READERCON 11 : FULL SCHEDULE (rooms not shown here) FRIDAY Fri 2:00p Registration, Info & Sales open. Fri 3:00p Bookshop opens. Fri 4:00p You're Mad as Hell, What Do I Do? Ellen Datlow, Scott Edelman (M), Harlan Ellison, James Alan Gardner, Carolyn Ives Gilman. Much powerful fiction has been inspired by anger and outrage. There is a wide range of possible responses to reading these works; we might run right out the front door and go protest or picket something, we might briefly feel an intense human connection with the author and forget about the whole mess ten minutes later. What is the nature of the contract between author and reader in these works? Do they carry with them some implied responsibility, or is that unfair? Fri 4:00p Bookaholics Anonymous Annual Meeting. Discussion (60 min.). Allegations continue about this most controversial of all 12-step groups. It has been suggested by some that despite the appearance of self-approbation, despite the formal public proclamations by members that they find their behavior humiliating and intend to change it, this group in fact secretly encourages its members to succumb to their addiction. The shame, in other words, is a sham. Within the subtext of the members' pathetic testimony, it is claimed, all the worst vices are covertly endorsed: book-buying, book-hoarding, book-stacking, book-smelling, book-loving, even book-reading. Could this be true? Come and testify yourself! Fri 5:00p Lest We Forget. Ellen Asher, Richard Bowes, Harlan Ellison (M), Kit Reed, Gene Wolfe. As long as "The Whimper of Whipped Dogs" and "Jeffty is Five" are in print, some of us won't forget Kitty Genovese's murder or how big Clark bars used to be. How important is maintaining our collective memory? Is this one of the moral duties of fiction? If so, how much can writers really do? Fri 5:00p Robot Lib. Michael Burstein, Glenn Grant, Geary Gravel, Robert J. Sawyer (M), Stephanie Smith. The robots in most sf stories are artificial servants, but that's only one of many possible roles they could actually play. Why has sf's treatment been so narrow? What does that tell us about ourselves? What works have explored the alternatives? Fri 5:00p Who Should Have Been On The Hugo Ballot This Year? Joseph Mayhew. Discussion (60 min.). Fri 5:00p Aline Boucher Kaplan reads either from a just- completed novel Crossing the Line: Vol. 1 of the Demons of Godsworld, or from Vol. 2 (in progress) (30 min.). Fri 5:00p Kaffeeklatsches. Nalo Hopkinson; Paul Williams. Fri 5:30p Mark Rich reads from a novel-in-progress. (30 min.). Fri 6:00p Slipstream Fiction and the SF Community. Bryan Cholfin, F. Brett Cox (M), Ellen Datlow, Kit Reed, Gordon Van Gelder. Jonathan Lethem, in a Village Voice piece reprinted in NYRSF #121, raised the issue of the proper relationship between sf as a genre and community, and the wealth of non-realist, non-f&sf fiction we've come to call "slipstream." Since we've had slipstream panels as far back as Readercon Fr1, and since we've had a longstanding goal to get some of these writers here, we could hardly resist continuing the discussion. Fri 6:00p Any Resemblance is Intentional. John Clute, Paul Di Filippo (M), Barry N. Malzberg, Teresa Nielsen Hayden, Madeleine E. Robins. A look at a growing subgenre of imaginative literature, stories which use historical figures in ahistorical settings. Fri 6:00p Pro-life Themes in Lois McMaster Bujold's Vor Series. Lise Eisenberg. Talk/Discussion (60 min.). These books portray an array of human societies, from a semi-feudal backwater planet to a collection of cutting-edge bioengineering merchants, to an isolated planetary colony inhabited solely by homosexual men. Wherever one goes, the one trait that separates the good guys from the bad guys is a deep reverence for human life, in whatever form it takes. Fri 6:00p Shariann Lewitt reads (30 min.). Fri 6:00p Connie Hirsch reads "The Judas Cup" (her first sale, from several years ago). (60 min.). Fri 6:00p Kaffeeklatsches. Paul T. Riddell; Michael Swanwick. Fri 6:30p John Cramer reads (30 min.). Fri 7:00p Is Hollywood Getting a Clue?. Harlan Ellison, Henry Jenkins (M), Aline Boucher Kaplan, Paul T. Riddell, Steven Sawicki. Our quasi-semi-annual media panel. The last three years have seen an inordinate number of good f&sf movies: Gattaca, p,Dark City, The Truman Show, The Matrix, Pleasantville, The Fifth Element, Men in Black, Contact, yes, even The Postman (your mileage may vary). Is this a trend, or a fluke (or are we wrong with this assertion)? Fri 7:00p Text, Meaning, and the Changing Self. John Crowley, James Alan Gardner, Greer Gilman, Faye Ringel (M), Ann Tonsor Zeddies. We've talked in the past about how texts can change their meanings when reread, but we've focused on changes that