September 9th, 2024 · Comments Off on Join SF in SF for GARTH NIX! Sunday, Oct 27th, 4PM at the Lost Church!
GARTH NIX APPEARING AT SF in SF!
TICKETS ON SALE NOW – GO GET YOURS!
Join us Sunday, October 27th, at our brand-new venue, The Lost Church in San Francisco!
We are pleased as punch to welcome back one of our favorite authors…
GARTH NIX
Garth has made several appearances with SF in SF over the past years, and we promise this one will be even better! It’s always a delight to hear him read, and learn more about the amazing books that have made him a beloved best-selling author around the world. Join us for a special event celebrating the release of his new book,
WE DO NOT WELCOME OUR TEN-YEAR-OLD OVERLORD!
Event is moderated by author Cliff Winnig. Garth will read, and take questions from the attendees.
This special event is taking place at The Lost Church, located in North Beach, at 988 Columbus Avenue at Chestnut, across the street from Bimbo’s 365 Club.
Doors open at 4:00PM – event starts at 4:30PM. It’s a party! We will have goodies to give away, and a free raffle for a special gift!
TICKETS ON SALE NOW – to make sure you get the info, sign up for the SF in SF mailing list at www.sfinsf.org (left sidebar)
PLEASE NOTE – Secure a guaranteed seat by purchasing tickets for this special event at $15 per person via Lost Church.
Proceeds benefit The Lost Church, a 501(C)(3) nonprofit arts organization that serves the community by creating, sustaining, and defending spaces for live performance.
THERE’S A BAR! Beer, wine, and soft drinks are available during the evening, located on the main floor of The Lost Church
Books will be for sale courtesy of Fly By Night Books, and all attendees are welcome to bring their own books from home for signatures. If you cannot attend, but would like a signed book mailed to you, please contact flybynightbooks@gmail.com. They’ll be happy to help!
Our wonderful podcast hosts from Soma FM will be recording the evening’s talk for later broadcast – they are listener-supported, commercial-free radio broadcasting to the world! Catch up on previous SF in SF conversations and reading at our dedicated channel, here
Email Rina Weisman at sfinsfevents@gmail.com with any questions!
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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
GARTH NIX has been a full-time writer since 2001, but has also worked as a literary agent, marketing consultant, book editor, book publicist, book sales representative, bookseller, and as a part-time soldier in the Australian Army Reserve.
Garth’s books include the Old Kingdom fantasy series: Sabriel, Lirael, Abhorsen, Clariel, Goldenhand and Terciel and Elinor; SF novels Shade’s Children and A Confusion of Princes; fantasy novels Angel Mage, The Left-Handed Booksellers of London, and The Sinister Booksellers of Bath; the collection Sir Hereward and Mister Fitz, and a Regency romance with magic, Newt’s Emerald. His novels for children include The Ragwitch; the six books of The Seventh Tower sequence; The Keys to the Kingdom series and Frogkisser! His short fiction includes more than 60 published stories, some of them collected in Across the Wall and To Hold the Bridge.
He has co-written several books with author Sean Williams, including the Troubletwisters series; Spirit Animals Book Three: Blood Ties; Have Sword, Will Travel; and Let Sleeping Dragons Lie.
More than six million copies of Garth’s books have been sold around the world, they have appeared on the bestseller lists of The New York Times, Publishers Weekly, The Bookseller and others, and his work has been translated into 42 languages. He has won multiple Aurealis Awards, the Ditmar Award, the Mythopoeic Award, CBCA Honour Book, and has been shortlisted for the Locus Awards, the Shirley Jackson Award and others. Nix was the Guest of Honor at the 2009 World Fantasy Convention in San Jose, California, and at the 2016 Boskone 53 in Boston, Massachusetts.
SF in SF is super happy to welcome Garth back to the series – you can learn more about this engaging author at his website, https://garthnix.com/
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SF in SF new home for events for 2024 is THE LOST CHURCH!
We are so excited to share this amazing performance space with you! All ages are welcome!!
The Lost Church is located at 988 Columbus Avenue (at Chestnut), North Beach, San Francisco. Bimbo’s 365 Club is across the street. The Lost Church is a nonprofit arts organization that serves the community by creating, sustaining, and defending spaces for live performances. The venue is ADA compliant: if you’d like to take the elevator down one floor to the performance space, please state that at the door.
Yes, we know….North Beach and parking are not always compatible! BUT – here is a link to parking garages in the area, more info on parking in the area, and street parking is free after 6PM. There are many easy ways to reach the venue by MUNI, or a combination of BART and MUNI! For MUNI options, please visit https://www.sfmta.com/muni-transit to plan your trip. For BART options, please visit https://www.bart.gov/planner. Make it a grand evening out, and visit here to find some excellent restaurants for dinner in the neighborhood!
For more information, The Lost Church can be reached at HQ@THELOSTCHURCH.ORG; for a recorded message with general information, call 415-320-1408
For information on SF in SF email Rina Weisman at sfinsfevents@gmail.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SAVE THE DATES – COMING UP NEXT WITH SF IN SF!
Join SF in SF for these next authors on our calendar!
- Sunday, September 15, 2024 – 4:00PM – Annalee Newitz, Andrea Stewart, and Julia Vee
- Sunday, October 27, 2024 – DOUBLE TROUBLE DAY!
Tags: Admin
August 20th, 2024 · Comments Off on Join SF in SF on 9-15 with Annalee Newitz, Andrea Stewart & Julia Vee!
Join SF in SF Sunday, September 15th at our brand-new venue, The Lost Church in San Francisco!
SF in SF – Science Fiction in San Francisco
Our 20th year is shaping up to be extraordinary! THAT’S RIGHT! We’ve been around since 2004!
ANNALEE NEWITZ ~ ANDREA STEWART ~ JULIA VEE
Each author will read a selection from their work, followed by Q&A with the audience; book signing and schmoozing follows.
Event is moderated by author Cliff Winnig
SF in SF takes place at The Lost Church, located in North Beach, at 988 Columbus Avenue at Chestnut, across the street from Bimbo’s 365 Club.
Doors open at 4:00PM – event starts at 4:30PM —- ALL AGES WELCOME
PLEASE NOTE – Secure a guaranteed seat by purchasing tickets ahead of time! $15 per person via Lost Church, and at the door
tickets on sale here and available at the door!
