The 2024 Whatever Holiday Gift Guide, Day One: Traditionally Published Books
Posted on December 2, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 123 Comments

Welcome to the first day of the Whatever Shopping Guide 2024 — Our way of helping you folks learn about cool creative gifts for the holidays, straight from the folks who have created them.
Today’s featured products are traditionally published books (including graphic novels and audiobooks); that is, books put out by publishers who ship books to stores on a returnable basis. In the comment thread below, authors and editors of these books will tell you a little bit about their latest and/or greatest books so that you will be enticed to get that book for yourself or loved ones this holiday season. Because, hey: Books are spectacular gifts. Enjoy your browsing, and we hope you find the perfect book!
Please note that the comment thread today is only for authors and editors to post about their books; please do not leave other comments, as they will be snipped out to keep the thread from getting cluttered. Thanks!
Authors/editors: Here’s how to post in this thread. Please follow these directions!
1. Authors and editors only, books only (including audiobooks). There will be other threads for other stuff, later in the week. Any type of book is fine: Fiction, non-fiction, graphic novels, etc. If you are not the author/editor of the book you’re posting about, don’t post. This is for authors and editors only.
2. For printed books, they must be currently in print (i.e., published before 12/31/2024) and available on a returnable basis at bookstores and at least one of the following three online bookstores: Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Powell’s. This is so people can find your book when they go looking for it. For audiobooks, they must be professionally published (no self-produced, self-published audiobooks) and at least available through Amazon/Audible. If your book isn’t available as described, or if you’re not sure, wait for the shopping guide for non-traditional books, which will go up tomorrow.
3. One post per author. In that post, you can list whatever books of yours you like (as long as it meets the criteria in point 2), but allow me to suggest you focus on your most recent book. Note also that the majority of Whatever’s readership is in the US/Canada, so I suggest focusing on books currently available in North America (if your book is available only in the UK or elsewhere, please note that).
4. Keep your description of your book brief (there will be a lot of posts, I’m guessing) and entertaining. Imagine the person is in front of you as you tell them about your book and is interested but easily distracted.
5. You may include a link to a bookseller if you like by using a URL. Be warned that if you include too many links (typically three or more) your post may get sent to the moderating queue. If this happens, don’t panic: I’ll be going in through the day to release moderated posts. Note that posts will occasionally go into the moderation queue semi-randomly; Don’t panic about that either.
6. As noted above, comment posts that are not from authors/editors promoting their books as specified above will be deleted, in order to keep the comment thread useful for people looking to find interesting books.
Got it? Excellent. Then tell the folks about your book! And tell your author friends about this thread so they can come around as well.
Tomorrow (12/3/24): Non-traditional books!
A Personally Significant Bluesky Moment
Posted on December 2, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 18 Comments


