I checked the ropes around me again, which held me to my bench so that I would not fall off into the sky. They were secure. I breathed deeply and looked out at the ocean. The edge was roaring just ahead of us. I glanced up at Admago, and he seemed to fall as the prow of the ship bowed over the edge. The ship was bending.
Luc Reid is (among other things) a professional speculative fiction writer who lives
in Burlington, Vermont. His Web site is incredibly boring because he's spending
all his free time writing and doesn't have time to do anything fun with
the site. You can read more about him here.
The Latterworld Wars: Juvenile fantasy/martial arts series, with Steve Bein.
The Curse-Keeper (working title): YA novel about a young man from a family cursed with never being able to get help from anyone.
... and other projects.
What's The Latest?
November 7, 2004: In going to Abyss
& Apex to read the new issue I found to my pleasure that my short-short
story "Just
Like Meteors" is the featured archive selection.
October 25, 2004: To my amazement and delight, my short story "Dark-Foot
Hugh" took the top prize in the first Codex
Halloween story contest. Set in Elizabethan England and on a merchant
ship of the time, it tells the story of an estranged father whose shadow
is haunted by his own dead brother, and of the son who tries to free him
from the ghost.
October, 2004: I am more pleased than I could express in the limited
amount of time I give myself to keep this site up to date to say that
I've signed with agent Nadia Cornier of the Creative
Media Agency. I've known her long enough to have some idea of her
energy and intelligence and count myself truly lucky.
August 23, 2004: Just returned from the Writers
of the Future workshop and gala awards ceremony in Los Angeles. What
a mind blowing journey, even the second time around!.
June 11, 2004: Just received the welcome news that my Flash Fiction
story "Catch" will appear in the July/August edition of Abyss
& Apex.
May 29, 2004: A note from the new online Magazine Lenox
Avenue (first issue to appear in July) accepting my short-short story
"Chance Meeting With a Baby on a Train" for publication in their second
issue, due out in September. I'm feeling fortunate to be involved in the
magazine so early on. Issue 1 includes work from Nick Mamatas, Elizabeth
Bear, and others.
May 29, 2004: Enjoyed an interview this morning by Margot Harrison
for the local Burlington alternative newspaper Seven
Days for an article about Vermont Writers
of the Future winners. I believe the article will appear in the upcoming
week's issue.
April 30, 2004: A note from Strange
Horizons saying my interview of James Maxey has been accepted for
publication in a near future issue of SH, probably during July.
March 30, 2004: Recently I've been putting a good deal of effort
into Codex, a
writers group for newly-pro and nearly-pro speculative fiction writers.
Revelatory forum discussions, helpful critiques: what more (short of a
massive advance on a first novel) could a writer want?
January 16, 2004: By virtue of my Writers of the Future
publication, I'm now eligible to be nominated for the Campbell award (see
my entry
at the Campbell Awards site
for more information. I have no chance of winning this year, given the
talented and frankly much more prolific writers I'm up against, but it's
nice to be out there. Time to get some more work out there!
September 23: The Writers of the Future XIX anthology is
at long last out in stores, and to my amazement I saw it prominently displayed
in my local grocery store! More of a shock than this was a brief Publisher's
Weekly review of the anthology that mentions "A Ship That Bends"
in flattering terms:
Luc Reid�s marvelous "A Ship That Bends" imagines a world
that is literally flat, where seafarers try to maneuver around the edge
and onto the other side.
August: I'm back from the dizzying experience of the Writers of
the Future contest in Hollywood and back to work on Gods and Demons.
Mike Lawrence, one of the winning illustrators this year, won the annual
grand prize for illustration for the woodcut he did for "A Ship That
Bends" in Writers of the Future XIX. The anthology hit stores
in September 2003.
July 15th: I was amazed and delighted to find out today that "Bottomless"
won second place in the Jan-Mar 2003 quarter of the Writers of the Future
contest. To my great joy, I'll be in two successive volumes of WotF anthology
and be able to attend the Writers Workshop not only this year, but next
as well. The contest administrator, Rachel, tried first to tell me I had
won obliquely, but I was a little slow on the uptake and she had to spell
it out for me.