Proceeds benefit The Lost Church, a 501(C)(3) nonprofit arts organization that serves the community by creating, sustaining, and defending spaces for live performance.
THERE’S A BAR! Beer, wine, and soft drinks are available during the evening, located on the main floor of The Lost Church
Books will be for sale courtesy of Fly By Night Books, and all attendees are welcome to bring their own books from home for signatures. If you cannot attend, but would like a signed book mailed to you, please contact flybynightbooks@gmail.com. They’ll be happy to help!
Our wonderful podcast hosts from Soma FM will be recording the evening’s talk for later broadcast – they are listener-supported, commercial-free radio broadcasting to the world! Catch up on previous SF in SF conversations and reading at our dedicated channel, here
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
ANNALEE NEWITZ writes science fiction and nonfiction. Their background includes being a policy analyst at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a lecturer in American Studies at UC Berkeley, the recipient of a Knight Science Journalism Fellowship at MIT, and they have a Ph.D. in English and American Studies from UC Berkeley. They are the author of three novels: The Terraformers, The Future of Another Timeline, and Autonomous, which won the Lambda Literary Award, and was nominated for the Nebula and Locus Awards. Their short story “When Robot and Crow Saved East St. Louis” was winner of the 2019 Sturgeon Award. In addition, they were the co-editor of the essay collection She’s Such A Geek and author of Pretend We’re Dead: Capitalist Monsters in American Pop Culture.
As a science journalist, they are the author of Four Lost Cities: A Secret History of the Urban Age and Scatter, Adapt and Remember: How Humans Will Survive a Mass Extinction, which was a finalist for the LA Times Book Prize in science. They are a writer for the New York Times and elsewhere, and have a monthly column in New Scientist. They have published in The Washington Post, Slate, Popular Science, Ars Technica, The New Yorker, and The Atlantic, among others. Previously, they were the founder of io9.com, and served as the editor-in-chief of Gizmodo. Stories Are Weapons: Psychological Warfare and the American Mind, is their latest book.
They are currently a freelance science journalist, a contributing opinion writer at The New York Times, and a columnist at New Scientist. In addition, they are the co-host, with Charlie Jane Anders, of the popular Hugo Award-winning podcast Our Opinions Are Correct. They can be found online at www.annaleenewitz.com.
ANDREA STEWART is the daughter of immigrants, and was raised in a number of places across the United States. Stewart is a Sunday Times Bestselling author whose short stories can be found in such venues as Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Daily Science Fiction, Galaxy’s Edge, and others. Her debut epic fantasy novel, The Bone Shard Daughter, was a finalist for the Locus Award for Best First Novel, the British Fantasy Award for Best Novel, the Goodreads Choice Award for Fantasy and Debut Novel, and the BookNest Award for Best Traditionally Published Novel. Her series, The Drowning Empire Trilogy, is now complete, with the titles The Bone Shard Daughter, The Bone Shard Emperor, and The Bone Shard War, all published by Orbit Books.
Her brand new title, just out, is The Gods Below, the first in a new trilogy. The series is set in a world ravaged by ancient magic, where precious gemstones bestow magical abilities on the few individuals able to harness their power. Full of clandestine power struggles and the battles between gods, the story follows Hakara, a young woman searching for her missing sister and who will do anything to find her — even lead a rebellion against the gods themselves.
Stewart now lives in sunny California, and in addition to writing, can be found herding cats, looking at birds, and falling down research rabbit holes. Learn more at www.andreagstewart.com
JULIA VEE loves stories of magic and monsters. Add East Asian dishes to the mix and you have the flavor profile of her writing. Julia’s academic focus on Asian Studies at U.C Berkeley only deepened her appreciation for the history and lore of that region. Though she has spent over two decades as a trial lawyer in Silicon Valley, she has always nurtured her creative spark, all the while teaching courses on business and property law as an adjunct faculty member in colleges and law schools. Outside of the courtroom, her heart beats strongest for the fantastical. She is a graduate of the Viable Paradise residential workshop. She often writes with co-author Ken Bebelle to craft fantasy adventure stories with East Asian elements. Their works include the Seattle Slayers series and their forthcoming trilogy, beginning with Ebony Gate, debuted from TOR in July of 2023, with Blood Jade published in July of 2024. A lifelong fan of comics, Julia met her spouse over a shared love of the medium. She is passionate about rescue dogs, knitting, and soup. Her fandoms include Elfquest, Avatar the Last Airbender, Kate Daniels, the Witcher, and Shang-Chi. Learn more at juliavee.com.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SF in SF new home for events for 2024 is THE LOST CHURCH!
We are so excited to share this amazing performance space with you! All ages are welcome!!
The Lost Church is located at 988 Columbus Avenue (at Chestnut), North Beach, San Francisco. Bimbo’s 365 Club is across the street. The Lost Church is a nonprofit arts organization that serves the community by creating, sustaining, and defending spaces for live performances. The venue is ADA compliant: if you’d like to take the elevator down one floor to the performance space, please state that at the door.
Yes, we know….North Beach and parking are not always compatible! BUT – here is a link to parking garages in the area, more info on parking in the area, and street parking is free after 6PM. There are many easy ways to reach the venue by MUNI, or a combination of BART and MUNI! For MUNI options, please visit https://www.sfmta.com/muni-transit to plan your trip. For BART options, please visit https://www.bart.gov/planner. Make it a grand evening out, and visit here to find some excellent restaurants for dinner in the neighborhood!
For more information, The Lost Church can be reached at HQ@THELOSTCHURCH.ORG; for a recorded message with general information, call 415-320-1408
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SAVE THE DATES – COMING UP NEXT WITH SF IN SF!
Join SF in SF for these next authors on our calendar!
- Sunday, September 15, 2024 – 4:30PM – Annalee Newitz, Andrea Stewart, and Julia Vee
- Sunday, October 27, 2024 – DOUBLE TROUBLE DAY!
- 4:30PM – Special event with author GARTH NIX! The Lost Church, tickets go on sale September 20th
- 7PM – Special SPOOKTACULAR event with three horror writers at the amazing San Francisco Columbarium! Loren Rhoads, Emerian Rich, and Francesca Maria. $10 at the door
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We are beginning to book authors for 2025! If you are an author with a science fiction, fantasy, or horror book coming out next year, and would like to appear, please contact Rina Weisman at sfinsfevents@gmail.com. Let’s talk!