Today marks a significant day in my personal history of social media, because today’s the day the Bluesky officially became the site where I have the largest number of followers I’ve ever had on any social media site: 206,700 as of this morning. Not Taylor Swift or John Cena numbers, but a perfectly respectable number for a nerd who writes science fiction.
If you’re curious which site held the record before this, no surprise, it was the former Twitter, where I had been active for more than 14 years. Specifically, in April of 2022 I had peaked there at around 206,400 followers. Those numbers began to drop when Elon Musk’s offer to buy Twitter was accepted, dropped more when he took over, and then fell steadily after I stopped posting on that site in November of 2023. When I finally closed my account there last month, it had dropped into the mid 180k area; I imagine if I had kept the account open longer the number now would be even lower. Since the election, people do seem to be leaving the site in droves.
Bluesky has famously become the beneficiary of that “X-odus,” as the site grew by millions of users in the aftermath of the election. The site (of the very second I’m writing this) has just under 24 million users, which is a fraction of what the former Twitter and Threads, its nearest rival, claim. But it’s not just how many users Bluesky has, it’s which users: Bluesky is now the home of the posting “middle class,” the really interesting people in specialized fields who talk about their work to others in their field, and to a general audience. This includes writers, journalists, scientists, comedians, actors and other creatives and professionals who give a site its jolt of life.
There’s a critical mass of all these folks at Bluesky now, and what’s more, they like it there, in no small part because of the substantive moderation tools, and because every user’s main “following” feed is just that: All the people you follow, when they post, no algorithm between you and them. These are powerful arguments for Bluesky as a service.
While it’s important to acknowledge that time and circumstance do not make this an apple-to-apples comparison, I’ll note that it took me 14 years on Twitter to get to 206k followers and on Bluesky it took less than 20 months. Nearly half of that Bluesky number has come in the last 30 days, with the post-election abandonment of X. Some of that number is likely to be bots and other such accounts, but then, that was true of Twitter and just about every other site I’m on. I do suspect, however, there are currently rather more live accounts following me on Bluesky than I had on the former Twitter — which is to say, accounts with actual people who spend actual time looking at the site. Much of this has to do with the newness of the accounts and of the site in general. We’re in the phase where people come to the site curious and looking to engage. We’ll see if it stays that way over time.
I’m pleased by this follower milestone. Most notably, it makes the point that my abandoning the mess that Elon Musk made of the former Twitter has ultimately come without any real penalty to me in terms of potential audience, and indeed, it’s been objectively beneficial. The engagement with my Bluesky posts, undampened by an algorithm, is substantially higher than had been on the former Twitter, or currently on Threads. And as noted, these followers are mostly real live humans. Plus, Bluesky is just more fun. Beyond that, professionally speaking I’ve seen no real difference in income/opportunities in the past year, although I caveat that with the notation I don’t rely on personal social media as my primary marketing avenue. But even if I did, see above, regarding engagement.
Basically, If some writer/journalist/creative is looking for a sign that Nothing Of Value Is Lost by permanently leaving X, here it is, in big, bright, blinking neon.
This is not to say Bluesky is perfect. With the onrush of new users to the site have come a flood of bots, trolls and chuds, who are trying their best to clog up the pipes with the same crap that’s on X. When they show up in my comments they’re quickly dispatched by Bluesky’s delightfully comprehensive block function, but I’m still having to spend more time dealing with that, especially after the election, than I have before.
Likewise, the influx of people from the former Twitter means a non-trivial number of them have carried over some of the worst aspects of that site to Bluesky: The quote-dunking, the picking of fights in comments, and the general snark-first, “hit or be hit” posture that comes from being on a site where even the most innocuous of comments can get you targeted by awful people, or bots run by awful people. Folks are having to learn the Bluesky ethos of “don’t engage, just block” with regard to jerks, and how to generally unclench when it comes to being on social media. Some are taking to it more readily than others.
Bluesky is having growing pains, in other words. Which is fine! And also a reminder that, however positively one might feel about the site in this honeymoon phase, it is still ultimately just a place full of people online, and you know how people online can get. It’s okay not to overhype the site. As I said over there, it’s a good place! But not The Good Place. Its major advantage at the moment is simply that it’s more pleasant than other similar places online. I chalk that up to its personalization and moderation tools, the “early days of a better nation” vibe, and the absence of a billionaire owner actively trying to use the site to spread disinformation, hate and strife. You know, the little things.
If you follow me on Bluesky, thank you and I hope I am and will remain a quality follow. If you’re not on Bluesky but are curious about it, now’s a fine time to check it out. If you’re still on the former Twitter, well, you do you and I’m sure you have your reasons, but please know all the reasons I gave myself to stay for as long as I did turned out to be unfounded. I’m happy not to be there anymore, and would be even if I hadn’t had Bluesky to fly away to. But I did have Bluesky to fly away to, and I’m glad.
— JS
“Another Christmas (Ambient Mix)” by Matthew Ryan (and Me)
Posted on December 1, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 3 Comments


Four years ago, you may recall, I wrote lyrics to a Christmas song that Matthew Ryan, my friend and generally tremendous musician, then put to music and performed. The song “Another Christmas (Until I Am There With You)” was written at the height of the pandemic, and was about looking forward to being once again with friends and loved ones for the holiday… some other time. Sad, but still hopeful. I write about the process of putting it together here, if you’re interested.
The original is absolutely terrific, largely thanks to Matthew’s immensely affecting performance of it, and the lyrics are not bad too:
Here in 2024, the song still works, and in fullness of time, I think has taken on some additional dimension. I thought it would be interesting to revisit it with a remix. I took the original recording and played with it in Logic Pro, and came up with this sort of ambient version of it, where a pad of electronic sounds (and the faint ghost of the original guitar track) make a new bed for Matthew’s voice.
It’s not meant to improve on the original recording, because I think the original recording is just about perfect for the song. But I do like the idea that the song is sturdy enough to work with different treatments of it. I would love to hear some other people’s versions of it one day.
If you like the song, visit Matthew’s Bandcamp page and check out his other music, and pick some up if you’re so inclined. It’s great stuff.
Welcome to December. May it be joyous for us all.
— JS
A Cat Picture to Get You Through the Weekend
Posted on November 30, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 12 Comments

Sugar is looking either introspective or annoyed here, depending on your own state of mind.
I’m writing up a storm on the novel that is due in a week, so this is to for me this weekend. I hope you have a fabulous couple of days, and remember to come back on Monday for the first installment of the 2024 Whatever Holiday Gift Guide!
— JS
The 2024 Whatever Holiday Gift Guide Starts Monday!
Posted on November 29, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 10 Comments


