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The SF in SF Podcast
dj@somafm.com (SomaFM DJ)
60 episodes
1 month ago
Recorded live at The Koret Auditorium in the San Francisco Public Library, October 5th, 2025 This is a special appearance and readings by authors Joe R. Lansdale (Hap and Leonard, Bubba Ho-Tep) and Samantha Mills (The Wings Upon Her Back), courtesy of SF in SF Events, the reading series sponsored by Tachyon Publications.
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All content for The SF in SF Podcast is the property of dj@somafm.com (SomaFM DJ) and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Recorded live at The Koret Auditorium in the San Francisco Public Library, October 5th, 2025 This is a special appearance and readings by authors Joe R. Lansdale (Hap and Leonard, Bubba Ho-Tep) and Samantha Mills (The Wings Upon Her Back), courtesy of SF in SF Events, the reading series sponsored by Tachyon Publications.
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Episodes (20/60)
The SF in SF Podcast
October 2025: Kate Maruyama, Jordan Rosenfeld and Sumiko Saulson
KATE MARUYAMA is the author of Alterations, The Collective, Bleak Houses, and Harrowgate and her novella Family Solstice was named Best Fiction Book of 2021 by Rue Morgue Magazine. Her short work has appeared in numerous journals and anthologies and she is a two-time Pushcart Prize nominee, and winner of the Uncharted Short Story Prize. She served on the working Board for Women Who Submit, and is currently on the Board of Directors for the Shirley Jackson Awards. She writes, teaches, cooks, and eats in Los Angeles. Learn more about this versatile author at https://www.katemaruyama.com/ JORDAN ROSENFELD has been a teacher and coach for over 20 years, working with writers to improve their skills in fiction and memoir writing. She has also taught writing at many writing conferences, such as the Mendocino Coast Writers’ Conference, the California Writers’ Club, Sebastopol Center for the Arts, and other. With six books on the craft of writing, including the forthcoming The Sound of Story: Developing Voice and Tone in Writing, Rosenfeld is also the author of three novels, most recently Fallout, Women in Red and Forged in Grace, and her work can be found in national publications such as The Atlantic, Mental Floss, The New York Times, Pacific Standard, The Rumpus, Scientific American, and many others. Learn more about her writing workshops and coaching at https://jordanrosenfeld.net/ SUMIKO SAULSON is a cartoonist, poet, science-fiction, fantasy and horror writer, and the editor of Black Magic Women, Scry of Lust and 100 Black Women in Horror Fiction. Their works include Solitude, Warmth, The Moon Cried Blood, Happiness and Other Diseases, Somnalia, Insatiable, Ashes and Coffee, and Things That Go Bump In My Head. They wrote and illustrated the comics Mauskaveli, Dooky, and graphic novels Dreamworlds and Agrippa. They write for the SEARCH Magazine and the San Francisco Bayview column Writing While Black. They are an award-winning author of Afrosurrealist and multicultural sci-fi and horror, whose latest novel Happiness and Other Diseases, is available on Mocha Memoirs Press. Learn more at https://sumikosaulson.com/
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1 month ago
1 hour 26 minutes 51 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
September 2025: Brenda Cooper, Evette Davis & Sheri T. Joseph
ABOUT THE AUTHORS BRENDA COOPER is a writer, a technology professional, and a futurist. Brenda writes science fiction, fantasy, poetry, and non-fiction. Two of her novels, The Silver Ship and the Sea and Edge of Dark, have won the Endeavour Award for the best science fiction or fantasy book written by a Pacific Northwest author. Wilders was also short-listed for the P.K. Dick award. Many of her short stories have been reprinted multiple times and some have appeared in various Year’s Best anthologies. Brenda’s most recent novels include a climate fiction duology set in the Pacific Northwest (Wilders and Keepers) and the tenth-anniversary re-drafted release of her Fremont’s Children series of books which started with The Silver Ship and the Sea, including the brand new fourth and final installment, The Making War. Her YA novel, Mayan December, is an exciting adventure through the past and the present, with an 11-yr old, a savvy scientist, a handsome dreadlocked time-traveler, an ancient shaman, a noble Mayan couple, and a computer nerd, in a search for the meaning of life and a way to save two worlds. Brenda is the Director of IT for a premier Pacific Northwest builder. Her love of technology, science, and science fiction combines to drive her interest in the future, and she delivers keynote addresses about the future a few times a year. She is particularly interested in robotics, climate change, and the social change that must go hand in hand with fixing the human relationship to the natural world. Brenda lives in Washington State with her wife, Toni, and their multiple border collies, some of whom actually get to herd sheep. She loves to exercise, garden, read, and talk with friends. Learn more at https://brenda-cooper.com/ EVETTE DAVIS is the author of The Others and The Gift, the first two installments of The Council Trilogy, published by Spark Press. The third and final book