14th-20th September is NZ Speculative Fiction Blogging Week
What?
This is an opportunity for anyone in (or even with links to) New Zealand to talk about Speculative Fiction, to publicise what they've been doing or simply share some knowledge. It's an opportunity to learn what others have been reading, writing, watching or drawing, to start a conversation, to gather some recommendations for reading or some tips for writing.
NZ Speculative Fiction Blogging Week is organised by Core members of SpecFicNZ, who are working towards the launch of a national SpecFic Writers organisation in 2010.
Why?
Because speculative fiction still doesn't get the recognition it deserves in New Zealand and because there are so many people out there doing so many exciting things - and so often they don't know about each other.
How can I participate?
1) Help get the word out! Link to this page, tell your friends, encourage people you know to write.
2) Write a blog post any time from 14th to 20th September. It can be a review of a book by a local writer, an update on your own writing, photographs of a place near you which has some links to speculative fiction, related art - the possibilities are endless. Don't feel you need to be an expert of have any kind of qualification for joining in - this is for everyone!
Please do remember to post a link to your post in the comments to this page, otherwise we may not see it. Comments are screened to stop spam, so don't worry if it doesn't show up straight away - we will be checking frequently.
3) Check back over the week to see what others have written. They'll all be linked to in this post as we get them. Discover what other people are thinking, doing and writing, and don't forget to comment - you may get some interesting conversations going or even meet some new friends.
The Posts
Anna Caro takes a look at examples of nineteenth century NZ speculative fiction online in SpecFic from Another Time
Catherine Mede gives an overview of what speculative fiction is in SpecFicNZ Blogging Week!
Tim Jones (along with Helen Lowe) will be discussing writing Speculative Fiction in Wellington this Thursday - he gives full information in Fantastic Voyages, This Thursday Evening
Ripley Patton introduces the week in New Zealand Spec Fic Blogging Week Has Arrived
Narena Olliver shares the first chapter of a story in Tina a Toi
Australia-based Simon Petrie gives some thoughts on how his New Zealand upbringing influences his SF writing, and some more general comments about Kiwi writers overseas, in It's NZ spec fic blogging week...
J. C. Hart has another introduction to the week and why it's important in NZ Speculative Fiction Blogging Week Begins
Cara discusses the problems with availability of speculative fiction in NZ in Buying speculative fiction in New Zealand... or not.
As an immigrant to New Zealand, Lynne Jamneck has some thoughts on how the country has shaped her writing... and herself in New Zealand Speculative Fiction Blogging Week
Ophelia Stornoway talks about the history of Semaphore magazine, and some NZ SpecFic which formed part of her childhood in New Zealand Spec Fic Blogging Week
Karen Healey talks about her experience of using cultural consultants to avoid inadvertent racism when including Maori mythology in her writing in Cultural Consultants
Grant Stone highlights another work of 19th Century speculative fiction in "with no likeness to humanity except that they stood on two legs; with arms yet not arms; faces human, yet how unlike!"
Anna Caro shares an extract from a work in progress in Invented Wings (an extract)
Catherine Mede brainstorms some ideas for speculative fiction writing set in, or including, New Zealand in Speculative Fiction in NZ?
J. C. Hart details publication options in Opportunies for Spec Fic writers in NZ
Ripley Patton highlights some local writers in A Sampler of New Zealand Spec Fic Authors
Grace Bridges introduces new publisher Splashdown Books in NZ SpecFic Blogging Week - Ooh La La!
Ophelia Stornoway talks about the presence of the New Zealand landscape in fantasy writing in Fantasy geography and NZ
Pat Whitaker announces the launch of his latest work and shares a preview of the cover in News
Simon Petrie talks about NZ content in Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine in ASIM and kiwi content
PJ Ballantine discusses some of the reasons behind the increasing success of genre fiction in NZ in Why genre is blooming in Aotearoa
Grant Stone announces the publication of one of his stories in The Salt Line featured on Wily Writers
Paul Heinz talks about why NZ is particularly suited to speculative fiction in Land of the Other
Anna Caro interviews a local speculative fiction publisher in An Interview with Kelly Buchanan from Random Static Press
Dan Rabarts posts about "one of New Zealand’s unsung heroes of fantasy literature" in Hugh Cook - The Wordsmith and the Warrior
Catherine Mede gives a personal perspective in Speculative Fiction – What does it mean to me?
