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eldritchhobbit

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Everything posted by eldritchhobbit

  1. In my latest “Looking Back on Genre History” segment on the StarShipSofa podcast, I discuss Guardians of the Whills, Andor, and local resistance in Star Wars. StarShipSofa 712 Laird Barron | StarShipSofa ALTALT ALTALT View the full post.
  2. eldritchhobbit

    Happy Birthday, Daphne du Maurier!

    dramyhsturgis: And happy birthday to Daphne du Maurier (13 May, 1907 – 19 April, 1989)! “I suppose sooner or later in the life of everyone comes a moment of trial. We all of us have our particular devil who rides us and torments us, and we must give battle in the end.” ― Daphne du Maurier, Rebecca (1938) View the full post.
  3. dramyhsturgis: May the 4th be with you. Happy Star Wars Day! View the full post.
  4. I’m so excited to share this with the universe! This anthology includes contributions from Emily Strand, Una McCormack, Daniel Unruh, Edward Guimont, Brunella Tedesco-Barlocco, Kristina Šekrst, Javier Francisco, Erin Bell, Martine Gjermundsen Ræstad, Andrew Higgins, John Jackson Miller, and me. The cover art is by Emily Austin. More information, including the full Table of Contents, is at the link below. The book can be requested via libraries as a hardcover or ebook, and the coupon code CFC10822213C4 provides a 24% “new release!” discount at the Vernon Press website: https://vernonpress.com/book/1672 ALT View the full post.
  5. unamccormack: Oxford portals View the full post.
  6. eldritchhobbit