are latent in the texts themselves. Sometimes, though, it's what happens to us in the interim that's crucial. Often it is reading another text which unlocks secrets in the first. Sometimes, it's a real-life experience; these may even draw us back towards a text without our quite knowing why. A look at these and other issues. Fri 7:00p Creating Interesting and Believable Characters In SF: How to Get it Right. Jeffrey A. Carver. Discussion (60 min.). Fri 7:00p Candas Jane Dorsey reads from her new novel, A Paradigm of Earth. (30 min.). Fri 7:00p Rosemary Kirstein reads from The Lost Steersman, a (hopefully) just-completed novel. (60 min.). Fri 7:00p Kaffeeklatsches. Gregory Feeley; Shariann Lewitt. Fri 7:00p Autographs. Pat Cadigan; Doranna Durgin. Fri 7:30p Elizabeth Hand reads (30 min.). Fri 8:00p Misfit and Outcast Literature. F. Brett Cox (M), Nalo Hopkinson, Rebecca Ore, Allen Steele, Robert Charles Wilson. The murders on Hitler's birthday focused attention on society's misfits and outcasts. Media coverage focused on the games and movies these outcasts preferred, while completely ignoring the literature (and the fact that the vast majority of misfits are not murderers). In solidarity with the many non-murderous misfits everywhere, we'll discuss the stories and books that helped shape our identity as misfits, and made that special status bearable. Fri 8:00p The Fiction of Gerald Kersh. Simon Bloom, Daniel Dern, Paul Duncan, Harlan Ellison, Ken Houghton (M). Fri 8:00p Book-Making. Leigh Grossman. Talk (60 min.). How does a manuscript become a book? Is it necessary to leave a saucer of milk out for the production faeries? A discussion of the steps a manuscript goes through in the pre-press production process, and what can be done to make the process smoother. Do author disks make things easier or not? How does one learn to get along with one's copyeditor? Does all this talk of desktop publishing really mean anything? Why doesn't my editor ever seem to know anything about the production process? Learn the answers to these and many other questions that come up in the course of creating a book. Fri 8:00p A Unified Theory of Consciousness. Eric M. Van. Chautauqua (60 min.). A proposed solution to the mind/body problem, beginning at the level of quantum mechanics and ending with the role of neurotransmission in mediating the nature of subjective experience. Deconstructs or supercedes (we think) traditional oppositions like dualism vs. materialism, and answers such vexing questions as the nature of free will and how the brain coordinates its massively parallel computational modules. No prior background in quantum mechanics, philosophy of mind, or neuroscience required; we can explain all that in Fr60 minutes, too! Fri 8:00p Jack McDevitt reads three items: two pages from Moonfall, a cliffhanger, leaving his characters in an impossible situation; and two short-shorts from Standard Candles, "Cruising Through Deuteronomy, in which a preacher worries about what a timemachine might reveal; and "To Hell with the Stars," in which an old science fiction anthology changes the course of history. (30 min.). Fri 8:00p Andrew Weiner reads "The Disappearance Artist", from his Fr1998 short story collection This Is The Year Zero (Pottersfield Press) (30 min.). Fri 8:00p Kaffeeklatsches. Scott Edelman; Warren Lapine. Fri 8:00p Autographs. Michael Swanwick; Gene Wolfe. Fri 8:00p Registration, Info & Sales close. Fri 8:30p Darrell Schweitzer reads (30 min.). Fri 8:30p Michael Cisco reads excerpts from his novel The Divinity Student. (30 min.). Fri 9:00p Linguistics and SF. John O'Neil. Talk/Discussion (60 min.). Fri 9:00p Mikhail Bakhtin: A Master Class in Writing. John Crowley. Chautauqua (60 min.). Mikhail Bakhtin (1895-1975) was a Russian "formalist" literary critic, whose concepts are very useful (we think) for working writers. Among other things, he's a response to Deconstruction (though he probably never heard of it). Fri 9:00p Esther M. Friesner reads (30 min.). Fri 9:00p Eleanor Arnason reads miscellaneous short pieces, plus some poetry. (30 min.). Fri 9:00p Kaffeeklatsches. John Clute; Stephanie Smith. Fri 9:00p Bookshop closes. Fri 9:30p Pat Cadigan reads (30 min.). Fri 9:30p Paul J. McAuley reads "Alien TV," set in a convention about ? Alien TV, and possibly a companion piece, "Before the Flood." (30 min.). Fri 10:00p Meet the Pros(e) Party. Each pro writer here tonight has selected a favorite sentence (or two short ones) from their own writing. Each is armed with a single sheet of narrow mailing labels on which this sentence appears. On the tables around you are pieces of wax paper. Meet the writers. Ask for a label. Put it on the paper. Make Art. Atheists, agnostics and the lazy can trust strictly to