Tags: Admin
June 10th, 2024 · Comments Off on SF in SF SPECIAL EVENT July 24th! Paolo Bacigalupi & Tim Pratt at The Lost Church
SPECIAL EVENT FOR SF in SF!
TICKETS ON SALE NOW!!!
Join us Wednesday, July 24th, at our brand-new venue, The Lost Church in San Francisco!
Join us at SF in SF – Science Fiction in San Francisco – Our 20th year is shaping up to be extraordinary! THAT’S RIGHT! We’ve been around since 2004!
PAOLO BACIGALUPI & TIM PRATT
ONLY SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA APPEARANCE!!
Each author will read a selection from their work, followed by Q&A with the audience; book signing and schmoozing follows.
Event is moderated by author Cliff Winnig
This special event is taking place at The Lost Church, located in North Beach, at 988 Columbus Avenue at Chestnut, across the street from Bimbo’s 365 Club.
Doors open at 7:30PM – event starts at 8:00PM
TICKETS ON SALE NOW!!!
PLEASE NOTE – Secure a guaranteed seat by purchasing tickets for this special event at $15 per person via Lost Church, and at the door
Proceeds benefit The Lost Church, a 501(C)(3) nonprofit arts organization that serves the community by creating, sustaining, and defending spaces for live performance.
THERE’S A BAR! Beer, wine, and soft drinks are available during the evening, located on the main floor of The Lost Church
Books will be for sale courtesy of Fly By Night Books, and all attendees are welcome to bring their own books from home for signatures. If you cannot attend, but would like a signed book mailed to you, please contact flybynightbooks@gmail.com. They’ll be happy to help!
Our wonderful podcast hosts from Soma FM will be recording the evening’s talk for later broadcast – they are listener-supported, commercial-free radio broadcasting to the world! Catch up on previous SF in SF conversations and reading at our dedicated channel, here
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
PAOLO BACIGALUPI is an internationally bestselling author of speculative fiction. He has won the Hugo, Nebula, World Fantasy, John W. Campbell and Locus Awards, as well as being a finalist for the National Book Award and a winner of the Michael L. Printz Award for Excellence in Young Adult Literature, for Shipbreaker. Paolo’s work often focuses on questions of sustainability and the environment, most notably the impacts of climate change. His writing has appeared in WIRED, High Country News, Salon.com, OnEarth Magazine, The Magazine of F&SF and Asimov’s. His short fiction has been anthologized in various “Year’s Best” collections of short science fiction and fantasy, nominated for three Nebula Awards, four Hugo Awards, and won the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award for best science fiction short story of the year. His collection Pump Six & Other Stories was named a Best Book of the Year by Publishers Weekly. His debut novel The Windup Girl was named by TIME as one of the ten best novels of 2009, and also won the Hugo, Nebula, Locus, Compton Crook, and John W. Campbell Memorial Awards. Internationally, it has won the Seiun Award (Japan), The Ignotus Award (Spain), The Kurd-Laßwitz-Preis (Germany), and the Grand Prix de l’Imaginaire (France). His other work includes a sequel to Shipbreaker, The Drowned Cities, Zombie Baseball Beatdown, The Doubt Factory, and The Water Knife. His long-awaited new novel, Navola, releases July 9, 2024. “With echoes of Renaissance Italy, The Godfather, and Game of Thrones, Navola is a stunning feat of world-building and a mesmerizing depiction of drive and will.” Learn more about this versatile author here.
TIM PRATT is a Hugo Award-winning SF and fantasy author and editor, with over 30 books to his credit, most recently the kinky multiversal space opera The Knife and the Serpent. His fiction and poetry have appeared in The Best American Short Stories, The Year’s Best Fantasy and Horror, the Best American Erotica, The Mammoth Book of Best New Horror, Strange Horizons, Realms of Fantasy, Asimov’s, Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet, Subterranean, and Tor.com, among many other places. He’s written several roleplaying game tie-in fantasy novels, including one for Forgotten Realms and five for Pathfinder Tales. In October 2007 he began publishing a series of urban fantasies featuring ass-kicking sorcerer Marla Mason, and you can find the “Marlaverse” online here
His debut collection Little Gods was published in 2003,and his second, Hart & Boot & Other Stories, 2007, was a World Fantasy Award finalist. He won a Hugo Award (for “Impossible Dreams” in 2007), and has been nominated for a Nebula Award, Stoker Award, Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award, a couple of Gaylactic Spectrum Awards, a Seiun Award, a Scribe Award, and two Ignotus Awards, among others. In 2004 he was a finalist for the Campbell Award for Best New Writer. Tim is a senior editor and occasional book reviewer at Locus, the magazine of the science fiction and fantasy field. Since 2013 he’s published a new story every month at www.patreon.com/timpratt, he makes jokes on Bluesky @timpratt.org. and you can see what else he’s up to online here .He lives in Berkeley, CA with his wife and kid.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SF in SF new home for events for 2024 is THE LOST CHURCH! We are so excited to share this amazing performance space with you! All ages are welcome!!
The Lost Church is located at 988 Columbus Avenue (at Chestnut), North Beach, San Francisco. Bimbo’s 365 Club is across the street. The Lost Church is a nonprofit arts organization that serves the community by creating, sustaining, and defending spaces for live performances. The venue is ADA compliant: if you’d like to take the elevator down one floor to the performance space, please state that at the door.
Yes, we know….North Beach and parking are not always compatible! BUT – here is a link to parking garages in the area, more info on parking in the area, and street parking is free after 6PM. There are many easy ways to reach the venue by MUNI, or a combination of BART and MUNI! For MUNI options, please visit https://www.sfmta.com/muni-transit to plan your trip. For BART options, please visit https://www.bart.gov/planner. Make it a grand evening out, and visit here to find some excellent restaurants for dinner in the neighborhood!
For more information, The Lost Church can be reached at HQ@THELOSTCHURCH.ORG; for a recorded message with general information, call 415-320-1408
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SAVE THE DATES – COMING UP NEXT WITH SF IN SF!
Join SF in SF for these next authors on our calendar!
