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John Scalzi’s non-blogging universe

Friday, August 29th, 2008

arts_books1-1_17.jpgIn this week’s story “Books vs. Blogs,” I talked with author/blogger John Scalzi about how his popular blog Whatever launched his career as a science fiction novelist. Scalzi serialized his “space opera”novel Old Man’s War as posts on his blog, believing at the time that “This is where it will live forever. Instead, a senior editor at Tor Books discovered it, liked it and was interested in purchasing it, despite the fact that Scalzi had given it away for free, as it were. Old Man’s War is no longer on-line, Scalzi says:

I took it down when it got sold. One can probably still find it online if one looks hard enough, but not legally. “Agent to the Stars,” however, is still on the site.

Scalzi has a “Sampler” page for his on-line fiction, including short stories, unused chapters and a complete novel. I admit that I haven’t read much of that, but I have read all the books in his Old Man’s War universe — in old-fashioned book form. Overall, they’re enormously appealing and accessible reads that can entertain non-sci-fi buffs and hardcore fans alike. Here are capsule reviews, in order, of the four books in the Old Man’s War trilogy. (Wait a minute, that can’t be right.)

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Air Loaf: Blogging vs. books

Thursday, August 28th, 2008

Today’s Air Loaf features CL’s Chanté LaGon and Curt Holman chatting about blogging vs. authorship, with Dragon*Con and the Decatur Book Festival as a backdrop.

Air Loaf is broadcast weekdays on 1690 WMLB-AM at approximately 8:10 a.m., 12:20 p.m. and 6:20 p.m.

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Decatur Blog Festival

Wednesday, August 27th, 2008

scalzi2.jpgThanks to the Decatur Book Festival and Dragon*Con, writers will be descending upon Atlanta like a horde of Visigoths this Labody Day Weekend. In advance of two of my favorite local events, in the Arts section this week, the story “Books vs. Blogs” explores the virtues and pitfalls of author’s blogs. Since so many writers have blogs, the story focused on a few noteworthy examples, including science fiction author John Scalzi and his popular, 10 year-old old blog  Whatever (anthologized in the upcoming volume Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded); horror novelist Cherie Priest and her Livejournal blog; and cartoonist Rich Tommaso’s Seattle Sketchbook.

Since there are soooo many author’s blogs out there, I won’t claim to offer a complete list of blogging guests of the Decatur Book Festival, let alone Dragon*Con, but here’s a few interesting ones. If you have suggestions of the “How dare you not include this one!” variety, please offer them in the comments field. (No, really.)

Kristen Chase: Motherhood Uncensored

Mir Kamin: Woulda Coulda Shoulda

The Place Where Jack Pendarvis has a “Blog” (featuring “McNeil’s Gold Medal International Emergency Exit Theatre”)

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