Unicode filenames. The latest version works with NT, 2000, XP, and Vista, and will work with Windows 7 when it’s out. Get it here.

I love, love, love this program.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

I look good in leather

by Rob - March 25th, 2009

At least, The Easton Press thinks so. Just got word that they’ll be doing a signed, numbered, limited leather-bound edition of Wake. Cool!

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Penguin Canada accepts Watch

by Rob - March 25th, 2009

I have separate editors in New York and Toronto. Ginjer Buchanan, my New York editor at Ace, accepted Watch on Tuesday, March 17, and today Laura Shin, my editor at Penguin Group (Canada), accepted it, too, saying, “Watch is wonderful!”

Yay!

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Nice photo of me

by Rob - March 25th, 2009


David G. Hartwell, my long-time editor at Tor, took this shot of me at the International Conference on the Fantastic in the Arts in Orlando last week. (And, yes, it was cool enough there that I was wearing a fleece much of the time.)

His other shots from the conference are here.

Photo: Robert J. Sawyer

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Pre-order the Wake ebook

by Rob - March 24th, 2009


Fictionwise.com has the ebook of my next novel Wake available for pre-order right here. The ebook — and the paper book — will be available April 7, 2009.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Fictionwise

by Rob - March 24th, 2009


Yesterday, Publishers Weekly posted a good article about Fictionwise, the company I buy most of my ebooks from (I’ve purchased 1,230 ebooks of various lengths from them), and the company that offers the largest amount of RJS content electronically.

And today, I got my Fictionwise royalty check — cool.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Tonight’s Supernatural Investigator

by Rob - March 24th, 2009

Hex or Hoax?

Tues., March 24, 2009, 10:30 PM ET / 7:30 PM PT coast-to-coast in Canada on Vision TV

Jinxes, curses, hexes, the evil eye: many cultures possess their own brands of black magic. Are there really people who can harness dark forces to strike down their enemies? In this episode, Halifax filmmaker Donna Davies enters the world of sinister sorcery to learn about Newfoundland witches’ spells, Haitian voodoo rituals and cutting edge contemporary research into the science of the curse. Produced by Sorcery Films Ltd.

Host: Robert J. Sawyer

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

More on Flash Forward at SciFi.com

by Rob - March 24th, 2009

Part 2 (of 2) of SciFi.com’s interview with me about the ABC adaptation of my novel Flash Forward is now up right here.

The interviewer is Karen Hayes.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

SciFi.com (or is that Syfy.com?) interview about Flash Forward

by Rob - March 23rd, 2009


Check it out: “Author Got Misty on the Set.”

Above: David S. Goyer and Brannon Braga on the set of Flash Forward, based on the novel by Robert J. Sawyer

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Peking Man lives

by Rob - March 23rd, 2009


I’m delighted to report that John Joseph Adams has just bought reprint rights to my 1996 short story “Peking Man” for his new anthology By Blood We Live for Night Shade Books.

“Peking Man” was originally published as the lead story in Dark Destiny III: Children of Dracula edited by my friend Edward E. Kramer, and it won Canada’s Aurora Award for Best English short story of the year.

Above: Peking Man as he appears at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology in Beijing — setting, incidentally, for part of my new novel Wake.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Wake "suprisingly good" …

by Rob - March 23rd, 2009

… despite the “sexual innuendos.” So says Flamingnet, a YA book review site with YA reviewers. You can read the 17-year-old reviewer’s thoughts here. (Rating: 10 out of 10.)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Nice!

by Rob - March 23rd, 2009

So, I spent a lovely afternoon here in Orlando, in the shade by the pool, working on revisions to Watch, the second volume of my WWW trilogy.

My beta-test readers have been getting back to me, and I must say the response has been extremely positive, but these comments from one particular reader made my day:

The last ten pages or so of this novel had me exceptionally transported. When I finished the last page, I paused; and the next thought I had was, “He’s fucked. How the hell is he going to top this?” But I’m looking forward to finding out.

I spent a while trying to decide if this was the best “middle book” of a trilogy ever. The only thing that I could come up with that comes close is the middle book of F. M. Busby’s Demu Trilogy … Watch is a great book.

:)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

RJS op-ed in today’s Ottawa Citizen

by Rob - March 20th, 2009

The Friday, March 20, 2009, edition of the Ottawa Citizen — the largest circulation newspaper in Canada’s capital city — has an op-ed piece by me entitled “All Screens Are Not Created Equal” about multitasking, computer use, and attention deficit disorder. At some point it will go behind the subscribers-only wall, but right now it’s free to read online right here.

An op-ed is a signed opinion piece that appears opposite the editoral in a newspaper; it is an opinion piece by someone other than the paper’s editorial writer. You can find older op-eds by me here (scroll down).

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Philosophical Speculations

by Rob - March 18th, 2009


Randy Jansen, Ph.D., Professor and Chair, Department of Philosophy, at Northwestern College in Orange City, Iowa, has a great blog called “Philosophical Speculations: An Exercise in Wondering,” and he recently did a very kind post about — cough, cough — Robert J. Sawyer, saying, among other things:

Many of Sawyer’s books (although I confess I haven’t read them all) are driven by a provocative thought experiment, often just the sort of thing that you’d find widely discussed in the philosophical literature. What would it be like if… everyone in the world were to catch a glimpse of the future? Or if we were to discover scientific evidence of a soul leaving the body at death? Or if we were able to return our aging bodies to their youthful condition? Or if we were to encounter an alien who believed in God? If you want to know what Sawyer thinks it’d be like if such things were to happen, read Flashforward, The Terminal Experiment, Rollback, and Calculating God, respectively. You can count on his books to engage your mind not only with plot and character but with ideas.

