More year in review

In 2008, I…

  • Began, in earnest, my job as Developmental Editor. When I’m knee-deep in a manuscript with a red pen or blue pencil, when I’m looking at what the competition does and how we can do it better or do something else, that’s when I really feel like an editor.
  • Published two issues of Kaleidotrope, to generally favorable reviews, including a brief mention in the Year’s Best Fantasy & Horror. I’d love to see a story or poem from the zine reprinted there in the next edition, or at least included among the honorable mentions. I’d love to see the zine reviewed in more places, like at The Fix or the Internet Review of Science Fiction. Heaven knows I send them copies. I think I need to step up the zine a little in 2009, looking at better ways to market it, and looking at ways I can maybe start paying my contributors more money. I’m very excited about the next issue, coming out in April, and already have a lot of material for future issues.
  • Suffered a herniated disc. Of course, it’s not the disc so much as the nerves it presses in on that cause the pain and discomfort. In my case, that’s L5-S1, and despite three spinal steroid injections and many weeks of physical therapy, I’m not free from pain half a year later. It’s usually very manageable, however, and nothing that’s actually incapacitated me. I do miss being able to sit comfortably in chairs. I think I need to keep at the stretching every day, and maybe look at some additional strengthening exercises I can do. I liked my orthopedist, but I’d like to avoid ever seeing him again all the same. I’d like to avoid surgery altogether if I can help it. (Right this minute it’s pretty painful, I must say.)
  • Traveled a little. I went to Los Angeles at Labor Day to sightsee and watch bad movies with friends — some of whom I met for the very first time in person — and then to England in November for work. We spent a gorgeous weekend in Miami in January, visiting my sister, who was down there at the time, and I spent my birthday down in New Orleans at a conference. I had to cancel going to Readercon in July, however, and would have liked to have seen the World Fantasy Convention in Calgary. But who knows what 2009 holds? It’s already been suggested I’ll be going to Chicago for business in March.
  • Voted for a black man for President. Who won. Felt really damn good about that.
  • Moved this blog to WordPress. I want to change the template, though.
  • Continued to write, but not enough. I hope to improve on that in 2009.
  • Learned that my sister is getting married. My congratulations again to her and Brian!

Movies of 2008

So these are the movies I’ve seen since January 2008, and I find I don’t have much of anything to say about them. There were highlights, of course — There Will Be Blood, The Dark Knight, The Visitor, Milk — and lowlights — Cloverfield, Jumper, Flightplan, Wanted. But most were just movies I saw, some good and some not so good. I could probably find something to say about any one of them, if you’re curious, but none move me to write about them in any depth like I did last year. Maybe that’s because I saw fewer new movies in ’08 — 14 in theaters, as opposed to last year’s 27 — or maybe it wasn’t as great a year for film.

I don’t know that that’s the case, though, because there’s plenty that was released this year that I hope I’ll get to see next year.

Books of 2008

My favorites are, in the order they were read:

  • The Botany of Desire by Michael Pollan — Never as good as The Omnivore’s Dilemma (his follow-up, which I actually read first, in 2007), and I don’t think Pollan quite proves his central thesis, but the book is never dull, full of valuable insights and interesting facts.
  • The Terror by Dan Simmons — A book I was genuinely sorry to put down when I was finished. Which, given the length, is saying something. Easily the scariest book I read all year.
  • Spaceman Blues by Brian Franics SlatteryMatt Cheney called it “songs of all sorts, entire arias and symphonies, and it sings visions, and the visions are both full and fulfilling…” He ain’t wrong, that’s for sure.
  • Logorrhea edited by John Klima — I have never really understood the mass appeal of spelling bees. I remember participating in one or two back in grade school, but the recent fascination with what’s essentially just a trick of good memory has me a little dumbfounded. Maybe I need to get around to finally watching Spellbound on DVD. I was skeptical of John Klima’s anthology — each story inspired by a winning word in the Scripps National Spelling Bee — but the stories speak for themselves. Most are fantasy or science fiction — not surprising given Klima’s background — and almost without exception excellent.
  • The Yiddish Policeman’s Union by Michael Chabon — I don’t think Chabon’s disappointed me yet with one of his novels. His short stories and novellas are sometimes a tougher sell, but he’s in top form here.
  • Grey by Jon Armstrong — Delightfully weird.
  • Soon I Will Be Invincible by Austin Grossman — This could have easily been a one-joke book. Many of the real-world superhero stories we’ve seen since Watchmen have been. But Grossman’s novel is by turns both funny and touching.
  • The Trouble with Poetry by Billy Collins — Outside of Kaleidotrope submissions, I don’t read enough poetry. I’m really glad I picked Collins’ book as my first step in remedying that.
  • Disgrace by J.M. Coetzee — Makes me wonder why I’ve not read more of his books. I wonder if I still have my copy of Waiting for the Barbarians lying around anywhere…
  • The King’s Last Song by Geoff Ryman — A sweeping story of Cambodia’s ancient (and more recent) past. I’m particularly glad I picked up the Small Beer Press edition, which includes Ryman’s sources and notes on where his story by necessity diverged from historical fact.

