Robert J. Sawyer

Hugo and Nebula Award-Winning Science Fiction Writer

Farewell to Berton House

by Rob - September 26th, 2007

Our Klondike adventure is over. Carolyn and I finished our three months at the Berton House Writers Retreat in Dawson, Yukon, today.

We arrived here on Tuesday, July 3, 2007, for an 87-day stay (minus 14 days for our side trip to China). It’s been a mostly relaxing, mostly productive time, and I’m going to miss it. Suzanne Saito, the local Berton House liaison, picks us up in two hours to take us to the Dawson airport, and we begin the trek home (with two nights in Whitehorse, then a flight to Vancouver, then the long flight to Toronto).

Our thanks to Elsa Franklin, the Berton House administrator; Suzanne Saito, the liaison; Dan Davidson, editor of the Klondike Sun newspaper; the Berton House Charitable Trust; the Klondike Visitors Association; and, of course, to the memory of the great Pierre Berton, who generously established this retreat.

(The painting above was done by a previous Berton House resident, and hangs just inside the entryway.)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

NorthStar: 25 Years Ago Today

by Rob - September 25th, 2007

Has it been a quarter of a century already? Wow …

Twenty-five years ago today, my great friend Ted Bleaney and I co-chaired a wonderful day-long science-fiction conference in Toronto called NorthStar: a full track of speakers, with a companion track of short films organized by Tom Nadas.

The event was a huge success, with a great turnout. The venue was the York Woods Branch of the North York Public Library. NorthStar was, I believe, the first-ever conference devoted to Canadian science fiction.

Our guest of honour was Donald Kingsbury (who we flew in from Montreal), and also on the program were such SF stars, even then, as Terence M. Green, Andrew Weiner, John Robert Colombo, and horror expert Robert S. Hadji; I served as master of ceremonies.

A very fond memory …

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

University of Waterloo teaches Rob

by Rob - September 25th, 2007

Not to be outdone by the University of Calgary, I’m informed that the University of Waterloo uses two Robert J. Sawyer novels in the science fiction course taught there by the Philosophy department’s Joseph A. Novak: both Calculating God and Mindscan are required reading. Woohoo!

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Klondike Poetry Round Robin

by Rob - September 25th, 2007

Last night (Monday, September 24, 2007), my lovely wife Carolyn Clink ran a poetry round robin at the Dawson Public Library here in the Yukon.

It was a wonderful event: about a dozen residents showed up (including Dan Davidson, the editor of the local paper, and Suzanne Saito, the Berton House liaison).

Carolyn read the first poem, and then they went around the circle with those who wanted to reading poems as well; they did three full turns around the circle — and Carolyn wrapped up by reading one of her best poems, “Cenotaphs.” A terrific way to spend our second-last night in Dawson.

Suzanne Saito, Dawne Mitchell, Carolyn Clink

Carolyn Clink

Carolyn’s blog at SFPOET.COM

Carolyn at SFWRITER.COM

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Best Movie Ever

by Rob - September 25th, 2007

Casablanca. Just sayin’ …

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Von Holtzbrink and eBooks

by Rob - September 24th, 2007

One really does have to wonder what’s going through the minds of the people at Von Holtzbrink — parent company of Tor, Forge, and St. Martin’s Press — when it comes to ebooks.

They have mostly given up doing Tor titles as ebooks (I was promised that my Mindscan would be released as an ebook, but it never was; I never even bothered to ask about Rollback).

But now, just today, Fictionwise at long last has Douglas Preston’s Tyrannosaur Canyon as an ebook — but only in Mobipocket format, and — get this! — for a book that’s been in mass-market paperback at $7.99 since August of last year, the ebook is priced at $14.00. That’s right, almost double the price of the current print edition.

I’m at a loss to explain the logic of this. Given that Von Holtzbrink insists on ebook rights in their contracts, not exploiting them efficiently, in a timely manner, and at a price point that would actually perhaps generate sales seems … less than optimal, shall we say.

(I went through the same nonsense years ago with the ebook of Hybrids, the last title of mine Von Holtzbrink did as an ebook: priced at way more than the prevailing print edition, and only available in one format. Apparently they’ve learned nothing since.)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Last night at Diamond Tooth Gerties

by Rob - September 23rd, 2007

Last night was the final night of the year at Diamond Tooth Gerties, the casino / night club here in Dawson, Yukon; it’s now closed until next summer. Carolyn and I walked on over for the 8:30 floorshow, and Gertie herself came over to our table, sang to me, and planted a big kiss on my forehead. :)

The reason the casino is called Diamond Tooth Gerties (plural) instead of Diamond Tooth Gertie’s (possessive) is, I guess, because they have two different actresses who portray Gertie. The one above is Kelley O’Connor; the other was Tracy Nordick.

