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‘Kawk’ Reviews

The best part about having a story published in Interzone is the attention that each issue routinely garners from reviewers and bloggers.  The wave of reviews for Interzone #227, featuring “Dance of the Kawkawroons,” has started to sweep across the Internet.  (I’m almost [but not quite] getting used to being on the hot- burner):

Literary Critic David Hebblethwaite’s Review

Suite 101 review by Colin Harvey

SFCrowsnest review by Gareth D. Jones

Garbled Signals review by Matt Bruensteiner

Locus Online review by Lois Tilton

Lightly Seared on the Reality Grill review by Paul Pritchard

John’s Reading review by John Fair

SF Revu review by Sam Tomaino

Fantasy & Science Fiction review by Anthony G. Williams

Dan Powell – On Writing

Ray Garrity – Russian Review

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Back-to-Back

My story “Dance of the Kawkawroons” is featured in the March 2010 issue of Interzone (#227) , the first time I’ve appeared in back-to-back issues of the popular British publication.  The magazine is being distributed in the U.S.,  including Barnes and Noble, by its new distributor.

I’m particularly proud of this story, the first draft of which I wrote during a writing retreat with Altered Fluid last year.    It was inspired by the sleep cycles of albatrosses, which I learned about during a trip to the Galapagos Islands in 2008.

I’m off to this year’s Fluidian retreat–up at Woodstock–on Thursday.  (Going without television for 4 1/2 days will be a challenge.  Hopefully I’ll be able to retain my sanity and not harm anyone.)  I’m hoping it proves to be as productive as last year’s.

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The Top Ten Movies of 2009

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I start, as I always do, by flagging the handful of critically acclaimed movies that are notably absent from my list below.  Precious: Based on the Novel “Push” by Sapphire, which graphically depicts the mental, physical and sexual torture of an overweight Harlem teen at the hands of her monstrous Pepsi-guzzling “mother,” is far too repugnant in far too many ways to recommend.  Where the Wild Things Are, a dark but far tamer film about the turmoil of childhood, takes a more fantastical approach, but makes the fatal mistake of assuming that a little boy playing make-believe with his imaginary friends—rejects from H.R. Pufnstuf—can sustain a ninety-minute film.  Another movie that failed to hold my interest, the Coen brothers’ A Serious Man, purportedly based on The Book of Job, celebrates quirky characters in a stylish but meandering story.  Other critical darlings that fell flat in my book include Gomorrah, Goodbye Solo, The Last Station, Nine, Paris, Summer Hours and The White Ribbon.

In the category of movies-I-admired-that-just-missed-the-cut I would include District 9, which attempts to tell a socially relevant story about alien creatures stranded in South Africa.  The documentary-style format and some farfetched plot elements, however (fuel that transforms humans into aliens? really?), kept me from being as engaged as I would have liked.  Also, I was of two minds about Julie and Julia.  The Julia component (with Meryl Streep) provides topnotch entertainment but gets dragged down a bit by the Julie parts (with Amy Adams), which are commercial fluff as airy as a freshly baked croissant.  Finally, A Single Man tells a moving story of a repressed gay professor in the early 1960′s (Colin Firth) but just fell short of my list because of its too-ironic ending.  (I’m pretty sure I wasn’t supposed to laugh).

The following movies were my favorites of 2009:

10.  Zombieland.  A dork (Jesse Eisenberg channeling Teen Woody Allen) teams up with a badass (Woody Harrelson channeling Chuck Norris) and sets off on a roadtrip to a west coast amusement park with a pair of con artist sisters (Abigail Breslin and Emma Stone) in this hilarious post-apocalyptic zombie comedy.  A mashup of belly laughs and gore, it tackles important questions such as: how difficult is the dating scene in a world overrun by the walking dead? And will the Jesse Eisenberg character live long enough to lose his virginity?  Along the way they encounter the last living celebrity in the year’s funniest cameo.

9.  The Messenger. Ben Foster plays an emotionally detached and wounded soldier and Woody Harrelson (again!) is his brash superior officer, a recovering alcoholic, both of whom are assigned to notification detail—advising next of kin of the death of their loved ones in Iraq or Afghanistan.  This heart-rending indie gem explores grief from an entirely original perspective—the point of view of the bearers of bad news—and features the year’s best ensemble acting.  Foster and Harrelson are both Oscar-worthy as is Samantha Morton as a soft-spoken widow with whom the Foster character – in violation of all the rules and protocols — forms a bond.