- Sunday, September 15, 2024 – 4:30PMAnnalee Newitz, Andrea Stewart, and Julia Vee
- Sunday, October 27, 2024 – DOUBLE TROUBLE DAY!
- 4:30PM – Special event with author GARTH NIX! – The Lost Church, tickets go on sale September 20th
- 7PM – Special SPOOKTACULAR event with three horror writers at the amazing San Francisco Columbarium! Loren Rhoads, Emerian Rich, and Francesca Maria. $10 at the door
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
For information regarding SF in SF events, or booking an author, please contact Rina Weisman at sfinsfevents@gmail.com
Tags: Admin
May 29th, 2024 · Comments Off on Join us on Sun June 23rd with Robin Sloan, Rudy Rucker & Clara Ward!
SF in SF Sun June 23, 2024 – BRING YOUR FRIENDS AND FAMILY!
Join us at SF in SF – Science Fiction in San Francisco – Our 20th year is shaping up to be extraordinary! THAT’S RIGHT! We’ve been around since 2004!
ROBIN SLOAN / RUDY RUCKER / CLARA WARD
Each author will read a selection from their work, followed by question and answers with the authors; book signing follows.
Event is moderated by author Cliff Winnig
The American Bookbinders Museum – 355 Clementina Street, San Francisco CA
Doors open at 6PM – event gets underway 6:30PM
$10 at the door – $8 seniors and students. No one turned away for lack of funds. CASH PREFERRED.
All proceeds benefit the American Bookbinders Museum
Refreshments will be served, and books will be for sale- attendees are welcome to bring their own books from home for signatures.
Our wonderful podcast hosts from Soma FM will be recording the evening’s talk for later broadcast – they are listener-supported, commercial-free radio broadcasting to the world! Catch up on previous SF in SF conversations and reading at our dedicated channel, here
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ABOUT THE AUTHORS
ROBIN SLOAN was raised and educated in Michigan, and attended Michigan State University, where he co-founded the literary magazine Oats and graduated with an economics degree in 2002. He worked for about a decade at the intersection of media and technology before publishing his first novel. In 2003, he founded the SnarkMarket blog with some friends, and then moved to the SF Bay Area in 2004 to work, first at Current TV as a media strategist/interactive producer, and then at Twitter as a media manager.
His new novel, Moonbound, has just been published by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. He has developed a special website as a companion to the novel, here
Sloan’s first novel, Mr. Penumbra’s 24-Hour Bookstore, was released in 2012. His second novel, Sourdough, was released in September 2017. He has written fiction and commentary for many publications, including the NY Times, the Atlantic, and MIT Technology Review. His novels have been translated into more than a dozen languages. Sloan and his partner Kathryn Tomajan produce olive oil under the Fat Gold brand, harvested off leased land in Sunol, California.
RUDY RUCKER is, quite honestly, one of the most important and visionary figures in science fiction literature working today. A writer, mathematician, artist, and a Silicon Valley computer science professor emeritus, Rucker is regarded as a contemporary master of science-fiction, and one of the founders of the cyberpunk literary movement. He received the very first Philip K. Dick award for his cyberpunk novel, Software, and another for Wetware. It’s worth noting that his novel Software (1982), was the very first SF work to introduce the (by now very familiar) notion of transferring a human personality to a bot. What’s more, Software was the first SF novel in which robot minds are evolved, rather than being designed.
As well as writing cyberpunk, Rucker writes SF in a realistic style known as transrealism—where the author uses SF archetypes to symbolize the concerns of the characters. Rucker’s forty published books include non-fiction books on the fourth dimension, infinity, and the meaning of computation. Rucker has also worked on several software packages; he runs a podcast of his talks; and you can browse some of his works online, including his autobiography Nested Scrolls and his Complete Stories.
For a more complete look at the work, both literary and artistic, of Rudy Rucker, and to learn more about this important writer, please visit his blog, here .
CLARA WARD lives in Silicon Valley, California, on the border between reality and speculative fiction. Be the Sea, their latest novel, takes place in the same near future as “Dream the Sea,” available here online from Small Wonders Magazine and is a science fantasy journey across the Pacific featuring sea creature perspectives, human tech, chosen family, and the world’s best chocolate. Clara’s short fiction has appeared in Strange Horizons, Decoded Pride, and The Arcanist. When not using words to teach or tell stories, Clara uses wood, fiber, and glass to make practical or completely impractical objects. More of their words along with crafted creations can be found here.
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The American Bookbinders Museum‘s entrance is located at 355 Clementina Alley, between 4th and 5th Street, between Howard and Folsom. The nearest BART station is Powell and Market. Street parking is free, and there are several garages in the area as well – further directions and transit options are available here via the ABM website.
May we suggest coming to the ABM and taking a tour or workshop? The bookbinding machines are AMAZING, and it’s a great look into one of the essential tools and trade necessary to make books! For more information, pleases contact the ABM at (415) 824-9754.
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For information regarding SF in SF events, or booking an author, please contact Rina Weisman at sfinsfevents@gmail.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SAVE THE DATES – COMING UP NEXT WITH SF IN SF!
Join SF in SF for these next authors on our calendar!
Wednesday, July 24, 2024 – Paolo Bacigalupi and Tim Pratt
** Please note this will be a ticketed event taking place at The Lost Church, in North Beach, San Francisco. Stay tuned for all the details! IT’S GOING TO BE AWESOME!
Sunday, September 15, 2024 – Annalee Newitz, Andrea Stewart, and Julia Vee
Sunday, October 27, 2024 – it’s a PARTY! Come spend Halloween with SF in SF and Loren Rhoads, and horror writers to be announced
Tags: Admin
May 10th, 2024 · Comments Off on Join SF in SF Sun May 19 – with Samantha Mills, Hana Lee, and Caitlin Chung
Join us at SF in SF – Science Fiction in San Francisco – Our 20th year is shaping up to be extraordinary!
Please join SF in SF for a fabulous evening with authors
SAMANTHA MILLS
HANA LEE
CAITLIN CHUNG
Sunday, May 19, 2024
Each author will read a selection from their work, followed by question and answers with the authors; booksigning follows.
Event is moderated by author Cliff Winnig
The American Bookbinders Museum – 355 Clementina Street, San Francisco CA
Doors open at 6PM – event gets underway 6:30PM
$10 at the door – $8 seniors and students. No one turned away for lack of funds. CASH PREFERRED.
