Author Archives: Mark R. Kelly

First Novels Directories

The latest exciting new feature here at Locus Online are directory pages for first novels only — a list of First Novels published in 2010 and also one for 2009. These join the sorted novels directories (by genre and series/standalone status) established a couple months ago, and like them will be updated weekly, or whenever a New Books page is posted. I had a couple user requests for such pages, and they seemed like a good idea to do.

I’ll stipulate at the outset that these are likely no more *comprehensive* than are the other Directory pages — inevitably, they compile only what we’ve seen here at Locus Online, including references to books reviewed or recommended by Locus Magazine, and not including forthcoming titles. As always, suggestions of other titles to include are welcome, especially for the First Novels pages, considering that that category garners special attention from several awards, and the lists will be especially useful the more comprehensive they are.

Cache, and RAM

Quick update — the solution described last time turned out to be only a part, perhaps only a small part, of the solution. After installing the super-cache plug-in on the both the News and Reviews blogs last night, the site was still unresponsive this morning, as prone to 503 errors as before. Liza and the staff at Locus HQ followed up this morning with the hosting service to upgrade our server with more RAM (it had been only 256 Mb), and that made the big difference. It’s understandable — we went from a server that did little more than host static pages, to one that ran PHP programs every time anyone clicked on a News or Reviews or Perspectives post. (Even with the cache plug-ins installed, some PHP is running each time.) I hope, of course, that there will be no more problems, but then I’ve said this before.

I’m off to Chicago area on Thursday for an extended weekend graduation event, but I’ll try to get some substantial posts done by then. A new Lois column just came in…

Growing Pains

A problem that made the site mostly inaccessible for two or three days, and intermittently last weekend, has been solved (I hope). The proximate culprit was Cory Doctorow, whose newly posted column on Wednesday attracted so many viewers that it overwhelmed our server. But the ultimate culprit was our Word Press installation of our various blogs, including the ‘Perspectives’ blog where Cory’s essays are posted, and, to some extent, the limitation of our current server. The difference between Blogger, which served the blogs until a couple weeks ago, and WordPress, which serves them now, is that the former was set up to post static pages via FTP on our server, while WP’s default function is to dynamically serve pages from its database (sitting directly on our server) when a URL request is received. Each request causes WP to launch an instance of its PHP program, and the net effect of many hits to Cory’s link was to overload the server, to the extent that for some periods this past week, no one at Locus could download e-mail for hours at a time…

Our friendly hosting service suggested installing a plug-in option to Word Press called Super-cache, which in effect makes WP work like we had Blogger work — it generates static pages that sit on our server and are served to most viewers, rather than launching instances of its PHP engine. Between their rebooting our server this morning, and my installing the plug-in, the overload situation seems to be solved. At least, the site is coming up, and email is downloading. We will still likely pursue an upgrade to our server as well.

Hope this explanation has been helpful for the six of you who read this blog…

New Perspectives, Roundtable

Said blogs are now re-hosted in WordPress, with two issue interviews excerpted into posts on the former. The Roundtable will get going again once we contact the various contributors and get them new login settings…

The May issue of the magazine wasn’t mailed until Friday, April 30th — a tad late. I’ll start compiling the book reviews this evening (the reviews index is always updated/posted simultaneously with — or earlier than — the issue Table of Contents), but the cover image and ToC probably won’t be posted until tomorrow.

Update 8:30 pm: The reviews index, beginning with http://www.locusmag.com/Magazine/Reviews0.html, is now updated with May issue reviews.

And as a preview, the May issue reviews are… (reviewer in paren’s):