Every year as the holiday season begins we’ve run a gift guide for the holidays, and over the years it’s been quite successful: Lots of people have found out about excellent books and crafts and charities and what have you, making for excellent gift-giving opportunities during the holiday season. We’ve decided to do it again this year.
So: Starting Monday, December 2, the Whatever Holiday Gift Guide returns! If you’re a writer or other creator, this will be an excellent time to promote your work on a site which gets tens of thousands of viewers daily, almost all of whom will be interested in stuff for the holidays. If you’re someone looking to give gifts, you’ll see lots of excellent ideas. And you’ll also have a day to suggest stuff from other folks too. Everybody wins!
To give you all time to prepare, here’s the schedule of what will be promoted on which days:
Monday, December 2: Traditionally Published Authors — If your work is being published by a publisher a) who is not you and b) gets your books into actual, physical bookstores on a returnable basis, this is your day to tell people about your books. This includes comics/graphic novels and audiobooks.
Tuesday, December 3: Non-Traditionally Published Authors — Self-published? Electronically published? Or other? This is your day. This also includes comics/graphic novels and audiobooks.
Wednesday, December 4: Other Creators — Artists, knitters, jewelers, musicians, and anyone who has cool stuff to sell this holiday season, this will be the day to show off your creations.
Thursday, December 5: Fan Favorite Day — Not an author/artist/musician/other creator but know about some really cool stuff you think people will want to know about for the holidays? Share! Share with the crowd!
Friday, December 6: Charities — If you are involved in a charity, or have a favorite charity you’d like to let people know about, this is the day to do it.
If you have questions about how all of this will work, go ahead and ask them in the comment thread (Don’t start promoting your stuff today — it’s not time yet), although I will note that specific instructions for each day will appear on that day. Don’t worry, it’ll be pretty easy. Thanks and feel free to share this post with creative folks who will have things to sell this holiday season.
— JS
Publishers Weekly Review of When the Moon Hits Your Eye Is In
Posted on November 27, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 9 Comments

And it’s a good one, I’m delighted to say. The relevant excerpt for me:
“[A] cleverly entertaining sci-fi romp… Scalzi’s ability to balance scathing satire with heartfelt optimism shines.”
I’m shiny!
The full review is here. Not anything particularly spoilery about it at this point.
— JS
A Schwan’s Song
Posted on November 27, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 20 Comments


News reaches me that the company formerly known as Schwan’s Home Delivery (recently rebranded — terribly — as Yelloh) has gone under, and I am sad. We used to get Schwan’s here at the Scalzi compound; indeed, I remember being in the yard in Spring of 2001, the year we moved to Ohio, seeing the big yellow Schwan’s truck driving down the road, and frantically waving it down so the driver would add us to his route. Schwan’s had very good ice cream and better-than-average frozen foods, and there was a time where I basically existed on the company’s microwavable bagel dogs. I’m not proud of that fact, but in my defense they were pretty good bagel dogs.
We stopped having Schwan’s delivered a few years ago when our driver, Paul, was reassigned to a different route; we’d been friendly over the years, and had chatted about guitars and books and such, so him being sent on another route was kind of a bummer. That personal connection breaking coincided with me deciding to lose some weight and (performative terrible burritos aside) eat slightly more mindfully. Therefore I was not around for Schwan’s the food company being sold to a South Korean conglomerate, the breakup of Schwan’s the food concern from its truck delivery arm, and this recent dreadful rebranding, which occurred in 2022.
The article linked above notes that in a universe where Uber Eats and Instacart exist, the business proposition for a big yellow truck filled with frozen treats is iffy at best, and I can certainly understand that. It still makes me a little bit sad. I liked having a big yellow truck show up with ice cream! It definitely beats some dude in an old Toyota driving up with your Kroger bags in the back. But inasmuch as I no longer subscribed to the service anymore, I suppose I can’t complain too much. The moment has passed, but I had already let the moment go long before.
— JS
“Transformers One” Is Finally Available For Streaming And I Really Think You Should Watch It
Posted on November 26, 2024 Posted by Athena Scalzi 9 Comments