All proceeds benefit the American Bookbinders Museum
Refreshments and books will be for sale- attendess are welcome to bring their own books from home for signatures.
Our wonderful podcast hosts from Soma FM will be recording the evening’s talk for later broadcast – they are listener-supported, commercial-free radio broadcasting to the world! Catch up on previous SF in SF conversations and reading at our dedicated channel, here: https://somafm.com/sfinsf/
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ABOUT THE AUTHORS
HANA LEE is a biracial Korean American writer who also builds software for a living. She has an undying love for fantastical stories in all their forms, especially video games, and a habit of writing to moody indie rock playlists. A graduate of Stanford University, she’s always loved the dark, the gothic, and the occult, so there’s usually a picturesque ruin of some kind lurking in the background of her novels.
Her short writing has appeared in Fantasy Magazine and Uncanny Magazine, and her first novel, Road to Ruin, is out now from Saga Press (debuting at SF in SF!) It’s the first book in the Magebike Courier series, as well as a love letter to her favorite movie, Mad Max: Fury Road. She lives in California with her partner and two beloved and ridiculously fluffy cats. Learn more about this author who’s definitely off to a great start at https://authorhanalee.com/about
SAMANTHA MILLS is a multiple award-winning author living in Southern California. Her debut science fantasy novel, The Wings Upon Her Back, is out now from Tachyon Publications. She has published a dozen short stories, appearing in Uncanny Magazine, Beneath Ceaseless Skies, Strange Horizons, Escape Pod and others. In addition to winning the Nebula, Locus, and Theodore Sturgeon Memorial awards for her short story “Rabbit Test” in 2023, Sam has also been nominated for the Pushcart Prize, made the Locus Recommended Reading List and the BSFA long list multiple times, and was included in the best-of anthologies The New Voices of Science Fiction and The Year’s Best Science Fiction & Fantasy 2023.
Sam grew up in Southern California, where she still lives with her family and cats. She graduated from the University of Santa Cruz with a B.A. in Pre- and Early Modern Literature, and received a Master’s in Information and Library Science from San Jose State University. In the other half of her life, she is a trained archivist specializing in primary documents, with a particular focus on helping local historical societies and research libraries preserve and manage their collections. When Sam isn’t working, writing or taking care of children, she’s watching B-movies, binding books, and crocheting stuffed animals. You can find more about this talented author at www.samtasticbooks.com.
CAITLIN CHUNG has lived in the Bay Area her whole life. She is a teacher, an expert eavesdropper, a fan of infomercials, and is known to be a supporter of superstitions. She has on many occasions been justly accused of being a Luddite. She lives in Oakland with her husband and their cat. Ship of Fates was her first book, and a Foreword INDIES Finalist.
Out from Lanternfish Press, Ship of Fates is a historical fantasy weaving together western fairy tales and Asian-American history and mythology. Beginning in the gridlocked harbor of San Francisco’s Barbary Coast, with a ship hung with red paper lanterns draws crowds eager to gamble and drink. Aboard it, the fates of two young women will be altered irrevocably—and tied forever to that of an ancient lighthouse keeper who longs to be free. Set against the backdrop of Gold Rush-era San Francisco’s Chinese immigrant community, Ship of Fates is a coming-of-age fairy tale that stretches across generations. We look forward to more fantastic fiction from this local author – in the meantime, learn a bit more here – https://tinyurl.com/7pwxszra
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The American Bookbinders Museum‘s entrance is located at 355 Clementina Alley, between 4th and 5th Street, between Howard and Folsom. The nearest BART station is Powell and Market. Street parking is free, and there are several garages in the area as well – further directions and transit options are available here via the ABM website. For more information, pleases contact the ABM at (415) 824-9754.
For information regarding SF in SF events, or booking an author, please contact Rina Weisman at sfinsfevents@gmail.com
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
COMING UP NEXT!
Join SF in SF for these next authors on our calendar!
Sunday, June 23, 2024 – Robin Sloane, Rudy Rucker, and Clara Ward
Wednesday, July 24, 2024 – Paolo Bacigalupi and Tim Pratt
NOTE: this will be a ticketed event held at The Lost Church, SF – stay tuned for details!
Sunday, September 15, 2024 – Annalee Newitz, Andrea Stewart, and Julia Vee
Sunday, October 27, 2024 – it’s a PARTY! Come spend Halloween with SF in SF and Loren Rhoads, and horror writers to be announced
November – tba
Tags: Admin
March 12th, 2024 · Comments Off on SF in SF Sunday March 24th – with Gail Carriger, Amy Sundberg, and Izzy Wasserstein
Join us for our March event – Our 20th year is shaping up to be extraordinary!
Please join SF in SF for a fabulous evening with GAIL CARRIGER, AMY SUNDBERG, AND IZZY WASSERSTEIN
SUNDAY – MARCH 24th
Each author will read a selection from their work, followed by question and answers with the authors; booksigning follows.
Event is moderated by author Cliff Winnig
The American Bookbinders Museum – 355 Clementina Street, San Francisco CA
Doors open at 6PM – event gets underway 6:30PM
$10 at the door – $8 seniors and students. No one turned away for lack of funds. CASH PREFERRED.
All proceeds benefit the American Bookbinders Museum
Books will be for sale, and feel free to bring your own from home for signatures.
Our wonderful podcast hosts from Soma FM will be recording the evening’s talk for later broadcast – they are listener-supported, commercial-free radio broadcasting to the world at https://somafm.com/
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ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Gail Carriger writes books that are hugs, mostly comedies of manners mixed with steampunk, urban fantasy, and sci-fi (plus cozy queer joy as G. L. Carriger). These include the Parasol Protectorate, Custard Protocol, Tinkered Stars, the San Andreas Shifter series for adults, and the Finishing School and Tinkered Starsong series for young adults. In addition, she’s published the nonfiction book, The Heroine’s Journey. She is published in many languages, has over a million books in print, over a dozen New York Times and USA Today bestsellers, and starred reviews in Publishers Weekly, Booklist, Kirkus, and Romantic Times.
