Got my DJing shirt on, just about to kick off the #nwc39 Thursday night dance!
Norwescon
Norwescon is the Seattle-area SF/F convention I’ve been volunteering at since roughly 2010. Once a year, I go get geeky with about 2,500 of my closest friends at a local hotel for a weekend.
I found the #nwc39 ball pit!
Good morning #nwc39! Let’s get this thing started, shall we? (84/366)
What do you mean, #nwc39 doesn’t start until tomorrow? ;)
All packed up and hitting the road. #nwc39 here I come! (83/366)
Got my first badge ribbon, and #nwc39 doesn’t even start until Thursday! (80/366)
2015 P.K. Dick Award Nominee Rankings
My ranking of this year’s Philip K. Dick Award nominated books, from least favorite to my top pick for the award (which, historically, has yet to match the actual award winner, so don’t put too much stock in my ranking):
- After the Saucers Landed, by Douglas Lain. Odd in ways that don’t resonate with me, and I found it rather boring.
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(R)evoution, by P.J. Manney. Some interesting ideas on transhumanism and nanotechnology, but too many of the characterizations really bothered me. Actually ended up disliking this one. Only takes fifth rather than sixth because at least I wasn’t bored.
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Archangel, by Marguerite Reed. Not a bad book, but for some reason, failed to engage me.
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Windswept, by Adam Rakunas. An entertaining adventure that made business-vs-union conflict more interesting than I would have guessed. Fun, but didn’t grab me the way I’d want a winner to do.
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Apex, by Ramez Naam. The conclusion to a trilogy, with lots of near-future extrapolation of mind/computer interfaces and enhancement and transhumanism. The end notes discussing today’s technology and how close we may actually be to some of what’s described in the books were particularly fascinating. Almost took the top spot, but in what is a personal and somewhat silly consideration, I tend to favor “standalone” books that handle all their worldbuilding over books that are later entries in a series, which benefit from all the plot and worldbuilding already established in the prior books.
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Edge of Dark, by Brenda Cooper. More transhumanism, only this time from a far-future perspective, when once human entities banished from human space due to fears of what they were becoming return to human space. Well-realized and interesting characters, really neat possibilities for future technologically-enhanced evolution, and very believable conflict. Definitely my top pick.
I was quite happy to see that the theme of “depressing trudging through postapocalyptic wastelands” trend of the past few years wasn’t represented at all in this year’s pick, with transhumanism being the theme of half of this year’s picks — much more along my particular interests.
Now, just over one week to wait until we learn who the winner is at this year’s award ceremony!
Will you get ALL THE RIBBONS! at #nwc39? (35/366)
Just beaming in to point out that we’re just eight weeks away from #nwc39! (28/366)
It’s this year’s #PKDickAward nominees! I have until March 25th (Friday at #nwc39) to get these read…and the first trend I’m noticing is that there are no small books this year! (Okay, Nexus and Crux aren’t nominees, but Apex is, and it’s the third book in that trilogy, so need to read the other two first.) Looking forward to getting through them all. (14/366)