J. C. Hart interviews a local writer in PJ Ballantine – NZ writer and podcaster
Debbie Cowens talks about the importance of SpecFic in Why I read and write Speculative Fiction
Tim Jones looks back to his first speculative fiction publication in Like A Virgin, Published For The Very First Time
Ripley Patton also highlights Grant Stone's short story, 'The Salt Line', in Free New Zealand Spec Fic Story
Anna Caro introduces the 31st New Zealand National Science Fiction and Fantasy Convention in Au Contraire
J. C. Hart remembers how she started writing in The Universe Is My Oyster: why I write speculative fiction
Catherine Mede interviews Lee Pletzers in Speculative Fiction – Interview with a Horror Writer
Ripley Patton discusses her move to New Zealand and how it ties into her writing in A Stranger in a Strange Land: Why I Write from New Zealand
Paulette Brae talks about how she first came to describe her writing as speculative fiction in Speculative Fiction
Debbie Cowens tells the story of a writing project she is involved in in The Joys of Writing Collaborative Speculative Fiction
Catherine Mede finds inspiration on a bush walk in Speculative Fiction – Native inspiration
Anna Caro reports back from a local event, including a link to a recording, in Fantastic Voyages
Ripley Patton finds inspiration for Speculative Fiction in New Zealand in Weird New Zealand: The Land of Speculation
Jenni Talula also reports back from Fantastic Voyages (in more detail) in Fantastic Voyages – Speculative Fiction Blogging Week
Catherine Mede remembers her introduction to speculative fiction in Under the Half Men of O…
J. C. Hart posts some photos and talks about what the week has meant to her in The healing powers of the beach
Sally McLennan shares her perspective on speculative fiction in What if? Ah, what if we were all the same, really…
Anna Caro lists some writers' resources in Aotearoa Past and Future - Resources for Writers
Matt Cowens shares a piece of fiction in NZ Spec Fic Blogging Week Opens New Horizons
Catherine Mede posts an excerpt from a work in progress in Speculative Fiction – Excerpt from Chrystias
Angel Leigh McCoy finds inspiration in some of the country's more bizarre (if sadly extinct) wildlife in Guild Wars, the Moa, and New Zealand ...
Tim Jones announces a book tour in The Voyagers Book Tour Of New Zealand
Anna Caro talks about how where she lives has affected her writing in A City of Possibilities
J. C. Hart shares the beginning of a short story in As Promised
Grant Stone finds himself less and less isolated in Distance
Sally McLennan comments on the growing speculative fiction community in Fantastic Voyages Within the Speculative Fiction Community



Count me in. I'll be posting
Count me in. I'll be posting this on my blog and linking to it as well. Thanks!
Ripley
You can definitely count me
You can definitely count me in, I've posted about it on my blog already :-)
Oh, this was Cassie... lol
Oh, this was Cassie... lol jchart.wordpress.com
I'll give you a plug on my
I'll give you a plug on my blog on on twitter :)
Will be attempting a blog a
Will be attempting a blog a day (or at least every two days) on http://catherinemede.wordpress.com/
Sounds awesome Karen. I'll
Sounds awesome Karen. I'll keep an eye out, but if you can remember to comment here it will make sure I don't miss anything
SpecFic NZ Blogging Week - starts now
Hi, just done my first blog - http://catherinemede.wordpress.com/2009/09/14/specficnz-blogging-week/
Awesome, thanks Karen. I'll
Awesome, thanks Karen. I'll be updating the post with links to posts so far later in the day.
Fantastic Voyages: Writing Speculative Fiction
There is a "real world" speculative fiction event on in Wellington during NZ Spec Fic Blogging Week: it's called "Fantastic Voyages: Writing Speculative Fiction", and it's a discussion between New Zealand speculative fiction writers Tim Jones and Helen Lowe, chaired by Radio New Zealand's Lynn Freeman. It's at the Wellington Arts Centre/Toi Poneke, 61 Abel Smith St, from 7.30-9pm this coming Thursday, the 17th. Admission is free.
I've put full info about it up on my blog here: Fantastic Voyages, This Thursday Evening. If you're in Wellington, please come along, and tell your spec fic/sf/fantasy/horror friends and colleagues as well.
Thanks Tim - I'll be there
Thanks Tim - I'll be there and I'll put your post up on the main post as well.
Thanks
Thanks very much for that. It seems as though several SpecFicNZ folk will be there, and I'm looking forwards to meeting you all.
My Introductory Post
Here be my first post. Yip! http://rippatton.livejournal.com/28359.html
Awesome - thanks Ripley
Awesome - thanks Ripley
Tina a Toi
The first chapter of a story
Chapter One
The great tribe of Kuaka, the godwit, moved restlessly and chattered uneasily throughout the night. Standing together on the sandbar high above the tides, fluttering their wings intermittently, they seemed as one great body as they journeyed with Pipiwharauroa in mind, ignoring the movement of the tides that exposed the mudflats and their feeding grounds. Their combined strength carried Pipiwharauroa across the oceans.
As the first rays of the sun suffused the sky and the waters of Ohiwa, the great sunken estuary of the Waiotahe river, Pipiwharauroa emerged from the deepest meditation, from her mind being caste adrift on the seas of timelessness. She had been travelling wide and far, into territory that left her, Pipiwharauroa, shaken and disturbed.