8.  The Hurt Locker. Kathryn Bigelow’s electric war drama explores the hearts and minds of an elite squad tasked with defusing bombs on the streets of Iraq.  The handheld camera shots and the soldiers’ constant interaction with locals – who may or may not be hostile – create edge-of-your-seat suspense.  Jeremy Renner steals the show as the latest addition to the squad, a reckless risk-addict who endangers them all.

7.  Crazy Heart. Jeff Bridges gives the performance of a lifetime as a washed up, alcoholic country singer who falls in love with a reporter and single mom (Maggie Gyllenhaal) writing about his turbulent career.  Colin Farrell is surprisingly effective in a minor role as the talented protégé who has eclipsed his mentor’s fame.  The terrific country music and Bridges’ stellar performance make this an absorbing and superior character portrait.

6. An Education.  Carey Mulligan, in a starmaking performance, plays a whip-smart 16-year-old student on track for Oxford in this charming coming-of-age story.  When a sophisticated suitor (Peter Sarsgaard) exposes her to an alluring world beyond her textbooks, he offers her a different type of education in life and love.  Mulligan’s enchanting performance is sure to garner an Oscar nod.

5.  Inglourious Basterds. A strike force of Jewish assassins sets off to battle the Nazis in Quentin Tarantino’s riveting alternate-reality revenge flick.  In vintage Tarantino style, the dialogue crackles and the film’s interrelated vignettes climax in an explosive, Fuhrer-bashing finale.  Christoph Waltz deserves special kudos for the most menacing performance of the year as a charming, multilingual, killer Nazi.

4. Up. In this uplifting tale about beginning life anew, a curmudgeonly widower (voiced by Ed Asner) attaches helium balloons to his house and sets off on a quest to Paradise Falls in South America, the exotic destination he and his late wife had always dreamed of visiting.  His plans are complicated when he discovers an eight-year-old Cub Scout stowaway.  Another Pixar classic in the tradition of Toy Story and WALL-E, it departs from familiar formulas – the hero and villain are septuagenarians and the love story is between a man and his deceased spouse – but still delivers adventure aplenty, including lost explorers, talking dogs, exotic birds and dirigible battles.  It also features the most poignant five minutes of any movie in 2009 in its opening montage, which chronicles the protagonist’s relationship with his wife from childhood to old age.

3.   Up in the Air. George Clooney stars as a freelance hatchet man who travels the country terminating employees of the airline industry in Jason Reitman’s timely dramedy about the pain of corporate downsizing.  Clooney’s character finds his own job is at risk when a young up-and-comer (Anna Kendrick) pitches the idea of saving time and money by firing the workers via webcam.  Vera Farmiga plays Clooney’s kindred spirit, a fellow nomad racking up frequent flyer miles who makes him reassess the value of a life without meaningful emotional connections.  Smart, sad, and slick, Reitman’s film hits all the right notes and surprised me with its ending.

2.   Moon. Duncan’s Jones’s suspenseful and cerebral sci-fi indie stars Sam Rockwell in a bravura single-actor performance as a solitary worker monitoring a mining plant on the dark side of the moon.  Kevin Spacey provides the voice of his cloying companion computer.  In the final weeks of his three-year assignment and desperate to be reunited with his wife and daughter on Earth, an accident and its aftereffects spur Rockwell’s character to question not only the true purpose of his mission, but his sanity.  Smartly riffing off of—and subverting—expectations created by movies such as Solaris and 2001: A Space Odyssey, the eerie Moon explores the nature of identity in a thoughtful and original way.