chance, and keep them in the order they obtain them (even while transferring them to a more permanent medium). Result: one of at least Nine Billion Random Prose Poems. Those who believe in the reversal of entropy can assemble them to make a Statement (one popular game consists of finding a sequence in which every juxtaposition is meaningful). But wait, there's more. Scissors. Those who lack respect for living authors (at least) can use them to combine one writer's subject with another's predicate. Try to match your friend's result (without consultation) and win valuable prizes! The party will also feature Those I Honor, Those I Despise, a talk by Harlan Ellison. SATURDAY Sat 9:00a Registration, Info & Sales open. Sat 10:00a Bookshop opens. Sat 10:00a The Autobiographical Voice. Harlan Ellison, Elizabeth Hand, James Patrick Kelly (M), Barry N. Malzberg, Robert Charles Wilson. Making the reader believe a story is in some way autobiographical can be a powerful literary device (perhaps all the more so in f&sf, precisely because it isn't the norm). What's it like to write these stories? Do they work only for certain types of writers? What are the techniques? Can this be done covertly as well as overtly? Sat 10:00a The Obscure Funny Stuff I Like. Glen Cook, Esther M. Friesner, Craig Shaw Gardner, Joseph Mayhew (M), Darrell Schweitzer. Recommendations, and a look at why some people think that's funny. Sat 10:00a Idea Triggers: Writing and Interactive Inspiration. Katya Reimann. Talk/Discussion (60 min.). Why talking to fans about one's books can be a good thing. Sat 10:00a The First Public Appearance of Artemis Magazine. Ian Randal Strock. Chautauqua (30 min.). The magazine, its goals, and its background. Sat 10:00a Paul T. Riddell reads "The Doom That Came to Cyberpunk." (60 min.). Sat 10:00a Jennifer K. Stevenson reads from her contemporary fantasy novel Trash, Sex, Magic, about trailer-trash sex magicians living on a riverbank in the Chicago suburbs. (30 min.). Sat 10:00a Kaffeeklatsches. Terry Bisson and Paul Park; Patrick O'Leary. Sat 10:00a Autographs. Ellen Datlow; Robert J. Sawyer. Sat 10:00a Listening Lounge. Judging A Book By Page 117 (taped at Readercon 3): Ellen Kushner, Eluki Bes Shahar, Alex Jablokov, John Kessell. Can you actually judge a book by opening to a random page and reading? Can this very useful skill be learned? Complete with demonstrations. Sat 10:30a Incas: The Aliens In Our Past. Suzanne Blom. Chautauqua (30 min.). When we imagine alternate societies, we generally turn to distant planets, but when we create those far civilizations, we come to them with the assumptions of Western Civilization, and most often create them in that image. Yet there have been totally alien civilizations on this planet that shared none of those assumptions. The Sa3000-mile-long Inca empire had no money or markets, no word for evil, and a different apparent perception of color. Learn about these and many, many other differences. Sat 10:30a Kelly Link reads (30 min.). Sat 11:00a The Career of Harlan Ellison. Paul Di Filippo, Scott Edelman, Marcel Gagne, Mark Rich (M), Paul T. Riddell. Sat 11:00a Writing For Our Children. Pat Cadigan, John Clute, Kathryn Cramer (M), Paul Levinson, Paul Park. Many of us are having children these days. How is that changing our perspective on children's literature? What type of stories will we want them to read? Won't we write some of them ourselves? What might they be like? Sat 11:00a Canadian SF. Joel Champetier, Candas Jane Dorsey, James Alan Gardner, Glenn Grant, Yves Meynard, Robert J. Sawyer (M), Jean-Louis Trudel, Peter Watts, Andrew Weiner, Robert Charles Wilson. Discussion (60 min.). Is Canadian sf a cohesive literary school, or just a random collection of authors, all of whom happen to be taxed way too heavily? Why is most Canadian sf published in the U.S.? Is the current Canadian sf boom going to translate into apermanent market force, or is it just a blip? Does Canadian sf have any relationship to Canadian mainstream literature -- does Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale seriously belong in a discussion of Canadian sf, or has it just been co-opted by the genre for Atwood's literary cachet? Sat 11:00a The Secret Museum: The Lost Collections of the Boston Museum of Natural History. Cortney Skinner. Chautauqua (60 min.). Little did Cortney know, when he opened that first trunk in his father's attic, that he'd be unearthing the past of a long-forgotten museum and its strange collections. Through documents and artifacts recently uncovered and displayed on the web, this new project will invite the public to help view, theorize about and discover the centuries-old history of this ancient institution. Sat 11:00a Ellen Kushner reads "The Death of the Duke," from Starlight 2.