Her first book, Soulless, made Audible’s Best list, was a Publishers Weekly Best Book, an IndieBound Notable, and a Locus Recommended Read. She has received the American Library Association’s Alex Award, the Prix Julia Verlanger, the Elbakin Award, the Steampunk Chronicle‘s Reader’s Choice Award, and a Starburner Award. She was once an archaeologist and is fond of shoes, cephalopods, and tea. Learn more about this fascinating and versatile author, plus get early access, specials, and exclusives via her website at http://www.gailcarriger.com
Amy Sundberg is the author of the recently released YA science fiction novel My Stars Shine Darkly as well as the novel To Travel the Stars, a YA retelling of Pride and Prejudice set in space. Her novels feature intrepid heroines, refined prose, and questions of agency, power, and possibility. She also reports on local news with an emphasis on public safety and the criminal legal system in Seattle and Washington State. You can read her work at the Urbanist and in her newsletter Notes From the Emerald City. Amy spent most of her life in the San Francisco Bay Area, but she is now living in Seattle with her little dog Nala. Learn more, plus subscribe to her newsletter, at visit https://amysundberg.com/
Izzy Wasserstein is a queer and trans woman who was born and raised in Kansas and currently lives in California. She teaches writing and literature, writes poetry and fiction, and shares a house with a variety of animal companions and the writer Nora E. Derrington. A Lambda Literary Award finalist, she’s the author of two poetry collections, When Creation Falls (Meadowlark Press (2018) and This Ecstasy They Call Damnation, the short story collection All the Hometowns You Can’t Stay Away From, and her brand-new novella, These Fragile Graces, This Fugitive Heart (Tachyon, 2024). Learn more at https://izzywasserstein.com/
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The American Bookbinders Museum‘s entrance is located at 355 Clementina Alley, between 4th and 5th Street, between Howard and Folsom. The nearest BART station is Powell and Market. Street parking is free, and there are several garages in the area as well – further directions and transit options are available here on the ABM website. For more information, pleases contact the ABM at (415) 824-9754
For information regarding SF in SF events, or booking an author, please contact Rina Weisman at sfinsfevents@gmail.com
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Author Carter Scholz will be speaking at this event, as we continue to mourn the loss of author Terry Bisson. Scholz has published several works of short fiction (collected in The Amount to Carry, 2003) and two novels (Palimpsests 1984, with Glenn Harcourt; Radiance: A Novel 2002). He has been nominated for the Hugo and Nebula Award for Best Novelette for his story “The Ninth Symphony of Ludwig van Beethoven and Other Lost Songs”. He also co-wrote The Twilight Zone episode “A Small Talent for War” and contributed stories to Kafka Americana. He has published several works of short fiction (collected in The Amount to Carry, 2003) and two novels (Palimpsests 1984, with Glenn Harcourt; Radiance: A Novel 2002). He has been nominated for the Hugo and Nebula Award for Best Novelette for his story “The Ninth Symphony of Ludwig van Beethoven and Other Lost Songs”. He also co-wrote The Twilight Zone episode “A Small Talent for War” and contributed stories to Kafka Americana.
A memorial is planned –The Outspoken and the Incendiary: The Life and Work of Terry Bisson — at The Lost Church, San Francisco, for Saturday, March 30th. More information is available here
SF IN SF, our team, and just about everyone we know is terribly saddened at the news that author Terry Bisson passed away in January, of complications from cancer. There would be no SF in SF without him, and our deepest condolences go out to his family and friends. Locus Magazine has posted a tribute on their site.
Raise a glass, folks.
Tags: Admin
February 6th, 2024 · Comments Off on Join SF in SF for 2024…and beyond! Feb. 25th with David D. Levine & David M. Sandner
Back in town – and gearing up for another year of SF in SF! OUR TWENTIETH!
Please join SF in SF for a fabulous evening of Frankenstein and his Monster, Mary Shelley, an exciting space caper story and science fiction fun with authors David D. Levine and David M. Sandner! And – there’s a Frankenstein’s Monster for EVERYONE! 😉
SUNDAY – FEBRUARY 25TH
Each author will read a selection from their work, followed by question and answers with the authors; booksigning follows.
Event is moderated by author Cliff Winnig
The American Bookbinders Museum – 355 Clementina Street, San Francisco CA
Doors open at 6PM – event gets underway 6:30PM
$10 at the door – $8 seniors and students. No one turned away for lack of funds. CASH PREFERRED.
All proceeds benefit the American Bookbinders Museum
Books will be for sale, and feel free to bring your own from home for signatures.
Our wonderful podcast hosts from Soma FM will be recording the evening’s talk for later broadcast – they are listener-supported, commercial-free radio broadcasting to the world at https://somafm.com/
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
DAVID D. LEVINE is the author of the space-opera caper novel, The Kuiper Belt Job, recently published by Caezi SF & Fantasy. https://www.arcmanorbooks.com/caeziksf. The Kuiper Belt Job is a caper story in space, a mash-up of Ocean’s 11 and The Expanse with a dollop of Firefly and Leverage. It’s an ensemble piece with complex character relationships and a twisty, compelling plot, but beneath the entertaining surface it raises deep questions about identity and personhood. In a world where minds can be copied, what does it mean to be “me”?
Although Levine began as a writer of technical articles, he has long had an interest in reading and writing science fiction. He has primarily written short fiction, with his first professional fiction sale in 2001. A long-time member of SF fandom and an early member of MilwApa (the Milwaukee amateur press association), he also co-edited a fanzine, Bento, with his late wife, Kate Yule, and has served as a Convention Committee Chair for Potlatch. His short story “Ukaliq and the Great Hunt” appeared in The Phobos Science Fiction Anthology Volume 2 (2003). In 2010, he spent two weeks in a simulated Mars habitat of the Mars Society, in Utah. He currently resides in the Pacific Northwest, and blogs at https://daviddlevine.com/blog/.
His previous works include the Andre Norton Nebula Award-winning novel, Arabella of Mars, the sequels Arabella and the Battle of Venus and Arabella the Traitor of Mars, and over sixty science fiction and fantasy stories. His story “Tk’Tk’Tk” won the 2006 Hugo Award for Best Short Story, and he has been shortlisted for awards including the Hugo, Nebula, Campbell, and Sturgeon. His stories have appeared in magazines such as Asimov’s, Analog, Clarkesworld, Fantasy & Science Fiction (F&SF), Tor.com, numerous Year’s Best anthologies. His collection, Space Magic, from Wheatland Press, won the 2009 Endeavor Award for best science fiction book in the Pacific Northwest. All three of the Arabella books are being reissued as ebooks from Open Road Media, and will be available (with absolutely stunning covers!) after Feb. 13, 2024, wherever you get your ebooks.
