All the New Science Fiction Books Coming Out in January!

There’s not a lot of space-faring SF this month, but it looks like there’s still enough to keep you spaceaholics busy. (Is that a thing?) January brings a new book from C.J. Cherryh (with Jane S. Fancher); the latest in David Weber’s Safehold series; the second Rise of Io book from Wesley Chu; the second Revenger book from Alastair Reynolds; and a new novella from Robert Jackson Bennett!

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Why I’m Obsessed with the Outlander Theme Song(s)

Sing me a song of a lass that is gone
Say, could that lass be I?

The first time I saw the opening lyrics to Outlander’s theme song posted on a friend’s Facebook post, I thought it sounded ridiculous, way too on-the-nose to start every episode by acknowledging the series’ premise. YES WE GET IT CLAIRE YOU DISAPPEARED.

That was before I actually listened to it, and watched the title sequence—and then, like Claire at Craigh na Dun, I fell hard. Now, I forbid my husband from fast-forwarding through the credits every time we watch… and considering that we binged a season at a time to get caught up in a matter of weeks, that means I’ve got it well memorized. But why do I find this particular TV opening so compelling?

The answer, I think, is that it presses all of my nerd buttons: it’s a remix of a mashup, with an excellent invocation of Rule 63. It is the platonic ideal of a TV theme song.

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All the Genre Television We’re Looking Forward to in 2019

The continuation of “Peak TV” means that there were 495 (!) scripted shows on the air over the course of 2018—and it doesn’t look like 2019 has any intentions of slowing down. It’s probably for the best that most of the 13 shows we’re looking forward to next year are returning ones, featuring everything from the next step in Eve and Villanelle’s fabulous cat-and-mouse game to Spock’s smile. But there are also some new series on our radar, including The Umbrella Academy and What We Do in the Shadows, not to mention the conclusion of at least one show (we will see Killjoys off with a Viking funeral, dammit). Ah, the TV circle of life.

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“The enemy of my enemy is my enemy” — Dick Tracy (1990)

As we close out 2018, “4-Color to 35-Millimeter” is firmly ensconced in the 21st-century renaissance of superhero movies. However, your humble rewatcher did miss a few 20th-century flicks that fit the bill, so in this final week of the year, we’ll take a look at those forgotten films. We started yesterday with 1985’s Red Sonja, and today we move on to the Warren Beatty-led Dick Tracy from 1990.

Chester Gould created the Dick Tracy comic strip in 1931, and continued to write and draw the strip until the 1970s when he retired. A hard-boiled police detective who used cutting-edge (fictional) technology to stop criminals, Tracy proved to be hugely popular throughout the 20th-century, his two-way wrist radio becoming an iconic feature (and a major inspiration for the later invention of smartphones and smart-watches).

Tracy inspired a whole series of films in the 1940s, which this rewatch will get to eventually (your humble rewatcher didn’t even know they existed until researching this entry), and then in 1990 Warren Beatty helmed a new adaptation.

[“It only works if we’re all in.” “Then it don’t work.”]

Series: 4-Color to 35-Millimeter: The Great Superhero Movie Rewatch

Worldbuilding and the Labor of Food

In this ongoing series, we ask SF/F authors to describe a specialty in their lives that has nothing (or very little) to do with writing. Join us as we discover what draws authors to their various hobbies, how they fit into their daily lives, and how and they inform the author’s literary identity.

I have a lot of fruit trees on my little, suburban lot. It’s a postage stamp lot, and packed in as tight as can be are six citrus trees, two pomegranates, two pears, two plums, two peaches, a jujube, three grapevines, a barbados cherry, two olive trees, a loquat, an elderberry, passionfruit vines, blackberries, raspberry… Let me think. I think that’s most of them. Papayas come and go, as well as other annual fruits and vegetables, and I love to draw bees and butterflies with flowers and herbs, but when I think of my garden, the first thing I think about is the lemon tree next to my front door that blooms in the spring and hands me hundreds of golden jewels in the dark days of winter.

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100 SF/F Books You Should Consider Reading in the New Year

Last year, I was so inspired by the various Best Of, Must Read, Smashing Science Fiction and Fantasy lists I encountered around the net that I decided to make my own book list, books chosen entirely on the basis of merit and significance to the field . People enjoyed the first list so much that I perpetrated sequels. I posted a number of lists, each twenty books long, each selected entirely on the basis of merit and significance to the field (ahem). Here, at last, the quintessence of Nicoll lists, comprising the books I would most heartily recommend. Each entry is annotated with a short description that I hope will explain why I picked it.

I am not implying that these are the only one hundred you should consider reading .

You may not know all of these. Congratulations! You are one of today’s lucky ten thousand. I will never again be able to read any of these for the first time… but you can!

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All the New Fantasy Books Coming Out in January!

New year, new to-be-read stack! That’s how it works, right? No? Maybe a little optimistic? Well, at any rate, here are some new books for the stack… even if the stack remains, uh, precarious. Where will you start? The reissued Outside the Gates from Molly Gloss? The third Winternights book from Katherine Arden? The last Miriam Black book from Chuck Wendig? S.A. Chakraborty’s The Kingdom of Copper? Which door will you step through?