(60 min.). Sat 11:00a Carolyn Ives Gilman reads a chapter from her science fiction novel in progress (working title Ghost ). (30 min.). Sat 11:00a Kaffeeklatsches. Patrick and Teresa Nielsen Hayden; Charles C. Ryan. Sat 11:00a Autographs. Debra Doyle and James D. Macdonald. Sat 11:00a Listening Lounge. Taped reading: Jack Dann from The Memory Cathedral (:45) Sat 11:30a Stephanie Smith reads from Baby Rocket, a novel-in-progress. (30 min.). Sat 12:00n The City as Character. Terry Bisson, Samuel R. Delany, Esther M. Friesner, Ellen Kushner, David Alexander Smith (M). As we've noted before ("Landscape as Character," Readercon 9), the setting of a story sometimes plays a role at least as central as the protagonist. A discussion of quintessentially urban fiction. Sat 12:00n 1998: The Year in Short Fiction. David G. Hartwell, Tom Jackson (M), Mark Rich, Michael Swanwick, David Truesdale. Sat 12:00n Smut And Nothing But: SF and Romance in Search of Redeeming Social Importance. Nalo Hopkinson, Kelly Link, Jennifer K. Stevenson (M), Cecilia Tan. (120 min.) A special report on sex scenes in science fiction and in romance. The first hour is devoted to readings from the panelists' favorite sex scenes from both genres. The second hour discusses the contrasts and similarities in these genres' treatment of this absorbing topic. Sat 12:00n Cambridge Kit Reed reads "River" from her new collection, Seven for the Apocalypse, just published by the Wesleyan University Press. (30 min.). Sat 12:00n Ellen Brody reads "The Shady Life of Annibal," by Gerald Kersh (60 min.). Sat 12:00n Kaffeeklatsches. Eleanor Arnason; Doranna Durgin. Sat 12:00n Autographs. Jeffrey A. Carver; Jack McDevitt. Sat 12:00n Listening Lounge. A Book To Change Their Minds (taped at Readercon 6): Gregory Feeley, Don Keller, Rob Kilheffer, Steve Pagel. Elsewhere in this program we ask "what can we do to gain mainstream acceptance for f&sf?" Well, how about an anthology of short fiction designed expressly for that purpose? Not sf for people who hate sf, but sf for open-minded people who are willing to be convinced that sf can be great -- if we prove it. An anthology designed not so much to sell, but to be read by the right people (book reviewers, editors, book review editors). It must thus feature our best talents in stories that play by mainstream rules, that live up to their standards of prose style and characterization (or circumvent them in a powerful postmodern way) -- while of course doing much more. (That f&sf can play hard by its own rules is something we can demonstrate later.) It should be dazzlingly good. Which authors should be included? Which story by each would be best? Would anyone actually publish such a book and give it the highly targeted marketing push it would need to do its job? Sat 12:30p Paul Park reads from a new fantasy novel about Romania. (30 min.). Sat 1:00p Must Art Be Difficult?. Samuel R. Delany (M), Harlan Ellison, Lissanne Lake, Patrick O'Leary, Gene Wolfe, Joey Zone. "Making it easier, I think, is invidious. It is a really bad thing. Art is not supposed to be easier! ? Ridding the world of heart attacks, making the roads smoother, making the beer better, but not Art. Art should always be tough. Art should demand something of you. Art should involve foot-pounds of energy being expended. It's not supposed to be easier, and those who want it easier should not be artists. They should be out selling public relations copy." - Harlan Ellison. Sat 1:00p The Techno-Thriller. Don D'Ammassa, Thomas Easton, Alexander Jablokov (M), James D. Macdonald, Allen Steele. Another in a series of panels exploring genres tangential to sf proper. To what extent is the distinction between the techno-thriller and sf just a marketing one? Are some techno-thrillers closer to sf than others? Does that necessarily make them better, or even more interesting to sf readers? Includes a survey of the field. Sat 1:00p Katya Reimann reads from Prince of Fire & Ashes, forthcoming from Tor. (30 min.). Sat 1:00p Greer Gilman reads from "A Crowd of Bone," a novella. (60 min.). Sat 1:00p Kaffeeklatsches. James Alan Gardner; Donald Kingsbury. Sat 1:00p Autographs. Elizabeth Hand; Robert Charles Wilson. Sat 1:00p Listening Lounge. Taped reading: John Kessel, "Some Like It Cold" (:40) Sat 1:30p Madeleine E. Robins reads an excerpt from a work in progress, Point Of Honour, which can best be described as Jane-Austen-meets-Dashiell-Hammett ? kinda. (30 min.). Sat 2:00p The Short-Short Story. Terry Bisson, Janice M. Eisen (M), Jack McDevitt, Michael Swanwick, Gene Wolfe. (90 min.) The best of these are more than stunts; they can be an art form unto themselves. The Last Starship From Earth (John Boyd), Black Easter, The Masks of Time, City