Although I don’t gamble, Carolyn and I often walked down to Gerties in the evenings — for the exercise and fresh air of the walk, and maybe to grab a slice of pizza from the snack bar or catch a bit of one of the three nightly floorshows. It was one of our favourite places in Dawson, and we’re going to miss it.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

More Northern Lights!

by Rob - September 23rd, 2007

Oh my God! Last night (Saturday, September 22, 2007), the northern lights were even better here in the Klondike than they were the night before — in fact, they were absolutely incredible: arching right across the entire sky, from north to south, visibly rippling and undulating. Unbelievable, and amazingly beautiful. And — yay! — at 10:30 p.m., instead of 4:30 a.m.

Sadly, Carolyn didn’t figure out how to get a really long exposure on her digital camera until after the best of the auroras had disappeared, but she still managed this wonderful shot.

We are both ecstatic! Auroras rock!

In fact, I confess that I’d never seen the northern lights when I wrote this scene, from the opening of Humans six years ago, on August 8, 2001, in which an aberrant display of the aurora borealis figures prominently [minor spoiler alert]:

[Mary Vaughan would] miss many things about Sudbury. She’d miss the lack of traffic congestion. She’d miss the friends she’d made here, including Reuben Montego and, yes, even Louise BenoĆ®t. She’d miss the relaxed atmosphere of tiny Laurentian University, where she’d done her mitochondrial DNA studies that had proven Ponter Boddit was indeed a Neanderthal.

But, most of all, she realized, as she stood at the side of the country road looking up at the clear night sky, she’d miss this. She’d miss seeing stars in a profusion beyond counting. She’d miss seeing the Andromeda galaxy, which Ponter had identified for her. She’d miss seeing the Milky Way, arching overhead.

And —

Yes!

Yes!

She’d especially miss this: the aurora borealis, flickering and weaving across the northern sky, pale green sheets of light, ghostly curtains.

Mary had indeed hoped to catch another glimpse of the aurora tonight. She’d been on her way back from Reuben Montego’s place out in Lively (hah!), where she’d had a final barbecue dinner with him and Louise, and she’d pulled over at the side of the road specifically to look up at the night sky.

The heavens were cooperating. The aurora was breathtaking.

She’d forever associate the northern lights with Ponter. The only other time she’d seen them had been with him. She felt an odd sensation in her chest, the expanding feeling that went with awe battling the contracting sensation that accompanied sadness.

The lights were beautiful.

He was gone.

A cool green glow bathed the landscape as the aurora continued to flicker and dance, aspens and birches silhouetted in front of the spectacle, their branches waving slightly in the gentle August breeze.

Mary had made it to her current age of thirty-eight before seeing the aurora, and she didn’t anticipate any reason to come back to Northern Ontario, so tonight, she knew, might well be the last time she’d ever see the undulating northern lights.

She drank in the view.

Some things were the same on both versions of Earth, Ponter had said: the gross details of geography, most of the animal and plant species (although the Neanderthals, never having indulged in overkilling, still had mammoths and moas in their world), the broad strokes of the climate. But Mary was a scientist: she understood all about chaos theory, about how the beating of a butterfly’s wing was enough to affect weather systems half a world away. Surely just because there was a clear sky here on this Earth didn’t mean the same was true on Ponter’s world.

But if the weather did happen to coincide, perhaps Ponter was also looking up at the night sky now.

And perhaps he was thinking of Mary.

Ponter would, of course, be seeing precisely the same constellations, even if he gave them different names — nothing terrestrial could possibly have disturbed the distant stars. But would the auroras be the same? Did butterflies or people have any effect on the choreography of the northern lights? Perhaps she and Ponter were looking at the exact same spectacle — a curtain of illumination waving back and forth, the seven bright stars of the Big Dipper (or, as he would call it, the Head of the Mammoth) stretching out above.

Why, he might even right now be seeing the same shimmying to the right, the same shimmying to the left, the same —

Jesus.

Mary felt her jaw drop.

