/ / News

IDW comics have produced a six-issue series of comics based on my short stories (they’ve adapted Anda’s Game, After the Siege, Craphound, I, Robot, When Sysadmins Ruled the Earth, and Nimby and the D-Hoppers). I had approval on all the scripts, interiors and covers — and I’m really happy with the caliber of work IDW got for me. The series launches this month with Anda’s Game, and IDW will sell you a subscription to the whole run for $23.99. Once the series concludes, IDW will publish a trade paperback collection, and we’ll be doing a Creative Commons release of the whole work to coincide with the trade.

Link

See also:
IDW will do six comics based on my stories
Sam Kieth cover for comic of Cory’s Anda’s Game
Model contract clause for works in Creative Commons

/ / Stories

Radar Magazine

Translations:
Bulgarian translation (Georgi Ivanov and Maya Georgieva)

Dutch translation (Niels Huijbregts)

French translation (C&F Editions)

German translation (Christian Woehrl)

German translation (Maximilian Schreiner)

Greek translation (Michael Tegos)

Italian translation (Decio Biavati)

Italian translation (Reginazabo)

Japanese translation (Takashi Kurata)

Japanese translation (Yutaka Ohshima)

Latvian translation (Bar Camp Baltics team)

Macedonian translation (Aleksandar Balalovski)

Norwegian translation (Tarjei Vågstøl)

Persian translation (Jadi)

Polish translation (Piotr Wrzosinski)

Portuguese translation (Carlos Martins)

Romanian translation (Stefan Talpalaru)

Russian translation (Ruslan Grokhovetskiy and friends)

Slovak translation (Pavol Hvizdos)

Spanish translation (Felixe and Marisol)

Turkish translation (Dördüncü Göz)

Ukrainian translation (Kos Ivantsov)

Art:
English fan art poster (Stojance)

Russian fan art poster (Ruslan Grokhovetskiy and friends)

English fan art poster(Ruslan Grokhovetskiy and friends)

Photoshop source file for Grokhovetskiy posters

File formats:
HTML (Churba Silvertongue)

PRC (Churba Silvertongue)

XML (Churba Silvertongue)

PDB (Henrik Löwendahl-Nyrén)

  • / / News

    Radar commissioned me to write them a science fiction story about “the day Google became evil.” I wrote them a little short-short called “Scroogled,” about the perfect axis of evil: the DHS and Google, working hand in hand. As part of the contract negotiation, I got Radar to agree to release the story under a remix-friendly Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license, so you’re free to make movies, slideshows, songs, art, or new texts from this one.


    Greg landed at San Francisco International Airport at 8 p.m., but by the time he’d made it to the front of the customs line, it was after midnight. He’d emerged from first class, brown as a nut, unshaven, and loose-limbed after a month on the beach in Cabo (scuba diving three days a week, seducing French college girls the rest of the time). When he’d left the city a month before, he’d been a stoop-shouldered, potbellied wreck. Now he was a bronze god, drawing admiring glances from the stews at the front of the cabin.

    Four hours later in the customs line, he’d slid from god back to man. His slight buzz had worn off, sweat ran down the crack of his ass, and his shoulders and neck were so tense his upper back felt like a tennis racket. The batteries on his iPod had long since died, leaving him with nothing to do except eavesdrop on the middle-age couple ahead of him.

    “The marvels of modern technology,” said the woman, shrugging at a nearby sign: Immigration—Powered by Google.

    Link

    / / News

    A couple weeks ago, I was on a great panel on copyright at the World Science Fiction Convention in Yokohama, Japan, called “Defending the Public Domain from Corporate Copyright Maximalism.” Steve Stair videoed my introductory remarks and posted them to YouTube.

    Link

    / / News

    The Clarion Science Fiction Writers’ Workshop has announced its instructor lineup for summer 2008 — and it’s a stellar bunch! Clarion is a kind of six-week boot-camp for sf writers (I’m a graduate, sometime instructor and member of the Board of Directors for The Clarion Foundation, the nonprofit that oversees the workshop), and this year’s teachers are: Kelly Link, James Patrick Kelly, Mary Anne Mohanraj, Neil Gaiman, Nalo Hopkinson and Geoff Ryman.

    Not to be outdone, the Clarion West workshop (a kind of sister workshop, but located in Seattle instead of San Diego) has announced its lineup for this summer: Paul Park, Mary Rosenblum, Cory Doctorow, Connie Willis, Sheree R. Thomas, and Chuck Palahniuk.

    Yes, I taught Clarion this past year and will teach Clarion West next year. There’s a pretty good chance I’ll end up doing another (undisclosed) Clarion next year, then I’m taking a several-year hiatus. These things are incredibly rewarding, but man, they’re hard work!

    Link to Clarion roster,
    Link to Clarion West roster