    Reading…

    My two-part plan to fill the time between the end of Picard and the start of the new season of Strange New Worlds is going very well. Cheers for Una McCormack, John Jackson Miller, and Star Trek. View the full post.
  7. dramyhsturgis: I am delighted to report that STAR TREK: ESSAYS EXPLORING THE FINAL FRONTIER is coming soon! 🖖 I’m so excited to share this with the universe! This academic anthology includes work from Emily Strand, Una McCormack, Daniel Unruh, Edward Guimont, Brunella Tedesco-Barlocco, Kristina Šekrst, Javier Francisco, Erin Bell, Martine Gjermundsen Ræstad, Andrew Higgins, John Jackson Miller, and me. The cover art is by Emily Austin. More information, including the complete Table of Contents, is available here from Vernon Press. ALT View the full post.
  8. I am listening to “Jericho” by Iniko on repeat. Stunning and science fictional. 🎶🎵🎶 “I don’t need gravity; I just need growth.” View the full post.
  9. I am delighted to report that STAR TREK: ESSAYS EXPLORING THE FINAL FRONTIER is coming soon! 🖖 I’m so excited to share this with the universe! This academic anthology includes work from Emily Strand, Una McCormack, Daniel Unruh, Edward Guimont, Brunella Tedesco-Barlocco, Kristina Šekrst, Javier Francisco, Erin Bell, Martine Gjermundsen Ræstad, Andrew Higgins, John Jackson Miller, and me. The cover art is by Emily Austin. More information, including the complete Table of Contents, is available here from Vernon Press. ALT View the full post.
  10. I’m feeling sentimental, so here is *checks notes* a 23-year spread of STAR TREK essays! ALT ALT ALT ALT View the full post.
  11. I’m so excited to share STAR TREK: ESSAYS EXPLORING THE FINAL FRONTIER with the universe. More information will be coming very soon! 🖖 View the full post.
  12. It’s not every day that you and your brilliant co-editor Emily Strand submit your completed book to your publisher, but today is that day for me! More information on STAR WARS: ESSAYS EXPLORING A GALAXY FAR, FAR AWAY, the sibling to our previously-submitted and also-forthcoming academic anthology STAR TREK: ESSAYS EXPLORING THE FINAL FRONTIER, will be coming soon! ALT View the full post.
  13. dramyhsturgis: “No,” Baze said. The word was, in so many ways, the perfect embodiment of who Baze Malbus had become, as blunt and as hard as the man himself. No was the word that seemed to define Baze Malbus these days, all the more so since the Imperial occupation had begun. No, and in that word Baze Malbus was saying many things; no, he would not accept this, whatever this might be, from Imperial rule to the existence of a Jedi in the Holy City to the suffering the Empire had inflicted upon all those around them. No, ultimately – and to Chirrut’s profound sadness – to a faith in the Force. *** The scent of fear…. Despite his best intentions, it even, sometimes, was a scent Chirrut caught from himself. But never from Baze. *** Chirrut Îmwe was not a Jedi. He was not, by any definition, a Force user. But what he could do, what he had spent years upon years striving for the enlightenment to do, was – sometimes – feel the Force around him. Truly, genuinely feel it, if only for a moment, if only tenuously, like holding his palm up to catch the desert sand that blew into the city at dawn and at dusk. Be, however fleetingly, one with the Force. *** Baze was a big man, a strong man, but he knew how to move himself with speed when needed, and with purpose at every moment. While Chirrut’s movements had flow, Baze’s had direction. *** These were Imperials, who had taken that which was beautiful and made it profane, and it didn’t matter if Baze Malbus still believed or not; it mattered to him that others did, and he saw the pain the Imperials caused every day. He saw it in friends and strangers. He saw it in hungry children in the streets, and hiding beneath the smile of Chirrut Îmwe. *** The problem was that if they were stopped for questioning, or brought it, there was no telling where that might lead or what it might lead back to. Unlike Baze, Chirrut still dressed as a Guardian of the Whills. He would be singled out because of this, subjected to more questions. And Chirrut, being Chirrut, would not tell the stormtroopers what they wanted to hear, and Chirrut, being Chirrut, would very likely begin spouting the litany. They would detain him. They might even detain him aboard the Star Destroyer, and Baze knew very well that those detained aboard the Star Destroyer were never heard from again. Baze sighed. “Fine,” he said. “Me first.” He shoved Chirrut into the alley. “I’ll catch up,” he said, then started running… *** Baze led the way, reached back to guide Chirrut out of the vehicle. As soon as Chirrut had his feet on the ground once more, Baze’s hand was gone. *** He didn’t want to know what Baze saw, not literally; Chirrut wanted Baze’s impression. If Chirrut asked, What does the service droid look like? he didn’t want Baze to say that the machine was a meter and a half tall, or half a meter wide, and covered in laminate with scratches along its torso. What Chirrut wanted was for Baze to say that the droid was friendly, or past its sell-by date, or had seen better days, or looked like it was fresh off the assembly line. Chirrut wanted the perception as Baze saw it, and thus, in a way, he was asking for Baze’s opinion. Right now, Chirrut was frowning, head down. “How does it look?” he asked. “Not,” Baze said, “good.” *** But Baze didn’t say anything. There was nothing he needed to say. Chirrut knew what he was thinking, and Chirrut knew why he was thinking it. *** He moved his walking stick, settled it so it stood between his knees where he sat. He rested his forehead against the cap of the staff, the cold metal of the crystal containment lamp doing little to soothe his headache. He was tired, and he was frustrated, and he thought that either or both would bother him less if Baze’s