He then goes on to discuss Mindscan.

The post about me is here, and this is a general link to his blog.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Identity Theft and Other Stories contents

by Rob - March 17th, 2009


In honour of its nomination for the 2009 Aurora Award — Canada’s top SF award — I’m going to post some excerpts from the my collection Identity Theft and Other Stories over the next little while, starting with this list of the contents:

  • Introduction by Robert Charles Wilson.
  • Individual story introductions by Robert J. Sawyer.
  • “Identity Theft,” copyright 2005 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in Down These Dark Spaceways, edited by Mike Resnick, Science Fiction Book Club, New York, May 2005.
    • Hugo, Nebula, and Aurora Award finalist; Premio UPC winner

  • “Come All Ye Faithful,” copyright 2003 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in Space Inc., edited by Julie E. Czerneda, DAW Books, New York, July 2003.
  • “Immortality,” copyright 2003 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in Janis Ian’s Stars, edited by Janis Ian and Mike Resnick, DAW Books, New York, August 2003.
  • “Ineluctable,” copyright 2002 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in Analog Science Fiction and Fact, November 2002.
    • Aurora Award winner

  • “Shed Skin,” copyright 2002 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in The Bakka Anthology, edited by Kristen Pederson Chew, The Bakka Collection, Toronto, December 2002; first U.S. publication in Analog Science Fiction and Fact, January-February 2004.
    • Analog “Analytical Laboratory” Award winner; Hugo Award finalist

  • “The Stanley Cup Caper,” copyright 2003 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in The Toronto Star, Sunday, August 24, 2003.
  • “On The Surface,” copyright 2003 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in Future Wars, edited by Martin H. Greenberg and Larry Segriff, DAW Books, New York, April 2003.
  • “The Eagle Has Landed,” copyright 2005 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in I, Alien, edited by Mike Resnick, DAW Books, New York, April 2005.
  • “Mikeys,” copyright 2004 by Robert J. Sawyer. First published in Space Stations, edited by Martin H. Greenberg and John Helfers, DAW Books, New York, March 2004.
    • Aurora Award finalist

  • “The Good Doctor,” copyright 1989 by Robert J. Sawyer. First published in Amazing Stories, January 1989.
  • “The Right’s Tough,” copyright 2004 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in Visions of Liberty, edited by Mark Tier and Martin H. Greenberg, DAW Books, New York, July 2004.
  • “Kata Bindu,” copyright 2004 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in Microcosms, edited by Gregory Benford, DAW Books, New York, January 2004.
  • “Driving A Bargain,” copyright 2002 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in Be VERY Afraid!: More Tales of Horror, edited by Edo van Belkom, Tundra Books, Toronto, 2002.
  • “Flashes,” copyright 2006 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in FutureShocks, edited by Lou Anders, Roc Books, New York, January 2006.
  • “Relativity,” copyright 2003 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in Men Writing Science Fiction as Women, edited by Mike Resnick, DAW Books, New York, November 2003.
  • “Biding Time,” copyright 2006 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in Slipstreams, edited by Martin H. Greenberg and John Helfers, DAW Books, New York, May 2006.
    • Aurora Award winner

  • “E-Mails from the Future,” copyright 2008 by Robert  J. Sawyer. First published in The Globe and Mail‘s Report on Business Magazine, Toronto, January 2008.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Wake 12-city Canadian book tour: dates

by Rob - March 17th, 2009


Penguin Canada is sending me to 12 cities to promote Wake — w00t! We’re still finalizing the venues, but I thought I’d give people a heads-up about the cities and dates:

Vancouver: Monday, April 20

Calgary: Tuesday, April 21

Edmonton: Thursday, April 23

Moncton: Saturday, April 25

Montreal: Tuesday, April 28

Ottawa: Wednesday, April 29

Toronto: Thursday, April 30

Winnipeg: Saturday, May 16

Waterloo: Thursday, May 21

Sudbury: Monday, May 25

Saskatoon: Thursday, June 4

Regina: Saturday, June 20

“The wildly thought-provoking first installment of Sawyer’s WWW trilogy explores the origins and emergence of consciousness. The thematic diversity — and profundity — makes this one of Sawyer’s strongest works to date.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review, denoting a book of exceptional merit)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Aurora Award nominees announced

by Rob - March 17th, 2009


The nominees for the 2009 Aurora Awards were announced this morning. My short-story collection Identity Theft and Other Stories is one of five finalists for the Best Long Form Work in English Award this year.

In the Long Form category, very unusually, three of the five nominees are short-story collections. Also, three of the five nominees are my writing students: Douglas Smith, Hayden Trenholm, and Edward Willett. Go team!

This is my 37th Aurora Award nomination to date; I’ve previously won the award 10 times — that makes me both the biggest winner and the biggest loser on the English side of the awards. :)

The full list of nominees is here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Watch

by Rob - March 17th, 2009


Ginjer Buchanan, my editor at Ace Science Fiction in New York, just emailed me to say she thinks Watch, the second volume of my WWW trilogy, is “even better than Wake.”

W00t! As Caitlin woud say, “I am made out of awesome!” :D

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site