As Pipiwharauroa awakened, Kuaka moved as one great flock to lift from the sand spit. As they took flight, they turned as one body to acknowledge her before scattering to their feeding grounds. Their cries stirred her friend and guardian, her namesake, the shining cuckoo, who had been quietly roosting throughout the night in the Pohutakawa tree that sheltered her. The light caught the beauty of his iridescent blue green feathers as he flew down to alight on her shoulder. It had been Pipi who had persuaded her to communicate with the godwits.
Slowly her beautiful surroundings grounded her again, brought her back to earth. "It seems you are right my friend. Kuaka tell me that on their journeys back and forth across the oceans north to their nesting grounds, they see many, many, things. They have shown me many things. They see what you and your kind have been seeing on your journeys north."
All the birds for some time now had been telling her that something terrible was happening. She could feel their sense of dread, their fear, and she could see the pictures that they tried to convey to her, but she could not really understand, she could not grasp quite what was happening for she had no experience to encompass it.
She was spending so much time now on Te Motu, the island, listening, meditating, reaching out, but all she knew was that something terrible was about in the world. Yet her own kind seemed to care too little for what she felt was going on. The birds they said were always in a state about something. It was their excitable nature. There was nothing to worry about.
But Pipiwharauroa knew that it was no accident that over eons and eons of time, they had evolved together, her kind and the birds, and that it was as well to listen to them. In order to understand what the birds were telling her she had been working at the very outmost limits of her extraordinary mental powers, reaching out over time and the seas of the universe, looking for some answer, some understanding of what the birds were telling her. She had to move so slowly and carefully, building defences, for the powerful and sensitive mind that characterised her species could be killed by psychic shock, by the awfulness of what the birds were conveying.
And there finally, across the seas of time, with the help of the great flock of Kuaka, the godwit and her namesake, Pipiwharauroa, the shining cuckoo, she could see that what the birds were conveying was true, that a species was coming, and what was most puzzling, creatures like themselves, like Pipiwharauroa, but then not like themselves, the same and yet so different. How could it be? They had come, the birds said, on the waters of the sea, in vessels floating like sticks upon the waters. They were doing terrible things, killing, slaughtering indiscriminately as if those birds like Ruru, the owl, and Pouakai, the great eagle, had gone mad. They were lighting fires which got out of control and together with strange four legged creatures they called Kuru, the dog, they were driving the terrified great and gentle Moa birds into the swamps and there slaughtering them far beyond their immediate need for food. These were the pictures conveyed to her but she could not comprehend it. It could not be.
How could these creatures be of their own kind, like themselves, who ate only fruit and nectar, plants and roots, shellfish and eggs the birds gifted to them on special occasions, gathering everything carefully, with a prayer and supplication toward those they were taking. As the birds collected seed and nectar and insects to survive, so did her kind, and always with the understanding of how interdependent they all were, how much they needed each other to survive. They never took more than they needed. How could they be like them? Surely the messages were wrong. Perhaps she was just growing old and her powers were failing her, or worse, going mad. But no, the birds would soon let her know, would soon condemn and leave her.
But she was hungry after her all night vigil and climbed out of her nest hanging in the great pohutakawa tree and descended to the ground, closing the entrance flap behind her and securing it against the rain which she knew would come later in the day. She knew she must now leave the island and return to the mainland.
"I am hungry my dear friend", she conveyed quietly to her friend. She had brought nothing with her to eat as such a journey required an empty belly. "What I now need is some of the sweet nectar of the pohutakawa", she said, feeling quite light-headed while she folded the feather blanket that she had wrapped around her all night and placed it in the cave, the entrance of which was hidden within the roots of a pohutawakawa tree. The blanket had been made from the caste off feathers of the ducks when they moulted every year and interwoven with flax fibres.
She stayed for a time kneeling in the dry sandy floor of the cave out of respect for her ancestors who once lived in and around this cave and for her mate Kahua who was buried nearby. The entrance was sheltered from the southerly winds and had offered shelter to their kind for many, many generations. Hot springs were nearby and the cave itself was cunningly developed by generations of habitation. There were niches on which to hang their hammocks and carefully carved storage rooms. There was a fire pit and a cunningly concealed exit for the smoke.
Pipiwharauroa had all but forgotten why her tribe ceased to live here other that that it became vulnerable to storms. Still the island remained their most sacred place and where all their tribe chose to be buried.
"Pipi, my friend, I can hear you and I am listening to you all, but now we must leave the island and go to Ngahuia". For above the tumult of the world far beyond she could hear her daughter calling her, asking her if all was well. There was it seems something that she and her mate Ruru needed to convey to her.
End
Hi Anna, I've put up a
Hi Anna, I've put up a vaguely-relevant blog entry at http://punktortoise.livejournal.com/22054.html
Edited for formatting only
Thanks Simon!