of Illusions, The Goblin Reservation ? what was going on? The glib answer, "the first year of the Ace Specials," is clearly confusing cause and effect. What produced this fireball of talent that Terry Carr noticed? Random chance? Some cycle of age and influence? Or was the environment of the mid-sixties conducive to brilliant speculation in a way that just hasn't happened since? If either of the latter, when might we see another year like this one? Sat 2:30p Daniel Hatch reads (30 min.). Sat 3:00p How I Wrote Black Light. Elizabeth Hand. Talk (30 min.). Sat 3:00p Paul Williams reads essays from his forthcoming Tor book The 20th Century's Greatest Hits, on Philip K. Dick's Martian Time-Slip, Theodore Sturgeon's "Mr. Costello, Hero" and "And Now The News . . .", and 2001: A Space Oddyssey. (30 min.). Sat 3:00p Mark W. Tiedemann reads "Psyche." (30 min.). Sat 3:00p Kaffeeklatsches. Samuel R. Delany; Katya Reimann. Sat 3:00p Listening Lounge. Taped reading: Pat Cadigan, "The Lost Girls" (:30) Sat 3:30p How I Wrote Darwinia. Robert Charles Wilson. Talk (30 min.). Sat 3:30p In the Shadow of the Ring: Female Fantasists and Tolkien. Faye Ringel. Talk (30 min.). Female fantasists (including Patricia McKillip, Delia Sherman, eluki bes shahar, and Greer Gilman) and their relationship with Tolkien, based on an essay in a forthcoming critical anthology. Sat 3:30p Other Fringe Lives. Rebecca Ore. Chautauqua (30 min.). Rural Virginia cockfighters and Midwestern spammers. Sat 3:30p James Patrick Kelly reads (30 min.). Sat 3:30p Robert J. Sawyer reads from Calculating God, forthcoming from Tor in the summer of 2000. (30 min.). Sat 4:00p Ellen Datlow and Harlan Ellison: A Conversation Sat 5:30p The Fallacy of Genre. Candas Jane Dorsey. Talk/Discussion (60 min.). Sat 5:30p The Science of Wormholes, Warpdrives, and Time Machines. John Cramer. Chautauqua (60 min.). A new "game" is being played in the theoretical physics literature -- serious journal articles are being published about wormholes, warp drives, and time machines, based on general relativity. Sat 5:30p John Crowley reads from the final volume of Aegypt, still far from completion. (30 min.). Sat 5:30p Donald Kingsbury reads from Pyschohistorical Crisis, an expansion of a story in Far Futures, taking place in an Alternate Asimov Galactic Empire. (30 min.). Sat 5:30p Kaffeeklatsches. Pat Cadigan; Joseph Mayhew. Sat 6:00p Terry Bisson reads "The Old Rugged Cross" (forthcoming in Starlight 3), about a man on death row who wants to be crucified. (30 min.). Sat 6:00p James Alan Gardner reads from either Vigilant, his most recent novel from Avon EOS, or Hunted, his next (scheduled for June Sa2000) (30 min.). Sat 6:00p Reception and Banquet. Sat 6:00p Bookshop closes. Sat 7:00p Registration, Info & Sales close. Sat 8:00p How Writers Go Wrong. Jack McDevitt. Talk (60 min.). Sat 8:00p The Dharma of Buffy. Donald G. Keller. Chautauqua (60 min.). Sat 8:00p Samuel R. Delany reads (30 min.). Sat 8:00p Debra Doyle and James D. Macdonald read "Remailer", from the recent anthology Not of Woman Born. (60 min.). Sat 8:00p Kaffeeklatsches. Glen Cook; Elizabeth Hand. Sat 8:30p Michael Swanwick reads "Moon Dogs," an sf story which his wife refers to as "another one of Michael's grim little fables." (30 min.). Sat 9:00p Strangling Cats, and Other Happy Pastimes. Harlan Ellison Sat 10:00p The Best of the Kirk Poland Memorial Bad Prose Competition, Vol. 2. Adam-Troy Castro, Craig Shaw Gardner (M), Geary Gravel, Shariann Lewitt, Eric M. Van (M). (c. 75 min.) Blurb for newcomers: Our traditional evening entertainment, named in memory of the pseudonym and alter ego of Jonathan Herovit of Barry Malzberg's Herovit's World. Ringleader Craig Shaw Gardner reads a passage of unidentified but genuine, published, bad sf prose which has been truncated in mid-sentence. Each of our panelists ? Craig and his co-moderator Eric M. Van, twelve-time and current champion Geary Gravel, and first-time challengers Adam-Troy Castro and Shariann Lewitt ? then reads an ending for the passage. One ending is the real one; the others are imposters concocted by our contestants (including Craig) ahead of time. None of the players knows who wrote any passage other than their own, except for Eric, who gets to play God as a reward for the truly onerous duty of unearthing these gems. Craig then asks for the audience vote on the authenticity of each passage (recapping each in turn by quoting a pithy phrase or three from them), and the Ace Readercon Joint Census Team counts up each show of hands faster than you can say "like a wall of stinking jelly." Eric then reveals the truth. Each contestant receives a point for each audience member they fooled, while the audience collectively scores a point for everyone who