eldritchhobbit: (Cabin Pressure/Hey Chief)
eldritchhobbit ([personal profile] eldritchhobbit) wrote2014-06-19 08:04 am

Worldcon schedule, Slate rebuttals, and TV

I have my preliminary schedule for Loncon 3/the 72nd Worldcon. I'm really excited!

Friday, 15 August
11am-12 noon
Solo presentation: “Sherlock Holmes and Science Fiction”


Saturday, 16 August
12 noon-1:30pm
Panel: “Commercializing Fans”

3pm-4:30pm
Panel: “Young Adult SF on the Big Screen”

6pm-7pm
Panel: “Young Adult and Middle-Grade SF”

8pm-9pm
I’ll be officiating at the Prometheus Awards ceremony.


Sunday, 17 August
1:30pm-3pm
Solo presentation: “Millennials and Worlds Gone Wrong: These Aren’t Your Parents’ YA Dystopias”

{245} Science Fiction


Following up on my recent post about Ruth Graham's article in Slate, here are a few more "must read" responses.
- From my friend and former graduate student, Curtis Weyant: "Unliterary Criticism"
- From Julie Beck: "The Adult Lessons of YA Fiction" (Thanks to Leslie!)
- From Maggie Stiefvater: "Here is a lie we've all been told: books will make you smart." (Thanks to [livejournal.com profile] estellye!)
- From Heather Hogan: "Geek Out: No, Adults Should NOT be Embarrassed to Read Young Adult Books" (Thanks to [livejournal.com profile] brighteyed_jill!)
- And, in fiction form (You want to see this!), from Kathleen Hale: "A Young Adult Author’s Fantastic Crusade to Defend Literature’s Most Maligned Genre" (Thanks to [livejournal.com profile] estellye!)

And regarding current television...
- How amazing was Fargo? So good.
- The new season of Longmire is off to a terrific start. Check this out: "The Top Five Reasons You Should Be Watching Longmire."
- I don't want this season of Orphan Black to be over.

[identity profile] whswhs.livejournal.com 2014-06-21 04:54 pm (UTC)(link)
And more than one genre! Sherlock is mystery, The Wire is a mix of crime and police procedural, Nip Tuck was part professional drama and part soap opera, and I'm not sure if there's a name for the genre of Dexter.

We bounce back and forth between different shows, watching a season of each, rather than watching the entire run of a show. And right now we're making our way through the X-men films. It was rather startling to see how X-men really had only one character with any depth, Logan (Charles and Erik had moments, but really only when they were bouncing off each other); a lot of the character depth evolved in the later films, I think, and especially in X2.