in the trilogy, The Campaign, will be released in September 2025. She is also the author of 48 States, which Kirkus named one of the Best Indie Books of 2022. The book was also a quarter-finalist for the BookLife Prize 2023 and longlisted in the 2023 Indie Book Awards. Davis is a member of the Board of Directors for Litquake, San Francisco’s annual literary festival. She’s been twice honored by the Friends of the San Francisco Public Library as a Library Laureate. Her work has also been published in the San Francisco Chronicle and Writer’s Digest. When she’s not writing novels, Davis advises some of the country’s largest corporations, nonprofits, and institutions as a consultant and co-owner of BergDavis Public Affairs, an award-winning San Francisco-based consulting firm. Davis splits her time between San Francisco and Sun Valley, Idaho. Learn more at https://evettedavis.com/ SHERI T. JOSEPH went to UC Berkeley, received a JD from UC Law San Francisco, and studied economics, geography, and creative writing. She is passionate about the need for housing and serves as executive director of a nonprofit corporation that supports creation of affordable housing for families, veterans, refugees, and vulnerable populations. She’s also a trustee for Homeward Bound, a provider of homeless services and housing. Sheri and her husband have three adventurous children and live in Marin, California. Edge of the Known World is her debut novel. Edge of the Known World is a literary thriller and love story about a brilliant young refugee in a realistic near-future when genetic screening tests like 23AndMe make it impossible to hide a secret identity. It was a USA Today Booklist Bestseller, and won the Gold Medal for Best New Voice in Fiction at the 2025 Independent Book Publishers Association Awards. It was also the 2024 American Fiction Awards Winner in Best New Fiction, Political Thriller, and General Science Fiction; and won First Place in the Chanticleer International Book Awards for Global Thriller. Learn more at https://www.authorsheritjoseph.com/
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1 month ago
1 hour 28 minutes 21 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
October 2025: Tachyon Publications 30th anniversary with Joe R. Lansdale and Samantha Mills
Recorded live at The Koret Auditorium in the San Francisco Public Library, October 5th, 2025 This is a special appearance and readings by authors Joe R. Lansdale (Hap and Leonard, Bubba Ho-Tep) and Samantha Mills (The Wings Upon Her Back), courtesy of SF in SF Events, the reading series sponsored by Tachyon Publications.
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1 month ago
1 hour 15 minutes 19 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
July 2025: Helene Wecker, Julia Vee, Ken Bebelle
Recorded live at The Lost Church in San Francisco, July 20th, 2025 ABOUT THE AUTHORS HELENE WECKER is a local Bay Area author, who grew up in Libertyville, Illinois, a small town north of Chicago, and received her Bachelors in English from Carleton College in Minnesota. After graduating, she worked a number of marketing and communications jobs in Minneapolis and Seattle before deciding to return to her first love, fiction writing. Accordingly, she moved to New York to pursue a Masters in fiction at Columbia University. She now lives near San Francisco with her husband and daughter. Her first novel, the highly acclaimed The Golem and the Jinni, was published in April 2013 by HarperCollins. The Golem and the Djinni won the 2014 Mythopoeic Award for Adult Literature, was nominated for the 2014 Nebula Award for Best Novel and was a finalist for the 2013 James Tiptree Jr. Award. It placed 2nd in the 2014 Locus Award for Best First Novel and the 2013 Goodreads Choice Award for Debut Author, and 3rd in the 2013 Goodreads Choice Award for Fantasy. Its sequel, The Hidden Palace, was published in 2021, and won a 2021 National Jewish Book Award. It was also selected for the 2021 One Bay One Book selection with the Jewish Community Library, a year-long conversation connecting Bay Area readers through discussions and events centered around a selection of current Jewish literature and its themes. And – EXCITING! Wecker is currently working on the third book! 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. The final book in the trilogy, Pearl City, is out now! 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. KEN BEBELLE, in his own words — Many kids who love science fiction become engineers or astrophysicists or comic book artists. I turned my childhood love of Star Wars into a career in prosthetics. With a degree in Cybernetics, I spent over twenty years specializing in upper limb replacement, fitting patients with everything from traditional body-powered prosthetics, to the latest myoelectric technology. Star Wars was a good influence on me. Since I’ve always been an avid reader of fantasy, science fiction, cyberpunk, and comic books, it made perfect sense that I would also write SFF. My writing partner, Julia Vee, and I first wrote together in the eighth grade, trading a floppy disk back and forth in the school hallways like spies passing state secrets. Together, Julia and I love creating rich, immersive worlds filled with the heroes and monsters from our dreams. Thank you for coming to visit our flights of fancy!