The auroral curtain was splitting down the middle, like aquamarine tissue paper being torn by an invisible hand. The fissure grew longer, wider, starting at the top and moving toward the horizon. Mary had seen nothing like that on the first night she’d looked up at the northern lights.

The sheet finally separated into two halves, parting like the Red Sea before Moses. A few — they looked like sparks, but could they really be that? — arced between the halves, briefly bridging the gap. And then the half on the right seemed to roll up from the bottom, like a window blind being wound onto its dowel, and, as it did so, it changed colors, now green, now blue, now violet, now orange, now turquoise.

And then in a flash — a spectral burst of light — that part of the aurora disappeared.

The remaining sheet of light was swirling now, as if it were being sucked down a drain in the firmament. As it spun more and more rapidly, it flung off gouts of cool green fire, a pinwheel against the night.

Mary watched, transfixed. Even if this was only her second night actually observing an aurora, she’d seen countless pictures of the northern lights over the years in books and magazines. She’d known those still images hadn’t done justice to the spectacle; she’d read how the aurora rippled and fluttered.

But nothing had prepared her for this.

The vortex continued to contract, growing brighter as it did so, until finally, with — did she really hear it? — with what sounded like a pop, it vanished.

Mary staggered backward, bumping up against the cold metal of her rented Dodge Neon. She was suddenly aware that the forest sounds around her — insects and frogs, owls and bats — had fallen silent, as if every living thing was looking up in wonder.

Mary’s heart was pounding, and one thought kept echoing through her head as she climbed into the safety of her car.

I wonder if it’s supposed to do that …

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Jack London review

by Rob - September 22nd, 2007

In honour of my last few days living just down the road from Jack London’s cabin in Dawson, Yukon, a pointer to a review I did of Jack’s book Before Adam; the review was published in 2005 in the glossy newsstand magazine Archaeology.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

At last! Northern Lights!

by Rob - September 22nd, 2007

Finally! About 4:30 a.m. this morning I got up to pee here at Berton House, and, on my way back to the bedroom, I looked out the kitchen window, and —

Oh, my God!

Northern lights! A spectacular show of the aurora borealis, rising up from the hills on the far side of the river, and sending streamers back across almost the entire sky. They were a beautiful, ghostly green. I immediately woke Carolyn, and we headed outside to see them. Absolutely breathtaking.

With only three nights left in our three-month stay here in the Klondike, I was beginning despairing that we’d never see the northern lights. The first six week, here in the land of the midnight sun, it simply never got dark at night, and although there have been a few spectacularly clear nights of late, we’d seen no auroral display at all.

But last night! Last night was amazing!

(What’s shown above is a stock photo, turned up by Google images, but very similar to what we saw.)

And winter has arrived here. Mercifully, it wasn’t that cold out at 4:30 a.m., but this morning at 10:00 a.m. the temperature here was -5 Celsius (23 Farhenheit). Brrrr!


There are strange things done in the midnight sun
By the men who moil for gold;
The Arctic trails have their secret tales
That would make your blood run cold;
The Northern Lights have seen queer sights,
But the queerest they ever did see
Was that night on the marge of Lake Lebarge
I cremated Sam McGee.

Robert Service


The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Rollback adopted at University of Calgary

by Rob - September 20th, 2007

My latest novel Rollback has been adopted as required reading for the science-fiction course to be taught by Ruby Ramraj at the University of Calgary next term (Winter 2008) — yay!

(Prof. Ramraj is also teaching an SF course this term, and she’s using my first novel, Golden Fleece, as a required text.)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

T-minus One Week

by Rob - September 19th, 2007

Today begins my final week at the Berton House writers’ retreat in Dawson City, Yukon; one week from today, on Wednesday, September 26, Carolyn and I depart for Whitehorse (the territorial capital); we’ll have a day of sightseeing there, plus me doing a reading at the public library, then on Friday, September 28, we’ll at last be back home in Mississauga.

It’ll have been a long journey. I left Mississauga on Thursday, June 28, 2007, flying to San Francisco for the NASA Ames / SETI institute conference on “The Future of Intelligent Life in the Cosmos.”

From there, I took the two-day trip to Dawson (rendezvousing with Carolyn in Vancouver), and we arrived at Berton House on Tuesday, July 3, 2007 — and, as y’all know, in the middle of my three-month stint here, Carolyn and I took off two weeks to go to China.