I remember being in the theater a couple of months ago and seeing the trailer for Transformers One, and despite having never seen a single Transformers movie in my life, I knew I wanted to go see it.
I wouldn’t be surprised if you had yet to hear of this new animated Transformers movie, or if you’d heard of it in passing but hadn’t seen any marketing for it. Lack of marketing is suspected to be a big reason why this movie did not do particularly well in theaters. I know when I went to see it, the theater was completely empty. It’s out of theaters now and has finally come to Paramount+.
And I’m here to tell you it is totally worth a watch! Like I said, I have never seen any Transformers movies before, but you don’t have to have seen them to enjoy this one. It’s actually a prequel involving young Optimus Prime before he became the leader of the Autobots and takes place on their homeworld, Cybertron. I love the idea of a prequel that doesn’t involve humans, because from what I have seen of the live-action Michael Bay Transformers movies, it really seems to me like humans are the least interesting part of every movie.
There is so much I love about Transformers One. First of all, the fact that it’s animated is what got me excited about it in the first place, and I’m happy to report that the animation is absolutely stellar. The lighting, colors, movement, expressions, backgrounds, particle effects, everything about it visually is really appealing. I am super impressed on that front, and it’s certainly much preferable to the CGI of the live-action movies.
With animated movies comes the field of voice-acting. Usually, when movies like this get a star-studded cast, I am less than enthused. There are so many recent animated movies that star A-list celebrities that do a poor job of voice-acting, or aren’t even voice actors at all (looking at you, John Oliver’s Zazu). They include them not because they’re good at voice-acting, or truly suited for the character, but because their name looks impressive on the casting list. While this movie does star big names like Chris Hemsworth, Scarlett Johannsson, and even Steve Buscemi, I actually think the voice-acting performances in this movie are quite good. Primarily, Brian Tyree Henry as Megatron was a very good pick.
One of the main divisive takes I’ve seen over Transformers One is whether or not the humor works. Some people find it rather unfunny, and others, myself included, find it very funny. Humor is certainly subjective, and in a lot of “kids” movies I really do not like the humor. Movies that other people find quite funny, like Encanto or The Super Mario Bros. Movie, have some of the most unfunny jokes I’ve ever heard. So, I cannot say how much you will like the jokes, but I think they work really well, and I actually laughed out loud several times throughout the movie. There’s a good mix of physical comedy and verbal comedy, and I appreciate any “kids” movie that does not include any farting/burping humor. (After all, they are robots, so toilet humor wouldn’t make a lot of sense anyways.)
Moving on, I love when a movie that seems really innocent/power-of-friendship-y turns sort of dark. I won’t get into any details because I want this to be a spoiler-free review, but I really like when you think there’s no way something is going to happen, and then it happens, and you’re left slack-jawed and clutching your pearls. Being unpredictable is really good in a movie like this.
So, yeah, this movie is awesome visually, has good performances, is funny, and is really unique and interesting overall. I can’t believe I’m now a Transformers fan! I highly recommend watching this movie if you have Paramount+. It’s a lot of fun and I think you’ll enjoy it.
Did you see it in theaters? Do you like the other Transformers movies? Let me know in the comments, and have a great day!
-AMS
When the Moon Hits Your Eye Gets a Starred Review in Kirkus
Posted on November 24, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 22 Comments


For those who don’t know, Kirkus is one of the major publishing trade magazines, and a starred review means that they are holding out your book as one of special note. And guess what? Kirkus gave When the Moon Hits Your Eye a starred review!
(You may have already surmised this from the headline, mind you.)
I am delighted, of course. Moon is a little different from most of my novels, both in organization and theme, and I wasn’t sure anyone but me would actually “get” it. It’s nice to have the first major trade review say, basically, “I see what you did there.”