DAVID M. SANDNER is an American academic and author, and a professor in the Department of English, Comparative Literature, and Linguistics at California State University, Fullerton. Sandner has a master’s degree from San Francisco State University and a doctorate from the University of Oregon. His doctoral thesis was titled The Fairy Way of Writing: Fantastic literature from the romance revival to Romanticism, 1712–1830, and was completed in 2000.
Professor Sandner’s latest book, The Afterlife of Frankenstein: A Century of Mad Science, Automata, and Monsters Inspired by Mary Shelley, 1818-1918, is just out from Lanternfish Press, along with a novella, His Unburned Heart (2024) from the horror press, Raw Dog Screaming.
Afterlife focuses on Dr. Frankenstein’s monster — one of the most iconic figures in English literature, popularized through decades of writing, film, and comedy. But even before the invention of film, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein profoundly impacted scores of writers, gathering force for the genre that would ultimately become what we know as science fiction. In this anthology, scholar of the fantastic David Sandner explores the first hundred years of Frankenstein’s influence. This collection of short stories and excerpts from work published between 1818 to 1918 demonstrates what a pioneering myth Frankenstein has always been—from the very day when lightning first struck and it opened its eyes on the world.
His recent fiction also includes the novelettes Mingus Fingers (with Jacob Weisman, Fairwood Press, 2019), and Hellhounds (with Jacob Weisman, Fairwood Press, 2022, with a complete novel, Egyptian Motherlode, due out from Fairwood Press https://fairwoodpress.com/index.html#/ in late 2024.
Sandner’s nonfiction includes The Fantastic Sublime: Romanticism and Transcendence in Nineteenth-century Children’s Fantasy Literature (Greenwood, 1996), The Treasury of the Fantastic (with Jacob Weisman, Tachyon Publications, 2013), and Philip K. Dick: Essays of the Here and Now (McFarland, 2020).
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The American Bookbinders Museum‘s entrance is located at 355 Clementina Alley, between 4th and 5th Street, between Howard and Folsom. The nearest BART station is Powell and Market. Street parking is free, and there are several garages in the area as well – further directions and transit options are available here on the ABM website. For more information, pleases contact the ABM at (415) 824-9754
For information regarding SF in SF events, or booking an author, please contact Rina Weisman at sfinsfevents@gmail.com
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SF IN SF, our team, and just about everyone we know is terribly saddened at the news that author Terry Bisson passed away in January, of complications from cancer. There would be no SF in SF without him, and our deepest condolences go out to his family and friends. Locus Magazine has posted a tribute on their site.
A memorial is planned –The Outspoken and the Incendiary: The Life and Work of Terry Bisson — at The Lost Church, San Francisco, for Saturday, March 30th. More information is available here
Raise a glass, folks.
Tags: Admin
November 9th, 2023 · 2 Comments
ADMISSION IS FREE TO ALL FOR THIS EVENT
SF in SF reminder! SUNDAY NOVEMBER 12, 2023
We want you here with us! It’s the last gig of 2023
We need YOU and YOURS in the audience with us!
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PLEASE NOTE: APEC and President Biden are in town
The 5th & Mission & the 3rd & Folsom Garages are closed
Super easy to get here!!!
Don’t drive! Take MUNI to 5th & Market, or BART to Powell St. and walk down to Clementina
We can only keep doing this series – 20 yrs in – by having our audience support us by showing up!
AS A THANK YOU – ADMISSION IS FREE TO ALL FOR THIS EVENT
RICK WILBER
E. LILY YU
CHAZ BRENCHLEY
with moderator Cliff Winnig
Doors open at 6:00PM
Event begins at 6:30PM
The American Bookbinders Museum
355 Clementina at 5th Street, between Howard and Folsom
Each author will read from their work, followed by Q&A and booksigning.
Books for sale at the event, courtesy of Tachyon Publications and Bookshop West Portal
Event is podcasted by SOMA FM, SF’s premier internet radio station.
All proceeds go to the American Bookbinders Museum.
Tags: Admin
November 3rd, 2023 · Comments Off on Join SF in SF Sun Nov 12 with E. Lily Yu, Rick Wilber, and Chaz Brenchley!
SF in SF Sunday, November 12, 2023
Our last gig for the year – don’t miss it!
RICK WILBER
E. LILY YU
CHAZ BRENCHLEY
with moderator Cliff Winnig
Doors open at 6:00PM
Event begins at 6:30PM
$10 at the door
$8 for students with valid high school or college ID card
Each author will read a selection from their work, followed by Q&A with the audience.
Books will be for sale at the event, courtesy of Tachyon Publications and Bookshop West Portal
Event will be podcasted by SOMA FM, San Francisco’s premier internet radio station.
All proceeds go to the American Bookbinders Museum.
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ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Rick Wilber is an award-winning writer, editor, poet, and professor. He is the author of four novels, four short-story collections, a memoir about caregiving for his parents, four college textbooks on writing and the mass media. He has edited several anthologies for Night Shade/Skyhorse, New Word City, and Tachyon Books. He has published more than seventy short stories, many of them in Asimov’s, including the novella, “The Death of the Hind” (co-authored with Kevin J. Anderson) in the current issue of that magazine. The story is a sequel to their award-winning novelette, “The Hind,” which won the magazine’s Reader Award in 2021 and won last year’s Canopus Award for Best Interstellar Fiction – Short Form. His novel
Alien Day was a finalist for the 2017 John W. Campbell Memorial Award for Best Novel. He is perhaps best known for including characters with Down syndrome in his stories, reflective of his son with Down syndrome, and for including elements of baseball in his stories, reflective of his father’s career as a major-league player, scout, coach and, very briefly, manager. The story he’ll be reading for SF in SF is a new one, inclusive of both of those elements. Rick is a visiting professor in Western Colorado University’s low-residency Graduate Program in Creative Writing in the Genre Fiction program
E. Lily Yu is the author of the novel On Fragile Waves, which won the Washington State Book Award, the story collection Jewel Box, and Break, Blow, Burn, & Make, forthcoming in 2024. She received the Artist Trust LaSalle Storyteller Award in 2017 and the Astounding Award for Best New Writer in 2012.