Abraham, Daniel • Leviathan Wept and Other Stories (Gary K. Wolfe)
Bacigalupi, Paolo • Ship Breaker (Gary K. Wolfe)
Bear, Elizabeth • Bone and Jewel Creatures (Paul Witcover)
Brown, Charles N., & Jonathan Strahan, eds. • Fritz Leiber: Selected Stories (Gardner Dozois)
Carriger, Gail • Changeless (Carolyn Cushman)
Carriger, Gail • Changeless (Faren Miller)
Fforde, Jasper • Shades of Grey (Faren Miller)
Francis, Consuela, ed. • Conversations with Octavia Butler (Gary K. Wolfe)
Gevers, Nick, & Marty Halpern, eds. • Is Anybody Out There? (Gardner Dozois)
Harris, Charlaine • Dead in the Family (Carolyn Cushman)
Hawkins, Rachel • Hex Hall (Carolyn Cushman)
Hobb, Robin • Dragon Haven (Faren Miller)
Hughes, Matthew • Hespira (Paul Witcover)
Huston, Charlie • Sleepless (Paul Witcover)
Johnson, Alaya • Moonshine (Faren Miller)
Kane, Stacia • Unholy Ghosts (Carolyn Cushman)
Kay, Guy Gavriel • Under Heaven (Gary K. Wolfe)
Kay, Guy Gavriel • Under Heaven (Gary K. Wolfe)
King, Stephen • Blockade Billy (Stefan Dziemianowicz)
Martin, George R. R., & Gardner Dozois, eds. • Warriors (Rich Horton)
McGuire, Seanan • A Local Habitation (Carolyn Cushman)
Nix, Garth • The Keys to the Kingdom, Book 7: Lord Sunday (Carolyn Cushman)
Parker, K. J. • The Folding Knife (Faren Miller)
Pinborough, Sarah • A Matter of Blood (Tim Pratt)
Quick, Amanda • Burning Lamp (Carolyn Cushman)
Scalzi, John • The God Engines (Rich Horton)
Schoen, Lawrence M., & Arthur Dorrance, eds. • Alembical 2 (Rich Horton)
Shepard, Lucius • The Taborin Scale (Paul Witcover)
Stanton, Mary • Avenging Angels (Carolyn Cushman)
Strahan, Jonathan, & Lou Anders, eds. • Swords and Dark Magic: The New Sword and Sorcery (Gardner Dozois)
Wilks, Eileen • Blood Magic (Carolyn Cushman)
Yolen, Jane, & Mike Cavallaro • Foiled (Carolyn Cushman)

New Reviews

And now reviews, http://www.locusmag.com/Reviews/, is WordPressed. This is of course just a variation of the News blog, using the same basic layout to match the site design, but this blog, like the Perspectives blog (yet to be Converted), synchronizes the right sidebar to the posts, rather than retaining a fixed sidebar; this entails more jiggery pokery of CSS divs that you might imagine. It seems to be working in all five of the browsers I have installed, though some details have yet to be polished — ignore the truncated left sidebar! — but at least I got Lois’ latest posted.

Two down (or three, if you count *this* blog), two to go.

New News

The Locus Online News blog, www.locusmag.com/News/, is now WordPressed. The success of this transition (from Blogger) will be the extent to which no one notices. I spent this past week, off and on, tweaking the layout of the newly created WP blog to reproduce the format and layout of the earlier blog, with only a couple refinements and additions along the way, and today copied the trial blog into the /News/ directory, deleting the old index.html page in favor of the WP-generated index.php page.

What I decided not to do was to actually migrate the old blog posts into WordPress. The posts already reside on our site, so migration wasn’t necessary for that reason. The only reason for doing so would be to allow category and tag entries to apply to all posts past and present, but the difficulty would be hacking WP to reproduce exactly the URLs for all of the old posts, which WP does not necessarily do in the same way Blogger did (though I found a setting in WP to do it very similarly). Safer, and easier, to let the old posts stand, so as not to break anyone’s links to those pages, and live without comprehensive tagging. Content from all those posts can still be found via the site’s search function.

Next will be setting up WP blogs for the other Locus Online blogs — Roundtable, Reviews, Perspectives. And then catch up on site content, which has been neglected in recent weeks (monitor listings, and so forth). And when all that’s done, maybe I’ll have time to read a book or two again.

Blog Migration

Today I am building a Word Press version of my personal blog, Views from Medina Road, in the process re-hosting it away from Blogger (.blogspot) and onto our own locusmag.com server. If you’re reading this, what you’re seeing is a first approximation at retaining the design of the original, which is still at http://locusmag.blogspot.com/. I’ll continue to refine this design, though my immediate priority is learning how to navigate Word Press and deal with its settings so that I can migrate the Locus News blog and the other Locus blogs before Blogger’s FTP support gives up the ghost entirely. (It’s already undependable.)

Migration

Locusmag.com migrated to a new server today, which is why you may have tried to view the site, early this afternoon west coast time, and seen a fragmentary homepage. The specific problem there was, the new server didn’t have the php scripts for displaying the news feed loaded, and the php tags broke the html structure of the rest of the page…

Moving to the new server is roughly like upgrading the server’s operating system, and we did this to enable installation of Word Press, with which we plan to host the various blogs, including News, Reviews, and Roundtable, currently run via Blogger, which is abandoning FTP support by the end of the month.