Here’s the entire review, but I’ll warn you that it is mildly spoilery (trade reviews often are, as they service booksellers and librarians, who want to know a little more about the book than other readers might). If you don’t want to be spoiled, the excerpt noted above covers it: “A ridiculous concept imbued with gravity, charm, humor, plausible cynicism, and pathos—and perhaps the merest touch of spite.” Yes. This.
— JS
Damn It, Who Keeps Sending Me Guitars
Posted on November 21, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 26 Comments

Specifically in this case a Tenor Baritone guitar? I mean, I already have a tenor guitar (more than one), and I have a baritone guitar too. Why would I need a tenor baritone? That’s just silly. And yet. Here is one anyway. A mystery, it is.
Anyway, hi. How are you?
— JS
Roses in the Snow, 11/21/24
Posted on November 21, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 8 Comments

First substantial snow of the season overnight. It won’t stay too long — it’ll be above freezing for the rest of the week — but it’s pretty while it’s here.
— JS
The Big Idea: Maurice Broaddus
Posted on November 20, 2024 Posted by Athena Scalzi 2 Comments

Writing can take you places you never expected. For author Maurice Broaddus, that includes the offices of some higher ups in his community. Read on to see where else his newest novel, Breath of Oblivion, has taken him.
MAURICE BROADDUS:
I get called into the principal’s office a lot over my writing.*
By “principal’s office,” I mean local city leaders, officials, or politicians. Usually it involves a story or article I’ve written. Lately it’s been my books getting me in … conversations.
My current trilogy, ASTRA BLACK, is about an independent, self-sufficient, self-determining Pan-African community. Breath of Oblivion is book two (Sweep of Stars is book one. Book three will be called A City Dreaming, all three titles taken from the Langston Hughes poem, “Stars.”) The central challenge faced in Breath of Oblivion is that of a community’s struggle to survive against the forces of (intergalactic) gentrification by Original Earth (O.E.). Systematic forces. Political forces. Economic forces. All leveraged to fracture the community from within (stirring dissent via infiltrators) and without (the weight of everything from those same oppressive forces to O.E.’s military might).
Much of the book is inspired by the obstacles faced while doing community organizing work and reimagining those situations through a science fiction lens. There is a level of reading of my work that could be seen as a thinly veiled critique of Indianapolis politics (admittedly, not that thinly veiled because while I’m many things, subtle is not one of them.) I love writing about my home town because I see it as two things: 1) America in microcosm (its history, how it operates, a cross-section of its people); and 2) an interrogation of my identity (I am in this place, in this time, in this context).
But also, I’m hyper-specific in that criticism because, given my conceit, there’s a high likelihood that that what we’re going through here in Indianapolis is an experience playing out in cities across the country; and history teaches us that the same playbook is still being used.
One of the best pieces of writing advice was given to me by fellow author, Daniel Jose Older: Do that $#!+. I was feeling anxious about a project I was working on, as it plunged headlong into territories of race, class, and politics (at the time a departure from the ways that I had been writing). I called up Daniel and those were the words he gave me. Writers have to be bold and take risks. That what we’re supposed to do, and keep doing, as creatives. Speak truth to power. Be fearless. Keep pushing. It can be scary sometimes (which is why it’s good to have friends who can encourage and support you). In the end, taking those risks, accepting those challenges, only makes you a better artist.
Breath of Oblivion is a book two–with its share of an ongoing murder mystery, assassinations, military action, political intrigue, ancient magic, and starships powered by jazz music—it’s also built for folks to be able to jump into. Despite the calls to the principal’s office, I’m not complaining. It’s a reminder of two things: 1) you never know who’s reading you; and 2) at least I’m being read!
*Not to be confused with a local leader being killed off BY REQUEST, constituting one of My Favorite Bit about the book.
Breath of Oblivion: Amazon|Barnes & Noble|Bookshop|Powell’s
Out Today: New Trade Paperback Editions of Old Man’s War and The Ghost Brigades
Posted on November 19, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 18 Comments