spots the real answer. As a rule, the audience finishes third or fourth. Warning: the Sturgeon General has determined that this trash is hazardous to your health, should you be recovering from fractured ribs, pulled stomach muscles, or the like (i.e., if it hurts to laugh, you're in big trouble). Blurb for veterans: This Best-Of recaps two rounds from the Fourth Competition (at Noreascon 2 in 1989), one from the Fifth (Readercon 3, Sa1990), and two from the Sixth (Readercon 4, 1991). The latter three were also featured in a suspiciously similar Best-Of we just did a year ago at Bucconneer in Baltimore. Please don't vote for any rounds you remember, or we really will defenestrate you! Sat 10:15p Listening Lounge. A radio adaption of Samuel R. Delany's novella "The Star Pit", narrated by the author; produced and directed by the late Baird Searles (2:15) SUNDAY Sun 08:30a Closed Workshop. Kelly Link, David Alexander Smith (M). Sun 10:00a Registration, Info & Sales open. Sun 10:00a Bookshop opens. Sun 10:00a Again, Dangerous Visions? Eleanor Arnason, Ellen Datlow, Harlan Ellison (M), Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Andrew Weiner. In theory, recent anthologies like Full Spectrum and Starlight have filled the same market niche that Dangerous Visions did:the state of the art in f&sf, with some emphasis on new writers. But they have not had the impact on the field (and outside it) that DV did. It's not hard to guess why: DV had the hook of "forbidden" stories, and the introductions and afterwords. Could and should we try to emulate these features in an original anthology? What could the hook possibly be, now that everything goes? (Or does it?) Sun 10:00a John Clute's Model of Fantasy Structure. John Clute, John Crowley, Candas Jane Dorsey, Donald G. Keller, Teresa Nielsen Hayden (M). Embedded in the Hugo-winning Encyclopedia of Fantasy is a theory about the structure of fantasy texts: they move from Bondage (Wrongness, Thinning), through Recognition and (often) Metamorphosis, to Eucatastrophe and Healing. A discussion of the model, and of the wealth of other critical terminology gathered (or invented) to elaborate it. Sun 10:00a How I Wrote Flashforward. Robert J. Sawyer. Talk (30 min.). Sun 10:00a Kathryn Cramer reads stories for young children, written by both her and others. (60 min.). Sun 10:00a Autographs. Paul Levinson; Patrick O'Leary. Sun 10:00a Listening Lounge. Fifty-Five Panels in Five-Sixths of an Hour. (taped at Readercon 5): Steve Brown, Janice Eisen, John M. Ford, Ellen Kushner (at end), Eric Van, Gordon Van Gelder. Here at Readercon, ideas that ordinary, lesser cons spend entire hours beating to death puzzling over can be summed up in sixty seconds or less. In just one hour, we can cover all the ground of an entire Worldcon program! Our five know-it-alls have all the answers. Sun 10:30a The Small Press. Steven Sawicki. Talk (30 min.). Is the small press a breaking ground for new writers, or a trap for those who can't cut it in the big world of publishing? What is the small press, who is the small press, why is the small press . . . and how to use it as both a reader and a writer. Sun 11:00a Not Since Tolkien: Fantasy Without World-Building. John Clute, Greer Gilman, Yves Meynard (M), Katya Reimann, Michael Swanwick. Once upon a time, all that it took to establish a convincing fantasy world was the magic phrase "once upon a time"(in a land far, far, away). Now it requires a map, a glossary, chronology, genealogies, recipes, URLs, etc.. But aren't there certain stories which are better off without this apparatus? (Much of the magic of William Morris's The Well at the World's End would have been neatly negated by a frontispiece map showing us exactly where the legendary Well was.) Whatever happened to "beyond the fields we know," anyway? Have any recent novels bucked this trend? Would some have been better off if they had? Sun 11:00a The SF Computer Game: A New Art-Form?. Pat Cadigan, Janice M. Eisen (M), Carolyn Ives Gilman, Kevin J. Maroney. The pure text adventure game (like the original ADVENTURE) may be dead, but there are still computer games with significant texts, in some cases written by the likes of Thomas M. Disch and Marc Laidlaw. Is there a nascent art form here? If so, where might it go and where might it take us? Sun 11:00a Your Ticket to the Moon: The Artemis Project. Ian Randal Strock. Chautauqua (60 min.). This commercial venture is an outgrowth of a science fictional idea, perpetrated by (mostly) sf writers. NASA's been to the Moon, and they're not going back. The Artemis Project has decided that it's time for private citizens to go to theMoon, and now you, too, can get involved. Sun 11:00a Harlan Ellison reads a just-completed short story. (60 min.). Sun 