It’s been a wonderful, mind-expanding, productive, fun summer, and I’m sure I’ll look back on it fondly for the rest of my life.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Robinson Crusoe on Mars — with added RJS!

by Rob - September 18th, 2007

Tomorrow — Tuesday, September 18, 2007 — the Criterion Collection is finally releasing the cult classic SF film Robinson Crusoe on Mars on DVD … and the bonus features include a nifty new documentary about the film produced by the redoubtable Michael Lennick, and the documentary is just chock-full of clips from an interview he did with one Robert J. Sawyer.

I’ve done a lot of film commentary in the past for TV shows (TVOntario’s Saturday Night at the Movies and Canadian Learning Television’s Books into Film, among others), but this is the first time I’ve been part of the special features on a DVD. I got an advance screener of the documentary, and it’s quite nifty, I must say.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

"The Galileo Seven" remastered

by Rob - September 17th, 2007

To our astonishment, here in Dawson, Yukon, Carolyn and I managed to catch the last half of “The Galileo Seven” remastered — the premiere of the second year of Star Trek Remastered in syndication (our Dawson cable company feeds KTLA from Los Angeles, and they’re showing Star Trek Remastered on Saturday nights at 11:00 p.m. Pacific time).

“The Galileo Seven” had lots of wonderful shuttlecraft miniature sequences in the original — and they’ve all been redone as CGI. Have a look.

(The remastered episodes will be commercially released on HD DVDs in season-long box sext starting this fall.)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

One more song: "Sweet Jaime"

by Rob - September 17th, 2007

One more song from The Six Million Dollar Man, a rather sweet and romantic scene in which Steve Austin and Jaime Sommers start to get serious. Lee Majors starts singing about the 2 minute 10 second mark …

Sweet Jaime

Speaking of canonical name spellings, by the way, the original spelling of Jaime’s first name was to be “Jamie,” but Lindsay Wagner accidentally misspelled it during an expensive effects shot when she was using her bionic finger to carve her name inside a heart (“Jamie + ?”) on the side of a tree, and so “Jaime” became the official spelling.

Of course, I think it’s perfect. Jaime, like Steve Austin, is from Ojai, California, and there “Jai” is pronounced “Hy” (“Ojai” is “Oh-Hy”).

And that means “Jaime” can be read as a homonym of “Hymie” — and Hymie was the robot character on Get Smart … prior to the The Six Million Dollar Man and The Bionic Woman, Hymie was one of the most popular characters with mechanical parts on TV.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Toronto SF authors at Word on the Street

by Rob - September 17th, 2007

Once again, Toronto’s Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers have taken a booth at the Word on the Street open-air book fair, being held in Queen’s Park, Toronto, from 11:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. on Sunday, September 30, 2007.

The SF&F booth is #183, on the east side of Queen’s Park, facing east, just south of St. Joseph Street.

In addition, from 1:00 to 1:30, Robert J. Sawyer will be reading from Rollback at the Great Books Marquee Tent at 1:00 p.m.

Signing schedule at booth 183:

* Robert J. Sawyer: 11:00 – 1:00; 1:30 to 6:00
* Terence M. Green: 11:00 – 6:00 (pictured above)
* Scott Mackay: 11:00 – 3:00
* Karl Schroeder: 11:00 – 2:00
* Phyllis Gotlieb: 3:00 – 5:00
* Andrew Weiner: 2:00 – 3:00

And Toronto’s Ad Astra SF convention will be on hand from 4:00 – 6:00, promoting next year’s con.

More info: thewordonthestreet.ca

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

And then there’s the Dusty Springfield theme song …

by Rob - September 17th, 2007

… used for the second and third 90-minute Six Million Dollar Man TV movies in the fall of 1973, before the 60-minute series began. Dusty Springfield sings; lyrics by Glen A. Larson. (YouTube video)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Another Nick DiChario novel!

by Rob - September 16th, 2007

Nick DiChario has sold second novel Valley of Day-Glo to Rob Sawyer at Robert J. Sawyer Books, for February 2008 publication, via Christine Cohen of the Virginia Kidd Agency; Nancy Kress has been commissioned to write an introduction to the novel.

Nick’s first novel, A Small and Remarkable Life, was previously published by Robert J. Sawyer Books (with an introduction by Mike Resnick), and was a finalist for this year’s John W. Campbell Memorial Award.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

More nifty SF music: "Gotta Get Loose"

by Rob - September 16th, 2007

Yes, Lee Majors himself sings this pretty cool little song called “Gotta Get Loose,” from the first of the episodes from The Six Million Dollar Man that introduced the character of the bionic woman.