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3 months ago
1 hour 7 minutes 23 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
June 2025 with Gail Carriger, Evan Leikam, and Khan Wong
Recorded live at The Lost Church in San Francisco, June 8, 2025 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, and San Andreas Shifter series for adults, and the Finishing School and Tinkered Starsong series for young adults, as well as the nonfiction, 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 has garnered 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. Get early access, specials, and exclusives via her website at www.gailcarriger.com EVAN LEIKAM grew up among the forests of central Oregon reading fantasy and science fiction from a young age. While touring the United States and Europe with an independent rock band, he began tinkering with his own stories to pass time in vans and music venues. Apart from writing he enjoys cooking, producing music, riding his bike, and From Software games. He is the host of the Book Reviews Kill podcast, and his social media pages have turned thousands on to new books. He currently lives in Portland, Oregon. His debut novel is Anjuli Kills a King, just out from MacMillan. The tale of an unlikely assassin: Anjuli, who works as a castle servant, cleaning laundry for a king she hates. She seizes the unlikely chance that comes her way to cut his throat. Running for her life, with a kingdom thrown into disarray, her struggle to will grab your imagination and not let go til the last page! Perrfect for fans of Joe Abercrombie, R.F. Kuang, and Christopher Buehlman! You can catch up on Evan’s book reviews at his Youtube channel, here KHAN WONG‘s debut space fantasy, the critically acclaimed The Circus Infinite, was published by Angry Robot Books in 2022. It was a finalist for the Lambda Literary Awards Speculative Fiction category and long-listed for the British Science Fiction Association’s Best Novel. His most recent novel, Down in the Sea of Angels, was published by Angry Robot Books in April, 2025, and is described as “An intense and thoughtful time-hopping dystopian fantasy, in which three individuals, psychically linked through time, fight enslavement, exploitation and environmental collapse. A great read for fans of Emily St. John Mandel.” In the past, he has published poetry, played cello in an earnest folk-rock duo, and been an internationally known hula hoop teacher and performer. He’s toured with a circus and produced circus arts shows in San Francisco, where he also worked as a grant-maker with a public sector arts funding agency.