And the biggest disappointments of the year:

  • A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole — Ultimately, I think it’s just too dated to still be really funny.
  • Wanted by Mark Millar et al. — Misognyistic and at least borderline racist, it’s little more than a repellent power fantasy that ruins what could have been an interesting “what if we killed off all the superheroes?” story. I didn’t much like the movie either.
  • You Don’t Love Me Yet by Jonathan Lethem — Ultimately a lousy book by a terrific writer; “lesser Lethem” might be the most charitable description. But as Donna Bowman wrote for the AV Club, “The man [was] due for a letdown.”
  • Crooked Little Vein by Warren Ellis — A little like watered-down, or warmed-over, Ellis. It’s not awful, but I didn’t see anything in it to suggest Ellis has a career as a prose novelist. It’s a story that might have worked considerably better on the comics page. (I also wasn’t too impressed with his graphic novel Blackgas, though.)
  • A Wrinkle in Time by Madeline L’Engle — I think if I’d read this growing up, it might be a cherished childhood classic. Then again, maybe not. It was a quick read, but I’m not in any rush to read the remaining books in L’Engle’s quartet.
  • Farthing by Jo Walton — Likable characters and a quick read — I read this on the plane ride to LA in August — it’s only up here because its alternate-universe premise is pretty shallow, and the whole thing sort of falls apart in the end.
  • Man in the Dark by Paul Auster — For a novelist who used to be among my very favorites, Auster’s had a whole lot of disappointments lately. This reads as very slight, barely qualifying as a story (much less a short novel), and it makes pine for earlier (much better) Auster novels. The so-called political twist, like so much else in the book, is barely examined. I don’t know what’s a more worrisome thought: that he just isn’t trying anymore…or that he is, and this is the result.

December sounded like this

As 2009 approaches, here’s my last monthly mix for ’08. It’s longer than most. I blame best-of-the-year lists and the week and a half I’ve had off to listen to them:

  1. “The Shining” by Badly Drawn Boy
  2. “Farrar, Straus & Giroux (Sea of Tears)” by Destroyer
  3. “Pretty Deep” by Tanya Donelly
  4. “How the West Was Won” by Katie Herzig
  5. “My Manic and I” by Laura Marling
  6. “Love Lockdown” by Kanye West
  7. “Runnin’ Out of Fools” by Neko Case
  8. “Frog” by VAST
  9. “State Trooper” by Deana Carter
  10. “Bus Bus” by Amy Ray
  11. “Midnight Radio” by Dar Williams
  12. “Reason to Believe” by Aimee Mann & Michael Penn
  13. “God Only Knows” by Joe Henry
  14. “Rachel Rosen” by John Anealio
  15. “My Delirium” by Ladyhawke
  16. “Around the Bend” by the Asteroids Galaxy Tour
  17. “Adelaide” by Grey Anne
  18. “Who Can Say?” by Kristy Hanson
  19. “So-So” by Brooke Waggoner
  20. “RoboCop” by Kanye West
  21. “Lotion” by Greenskeepers
  22. “Flowers Up” by Sam Phillips
  23. “Orphans” by Beck
  24. “Close My Eyes” by Arthur Russell
  25. “Don’t Let the Sun Go Down on Me” by Renee Stahl
  26. “For You” by Kate York
  27. “Canadia” by MC Frontalot
  28. “…Long Time Ago” by Concrete Blonde
  29. “Tender Mending” by Brooke Waggoner
  30. “Pistachio” by Lisa Hannigan
  31. “Don’t Leave” by Ane Brun
  32. “The Wrestler” by Bruce Springsteen
  33. “It’s Not Over” by Kristy Hanson
  34. “The Chain” by Ingrid Michaelson