Couple of things to note about this YouTube clip: the opening shot is the one and only place in the whole series that establishes the canonical spelling of Steve Austin’s full first name. Up to this point, it was anyone’s guess wether he was really a Steven or a Stephen; here, it’s clearly shown that he’s Steven (he’s NEVER called that in the series; all other references, even on close-ups of his ID card, are to “Steve” Austin).

Also, you want a quick and dirty guarantee of an excellent Six Million Dollar Man episode? Look for that special credit, “And ALAN OPPENHEIMER as Dr. Rudy Wells.” Not only is Alan Oppenheimer one of the great TV character actors of all time (as well as brilliant voice artist — he was Man-at-Arms and Skeletor in He-Man and the Masters of the Universe), but just about every SMDM episode he was in was intelligent and first rate. His Wikipedia entry.

Lee Majors sings “Gotta Get Loose” (video)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

A computer named after me!

by Rob - September 16th, 2007

How cool is this! A computer at the Computer Science Computing Facility’s Research Group at the University of Waterloo is named after me! In fact, most of the computers there are named after science-fiction writers — Asimov, Bradbury, LeGuin, Sawyer, Turtledove, Verne. Check it out!

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Benson, Arizona

by Rob - September 16th, 2007

Benson, Arizona, blew warm wind through your hair

My body flies the galaxy, my heart longs to be there

Benson, Arizona, the same stars in the sky

But they seemed so much kinder when we watched them, you and I

Everyone who remembers the low-budget 1974 John Carpenter SF film Dark Star also remembers it as one of the very few SF films ever to have a country-and-western theme song.

That song, “Benson, Arizona,” is immortalized here — including an MP3 of it ripped from the soundtrack album. Had me grinning from ear to ear listening to it this afternoon.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Cordwainer Smith Rediscovery Award

by Rob - September 14th, 2007

Since we’ve started our deliberations for next year’s recipient, it’s probably time that I noted publicly that I’m now one of four jurors for the annual Cordwainer Smith Rediscovery Award. I’m replacing Gordon Van Gelder, who has stepped down to spend more time with his family; the other current jurors are Martin Harry Greenberg, Barry Malzberg, and Mike Resnick.

The award is bestowed each year at Readercon, and goes to “a science fiction or fantasy writer whose work displays unusual originality, embodies the spirit of Cordwainer Smith’s fiction, and deserves renewed attention or ‘Rediscovery.'” Past winners include Olaf Stapledon, R.A. Lafferty, and Leigh Brackett.

More info here.

I’m honored and thrilled to be part of the jury.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Percy Rodriguez, R.I.P.

by Rob - September 14th, 2007

Canadian actor Percy Rodriguez — known to Classic Star Trek fans as Commodore Stone from “Court-Martial” — has passed away.

It’s hard to overstate the impact in 1967 of having Captain Kirk’s superior officer be a black man, and the absolute authority and dignity Rodriguez brought to the part was perfect.

I’m sorry to see him go; I’ve always liked his work. He was born in Montreal in 1924.

IMDb entry

Wikipedia entry

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Stephen Kotowych: That’s my boy!

by Rob - September 13th, 2007

I’m a bit behind in announcing this, but Stephen Kotowych, one of the writers who came to see me when I was writer-in-residence at the Toronto Public Library’s The Merril Collection of Science Fiction, Speculation and Fantasy in 2003, recently won the $5,000 Grand Prize in the Writers of the Future Contest, for which I’m a judge (judging is done blindly — and, in fact, I wasn’t a judge in the rounds Stephen was involved with).

After my time at the Merril, I created a writers’ workshop, known as The Fledglings, with many of the most-gifted writers who came to see me there, and Stephen has been a mainstry of that. I’m absolutely thrilled that he won! The SciFi Channel’s SciFi.com has a nice piece about his win here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Chengdu Memories

by Rob - September 13th, 2007

A trip report for China’s SCIENCE FICTION WORLD magazine

by Robert J. Sawyer

I’m back safe and sound in Canada after two wonderful weeks in China. The highlight for me, of course, was the Chengdu Science Fiction and Fantasy Festival, at which I won the Galaxy Award for Most Popular Foreign Author of the Year. I must say, in all my travels, all over this wonderful world, I’ve never before been mobbed like a rock star — nor have I ever been treated so well. The warmth, kindness, and hospitality of everyone I met in China was a joy to behold.