The new server’s control panel also provides some new features that I’ll be exploring. But the next, immediate, task is to install Word Press and see about migrating the Blogger blogs. More on that soon.

Infrastructure Note

There is now a separate Index to Magazine Reviews, including all the magazine and webzine issues reviewed by Lois Tilton in her new column, as well as a handful of magazines covered in reviews run on the website in the early 2000s by Rich Horton, Michael Swanwick, and others. This index will, of course, be updated each time we post a new column from Lois.

References to Lois’s reviews are also now included in the 2010 Magazine Directory, which otherwise compiles references to reviews in Locus Magazine, and descriptions in Locus Online’s ‘Other Magazines’ pages.

Light and Dark in Orlando

First, to fill in a couple details from the previous post, Nalo Hopkinson’s lunchtime speech referred notably to the Racefail 2009 debate that raged online a year or so ago; she also used the phrase “people of pallor” as a nice parallel to the standard “people of color”.

Friday the clouds broke up a bit, and by Saturday the sun returned full-force, just in time for the annual Locus photo of ICFA attendees out by the pool — the sun was bright enough that we were getting uncomfortable by the time stragglers gathered to make it into the shot. (When the photo appears in Locus Magazine, I’m the one in the bright yellow polo shirt.)

The Friday lunchtime speaker was guest scholar Takayuki Tatsumi, best known for books like Cyberpunk America and the more recent Full Metal Apache. He spoke on “Race and Black Humor”, discussing several examples of how racism played in the response to natural catastrophes, like Katrina, and in works of fiction, including a Brian Aldiss story from 1966 called “Another Little Boy” and the Japanese bestseller Japan Sinks… if the talk was a tad arcane, it was leavened by a film clip from a parody of the last title, clips of a worldwide disaster in which everyplace except Japan sinks, that looked like a bad outtake from 2012.

The highlight of Friday evening was another ICFA tradition, the performance/stage reading of three short plays. (The first couple times I attended ICFA, these were written and/or performed by Brian Aldiss, with supporting cast.) This time two of the plays were by Jeanne Beckwith — “Mission to Mars”, with Brett Cox and Andy Duncan portraying two astronauts who’ve arrived at Mars and whose backup supply ship is overdue; and “The Last Detective”, with Jim Kelly, John Kessel, Kij Johnson, and Sydney Duncan as the characters and author of a story, respectively. The final play was “Driving Day” by Timothy Anderson, again starring Brett Cox, a surreal piece that involved cast members circling the room and waving their arms back and forth. They were all fun.

Then folks gathered outside by the pool cabana; it wasn’t quite warm enough to be comfortable, and the gas lamps weren’t supplied with propane, but we made do. Russell brought out his guitar, Charles produced a bottle of Glenmorangie, and we were fine.

The awards banquet on Saturday evening closed the weekend, and went typically long, with awards presented for service to ICFA, by Sheila Williams to students for the Dell Magazine writing contest (whose recipients included a good Rachel and an evil Rachel), the Lord Ruthven awards for works about vampires, and, eventually, the previously-announced Crawford Award winner, to Jedediah Berry for his The Manual of Detection, as the best first book by a fantasy writer from the past year. As if all those were not enough, it was then announced that two more awards will be presented beginning next year — one, named after Nalo Hopkinson, for a story by a person of color, and another, named after Suzy McKee Charnas, for some service the nature of which I didn’t quite catch. I’m sure Locus mag will get all the details in place in their official coverage of the weekend.

In between all that, I bought a couple books in the book room, bought one book in the silent auction, had some good conversations with people, met Jedediah Berry and Kit Reed and Rebecca Holden and several others for the first time, had a meeting with Liza about prospects for a PDF version of Locus Magazine and options for converting our current Blogger blogs, and attended a reading by Amelia Beamer from her forthcoming novel The Loving Dead, which continued to gather positive buzz throughout the weekend, by Ellen Klages, who read several unpublished passages from her “portable childhood” series, and by Andy Duncan, who read a hilarious story about a man conniving to outrun a bullet.

Now, Sunday morning, it is mostly overcast again, and I’m finishing up here before packing to leave for the airport.