1.   Star Trek. J.J. Abrams’ adrenaline-fueled re-imagining of the Star Trek franchise exploded onto the big screen in the year’s best popcorn movie, which provided the most fun I had in the theater in 2009.  By cleverly using a time travel story, the screenplay injects a breath of fresh air into the series as relationships are re-jiggered and the Enterprise squares off against a genocidal Romulan hellbent on revenge.  The breakneck pace and superb recasting would mean nothing, however, without making us care about the characters, and the film faithfully captures the brashness and swagger of James T. Kirk, the inner turmoil of half-Vulcan-half-human Spock and the loyalty (and general irascibility) of Dr. Leonard McCoy, the troika at the heart of Trek.  The story is so compelling that it’s easy to overlook – even on a fifth viewing! — some plot holes and bad science pointed out by the ever-vigilant Trekker contingency on the Internet.  Pass the popcorn; I’ll be watching this one again and again.

The five runners-up:

11.  Watchmen (visually stunning adaptation of Alan Moore’s classic graphic novel, a noir whodunit set in an alternate 1985 as nuclear war looms and members of a retired superhero group are killed off one at a time); 12. Avatar (James Cameron’s revolutionary special effects film—the highest grossing movie of all time—provides the ultimate immersive 3D experience and would have ranked higher on my list had it moved beyond its Pocahontas redux plot); 13. The Hangover (a Las Vegas bachelor party gone horribly wrong provides the most raucous laughs of the year); 14.  In the Loop (a political satire that boasts the sharpest dialogue of the year, it depicts the behind-the-scenes wrangling of British and American politicians prior to a possible invasion of an unnamed Middle Eastern country); 15.  (500) Days of Summer (jigsaw pieces of a bittersweet romance that captures the exhilaration and heartbreak of a summer tryst).

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Some not-so-”Harsh” reviews

interzone226Here are some reviews for “In the Harsh Glow of Its Incandescent Beauty,” which appears in Interzone 226 (January/February).

Over at the Asimov’s Forum, StevenLP writes:

“Forgot to mention the Jan/Feb issue of Interzone. It has two good stories: “In the Harsh Glow of its Incandescent Beauty” by Mercurio D. Rivera and “Again & Again & Again” by Rachel Swirsky. The former is set in the same universe as Rivera’s impressive “Longing for Langalana” where the [Wergens] are an alien species infatuated with the human race – which forms the backdrop to the story of the main character’s pursuit of his wife who – through chemical means – is infatuated with his ex-business partner….”
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From the blog Three Beautiful Things:
1. The latest issue of Interzone is a corker — I read it on the train on my way up to London. Pick of the bag are:
Into the Depths of Illuminated Seas — a magical, angry sea fable, full of revenge and fury by Jason Sanford. It’s a woman who finds the names of sailors who are to die at sea written on her body.
In the Harsh Glow of its Incandescent Beauty — a story about Mercurio D. Rivera’s aliens that adore humans — an impressive depiction of the pain and self-deception that surround an affair.
Tyler Keevil’s Hibakusha — a man volunteers his way back to a London that has been destroyed by nuclear terrorism.
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Matt Bruensteiner at Garbled Signals writes:

“In the harsh glow of its incandescent beauty”, Mercurio D. Rivera. Maxwell is traveling the solar system in pursuit of his abducted wife. He’s joined by a pair of Wergen, aliens who have granted humanity access to immense amounts of new technology, and also follow humans about with an unexplained cloying devotion. Maxwell is part of a team that discovered a chemical that induces a similar unconditional love in humans. This sets up a neat counterpoint between the Wergen-human relationship and his personal relationship with his wife. Well done.

Some additional reviews can be viewed on the links below:

SFRevu

John’s Reading by John Fair

SFCrow’sNest

Black Gate

Suite 101′s

Tangent Online’s

Anthony Wlliams

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Just Czeching Up

IkarieCoverI’m tickled to see that “The Scent of Their Arrival” appears in this month’s issue of Ikarie, the leading SF/Fantasy magazine in the Czech Republic, along with stories from Daryl Gregory, Jay Lake and others.  It’s amusingly translated as “The Smell of Their Arrival.”

In other news, “Snatch Me Another” will be podcast over at StarShipSofa at a future date.  It will also be read on the radio show “Beam Me Up” over at WRFR Ip/fm in Rockland, Maine.

Finally, “In the Harsh Glow of Its Incandescent Beauty” appears in the January/February issue of Interzone #226.  My story features some absolutely stunning color artwork by the acclaimed Jim Burns.

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