I was pleased to have the opportunity to give a speech entitled “Science Fiction as a Mirror for Reality,” and I was glad that it engendered some spirited discussion. Many thanks to my translator, Nick! Indeed, special thanks go to all the interpreters who worked so hard at the conference so that those of us who only speak English could be included.

I also very much enjoyed the other speeches I heard (sadly, I didn’t get to hear them all!), including Betty Anne Hull’s and Michael Swanwick’s. As it happened, Michael was a finalist for the Hugo Award to be given out in Japan right after the Chengdu conference ended, but he couldn’t recall which of the three short-fiction categories — short story, novelette, or novella — his nominee fell into. I had fun teasing him after his talk — which went way over time — about his poor ability to estimate how long something was! He took it in good humor, of course.

Although I had been friends with Nancy Kress, David Brin, and Betty Anne Hull for years, one of the many joys of Chengdu was getting to know Michael Swanwick, Neil Gaiman, and David Hill — I’d met Michael and Neil before, but only really in passing, and had not had the pleasure of meeting David. Given the incredible heat in Chengdu, I’m glad that my usual garb at conventions is Hawaiian shirts — instead of Neil Gaiman’s heavy black leather jacket!

I was very pleased to get to visit the giant, spacious, beautiful offices of Science Fiction World. The two best-selling science-fiction magazines in English are Analog Science Fiction and Fact and Asimov’s Science Fiction. In 1985, I got to go to New York City to interview the editors of each for a documentary series I was doing for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation on the history of science fiction. But I was told I couldn’t see the editors (at the time, Stanley Schmidt and Gardner Dozois, respectively) on the same day — because they shared a desk, and they couldn’t both come into the office on the same day! That’s how small SF publishing is in North America! Although we in the west often think of these magazines as the big boys, Science Fiction World outsells both of them combined by many times. A lot of us in the west worry about the declining sales of science fiction there; I’d say it’s quite possible that the future of the genre really is in China.

And that’s why I’m so proud that Science Fiction World chose to reprint a number of my “On Writing” columns, originally written for the Canadian SF magazine On Spec. To think that I’ve contributed, in a small way, to helping shape the next generation of Chinese SF writers makes me very happy.

One of the many things that impressed me about the conference was the huge involvement and sponsorship by the government. I totally agree with the position that reading science fiction encourages young people to go into careers in science (despite Michael Swanwick’s statement in his talk at the conference). I just wish that governments elsewhere — including my own in Canada! — would take science fiction as seriously.

Michael’s paper in the conference-proceedings book, which talked about different movements and schools of English-language SF, was very interesting, and I am looking forward to seeing what sort of schools and movements of Chinese SF develop in the years to come. I suspect it’s going to diverge from what we’ve done in the west, taking the field in new and exciting directions.

I do want to mention how beautiful the Galaxy Award trophies is — it’s absolutely lovely. I’ve won other awards, but the Galaxy is, without doubt, one of the prettiest. It’s going to sit right next to my Hugo in my living room in Toronto.

Everything about the conference was first-rate, but there was more to my trip to Chengdu than just that. Sichuan province has a reputation we know even in Canada for spicy, hot food — and I’m afraid my weak western stomach was rarely up to the task. But the good company at the wonderful meals (including two hot-pot meals) was absolutely wonderful, and our hosts were always gracious and kind.

And, of course, the Chengdu area is known for panda bears. Our outing to the panda facility was amazing, and for the rest of my life I will happily remember having a panda bear sit in my lap! What an experience!

On the final night of the conference, editor Jenny Bai, Neil Gaiman, Nancy Kress, Michael Swanwick, my wife Carolyn Clink, myself, and others had a nice time unwinding in the hotel bar — and Neil expressed the hope that it wouldn’t be another 10 years before another major international SF conference in China.

I agree wholeheartedly. This was one of the very best conventions I’ve ever been to, and one of the absolute top experiences of my life. As it happened, I had to choose between attending the Chengdu conference or the World Science Fiction Convention, which was held the following week in Yokohama, Japan; I simply couldn’t take the time to go to both. But I know I made the right choice — and I’m very much looking forward to the next one! As those who were at the Leisure Forum just after the conference know, Carolyn, Nancy, Michael, and I — who sang the American folk song “O Susanna” for the crowd — really can’t sing at all. But we’re going to practice, and next time … well, we’ll be less bad.