As you may know, 2025 is the 20th anniversary year of Old Man’s War, and to celebrate, there will be a new installment in the series, which will come out in September of 2025. Before then, however, we’re taking the previous six novels in the series and giving them a new look and feel, including new covers and a new introduction to each book from me.
Today marks the release of the first two books in the series: Old Man’s War and The Ghost Brigades. They look great, if I do say so myself, and in each case the introduction there are some previously unaired nuggets of trivia about the writing of each book, so there’s that to look forward to. The other four novels in the series will be coming out in 2025, culminating, as noted, with a new Old Man’s War series novel in September. So there’s a lot to look forward to. Collect them all!
A reminder also that I am currently doing a thing with Jay and Mary’s, my local bookseller, to sign and personalize books for the holidays, so if you want to get these snazzy new editions complete with my signature in them, for yourself or as a gift for others, here’s the link to do that.
Twenty years. Wow. I’ll have more to say about that on the actual anniversary (which is, as it happens, January 1st). For now, I’ll say: The time went fast.
— JS
The Big Idea: Alan Smale
Posted on November 18, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 2 Comments

When you have the chance to write a sequel, you do it… right? Well, for Alan Smale, the answer was not as straightforward as all that. Come find out why he hesitated at first to write Radiant Sky, and why now he’s glad he did.
ALAN SMALE:
So, to review: Radiant Sky is the sequel to Hot Moon, my alternate-Apollo novel published in 2022. Hot Moon was the book I always wanted to write, my “technothriller with heart,” set entirely on and around the Moon in 1979-80, in a different and very fun past where the US and the Soviets both have precarious bases on the lunar surface and the Space Race is still going strong. Vivian Carter, the commander of Apollo 32, gets herself caught up in the Cold War … in space.
A war that quickly turns hot, when her routine mission to bring a NASA Cargo Container to Columbia Station, an old-school Skylab in lunar orbit, comes under attack from a trio of Soviet Soyuz craft, in the world’s first and clunkiest space battle. Vivian and her crew are forced to abandon their planned follow-on exploratory mission to the volcanic Marius Hills region of the Moon and divert to Hadley Base, where they and the eighteen NASA astronauts already crewing that base will have to MacGyver/improvise weaponry from the raw materials around them to defend themselves against a second Soviet assault, this time on the lunar surface. And … matters go on from there.
As Radiant Sky begins, it’s now 1983, and the superpower confrontation has calmed into an irritable, blustering, and saber-rattling détente much like the one we experienced in our own timeline. By now there are two joint US-Soviet bases on the Moon, and the relevant technology has improved quite a bit. Such improvements are typical of what happened in the real Space Program(s), of course: just look at the increase in our capabilities over the course of Project Gemini, when we learned to spacewalk, rendezvous, and undertake extended spaceflights, though an amazing ten missions between March 1965 and November 1966. Or, look at the massive increase in the capabilities of Apollo 17 over those of Apollo 11 in just three years, plus the marathon exploits of the astronauts on Skylab (which are greatly underrated and under-appreciated, in my humble opinion).
Anyway: as we learn in the first pages of Radiant Sky, Vivian Carter is now commanding LGS-1, Lunar Geological Survey One, which will circumnavigate the Moon by way of both poles. “Carter’s convoy” consists of a MOLAB – Mobile Laboratory, a small silver pressurized truck – plus a Lunar Rover and one of those nifty lunar dirt bikes from the first book, with a crew of six. It’s at the same time a breathtaking journey of exploration, and a hardcore scientific sampling mission.
Which all sounds great, but since Vivian Carter is in the picture, you might guess that things are going to go south figuratively, as well as literally. She is, after all, a trouble magnet.
And sure enough, at the lunar South Pole, LGS-1 comes under attack in the most unexpected of ways. I mean, the US now has the Lunar Accord with the Soviet Union, so … who are these guys, who have set mines in LGS-1’s path, and a guy with a rocket launcher on a nearby ridge, plus what looks very much like an armed Lunokhod Rover coming up behind them? And, can Vivian and her crew survive this desperate encounter?
I absolutely, honestly, hand on heart, intended Hot Moon to be a standalone. I poured into it all my love for human spaceflight: the US Apollo Program that I grew up with, plus the intriguing details we’ve learned since about the Soviet lunar program, and wrote the best book I possibly could – my love affair to Apollo, in all its retro, dorky goodness. But when Book One got some nice reviews, and blurbs from some Big Names, and I was given the opportunity to write a sequel, I … Well, you know what? I didn’t jump at it. I took a few months to think about it, sketching out possibilities, and making sure this was what I really wanted to do. The ideas started coming faster and faster, and the plot built in my head, and before I knew it I really wanted to write Radiant Sky. I wanted to write it a lot.
Book One is still complete in itself. But when I reread it now, it genuinely feels like I wrote it with the express intention of following up with a second book. So many hooks. So many possibilities for interesting character arcs and fun technologies. A general thickening of the plot, in the dangerous geopolitical situation of the 1980s. Past Alan’s subconscious had apparently been hard at work, planting the seeds and laying the groundwork.
So I got to write another Best Book I could write about Apollo, and Soyuz, and lunar exploration and armed conflict. Getting to play once again with a realistic space program in what I truly believe could have been a realistic and attainable version of the 1980s has been a great thrill.
Radiant Sky is an adventure, a human-based thriller of an Apollo program and a lunar exploration initiative that might have been. For sure, it’s full of derring-do and intrigue and character stuff, but just as in Hot Moon, I stay very close to what could have been attainable with the technology of the day – in fact, most of the technologies I’ve used were already on the drawing board when our Apollo Program ended, or are straightforward extrapolations.
Just about everything in Radiant Sky – good and bad, the small-arms fire and military stuff as well as the cool technological advances that benefit everyone – could have been achieved. Vivian’s Moon is dangerous, and there’s an Earth in the background that is politically messed up, but despite my characters’ various trials and tribulations, both books present a deeply optimistic view of human spaceflight, and of humanity itself. We did great things in space. We could have done more.
And, you know what? We still might, in the next ten years. We could be back on the Moon in my lifetime. Or even setting our sights (and sites) on Mars. Suddenly, we’re once again in an era where nothing seems impossible, where science fiction can become science fact, right in front of our eyes.
Which is a big deal. And, as I’ve said elsewhere: that is really incredibly astonishingly cool.
Radiant Sky: Amazon|Barnes & Noble|Bookshop|Powell’s
View From a Hotel Window, 11/15/24: Cincinnati
Posted on November 15, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 12 Comments

And in what is possibly a first for this series of photos: an ice rink! Because I guess it is that time of year, isn’t it.
This is also the last hotel shot of the year, as tomorrow’s Books By the Banks is my last public appearance of 2024. After this I crawl into a hole to finish the current novel, and then possibly sleep until 2025. So by all means, if you are in or near Cincy, come say hello to me tomorrow. Or forever hold your peace, “forever” in this case being until December 31, 2024.
— JS
The Big Idea: Sharon Shinn
Posted on November 15, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 2 Comments