Thanks Simon!
And another one: at
And another one: at http://punktortoise.livejournal.com/22507.html
postiness
I've made a post over at lj on the availability of SF in NZ.
As another Wellingtonian SF geek, good to have discovered your blog!
Thanks Cara. And good to
Thanks Cara. And good to "meet" you as well - there seem to be quite a lot of us around :D
http://opheliastorn.livejourn
http://opheliastorn.livejournal.com/22078.html
Bit rambly, but I'm afraid that's all my brain's good for at the moment!
Looks good :)
Looks good :)
Hi Anna, Hope the week has
Hi Anna,
Hope the week has had a good kick-off so far, post-wise. You can find mine at:
http://lynnejamneckdiaries.blogspot.com/
Lynne Jamneck
Thanks Lynne - yes, I've been
Thanks Lynne - yes, I've been really happy with how it's going.
By total coincidence, I ended
By total coincidence, I ended up posting this today: http://karenhealey.livejournal.com/815447.html
And I'm glad you did...
And I'm glad you did... that's really interesting and probably helpful to me with my own writing.
Karen Healey has given
Karen Healey has given permission for her post here to be added to the list - http://karenhealey.livejournal.com/815447.html
She's talking about her upcoming debut novel, and using cultural consultants to keep from making the awful on the race/culture front.
Good spotting, Ophelia
Good spotting, Ophelia
Saw this on Cassie's blog...
Saw this on Cassie's blog... I'm not a Kiwi and I don't write speculative fiction, but just wanted to give you congrats for the week! I'll drop this a link on my blog ASAP... :)
Thank you :)
Thank you :)
Hey Anna, The next blog is up
Hey Anna,
The next blog is up - http://catherinemede.wordpress.com/2009/09/15/speculative-fiction-in-nz/
Another early morning person
Another early morning person then? :)
Anna, My second post titled,
Anna,
My second post titled, A Sampler of New Zealand Speculative Fiction Authors, is up on my LJ at http://rippatton.livejournal.com.
Wow, I can't wait to read all these great posts!
Cheers,
Ripley
They're really good :)
They're really good :)
I've posted a blog at
I've posted a blog at http://splashdownbooks.blogspot.com Come on over!
Thanks Grace - always good to
Thanks Grace - always good to see someone new to me as well.
Tuesday post -
Tuesday post - http://opheliastorn.livejournal.com/22377.html
Thanks :)
Thanks :)
It's good to see everyone
It's good to see everyone participating in this great site...
I'll be blogging about it on my Writing.com account very soon and linking to it on my facebook page: www.facebook.com/pbrae
My own work of speculative fiction has just become available, in e-book format, at www.bluewoodpublishing.com, called A Diamond In The Dust. You can read an extract at the site.
P :)
Excellent :) Just post the
Excellent :) Just post the link here when it's done and I'll add it to the main post.
My blog entry on writing.com
My blog entry on writing.com can be found here:
http://www.writing.com/main/books/item_id/1501714
Happy Writing!
Link to my speculative fiction:
http://www.bluewoodpublishing.com/Books/ADiamondInTheDust.html
By the way, we LOVE speculative fiction at Bluewood Publishing!
www.bluewoodpublishing.com
P :)
Thanks :D
Thanks :D
Wrote a blog post 'Why genre
Wrote a blog post 'Why genre is blooming in Aotearoa'
Thanks :)
Thanks :)
My story "The Salt Line" is
My story "The Salt Line" is available on the Wily Writers website, as both text and audio. Plus, the audio version was narrated by Tim Jones, which makes me super happy.
Wily Writers site: http://www.wilywriters.com/
And the link from my site:
http://d1sc0r0b0t.blogspot.com/2009/09/salt-line-featured-on-wily-writer...
Also yesterday, yet another NZ spec fic author from the 1800s: http://d1sc0r0b0t.blogspot.com/2009/09/strange-beings-how-shall-i-descri...
Thanks Grant.
Thanks Grant.
There will be a guest post on
There will be a guest post on my blog tomorrow morning by Dan Rabarts about the mighty Hugh Cook. d1sc0r0b0t. 9AM. Wednesday. Be there.
And I was...
And I was...
Wow, Anna! Look what you've
Wow, Anna!
Look what you've started!
My contribution is at http://sparkintheumbra.com/writing/land-of-the-other/
Cheers, Paul.
I know! I'm starting to feel
I know! I'm starting to feel a little scared at how much this has taken off. Thanks for the post.
Hey Anna, Here is my next one
Hey Anna,
Here is my next one - Speculative Fiction - What does it Mean to Me
http://catherinemede.wordpress.com/2009/09/16/speculative-fiction-what-d...
tomorrow, I promise will be the interview with Lee Pletzer!