To the future!

German Flashforward

by Rob - September 12th, 2007

I’m very pleased to announce the sale of a German edition of my novel Flashforward to Wilhelm Heyne Verlag, an imprint of Random House GMBH, and for a nice pile of euros, too, I might add. ;)

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Star Trek geekery: a return to Vasquez Rocks!

by Rob - September 12th, 2007

Vasquez Rocks in southern California is where the classic Star Trek episodes “Arena” and “Friday’s Child” were filmed. And the good folks at HeroComm.com — a site devoted to the actual original communicator props from the series — decided to take one of the original communicators to Vasquez Rocks for a reunion, recreating the famous close-up shot of it that featured in “Friday’s Child.” Great fun: check it out!

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

What is Science Fiction?

by Rob - September 11th, 2007

Over at Yahoo! Questions, someone asked, “What do YOU think science fiction is? Do you think it could be a prediction of the future?”

I posted this answer:


My own definition is this: Science fiction is the mainstream literature of a plausible alternative reality. That is to say, it is stories told as if to people already familiar with the story’s milieu, but that milieu is one the author has contrived but could exist (or, in the case of alternate history stories, could have existed). If a story is set on a Martian colony in the year 3000 A.D., it’s told as if the reader is already a member of that colony, or at least lives in a reality in which such a colony is well known (just as a mainstream novel for an American audience might in fact be set in modern Australia).

This is part of the special joy of science fiction: the reader, of course, isn’t actually familiar with the milieu, and loves the process of picking up clues, artfully salted by the author, as to what the nature of the setting really is. But the skilled SF author will not stop to flat-out explicate things his or her reader, were they really contemporaries of the story’s characters, would actually know.

I use the phrase “alternate reality,” rather than simply calling SF “the mainstream literature of the future,” in part because of the large body of work known as “alternate history” or “parallel-worlds stories,” which are usually considered part of science fiction.

My definition seeks to define SF as a storytelling mode, rather than by listing an arbitrary series of tropes (spaceships, time travel, aliens), and I think it does a good job of accurately encompassing most work in the field. Of course, there are always exceptions, but I’ve found this definition has served me well over the years.

To your second point, yes, science fiction might sometimes predict the future, but that is rarely its intent. Just as often, as Ray Bradbury has said, it’s job is to PREVENT the future. If accurate prediction were the criterion of good SF, we’d have to say that George Orwell’s NINETEEN EIGHTY-FOUR was an abysmal failure because the real year 1984 turned out nothing like his prediction. But in fact Orwell’s novel was a resounding success because its warning call helped us to keep the future it portrayed from becoming reality.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

"Biding Time" in Penguin Book of Crime Stories

by Rob - September 10th, 2007

For those looking for my Aurora Award-nominated short story “Biding Time,” it’s online during the voting period here as a Word document, in the DAW science-fiction anthology Slipstreams edited by Martin H. Greenberg and John Helfers, and also, I’m pleased as punch to announce, in the wonderful new anthology The Penguin Book of Crime Stories, edited by Peter Robinson, where it appears alongside work by Michael Connelly, Laura Lippman, Ian Rankin, Eric Wright, and Robinson himself; I’m honoured and thrilled to be in such august company.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site

Actual fill-it-in Aurora ballot now available

by Rob - September 10th, 2007

The actual fill-it-in-and-mail-it ballot for the Aurora Awards is now available online as a PDF here.

If you’re an attending member of VCon in Vancouver, voting is free; otherwise, it’s Cdn$6.00 to vote — the fees go entirely to pay for the Aurora Awards trophies (which are gorgeous and are designed and built by the wonderful Franklyn Johnson). You have to be a Canadian citizen, not necessarily living in Canada, or a permanent resident of Canada to vote.

You should mail your ballot by October 10 (exactly one month from now), or you can cast it in person at Con*Cept in Montreal or VCon in Vancouver.

And the Wiki version of the ballot is getting nicely populated with links to online versions of finalists. You can access that here.

Ballots go to:

VCON – Aurora 2007
2965, 11th Avenue West
Vancouver, BC, Canada
V6K 2M4

The Aurora Awards web site is here.

The Robert J. Sawyer Web Site