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From the Zombie Post-Apocalypse to Candyland: Where to Start with Seanan McGuire’s Books

Over nearly a decade, Seanan McGuire has established at least seven different fictional worlds, from faeries in the San Francisco Bay Area to examinations of what happens after “happily ever after,” and how civilization might survive and even (gasp) thrive after the zombie apocalypse. She regularly writes for at least five of these universes—so many that she needs another name to write them all!

Part of what makes McGuire’s work so engaging is that she pulls from preexisting folklore and pop culture and remixes these elements into wholly original worlds: St. George vs. the dragon, superheroes, marketing agencies, killer mermaids caught on camera, medical scares and scandals, fairy tale narratives that decide what the characters do instead of the other way around. Her latest series, the Wayward Children novellas, opens multiple doors into a variety of portal fantasies. Similarly, you have seven doors in front of you—see which world(s) suits you best.

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The Books We’re Looking Forward to in 2019

The year is nearly over, and our to-be-read stacks are still towering perilously above us, but we just can’t help ourselves… Next year is full of books we cannot wait to read—in truth, more books than we could even fit on the list below! So as we hastily rearrange our shelves in a vain attempt to make room, tell us: what upcoming books are you excited about?

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She-Devil with an Accent — Red Sonja

As we close out 2018, “4-Color to 35-Millimeter” is firmly ensconced in the 21st-century renaissance of superhero movies. However, your humble rewatcher did miss a few 20th-century flicks that fit the bill, so in this final week of the year, we’ll take a look at those forgotten films, starting today with 1985’s Red Sonja starring Brigitte Nielsen.

Red Sonja, who has appeared as a supporting character in Conan the Barbarian comic books and on her own, both is and isn’t a creation of Conan creator Robert E. Howard. Howard had a character named Sonya of Rogatino who was not part of the Conan stories, but instead a historical fiction character, from a tale taking place in the 16th century.

Marvel had the rights to do comic-book versions of Conan from 1970 to 1993. In issue #23 of Conan the Barbarian, published in 1973, Roy Thomas and Barry Windsor-Smith introduced the character of Red Sonja as a woman who teamed up with Conan on a thieving job.

The character became hugely popular, and is still published as a comics character today—and also was the star of a 1985 movie.

[“I’m going to feed your eyes to the birds, red-hair!” “I don’t need eyes to find you, I can smell you at a hundred paces!”]

Series: 4-Color to 35-Millimeter: The Great Superhero Movie Rewatch

Six Means of SF Transportation You Should Probably Avoid

I was lucky enough to grow up in an age when people weren’t as worried about safety. Especially transportation safety. That’s why:

  • I remember the brief glorious moment of flight when jumping an old beater car over a railway crossing, followed by the thud when the engine falls out on touchdown;
  • I know the exact sound of a windscreen and face collision after an abrupt stop;
  • I know how fast a VW Beetle has to take a corner before the kid riding the running board flies off;
  • I can boast of walking four miles through a blizzard after breaking four ribs in a mid-winter car wreck.

It was a glorious time to be alive.

Science fiction offers even more exotic transportation choices—choices that even I would avoid. Here are six of them.

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Read the First 11 Chapters of Jenn Lyons’ The Ruin of Kings

Debut author Jenn Lyons has created one of the funniest, most engrossing new epic fantasy novels of the 21st century in The Ruin of Kings—an eyebrow-raising cross between the intricacy of Brandon Sanderson’s worldbuilding and the snark of Patrick Rothfuss.

The book publishes February 5th, but you can start reading right now! The prologue plus chapters 1-11 are available below, and we’ll be running additional excerpts here every Tuesday until the publication date. What are you waiting for?!

[When destiny calls, there’s no fighting back…]

Watch the First Trailer for Jordan Peele’s New Horror Film Us

Merry Christmas! Jordan Peele’s present to us is the first trailer for Us, his highly-anticipated followup to Get Out starring Lupita Nyong’o, Winston Duke, and Elisabeth Moss. Whereas Get Out was something of a stealth modern horror film, Us seems to wear its genre trappings like the blood-red robes of its antagonists, and carry a commentary as cutting as the eerie gold scissors they hold. With elements of The Strangers, Peele’s take on the home invasion subgenre nonetheless has a fascinating twist.

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A Charlie Brown Christmas Searches for Truth in a Complicated Holiday

Charlie Brown looked into the shining void that is Christmas, and became a hero.

Here was a child who acknowledged the sadness beneath the festivity, the loneliness, the aching search for meaning under tinsel. This half hour met the challenge thrown down by Rudolph, raised the bar for the Grinch, and created the template that has been used by nearly every animated special, sitcom, and even drama since the 1960s. Charlie Brown dispensed with all merriment, demanded to know the meaning of Christmas, and got a perfect answer.

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“I, Cthulhu, or, What’s A Tentacle-Faced Thing Like Me Doing In A Sunken City Like This (Latitude 47° 9′ S, Longitude 126° 43′ W)?”

Please enjoy what has become a quiet holiday tradition in the Tor.com offices: the reading of Neil Gaiman’s original story: “I, Cthulhu, or, What’s A Tentacle-Faced Thing Like Me Doing In A Sunken City Like This (Latitude 47° 9’ S, Longitude 126° 43’ W)?”

Merry Christmas!

 

I.

Cthulhu, they call me. Great Cthulhu.

Nobody can pronounce it right.

Are you writing this down? Every word? Good. Where shall I start—mm?

Very well, then. The beginning. Write this down, Whateley.

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