reassuring presence were somewhere over his shoulder. *** “Would he come with us?” Chirrut grinned. “Yes,” he told Fortuna. “He, meaning me, would.” “I don’t mean to offend, but you’re blind.” Chirrut put a hand up in front of his face, waved it back and forth, gasped. “Baze Malbus,” he said. “Why didn’t you tell me?” Baze laughed. Fortuna didn’t. “Don’t mistake his lack of eyesight for a lack of vision,” Baze said. *** “So you have hope, still?” Baze shrugged, spread his hands on his thighs. They were big hands, and he had done a lot of harm with them, and sometimes he wondered if his hands would not have been better used for gentler work – what it would have been like to have been a painter or sculptor or baker. “I do not know what I have anymore,” Baze said. “I have a home, and will fight for it. I have those I love, and I will fight for them. I see injustice, and will fight against it. I suppose these are the best reasons to fight.” *** “Tea?” Baze asked. Chirrut turned his head in surprise, orienting to the sound of his friend’s voice. “It’s chav,” Baze said. “Not that wretched Tarine stuff.” For a second, Chirrut found himself at an utter loss for words. He hadn’t heard Baze’s approach, and Baze was not, generally, a man who did things quietly. More, he hadn’t sensed Baze’s approach, nor even his presence, and if there was a presence that Chirrut Îmwe knew in the Force more than any other – more, perhaps, than his own place in it – it was that of Baze Malbus. “Well, if it’s chav,” Chirrut said, “I can hardly refuse, can I?” *** “There is a space between ‘next to impossible’ and ‘impossible.’” Chirrut smiled at something only he knew was there. “This is where we will fit.” “This guy, do you believe this guy?” Denic said to Baze. “Yes,” Baze said. *** Chirrut shook his head slightly, frowning. Baze tried to remember the last time he’d seen Chirrut happy. *** “There is no time to argue with me, Baze Malbus. Here, your anger only grows. You must leave Jedha before it consumes you.” “You cannot be left alone,” Baze said. “You would walk into walls.” View the full post.
  14. These two novels — The Button Field by Gail Husch (2014) and Killingly by Katharine Beutner (2023) — were inspired by the same real-life unsolved mystery, the disappearance of student Bertha Mellish from Mount Holyoke College in 1897. I found The Button Field to be haunting, and now I’m looking forward to reading Killingly. ALT View the full post.
  15. Back to the Future Is Female! I am looking forward to this online event at 6pm Eastern on March 14, 2023! From Pulp Era pioneers to the radical innovators of the 1960s and ’70s, visionary women writers have been a transformative force in American science fiction. For Women’s History Month, acclaimed SF authors Chelsea Quinn Yarbro, Pamela Sargent, and Sheree Renée Thomas join Lisa Yaszek, editor of LOA’s The Future Is Female!, for a conversation about the writers who smashed the genre’s gender barrier to create worlds and works that remain revolutionary.  View the full post.
  16. dramyhsturgis: I’m delighted to share that I’ll be giving a paper at the upcoming Realizing Resistance Episode III: The Expanding Universe conference on Star Wars. My talk will be “‘They Walked without Speaking’: GUARDIANS OF THE WHILLS, ANDOR, and Local Resistance.“ More on the conference is here: dcsco-op.org/rriii/ ALT ALT Registration for RRIII: The Expanding Universe is now officially OPEN! Join now to attend this three day digital conference May 4-6, 2023 for social events (cosplay reception), panels, brilliant keynotes, and all things Star Wars! Realizing Resistance Episode III Tickets | Digital Cultural Studies Cooperative View the full post.
  17. StarShipSofa 706 Eleanor Arnason | StarShipSofa On my “Looking Back on Genre History” segment on the latest episode of the StarShipSofa podcast, I discuss the new series The Rig and its deep science fiction roots. ALTALT ALT View the full post.
  18. The Fox & Wit edition of The Cloisters by Katy Hays is beautiful! ALT View the full post.
  19. I was sorry to learn of the death of director He Ping last month. I’ve treated myself to a rewatch of his memorable wuxia/Western film Warriors of Heaven and Earth in tribute. (It’s pictured here with some of the other movies in my “films by or with Jiang Wen” collection.) View the full post.
  20. ALT I’m doing some rereading for research purposes. (I love my job.) View the full post.
  21. ALTALT Thanks to a lovely Valentine’s surprise from my sweetheart, we now have a new family member. He likes my taste in posters, and he’s found some friends to hang with. View the full post.
  22. I was delighted to talk Star Trek and Star Wars with Michael Boyce on the latest episode of the Geek4 podcast. ALT Geek4 — Michael W. Boyce, PhD View the full post.
  23. eldritchhobbit

    The Button Field

    I’m currently reading a fascinating book called The Button Field: A Novel by Gail Husch (2014). It’s based on an actual unsolved mystery, the disappearance of student Bertha Mellish from Mount Holyoke College in 1897. ALTALT View the full post.
  24. Things to Do During the ‘Star Trek’ Hiatus: ‘Star Trek’ Podcasts: ashleywritesstuff: Need something to listen to while you wait for Star Trek: Picard? I’ve compiled a list of Star Trek podcasts to check out while you wait on @fangirlish. What’s your favorite? Thanks to @ashleywritesstuff for the shout out — and the great recommendations — in this article! View the full post.
  25. eldritchhobbit

    Teaching Shirley Jackson’s Hangsaman

    Teaching Shirley Jackson’s Hangsaman (1951) by Amy H. Sturgis I’m happy to say that my “Teaching Shirley Jackson’s Hangsaman (1951)” post, based on my experience of teaching Shirley Jackson in my graduate Dark Academia course in Fall 2022, is now online at Reading Shirley Jackson in the 21st Century. View the full post.
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