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3 months ago
1 hour 17 minutes 9 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
May 2025 with Karen Joy Fowler & Pat Murphy
Recorded live at The Lost Church in San Francisco, May 4, 2025 ABOUT THE AUTHORS PAT MURPHY is an American science writer and author of science fiction and fantasy novels. She has often used the ideas of the absurdist pseudophilosophy pataphysics in some of her writings. Along with authors Lisa Goldstein and Michaela Roessner, she formed The Brazen Hussies in 2000 to promote their work. Together with Karen Joy Fowler, Murphy co-founded the James Tiptree, Jr. Award, an award encouraging the exploration & expansion of gender, (now called the Otherwise Award) at WisCon in 1991. The award was originally named for science fiction author Alice Sheldon, who wrote under the pen name James Tiptree, Jr. Her new novel, published in May 2025, is The Adventures of Mary Darling, from Tachyon Publications. Mary Darling is a pretty wife whose boring husband is befuddled by her independent ways. But one fateful night, Mary becomes the distraught mother whose children have gone missing from their beds. In this subversive take on Peter Pan and Sherlock Holmes, a daring mother is the populist hero the Victorian era never knew it needed. A starred review from Library Journal: “Mary’s story is a dangerous and delightful adventure that turns the bigotry and misogyny of Victorian England on its head. Her first novel, Shadow Hunter, was reprinted in a revised edition by Tachyon Publications in 2002. In 1986, she received the Nebula Award for both her second novel, The Falling Woman (1986), and her novelette, “Rachel in Love.” Her short story collection, Points of Departure (1990) won the Philip K. Dick Award, and her 1990 novella, Bones, won the World Fantasy Award in 1991. From 1998 through 2018, Pat Murphy and Paul Doherty (a scientist and educator) jointly wrote the recurring ‘Science’ column in the Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction that typically appeared twice each year. Her YA novel, The Wild Girls (2008), won the Christopher Award, as well as the children’s category of the 2008 Northern California Independent Booksellers Association Book of the Year Awards. For more than 20 years, when she was not writing science fiction, she worked at the Exploratorium, San Francisco’s museum of science, art, and human perception, publishing published nonfiction as part of the museum staff. After a stint at Klutz inventing games and things like Lego Chains, Murphy joined Mystery Science (company) in 2014 as the first employee, creating science curriculum for elementary school teachers. She lives in Nevada, is black belt in the martial art kenpō, and is a whiz at creating balloon animals. KAREN JOY FOWLER is an American author of science fiction, fantasy, and literary fiction. Her work often centers on the 19th century, the lives of women experiencing the unexpected or fantastic, and social alienation. She is best known for the popular novel, The Jane Austen Book Club (2004). Fowler attended UC Berkeley, and majored in political science. She later returned to college, entering a creative writing class at UC Davis, and began publishing science fiction stories. She first made a name for herself with the short story “Recalling Cinderella” (1985) in L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume 1 (1985) and the collection, Artificial Things (1986). Her first novel, Sarah Canary (1991), involves a group of people in the Pacific Northwest alienated by 19th century America, who experience a peculiar kind of first contact in 1873. Her second novel, The Sweetheart Season (1996), is a romantic comedy of a woman’s baseball team in the 1940s, infused with history and fantasy. Her novel The Jane Austen Book Club, (2004), was a critical and popular success, becoming a NY Times bestseller for 13 weeks. The plot, that of six members of a contemporary book club discussing Jane Austen books, includes science fiction as an integral part of the novel’s plot. It was made into a romantic comedy film in in 2007. Fowler also collaborated with Pat Murphy to found the James Tiptree, Jr. Award (the Otherwise Award) in 1991. Fowler drew inspiration from the fact that Sheldon’s mother, Mary Hastings Bradley, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mary_Hastings_Bradley was an adventurer, going on several trips to Africa including a gorilla hunting expedition in 1920. As such, she served as the inspiration for the protagonist in Fowler’s “What I Didn’t See” which won the Nebula for Short Story in 2003 Fowler’s novel, We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves (2013), was a critical success, winning the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction in 2014. It was also shortlisted for the 2014 Nebula Award and 2014 Man Booker Prize. Her most recent novel, Booth, involves a family of Shakespearean actors best known for their connection to Lincoln’s assassin John Wilkes Booth. It was longlisted for the 2022 Booker Prize. Fowler received a World Fantasy Life Achievement Award at the 2020 World Fantasy Convention in Salt Lake City, Utah.