For her new novel Alibi, author Sharon Shinn strays a bit from what she’s usually known for, to mix another genre of literature into her storytelling. What mysteries has she uncovered from this process? Read on!
SHARON SHINN:
I write speculative fiction with a high romance quotient, so it’s rare that I dabble in the mystery genre. But that’s where I’ve grounded my newest book, Alibi, which takes place in the near future when teleport is the most common means of transit. (If you can travel anywhere almost instantly, how can you have an alibi for murder?)
Alibi’s structure is a little unconventional in that the death doesn’t occur until about 50 pages from the end. Still, the prologue makes it clear that somebody’s going to die soon. That gives readers opportunities to watch for clues as the story unfolds or start to fret as the main characters take stupid risks that might come back to haunt them once the cops start looking for suspects.
It’s not the first time I’ve tried my hand at a mystery. I’ve published three short stories that follow a fairly traditional whodunit format and one novel (Summers at Castle Auburn) that includes a high-profile murder toward the end of the book. I even wrote a script for a five-minute story that my brother produced when he ran a murder mystery company in Copenhagen ten years ago. (Here’s Part One, the murder, and Part Two, the solution.)
I like writing mysteries for a couple of reasons. First, they make sense of the world—or at least they illuminate one small event in the unceasing tide of bewildering madness. How did this happen? Why did this happen? Who is responsible? These are questions that arise over and over in real life but so often don’t have definitive answers. But in mysteries, the the knots are untangled and the entire pattern is revealed.
Second, mysteries imagine a society in which actions have consequences. Evil-doers are punished. Justice is served.
There’s usually a clear-cut villain in a murder mystery, though that varies by the book. Often, the victim is someone who deserves to die—a blackmailer, say, or a violent abuser. Sometimes the reader is even rooting for the murderer to get away with the crime, because that outcome offers a kind of emotional justice. Other times, it’s the killer who’s the monster, and the pleasure comes from watching the brute come crashing down.
Both of these scenarios are so satisfying because—again—they are so rare in the world we actually live in. In real life, serial killers operate for decades and are never identified; Indigenous girls disappear and the news outlets don’t even notice. But mystery novels make us believe that sometimes right and wrong can be pushed into balance. Sometimes the cruel are punished and the innocent are avenged.
In the mysteries I’ve written, I tend to go with the trope of the scumbag whose death is a cause for celebration. (That’s certainly true in Alibi, where the murder victim is a billionaire whose many unsavory traits include a callous indifference to his dying son.) In fact, in most of my books, even the ones that are straight-up fantasy, my villains are usually irredeemably awful. I don’t bother with much subtlety or nuance. I can’t bring myself to buy into the common wisdom that “everybody has a good side.”
In fact, I can’t imagine that anyone who’s reading the news today could subscribe to that theory. Haven’t they heard about the husband who repeatedly drugs his wife and invites strangers in to have sex with her? Or the pharma bro who jacks up the prices of lifesaving medicines simply to make a profit? Or the woman who kills her children because her new husband convinces her the kids are possessed? I don’t know, maybe in their free time these individuals are rescuing kittens and knitting blankets for homeless shelters. But it’s hard for me to come up with enough good deeds they could perform to offset the bad stuff they’ve done.
That’s what I like about writing mysteries. I can make sure everyone gets what they deserve. I don’t have to pretend there might be extenuating circumstances.
I think mysteries are popular for another reason: They have an intellectual payoff as well as an emotional one, which offers parallel rewards for people on both side of the page. Readers have a chance to match their wits against the protagonist’s and feel a thrill of smugness if they solve the crime before the detective does. Writers have the absorbing challenge of putting together a precise and perfect puzzle that satisfies three requirements of the genre: planting the right clues, providing motives and backstories for a large cast of characters, and playing fair with the reader without giving too much away.
A few years ago, a friend told me that he thought mysteries would be the hardest books to write largely because of those three requirements. I replied that I think any type of fiction has to incorporate some of the same elements. The author’s job is to provide just enough information at just the right moment to guide the reader to a defined ending that might be surprising, devastating, or uplifting, depending on the book itself.
Not all fiction has a big final reveal, like mysteries do, but most of it does have an end goal—to make readers believe that the story is real, that it makes sense, that it is as complete and self-contained as a snow globe. Nothing is missing or out of place. That’s not a pleasure we can find often in our daily lives. A novel might be fantastical or mysterious, it might be full of demons or murderers—but sometimes, it’s a better place to live.
Alibi: Amazon|Barnes & Noble|Bookshop|Powell’s
The Big Idea: Kat Richardson
Posted on November 14, 2024 Posted by Athena Scalzi 1 Comment

