Upcoming Short Story Publications
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Nearing publication
Monday, April 26, 2010
Latest contract
Sunday, April 25, 2010
Back from Conestoga
I attended Conestoga in 2006, 2007 and 2008, but skipped last year after it moved from its previous summertime date to April. Those previous Conestogas were some of the best cons I ever attended.
Last year I went to SoonerCon in Oklahoma City instead; after what happened on the road (my car's transmission melted down and I was stranded overnight in Henryetta, I decided to skip SoonerCon and return to Conestoga.
I'd say attendance this year at Conestoage was half of what I had last seen, not more than, say 60% of Con DFW. The guests were equally sparse, and so the panels were fewer. There were a handful of old chums to chat with - Bill Ledbetter, Brad and Sue Sinor, James K,. Burk - but attendance was really puny.
I wasn't scheduled for an autographing - which in light of the fact I've got "Fantastic Texas" to tout was a big negative in my 'book', pardon the pun - and only two panels, one at 9 a.m. and one at 11 a.m. Saturday morning. Hence Saturday after lunch I looked around and decided it wasn't a good investment of my time to hand around any more,
The good news is that the two panels I participated went very well - the panel at 9 a.m. Saturday on "Is Literacy in Decline?" - which I moderated - was well received by the faithful who attended. The panelists were all bright, helpful and infornative - Matthew Bey from Austin, of "Space Squid" fame - Stacy Nyikos of Tulsa, a young adult author - and Gary Babb. Two of the listed panelists didn't show. Bill Eakin said he had gotten an email that said he could be on the panel, but he wasn't on the program. He sat on the front row and still helped out a lot.
I wasn't in the program book myself, and had to ask to get my schedule last week. Apparently the con has had some sort of implosion in regards to its programming. I understand one of the key organizers had to move away. This kind of ball-dropping happens in all sorts of volunterr organizations, you just take it in stride.
The panel at 11 a.m. was in the main ballroom, on the subject of E-Books and Kindles and Nooks and all that sort of stuff. There were only three of us on the panel, myself, moderator Steve Wedel and Will Thomas. Although the attendance was smaller than you might expect at mid-day on Saturday in the main ballroom of the con, everyone enjoyed it. The small size actually helped, the members of the audience were able to participate and contribute very well to the discussion.
Overall, I'm glad I went; I picked up some useful gossip, tips and ideas; but in light of the size of the event, I didn't think it was worth staying the whole weekend. I hope they do better next year.
Tuesday, April 20, 2010
Books-a-Million
Barnes & Noble took "Fantastic" right off the bat, but my publisher has to sign an agreement with the distributor for BAM, their terms weren't the same. Glad that got taken care of.
I did five signings in February and March, I will probably start up again in May sometime.
Sunday, April 18, 2010
Conestoga
Friday, April 16, 2010
Sorry
Not looking for sympathy here, just explaining.
On the positive note, got my schedule for Conestoga next weekend, and the "Fantastic Texas" fan page got its 200th Facebook fan.
Thursday, April 08, 2010
Final version
Friday, April 02, 2010
Revision completed
Thursday, April 01, 2010
Rats!
Buy "Texas & Other Planets"
Buy "Fantastic Texas" on-line
Latest reviews
A better path develops for a distraught man in “Double Exposure” by Lou Antonelli (debut 6/11 and reviewed by Frank D). Jake is about to end it all. He has been trying to keep his high maintenance wife happy for decades and has needed to embezzle to satisfy her spending habits. Now, on the verge of indictment and abandoned by his spouse, he buys a gun. Before he pulls the trigger, he spies a Kodak one-day photo hut. Curious, he pulls up to the window. They are holding pictures of him and his last girlfriend from 30 years before. The package is a lot thicker than it should be.
Double Exposure” is listed as an Alternative History story but I would classify it as a Magical Realism tale. It is set as a second chance tale, a look into a life that should have been. The author is inspired by his memories of the old photo huts (I remember them) and of their disappearance. A cool idea (photos of another life), one that I could imagine would make for a great anthology.
- Frank Dutkiewicz, Diabolical Plots
“Great White Ship”: A traveler stuck waiting for a flight strikes up a conversation with an old airline employee. The Old Timer tells him a story of a Great White Airship that arrives from a most unusual destination. The story of a craft from an alternate reality and how it got there is only the precursor to the final act.
This is one of my favorite stories from this site. I have a great passion for lighter-than-air craft and their potential as a future means of transport, which opens the story. The author uses this speculation to launch into an engaging tale. As fascinating as the main story line is, the alternate history premise that accompanies it is just as worthwhile. This story was well written and very well thought out. It is well worth the read.
Recommended.
- James Hanzelka, Diabolical Plots
Lou Antonelli fiction archived online
- "Double Exposure" - Daily Science Fiction
- "Great White Ship" - Daily Science Fiction
- "The Centurion and the Rainman" - Buzzy Mag
- "The Goddess of Bleecker Street" - Kalkion
- "Irredenta" - World SF Blog
- "Ghost Writer" - Flashes in the Dark
- "Avatar" - Darker Matter
- "Black Hats and Blackberrys" Bewildering Stories
- "Pen Pal" - Revolution SF
- "I Got You" - Bewildering Stories
- "Big Girl" - Ultraverse
- "S.P.P.A.M." - Bewildering Stories
- "Silence is Golden" - Revolution SF
- "Fermi's Fraternity" - Planetary Stories
- "The Rocket-Powered Cat" - Revolution SF
- "Video Killed the Radio Star" - Apehelion
- "Silvern" - Revolution SF
Recent Reviews
- "Texas & Other Planets" - Missions Unknown
- "Texas & Other Planets" - Jayme Blaschke's Gibberish
- "Texas & Other Planets" - Amazon
- "Dispatches from The Troubles" - SF Revu
- "Dispatches from The Troubles" - SF Site
- "Fantastic Texas" - Serial Distractions
- "Fantastic Texas" - Tangent Online
- "Professor Malakoff's Amazing Ethereal Telegraph" - Tangent online
- "The Witch of Waxahachie' - April 2008 - SF Signal
- "The Witch of Waxahachie" - April 2008 - Spiral Galaxy