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3 months ago
1 hour 8 minutes 19 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
April 2025: DARYL GREGORY & NGHI VO with special guest host Kimberly Unger
Recorded live at The Lost Church in San Francisco, April 13th, 2025 ABOUT THE AUTHORS DARYL GREGORY, the multiple award-winning author of critical darling SFF novel Spoonbenders, has a new book out! It’s called When We Were Real (Saga Press, April 1, 2025), set in America seven years after we all learn we are living in a simulation. It’s a madcap adventure following two friends on a cross-country bus tour through the mind-boggling glitches in their simulated world as they grapple with love, family, secrets, and a recent cancer diagnosis. When We Were Real is a tour-de-force and exploration of what really matters, even in an artificial world, which has received fantastic praise from numerous leading SFF authors, including Lev Grossman, Kim Stanley Robinson, Nancy Kress, Ben H. Winters, and more. Daryl writes novels and short stories in a variety of genres, but has also written comics and video games. He teaches every year at the Viable Paradise Writing Workshop (apply!), as well as doing some programming on the side. He grew up in Chicago, and has lived in a few states along I-80 — Pennsylvania, Iowa, Oakland — and now splits his time between Seattle, WA (which means he spends a lot of time in coffee shops. A lot), and State College, PA. His latest novel is When We Were Real (Saga Press, 2025), and before that was the Appalachian horror novel, Revelator (Knopf), a 2022 Dragon Award and Locus Award finalist, and Washington Post book of the year. His SF murder mystery novella The Album of Dr. Moreau was an Edgar award finalist. The novel Spoonbenders was a Nebula, Locus, and World Fantasy Award finalist. His novella, We Are All Completely Fine (Tachyon Publications) won the World Fantasy and the Shirley Jackson awards, and was a finalist for the Nebula, Sturgeon, and Locus awards. NGHI VO is an American author of short stories, novellas, and novels, who identifies as queer. Born in 1981 in Peoria, Illinois, where she lived until attending college at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, she moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin on the shores of Lake Michigan in 2007. Her first published short story was “Gift of Flight” in 2007, followed by a number of published short stories in various media. Vo’s fantasy novella The Empress of Salt and Fortune, the first title that launched her Singing Hills Cycle, was published in 2020. It received considerable acclaim and won the Hugo Award for Best Novella, and the International Association of the Fantastic in the Arts Crawford Award. The book was also a finalist for the Lambda Literary Award, the Nebula Award, the Locus and the Ignyte Award. The next book in the cycle was When the Tiger Came Down the Mountain (2020), followed by Into the Riverlands (2022), Mammoths at the Gates (2023), and The Brides of High Hill (2024). The novellas can be read in any order. Her debut novel, The Chosen and the Beautiful, was published in 2021. The novel is a queer fantasy adaptation of The Great Gatsby which reimagines the character of Jordan Baker as a woman of Vietnamese descent who was taken to Louisville as a young child, and raised by a wealthy, white American family. Vo’s second novel, Siren Queen (2022), an urban fantasy set in pre-Code Hollywood, was followed by The City in Glass (2024). Her new book, Don’t Sleep With the Dead, is a companion novel to The Chosen and the Beautiful. ​She believes in the ritual of lipstick, the power of stories, and the right to change your mind.
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3 months ago
1 hour 30 minutes 16 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
October 2024: Garth Nix
Recorded live at The Lost Church in San Francisco, October 27, 2024 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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3 months ago
44 minutes 52 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
September 2024: Annalee Newitz, Andrea Stewart & Julia Vee
Recorded live at The Lost Church in San Francisco, September 15, 2024 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. 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. 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.
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3 months ago
1 hour 12 minutes 50 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
July 2024: Paolo Bacigalupi and Tim Pratt
This is the first SF in SF to be recorded at our new venue, The Lost Chuch, a nonprofit performance space in San Francisco's North Beach neighborhood. 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." https://windupstories.com/ 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 at https://marlamason.net/ 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 at https://www.timpratt.org/ He lives in Berkeley, CA with his wife and kid.
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1 year ago
1 hour 16 minutes 10 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
June 2024: Robin Sloan, Clara Ward and Rudy Rucker
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: https://www.robinsloan.com/moonbound/ 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. https://www.rudyrucker.com/ 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 at https://clarawardauthor.wordpress.com/
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1 year ago
1 hour 31 minutes 29 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
May 2024: Samantha Mills, Hana Lee and Caitlin Chung
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. AITLIN 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://www.breakingtheglassslipper.com/2020/07/23/five-questions-with-caitlin-chung/
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1 year ago
1 hour 33 minutes 18 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
March 2024: Gail Carriger, Amy Sundberg, and Izzy Wasserstein
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. 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. 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).