11:00a Listening Lounge. Taped reading: Kit Reed "Mommy Nearest" & "The Sibling" (:45) Sun 12:00n Just Say "Wow!": Drugs and SF. John Crowley, Elizabeth Hand, Paul J. McAuley, Patrick Nielsen Hayden, Cecilia Tan (M). "Science fiction" and "drugs" are both punchlines for the same joke ("Reality is a crutch for people who can't handle ?"). That says something, doesn't it? When we add the alterations of reality that accompany drug use to the altered reality of an invented future, we open the door to all sorts of interplay between the two. Sun 12:00n The Career of Ellen Datlow. Pat Cadigan, F. Brett Cox (M), Jim Freund, James Minz, Gordon Van Gelder. Sun 12:00n Galaxies, by Barry N. Malzberg. Paul Di Filippo, Scott Edelman, Gregory Feeley, Donald G. Keller, Eric M. Van (M). It might be the greatest work of sf criticism ever written (certainly it's the funniest) ? except it's a novel ? except itisn't. It's back in print (in Three in Space, selected by Jack Dann, Pamela Sargent, and George Zebrowski, White Wolf Press). We'll talk about it. Sun 12:00n Paul Levinson reads from The Silk Code, an sf novel (forthcoming from Tor in October) featuring NYC forensic scientist Dr. Phil D'Amato, whose prior exploits were detailed in three novelettes (two Nebula nominated) in Analog. (30 min.). Sun 12:00n Patrick O'Leary reads from The Impossible Bird, a nearly-complete novel about hummingbirds, aliens and death. (60 min.). Sun 12:00n Kaffeeklatsches. Geary Gravel, Rosemary Kirstein, Cortney Skinner and Ann Tonsor Zeddies; Jack McDevitt. Sun 12:00n Autographs. Kathryn Cramer and David G. Hartwell; Samuel R. Delany. Sun 12:00n Listening Lounge. Fantasy Can Save The World, Can't It? (taped at Readercon 7): Ellen Kushner, Iain McCaig, James Morrow, Susan Palwick, Terri Windling. If fantasy stories are capable of transforming readers' lives, do the writers of these stories bear a certain moral responsibility to young readers? In the introduction to her forthcoming anthology The Armless Maiden, Terri Windling addresses the therapeutic value of fairy tales in helping abused children cope: "? what is important about these stories from the point of view of any of us who have gone through the deepdark woods in childhood ourselves is not the expectation of ending Happily Ever After. Rather, it's the way that ending is achieved, through the process of transformation. It is all too easy to get lost in that wood, stuck in the mindset of victimization. These stories urge us to pass on through, to toss off the spells and the donkey-skins, to pick up the sword, the stone, the ring, and transform ourselves and our lives with the old-fashioned strengths of ?goodness,' persistence, and action." Is it possible to say "It's only fantasy." and not have it sound like a glib dismissal? Sun 12:30p Jean-Louis Trudel reads from his translation of Joel Champetier's novel, published by Tor in May as The Dragon's Eye, and perhaps some of his own fiction. (30 min.). Sun 1:00p Literary Life After Death. Harlan Ellison, Arthur Hlavaty, Teresa Nielsen Hayden (M), Darrell Schweitzer, Paul Williams. Philip K. Dick's posthumous career has arguably been more successful than his living one. Sturgeon, Bester, and Avram Davidson are back in print, and small presses like NESFA have had success with the likes of Cordwainer Smith. What's going on here? How do estates and publishers make this happen? Sun 1:00p SF After the Space Age. Jeffrey A. Carver (M), Carolyn Ives Gilman, Jeff Hecht, Ed Meskys, Allen Steele. "One of the elements in Ballard's work which seemed uniquely offensive to the then-dominant credo of American science fiction was histendency to set stories in a relatively near future in which the "Space Age" was already a thing of the past . . . If we contemplate the future without the rose-tinted spectacles of American sf, it now seems highly likely that Ballard was right. We have indeed come to the point of realizing that the Space Age-as American science fiction understood it-is effectively over." Brian Stableford, in NYRSF #115. While Stableford may overstate the case, there's no denying that the progress of space exploration has been nothing like American sf envisioned it. Must stories about future space exploration acknowledge this? If we haven't been back to the Moon in thirty years, how do you make your lunar colony or trip to Mars credible? Sun 1:00p SF in French: The Current Renaissance. Joel Champetier, Yves Meynard, Jean-Louis Trudel (M). Talk/Discussion (60 min.). In France, sf is undergoing a definite renaissance after some fallow years (and fantasy is being born), while Canadian francophones continue to put out quality works. So, for those interested in finding out more about the rest of the world ? Sun 1:00p Geary Gravel