Wednesday, August 27, 2003
Con-Version 2003
 
The visitor to Calgary, at lest the one coming into the D-gates, is greeted by the – I decided to dub it a femidactyl, or maybe a chickidactyl – swooping out of the … uhh … fluorescent lights. Perhaps it was to honor the discovery of feathered dinosaurs, and the long sweeping metal columns linking it to its outriders of bat and eagle (not shown) was an artistic impression of a taxonomic tree.

Calgary was hot and smoky with the drift from forest and grassfires; I wilted and was not nearly as social as I had wished to be, so saw little of Friday except the registration line-up. Saturday am I had a 10 am reading (is there ever a good time for a reading) with Lynda, where I read from "Suspended Lives", a short story just published in Julie Czerneda’s Space Inc. anthology. If you're at Worldcon, there will be a lanch party. Tell Julie I sent you. Lynda read the bit of The Courtesan Prince (see Lynda's news page for explanation), where a Reetion pilot (Ann) is improvising her way through the first official encounter with the Gelacks in centuries (including Amel). Subsequently I was on a panel on "Humans in Space", where I felt like the lone technophile among social scientists; I had come prepared to speak on the medical challenges facing humans in space, whereas the panel went off in the direction of the political and social challenges facing the US (mainly) and the world of justifying space travel given the problems of earth. My reference, by the way, for a chunk of my research, is Frances Ashcroft's Life at the Extreme: The Science of Survival on the subject of human adaptation to all extremes of environment, compared with other animal adaptation. Good panel, covered a lot of ground. My other panel was "Babylon 5: Five years after", in which panelists and audience agreed that, yes, it was a great show, but disagreed on where exactly we would mark the point of it becoming great (do we hide the first, or the first and second seasons from people we would like to convert?), and whether fandom is its own worst enemy because we will point out the flaws and expect greatness. (Where I got hooked was Season 2, Episode 2, "Revelations", which is not a bad place to pick it up. About half of the Season 2 episodes are well worth watching and watching again. And Season 3, yum!).

Events I attended were a reading by Dave Duncan from his forthcoming Blades' novel Impossible Odds; the prologue is up at his website and this was Chapter 1, wherein one undistinguished and one too-young Blade are set an impossible task. Lynda has a photograph of Dave brandishing the cover. Marie Jakober had the paperback cover of her award-winning Civil War novel to show (left); that is also due out shortly. A preliminary, very small, image of the Edge edition of her fantasy Even the Stones is up at the Edge site. on the future books page. Dr. Phil Currie of the Royal Tyrell museum gave a talk on "Dinosaurs on SF", complete with book covers ranging from pulp Edgar Rice Burroughs to Greg Bear's Darwinia and Robert Sawyer's Farseer series. Not to mention Jurassic Park. He filled us in on the behind-the-scenes of the feathered dinosaurs story and introduced us to some ofthe bestiary from the Alberta beds. I also heard Tim Hills talk about archery in SF, an expert free-associating about everything from bow design, styles of archery in various cultures, the sharpest points (obsidian, as shown by the researches of a surgeon enthusiast), the fastest fastshooter (2.1 s/arrow), the Mongol Ambassador outshooting the cream of English Bowmen in the ?Tudor years, Cape Buffalo hide ...

We met up with the Edge gang, and brainstormed about titles, the results of which can be seen here.


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