Chaz Brenchley is a British writer of novels and short stories, associated with the genres of horror, crime and fantasy. Some of his work has been published under the pseudonyms of Ben Macallan and Daniel Fox. Chaz also serves as one of three hosts, with Jeannie Warner and John Schmidt, of the podcast Writers Drinking Coffee. Winner of the British Fantasy Society’s August Derleth Award in 1998 for
Light Errant (and not, as often stated, the Outremer series), he has also published three books for children and more than 500 short stories in various genres. His time as Crimewriter-in-Residence at the St Peter’s Riverside Sculpture Project in Sunderland resulted in the collection
Blood Waters. Brenchley has also been writer in residence at the University of Northumbria. Charles de Lint praised
Dispossession as “one of those increasingly rare books that remind you just how satisfying fiction can be.” He currently resides in the South Bay with his wife, author
Karen Brenchley, one of the original founders of the SF in SF authors series (along with Terry Bisson), cats, and many, many cookbooks.
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The
American Bookbinders Museum‘s entrance is located at 355 Clementina Alley, between 4th and 5th Street, between Howard and Folsom. The nearest BART station is Powell and Market. Street parking is free, and there are several garages in the area as well – further directions and transit options are
available here on the ABM website. For more information, pleases contact the ABM at (415) 824-9754
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Author events are held at the
American Bookbinders Museum, located at 355 Clementina Street at 5th Street, between Folsom and Howard, SF, CA, (415) 824-9754
Film events are held at The Balboa Theatre, located at 3630 Balboa Avenue, between 37th & 38th Avenues, SF, CA
For information regarding SF in SF events, or booking an author, please contact Rina Weisman at sfinsfevents@gmail.com
Tags: Admin
October 10th, 2023 · Comments Off on Join SF in SF Saturday Oct 14th with Nancy Kress, Jack Skillingstead, & Howard Hendrix!
SATURDAY OCTOBER 14TH 2023
NANCY KRESS
JACK SKILLINGSTEAD
HOWARD HENDRIX
with moderator Cliff Winnig
Doors open at 6:00PM
Event begins at 6:30PM
$10 at the door
$8 for students with valid high school or college ID card
Each author will read a selection from their work, followed by Q&A with the audience.
Books will be for sale at the event, courtesy of Tachyon Publications and Bookshop West Portal
Event will be podcasted by SOMA FM, San Francisco’s premier internet radio station.
All proceeds go to the American Bookbinders Museum.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
NANCY KRESS is the author of thirty-five books, including twenty-seven novels, four collections of short stories, and three books on writing. Hailed by bestselling author Kim Stanley Robinson as “one of the greatest living science fiction writers,” she has won multiple Nebula and Hugo awards for her fiction. She writes often about developments in science, particularly genetic engineering, as in her bestselling novel
Beggars in Spain. Her work has been translated into over a dozen languages (including Klingon). She teaches writing and was the “Fiction” columnist for
Writer’s Digest magazine for sixteen years.
JACK SKILLINGSTEAD is an American science fiction writer living in Seattle, Washington, and is married to science fiction author, Nancy Kress. In 2001 Skillingstead was named a winner in Stephen King’s “On Writing” contest. He has published more than forty short stories in pro and semi pro markets. He has also published three novels – Harbinger (Fairwood Press, 2011), Life on the Preservation (Solaris, 2013), and The Chaos Function (Harcourt, 2019), in addition to two story collections – Are You There and Other Stories (Golden Gryphon, 2009) and The Whole Mess and Other Stories (Fairwood Press, 2023). His work has appeared in four Year’s Best Anthologies and has been translated into various languages, including Russian, Polish, Czech, Spanish, French, and Chinese. Skillingstead has been nominated for the Philip K. Dick Award, and the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award. One review of Are You There and Other Stories, (Tangent) called Skillingstead “a major author in the genre of SF. Skillingstead was born in 1955 and grew up in a working class suburb of Seattle, and has spent most of his life in and around that city.
HOWARD V. HENDRIX writes poetry, science fiction, and nonfiction. His first four published novels appeared from ACE Books – Lightpaths (1997), Standing Wave (1998), Better Angels (1999), and Empty Cities of the Full Moon (2001) – followed by The Labyrinth Key (2004), and Spears of God (2006), from Ballantine Del Rey. His collected fiction is available in Perception of Depth (2011) and The Girls with Kaleidoscope Eyes (2019). He has authored, co-authored or co-edited seven book-length works of nonfiction, including Visions of Mars: Essays on the Red Planet in Fiction and Science, by Howard V. Hendrix , George Edgar Slusser, et al. His shorter fiction appears regularly in Analog Science Fiction and Fact, his nonfiction in Analog and the San Francisco Chronicle, and his poetry in Star*Line. His numerous poems include the SFPA Dwarf Stars 2010 winner “Bumbershoot.” His poem “Extravehicular Activity” appeared in the April 2023 issue of Scientific American. His poetry collection Living Fossils are the Happiest Kind (In Case of Emergency Press, 2023) is just out.
Originally trained as a biologist, he took graduate degrees in literature and taught writing and literature at CSU Fresno, for many years. Three weeks after he retired, the house in the mountains where he and Laurel lived for 15 years burned up in the Creek Fire in 2020. They have recently relocated to Denver, Colorado.
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The American Bookbinders Museum‘s entrance is located at 355 Clementina Alley, between 4th and 5th Street, between Howard and Folsom. The nearest BART station is Powell and Market. Street parking is free AFTER 6PM (but check the meter for hours!), and there are several garages in the area as well – further directions and transit options are available here on the ABM website. For more information, pleases contact the ABM at (415) 824-9754
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Author events are held at the
American Bookbinders Museum, located at 355 Clementina Street at 5th Street, between Folsom and Howard, SF, CA, (415) 824-9754
Film events are held at The Balboa Theatre, located at 3630 Balboa Avenue, between 37th & 38th Avenues, SF, CA
For information regarding SF in SF events, or booking an author, please contact Rina Weisman at sfinsfevents@gmail.com
Tags: Admin