reads "The Man Who Went Out of His Way," a story set in the same universe as The Alchemists and The Pathfinders. (60 min.). Sun 1:00p Adam-Troy Castro reads "The Last Straw," a horror story that appeared in Tampa Tribune Fiction Quarterly. (30 min.). Sun 1:00p Kaffeeklatsches. Rebecca Ore; Gene Wolfe. Sun 1:00p Autographs. James Alan Gardner; Katya Reimann. Sun 1:00p Listening Lounge. Tony Daniel, "Automatic Vaudeville" -- A selection from the monthly live sf radio drama, complete with original music and a cast of 12 including Robert LeGault. Written & directed by Tony Daniel; produced & engineered by Jim Freund (:55) Sun 1:30p Don D'Ammassa reads "Wormdance." (30 min.). Sun 2:00p A Literary Taste Continuum. Debra Doyle, Moshe Feder, Donald G. Keller, Fred Lerner (M), Patrick Nielsen Hayden. We have a theory about literary tastes regarding sf and mimetic fiction. The following genres (or subgenres) exist on a continuum: hard sf, classic sf, literary sf, slipstream, mimetic "literary" fiction (part of "mainstream"). Most readers have a true love and preference among these five, readily enjoy works one slot away, occasionally enjoy works two slots away, but generally avoid works in the subgenres further removed. Is there truth and usefulness in this, or have we only described our own catholic tastes (as lovers of literary sf and readers of all of these)? Sun 2:00p Why I Love/Hate Science Fiction. Rosemary Kirstein, Barry N. Malzberg, Joseph Mayhew (M), Paul T. Riddell. [This space intentionally left blank]. Sun 2:00p Ask Uncla' Harlan, Revisited. Harlan Ellison. Talk (60 min.). Our Guest of Honor responds to questions sent to him by convention members. "All questions will be answered thoroughly and completely." Sun 2:00p Glenn Grant reads "Thermometers Melting," from Arrowdreams: The Anthology of Alternate Canadas. (60 min.). Sun 2:00p Kaffeeklatsches. Kathryn Cramer and David G. Hartwell; Michael Burstein and Paul Levinson. Sun 2:00p Listening Lounge. The Real Year (taped at Readercon 5): Constance Ash, Daniel Dern, Gregory Feeley, Barry N. Malzberg (from audience), Susan Palwick. John Clute maintains that every sf text, regardless of the year it claims to be set in, has an underlying "real year" which shines through, the secret point in time that gives the work its flavor entire. The real year of any Bradbury story is 1927, or (our example) any Spider Robinson story, 1970. Get it? What a neat critical notion! (See the January, 1991 issue of The New York Review of Science Fiction.) According to Clute, as the real year of a book approaches the present, the harder it is to write or read or understand. Agreed? Which sf texts have been this cutting-edge? What happens to these texts as time passes -- do they make more, less, or different sense? Sun 2:00p Bookshop closes. Sun 3:00p The Killers Inside Us. Michael Cisco, Samuel R. Delany, Connie Hirsch, James D. Macdonald (M), Paul Williams. There is no obvious division between normality and horrific psychopathology (a thought that occurred to us long before Littleton, bythe way). How have writers exploited this fact? What's it like to read a text that reminds you that you exist on a continuum with the monster? Sun 3:00p How We Would Have Edited Differently. Debra Doyle, Lise Eisenberg (M), Stephen Popkes, Cecilia Tan. Sometimes when we read a book-whether we are editors, authors, critics, or just readers-we can't help thinking how itcould have been different, and better. A look at some good books and their undeveloped potential, and a discussion of how the editing process works to remedy this. Sun 3:00p The New Foundation Trilogy. Paul Levinson. Discussion (60 min.). What are the disappointments and strengths of the new Foundation trilogy (by Gregory Benford, Greg Bear, and David Brin)? How do they compare to the original trilogy, the robot books, and the Foundation-robot books Asimov wrote in the 80s? In what ways is the new trilogy loyal and disloyal to the qualities that made the original trilogy so important? What are the differences among the three new volumes themselves? Are the robots ultimately not compatible with the mechanisms and issues ofthe original trilogy? Is there a future for further Foundation books? Sun 3:00p Nalo Hopkinson reads from Midnight Robber, an sf novel (forthcoming from Warner Aspect next March) with elements of Trinidadian and Jamaican language, folklore and culture, set on a planet settled by Caribbean people.(30 min.). Sun 3:30p Ann Tonsor Zeddies reads from Typhon's Children, a novel (forthcoming in October) by Toni Anzetti, a "friend" who was regrettably unable to attend this year. (30 min.). Sun 4:00p Readercon 11 Debriefing. Members of the Readercon Su11 Committee. Sun 4:00p Registration, Info & Sales close. =========