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1 year ago
1 hour 47 minutes 52 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
February 2024: David D. Levine & David M. Sandner
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! 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/. 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 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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1 year ago
1 hour 3 minutes 12 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
June 2023: Fran Wilde and Henry Lien
Each author will read a selection from their work, followed by Q&A with the audience, moderated by author Cliff Winnig. FRAN WILDE is an American science fiction and fantasy writer and blogger. Her debut novel, Updraft, was a 2016 Nebula Award nominee, and won the 2016 Andre Norton Award and the 2016 Compton Crook Award. Her debut middle grade novel, Riverland, won the 2019 Andre Norton Award, was named an NPR Best Book of 2019 and was a Lodestar Finalist. Wilde is the first person to win two Andre Norton Awards for both Middle Grade and Young Adult Fiction. Her short fiction explores themes of social class, disability, disruptive technology, and empowerment against a backdrop of engineering and artisan culture, and has appeared in Asimov’s Science Fiction, Nature, Tor.com, Uncanny Magazine, and elsewhere. The Gem Universe, a trilogy comprising The Jewel and Her Lapidary, and The Fire Opal Mechanism, concludes with the upcoming The Book of Gems. Her poetry has appeared in Fireside Fiction, The Marlboro Review, Articulate, and Poetry Baltimore. Wilde holds an MFA in poetry and an MA in information architecture and interaction design. She is one of the editors of the online The Sunday Morning Transport newsletter. HENRY LIEN is a 2012 graduate of Clarion West. He is the author of the Peasprout Chen fantasy series, a delightful middle grade fantasy/adventure series about a girl determined to take top ranking at Pearl Famous Academy of Skate and Sword where she studies Wu Liu, a form that blends figure skating with martial arts. “Harry Potter Meets Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon . . . On Ice!” AND about immigration, girl power, sibling relationships, leadership, teamwork, and the importance of friendship! His short fiction has appeared in publications like Asimov’s, Analog, F&SF, and Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet, and he has served as arts editor for Interfictions Online. He is a four-time Nebula/Norton Award finalist. Henry also teaches writing for institutions including UCLA (which awarded him Instructor of the Year), the University of Iowa, Writing the Other, and Clarion West. Henry has previously worked as an attorney and fine art dealer. Born in Taiwan, Henry currently lives in Hollywood.
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1 year ago
1 hour 32 minutes 35 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
SF in SF February 2023: Annalee Newitz & Naseem Jamnia
Annalee Newitz is a nonfiction and fiction author. The recipient of a Knight Science Journalism Fellowship at MIT, they also hold a Ph.D. in English and American Studies from UC Berkeley. Previously, they founded the well-known website io9, was the editor-in-chief of Gizmodo, a policy analyst at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and a lecturer in American Studies at UC Berkeley. Newitz is currently a freelance science journalist, a contributing opinion writer at The New York Times, and a columnist at New Scientist, as well as the co-host, with Charlie Jane Anders, of the Hugo Award-winning podcast Our Opinions Are Correct. Their nonfiction has appeared in Slate, The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Wired, Smithsonian Magazine, The Washington Post, 2600, New Scientist, Technology Review, Popular Science, Discover, and the San Francisco Bay Guardian. They are also 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. Their latest nonfiction book, Four Lost Cities: A Secret History of the Urban Age, was a national bestseller. Their first novel, Autonomous, won the Lambda Literary Award, and was nominated for the Nebula and Locus Awards. Their second novel, The Future of Another Timeline, received starred reviews from Publisher's Weekly, Kirkus, Library Journal, and Booklist, and their short story "When Robot and Crow Saved East St. Louis" was winner of the 2019 Sturgeon Award. They are also the author of Scatter, Adapt and Remember: How Humans Will Survive a Mass Extinction, which was a finalist for the LA Times Book Prize in Science. Newitz' current novel, The Terraformers, is "a sweeping, uplifting, and illuminating exploration of the future." Naseem Jamnia is a former neuroscientist and recent MFA graduate from the University of Nevada, Reno. Their work has appeared in the Washington Post, Cosmopolitan, The Rumpus, The Writer's