NewsStrange HorizonsIt would not be an exaggeration to say that Doctorow's work is one of the main reasons I still read science fiction, so I looked forward to his first novel with great anticipation. The simple verdict? It's good. A fast, funny, smart, clever book which entertains so well that it's only upon reflection that its surprising sophistication and depths become evident. Author of the Month at Strange HorizonsI'm the Author of the Month at the excellent e-zine, Strange Horizons. They've published a review of Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom, a long interview that Katsi Macdonald (daughter of James D. Macdonald and Debra Doyle) conducted with me, and have reprinted my short story, Visit the Sins, which initially appeared in Asimov's and was later reprinted in one of Hartwell's Year's Best anthologies.
Northeast Public Radio interviewGreg Dahlmann has done a piece on Northeast Public Radio about the Creative Commons that includes an interview with me about the online release of the novel. You can listen to the audio of the piece in a variety of formats or read the transcript here.
SXSWI'm going to be speaking in Austin, Texas, at the South By Southwest interactive festival, between March 7-11. I'm apparently on more panels than anyone else this year: Saturday, 5-6: Doing Good Onlne: Innovative Ideas from Non-Profits on the Internet Sunday, 11:30-12:30: Some Rights Reserved: The Creative Commons Project Monday, 3:30-4:30: Why I Dig Working in the Cultural Gutter Tuesday, 11:30-12:30: The Hollywood Agenda I'll be doing a signing for Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom after the "Cultural Gutter" panel, and there's an EFF/EFF-Austin party on Monday, March 10. Hope to see you there! Dada and Out in the Magic KingdomIn the spirit of Modesty's cut-up generator, Ben Brown has created a Dadaist remixer for Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom. Nice results:
NYTCory Doctorow is an avid Weblogger (he can be found at boingboing.net), and his novel's ad-hocracies of ''twittering Pollyannic castmembers'' who smoke ''decaf'' crack and congratulate one another on ''Bitchun'' ideas offer a knowing, gently satiric view of a once ascendant digital culture. And the impressively imagined world of the novel is tricked out in lively prose. In one particularly amusing section, Julius recalls an ex-wife from space named Zed: ''We met in orbit, where I'd gone to experience the famed low-gravity sybarites. Getting staggering drunk is not much fun at one gee, but at ten to the neg eight, it's a blast. You don't stagger, you bounce, and when you're bouncing in a sphere full of other bouncing, happy, boisterous naked people, things get deeply fun.'' Though she's around for only a few pages, Zed is one of Doctorow's best inventions, a ''transhuman . . . with a bewildering array of third-party enhancements: a vestigial tail, eyes that saw through most of the R.F. spectrum, her arms, her fur, dogleg reversible knee joints and a completely mechanical spine.'' Julius can't keep Zed's interest, and their relationship ends on a sad note -- she reverts to a backed-up version of her brain from the time before they met. Down and Out in the New York TimesToday's NYT is carrying a half-page, mostly positive review of Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom, in the main book-review section. I'm doing a panel tomorrow called "Why I Dig Working in the Cultural Gutter," but this may disqualify me!
The BooksmithI'll be doing a reading and signing at San Francisco's The Booksmith (1644 Haight Street, San Francisco 415.863.8688 or 800.493.7323) at 7PM on Tuesday, March 5th. Hope you can make it! |
‘Down and Out In the Magic Kingdom’ is a novel of ideas. It shares more in common with the work of Stanislaw Lem than with William Gibson. Cheap laughs and deep thoughts jostle one another, having a swell time as the reader enjoys the painful revelations that await Jules. Doctorow covers a lot of conceptual ground in a small space, and he makes something that’s rather complex look ridiculously easy. But don’t try this at home kids. You may injure your brain. If you’re not backed up, then you might not be able to recover. We may think we’re bitchin’ — but we’re not Bitchun yet, not by a long shot.
[Read more quotes about the book] [FAQ] [Get a signed copy shipped to your door] ![]() Paperback ISBN: 076530953X
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