June 25th: More good news from Writers
of the Future: My novelette "Bottomless" (young man who
lives in a village deep inside a bottomless pit is run out of town and
must try to find a way to clear his name in parts unknown) is a finalist
in the Jan-Mar quarter of the 2003 contest; results should be back in
about two weeks. Woo-hoo! And in about five or six more weeks, I'm off
to the WotF Writers Workshop with Tim Powers and K.D. Wentworth.
May 1st: Issue 3 of Abyss
& Apex comes out with "Just Like Meteors" (two elderly
friends are arguing about protesters who set themselves on fire and plunge
from the sky into public places).
March 20th: Got the news that "A Ship That Bends" (a
Phoenecian girl grows up working out a way she can sail over the edge
of the earth, which is visible from her home, to the bottom) will be included
in the Writers of the Future XIX anthology, a paperback that will be published
in August and which is available at bookstores, Amazon.com, www.writersofthefuture.com,
etc.
Werkstattsschrieberfreuden
NOTE: So many of my writing friends are achieving so much success that I am beginning
to miss well-deserved congratulations, such as recent sales to Asimov's
and Analog and positive
mentions in Publisher's
Weekly. I will either have to alienate some of my friends, sabotage their
careers, or continue to let some entries slip through the cracks below. Alas,
it will probably be that third option.
Steve Savile
on the release of his new collection Angel Road.
Jud Roberts, whose story about a Viking who rises from thrall to reknowned
warrior, found a well-deserved home at HarperCollins, where it will be
released as YA novels.
Alethea Kontis, whose messed-up alphabet book The Telephab has
been enthusiastically accepted at Candlewick Press.
Steve Savile again, whose first novel in Swedish (translated by his publisher;
his Swedish is good, but not that good) has been picked up to be
made into a 2-part TV movie by the largest independent television company
in Sweden. Grattis, Steve!
Matthew Candelaria, whose engaging and vividly imagined story "Trust
is a Child" won the grand prize at the Writers of the Future awards
ceremony in August.
Jay Lake, whose stories
are blossoming as prolifically as the poppies in the Wizard of Oz,
and with no less mind-bending potency. Jay's recent successes are too
numerous to mention, but they include sales to Writers of the Future,
On Spec, Ideomancer, Black Gate, Strange Horizons,
Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet, Realms of Fantasy, Asimov's,
and a number of others. His Web site is www.jlake.com.
Steve Bein, my black belt speculative fiction writer friend. Recently
he had a chance to meet David Carradine, and when someone told Mr. Carradine
that Steve is pursuing a PhD in Philosophy, Mr. Carradine responded: "Yeah,
and he can kick a**, too."
Carl Frederick, theoretical physicist, speculative fiction writer, bagpiper,
and winner of the Nicest Guy In Hollywood award, who in addition to several
other recent story sales just sold a piece to Artemis that (it
looks like) will form the basis of some new physics work he and a colleague
are writing up for Physical Review.
Jud Roberts, whose pair of books set in painstakingly-researched and beautifully
realized Viking times finally caught the attention of a really smart agent.
Steve Savile, who's started in on a film project with a certain Hollywood
actress and producer.
Maya Lassiter, whose graceful Boot Camp short story of the urban supernatural,
"Dusi's Wings", appeared in a recent issue of Realms
of Fantasy.
James Maxey,
whose short story "Empire of Dreams and Miracles" so caught
the attention of the good folks at Phobos
that they named it a winner in their first annual short story contest,
named their anthology of the winning stories after it, and later had the
good sense to buy his superhero novel Nobody
Gets the Girl, one of those rare single-sitting reads with a convoluted,
beautifully engineered ending. I believe it's due out in October. Check
out James' Web site at www.nobodygetsthegirl.com.
and congratulations to James Maxey again on the inclusion of a short story
and a novella, "Absolutely Brilliant in Chrome" and "All
the Empty Space" for the new Phobos anthology Absolutely Brilliant
in Chrome, a non-contest compilation of works by past Phobos contest
winners. Note that two of the three Phobos anthologies to date have been
named after Maxey stories!