Chronicle, and other venues. Jamnia is a 2018 Bitch Media Fellow in Technology, a 2019 Lambda Literary Fellow in Young Adult Fiction, and they recently received the 2021 inaugural Samuel R. Delany Fellowship. In addition to cowriting the academic text Positive Interactions with At-Risk Children, Jamnia's work has been included in the Lambda Literary 2020 EMERGE anthology and We Made Uranium! And Other True Stories from the University of Chicago's Extraordinary Scavenger Hunt. Jamnia is the managing editor at Sword & Kettle Press, an independent publishing house of inclusive feminist speculative fiction. They are also the former managing editor at Sidequest.Zone, an independent gaming criticism website. A Persian-Chicagoan and child to Iranian immigrants, Jamnia now lives in Reno with their husband, dog, and two cats. Recorded February 26, 2023 at the American Bookbinders Museum in San Francsico
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1 year ago
1 hour 14 minutes 23 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
January 2020: Kim Stanley Robinson and Cecilia Holland
KIM STANLEY ROBINSON is an American writer of science fiction. He has published 19 novels and many short stories but is best known for his Mars books. His work has been translated into 24 languages. Many of his novels and stories have ecological, cultural, and political themes running through them and feature scientists as heroes. Robinson has won numerous awards, including the Hugo Award for Best Novel, the Nebula Award for Best Novel and the World Fantasy Award. Robinson’s work has been labeled by The Atlantic as "the gold-standard of realistic, and highly literary, science-fiction writing." According to an article in The New Yorker, Robinson is "generally acknowledged as one of the greatest living science-fiction writers." CECELIA HOLLAND is an American historical fiction author, also well-known for her science fiction novel, Floating Worlds. Her first novel, The Firedrake, was published in 1966, and Holland has been a full-time professional writer ever since. Her character-driven plots, scrupulously researched, are often developed from the viewpoint of a male protagonist. With plenty of action (her battle scenes are noteworthy for their bottom-up viewpoint and understated verisimilitude), her work focuses primarily on the life of the mind—whatever that might mean in a particular culture—and especially on politics, in the broadest sense, whatever politics might be in a monarchical, feudal or tribal society. Holland lives in rural Humboldt County, CA. For ten years, Holland taught creative writing classes at Pelican Bay State Prison in Crescent City, CA. She was visiting professor of English at Connecticut College in 1979. Holland was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1981–1982.
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1 year ago
1 hour 33 minutes 48 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
SF in SF February 2020: Tiffany Trent, Juliette Wade and Mike Chen
SF IN SF, in partnership with Tachyon Publications and the American Bookbinders Museum, welcomes the acclaimed Juliette Wade, Mike Chen, and Tiffany Trent. Hosted by Terry Bisson Juliette Wade's first novel, Mazes of Power, is just out from Daw; a work of sociological science fiction, it follows a deadly battle for succession in a world where brother is pitted against brother in a singular chance to win power and influence. Wade's short fiction has been published in Analog, Clarkesworld, and Fantasy & Science Fiction magazines, and she runs the popular Dive into Worldbuilding video series and blog. With a B.A. in Japanese, an M.A. in Linguistics, and a Ph.D. in Education, Wade has spent time living in France and Japan. Now she lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her Australian husband and two teenage boys. Tiffany Trent is the author of The Unnaturalists and The Tinker King, and of the Hallowmere series. Her short stories have appeared in Clockwork Cairo, Willful Impropriety, After the Fall, and others. With Stephanie Burgis she is the editor of the Locus Award finalist for Best Anthology, The Underwater Ballroom Society. Trent teaches creative writing in the online MFA program at Southern New Hampshire University. She lives with her husband and two awesome kids, and geeks out over beekeeping, suburban homesteading, weird science, pie, and martial arts. Mike Chen's new novel A Beginning at the End, is set among people struggling to survive and connect in post-pandemic San Francisco; his first book, Here and Now and Then, followed a time-traveling secret agent--and fathe--torn between a life in the future and one in the past. In addition to writing fiction, Chen has been a tech writer, Word Press developer, and sports journalist. He lives in the Bay Area with his family, and is ready to explain why Jean-Luc Picard is the greatest human in real or fictional history.
