Apropos of a great post by ❦asphalteden, I figured I would post a brief overview of my relationship with science fiction. This was originally written as a response to his post, but I figured maybe it could stand on its own. Heck, we might even kick off a meme here!
If you saw me on that evening subway ride and judged me for my reading material, a battered, torn copy of Snow Crash, how would your opinion have changed if you'd known I was toting four volumes of Proust in my shoulder bag?
In which Bill is interviewed for a segment on BBC WORLD UPDATE about the new science fiction play "Heddatron," running now in New York City.
A RealAudio stream of this morning's "World Update" is available from the BBC World Service Radio website. The segment on "Heddatron" starts at 18:27 and lasts about 4:15. You can fast-forward to it if you have the right version of Real Player.
My review of C.S.A.: The Confederate States of America is now live online at Science Fiction Weekly: http://www.scifi.com/sfw/screen/sfw12291.html I mentioned one commercial product from the movie in my original review that turned out to be too offensive to print. Curious what
It seems I will be interviewed this weekend by BBC World Service Radio for a feature story on the play "Heddatron," to air Monday or Tuesday. Loyal readers will recall that I wrote a not entirely complimentary review of said play a few days back for Science Fiction
I spent a nastily pleasant evening out at Tribeca Cinemas last night, attending a screening of indie horror flick Headspace. My Science Fiction Weekly review is here: http://www.scifi.com/sfw/screen/sfw12247.html Everyone I met last night before the show was very interesting to talk to: the
I'm not sure how Tangent gets its hands on Asimov's so early (the electronic version, maybe?), but they already have a review of the April/May double issue up. Besides mine, also very well-reviewed are stories by Paul Melko and Greg van Eekhout, fellow Blue Heaven
Live robots rampage through a riff on intelligence, individual rights, and Henrik Ibsen.
As promised last week, my review of Heddatron is now live at SciFi.com: http://www.scifi.com/sfw/screen/sfw12238.html Despite the review, an evening spent at Heddatron is not without its compensations (one of the chief being the theater's proximity to Lupe's East
Tonight █████ and I go to see Heddatron at HERE. It's more or less "Hedda Gabler" with robots. Real robots. Live on stage. Well, not live robots, of course, but live robots, you see: Les Freres Corbusier continues its irreverent massacre of historical icons and academic esoterica
Showing 12 of 424 total posts
Stay up to date with curated collection of our top stories.