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1 year ago
1 hour 37 minutes 14 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
March 2023: Mia Tsai & Becca Gomez Farrell
Mia Tsai is a Taiwanese American author of speculative fiction. She lives in Atlanta with her family, and, when not writing, is a hype woman for her orchids and a devoted cat gopher. Her favorite things include music of all kinds (really, truly) and taking long trips with nothing but the open road and a saucy rhythm section. She has been quoted in Glamour magazine once. In her other lives, she is a professional editor, photographer, and musician. Becca Gomez Farrell is a professional writer, creating works in the genres of fantasy, romance, horror, and science fiction, with side trips into personal essay and creative nonfiction. With nearly 20 short stories published, one epic fantasy novel, and a romance novella to her credit, she is currently also working on a new novel, Natural Disasters. Wings Unfurled, her current novel out in the world, is the second part of her duology, Wings Rising. It was preceded by Wings Unseen, featured at Becca’s last appearance with SF in SF in September, 2017. Her other passion is writing about wine, cocktails, dining out, and travel, at her blog, The Gourmez, a fascinating dive into what makes a good meal, a great cocktail, and great restaurant recommendations. In this guise, she contributes to the award-winning Carpe Durham and WRAL Out and About blogs. In addition, she writes reviews and critiques of soap operas, network shows, and tweets short movie reviews and write occasional ones for plays, books, and concerts. A Bay Area resident since 2013. she’s also an owner of furry creatures, a wife of a fantastic front-end developer, a progressive politicker, and a formidable pinochle player.
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1 year ago
1 hour 17 minutes 32 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
July 2023: Charlie Jane Anders and Kate Maruyama
CHARLIE JANE ANDERS is currently hard at work on a new adult novel, tentatively called The Prodigal Mother. Most recently, she wrote the young adult Unstoppable trilogy: Victories Greater Than Death, Dreams Bigger Than Heartbreak, and Promises Stronger Than Darkness. She’s also the author of the short story collection Even Greater Mistakes, and Never Say You Can’t Survive (August 2021), a book about how to use creative writing to get through hard times. Her other books include The City in the Middle of the Night and All the Birds in the Sky. She’s won the Hugo, Nebula, Sturgeon, Lambda Literary, Crawford and Locus Awards. She co-created Escapade, a transgender superhero, for Marvel Comics and wrote her into the long-running New Mutants comic. Anders is also currently the science fiction and fantasy book reviewer for the Washington Post. Her TED Talk, “Go Ahead, Dream About the Future” got 700,000 views in its first week. With Annalee Newitz, she co-hosts the podcast Our Opinions Are Correct. KATE MARUYAMA writes, teaches, edits, cooks, and eats in Los Angeles. Her novel Harrowgate was published by 47North and her novella Family Solstice was named Best Fiction Book of 2021 by Rue Morgue Magazine. She has also published the novella Halloween Beyond: A Gentleman’s Suit (Crystal Lake Publishing), and her duo of novellas, Bleak Houses: Safer and Family Solstice is out now from Raw Dog Screaming Press. Her second horror novel The Collective will be serialized through Writ Large Projects, and her non-genre novel Alterations is upcoming from Running Wild Press. Her short work has appeared in Asimov’s, Entropy, Analog Science Fiction & Fact, Duende, The Coachella Review, and The Magnolia Review among others and was awarded the Uncharted Magazine Short Story Prize. Maruyama’s work has also appeared in numerous anthologies including December Tales, Gathering: A Women Who Submit Anthology, Halloween Carnival Three, and Winter Horror Days. She is a member of the SFWA and the HWA where she serves on the Diverse Works Inclusion Committee, where she helps edit The Seers’ Table. She has served as a juror for the Bram Stoker Awards, and twice for the Shirley Jackson Awards. She is currently serving on the working board of Women Who Submit.
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1 year ago
1 hour 51 minutes 33 seconds

The SF in SF Podcast
Recorded live at The Koret Auditorium in the San Francisco Public Library, October 5th, 2025 This is a special appearance and readings by authors Joe R. Lansdale (Hap and Leonard, Bubba Ho-Tep) and Samantha Mills (The Wings Upon Her Back), courtesy of SF in SF Events, the reading series sponsored by Tachyon Publications.