Sometimes as an author you find a character, and sometimes the character finds you. In this Big Idea for Storm Waters, author Kat Richardson introduces a character who stopped by… and then stayed for a whole adventure.
KAT RICHARDSON:
Classic mysteries, golden age American crime film, and modern fantasy novels—plus a side of pulp-noir style—in a dark fantasy version of Hollywood. That’s where Storm Waters started. Initially I thought it was just some pesky character who showed up (in my post-cancer-surgery brain) and wouldn’t shut up—a phenomenon a lot of writers talk about, but which I’d never experienced before. This guy, whose name was Marty Storm, was such a Hardboiled trope: he talked like Philip Marlowe, dressed like Cary Grant, and drank like Nick Charles. But what he kept talking about was ghosts, magic, family ties of the most toxic kind, and how to break out of them.
A crime thriller with a magic-using antihero who’s literally haunted by his family’s past and his own misdeeds? Oh, yes. This was something I wanted to write, but I also wanted to modernize my take on hardboiled crime noir, as well as adding in the ghosts and magic, family trouble, redemption, and all the ridiculous glamour and grime of Hollywood’s gilded self-image. Sounds pulpy, but that’s okay. Storm Waters is a sort of love letter to the films and pulp detective fiction of the 1930s and 1940s, with their witty banter and mean streets, which I love, mixed with my unquenchable urge to throw magic and fantasy into an otherwise mix.
I had a lot of conversations with Marty. A lot of them were terrible, gruesome, or just… not right, and a lot of them were dead ends, but one stuck. I was out walking the dog, thinking about coffee and ghosts and imagining the fog that would form on the top of a morning’s hot cup o’ joe in a room suddenly gone chilly with the presence of something uncanny and murderous. After that, things began to fall into place with crooked cops, magic, murder, and menacing ghosts. And that’s where the book starts.
But an idea and a character are not enough. So I started digging into crime stories (fictional and real) of the period, as well as the history of Los Angeles, Hollywood, and Long Beach—because even though I grew up there, LA is great at erasing and remodeling its history—then expanding into New Orleans, train travel, Pullman Porters (of which most, sadly, got left on the editing table), and on and on. Eventually I had to come up for air and figure out what I was going to use and what I wasn’t. I had a lot of information about the period I finally chose for Marty’s story: the first half of 1934—the worst year of the Great Depression.
It was also the first year after Prohibition ended. I’d wanted to set the book earlier, but that would have made Marty too young for the self-examination that I wanted him to undertake on the way to making this story more modern and respectful of certain issues. And I wanted to draw some parallels between the political and social anxiety that was growing in the United States of my own time with the anxiety growing in the 1930s over the events that would ignite the Second World War. Anxiety is the essence of noir. But the first year after Prohibition was a strange adjustment for a lot of people in North America and it adds another thing to complicate Marty’s life, since he used to be a bootlegger, among other bad habits.
I admit I took a lot of inspiration from the American crime and mystery writers of the period: Dashiell Hammett, Cornell Woolrich, James M. Caine, and Raymond Chandler. And also from films like The Thin Man, The Maltese Falcon, The Public Enemy, and The Night Has a Thousand Eyes, as well as the music that was popular (and some that was unpopular.) It’s an interesting time to mess around in, though it does have a lot of potential pitfalls, which I hoped to avoid falling into without completely erasing their implications.
Writing this book was an adventure and it took me to a lot of places I’d like to revisit in future volumes, if I get the chance: the man who vanished from a ferry between Los Angeles and San Diego and was never found, the tales of ghosts around the old Plaza of downtown, the flooding of the Los Angeles river in 1938 and the drastic change that made in the landscape and politics. Like its setting, Storm Waters is not the real world, but it has some reflections of it in flickers of silvery projector light.
Storm Waters: Amazon|Barnes & Noble|Bookshop|Powell’s
100,000 Miles
Posted on November 14, 2024 Posted by John Scalzi 34 Comments


I have had my MINI Countryman since April of 2011 (here’s the post where we went to pick it up, you can tell it was a long time ago because Athena is shorter than I am), but it was only last night, on my way back from an event in Medina, Ohio, that the car passed the milestone of 100,000 miles of use. That’s 4,947 days from pickup to 100k, which means on a daily basis I averaged 20.21 miles on the Countryman.
Which is of course not how it actually worked. How it actually worked was I would go days without using the car at all, since I work from home and while at home I don’t have much of a social life. I might leave the house once a week on a short grocery run, which would be between five and thirty miles round trip, depending on the stores I was hitting. Then, once every couple of months or so, I would take a long drive, often to an event or a convention – as I did last night; I added about 360 miles going to the event and back. So: Bursts of inactivity punctuated by long distances. The longest trip I think I made with this car was to Chicago and back, which it has done several times now, a round trip of nearly 600 miles.
No matter how you slice it, however, I’ve driven the car less than most people drive their cars. In 2022, the US average for annual mileage on a car is 14,489 miles; I’m averaging 7,383, which is barely over half. I can’t say this is about virtue, just the fact that I work from home and have other people, primarily Krissy, using their cars to do most of the errands. I and Krissy and Athena each have our own vehicles; I drive the least of the three of us by far.
I’ll note that when I picked up this car in 2011, I said I suspected this would be the last car we bought that would be powered entirely by a combustion engine. This turned out to be not quite true when we picked up a used minivan for Athena’s use a couple of years ago. But Krissy did just get a new car, and that car is indeed a hybrid (our plans for her to get a Ford F-150 Lightning fell through for various reasons). If and when I pick up another car, I will probably either go for a PHEV or an electric car entirely. Given that I live in a charging desert, a PHEV will seem to more likely choice (this is what I would get if I had to get one now), but I think I lot will depend on when I get a new car; there are some interesting solid-state car batteries coming down road that will have far more extended ranges than current electric cars.
Barring a car crash or an unforeseen mechanical failure, however, I’m not going to be in a rush to get a new car. I like my car and it suits me aesthetically. I’ve maintained the MINI well over the years and the current maintenance costs are pretty minimal, and given how little I drive it, the fuel costs are manageable (even if it does take premium). We paid cash for it so there’s no monthly payment on it and the insurance costs at this point are low. Plus we’re about to an era where new cars are going to get drastically more expensive thanks to planned (very stupid) tariffs, and anyway we just got a new car. Besides, this car only has 100K miles on it! It’s good for a few more. I’ll be keeping it.
Still, passing the 100k milestone feels pretty significant. Despite having it for 13 years now, my brain still thinks of my MINI as a newish car. I suppose I can’t say that any more. With 100k miles on it, it’s a distinctly middle-aged car. But then I’m a middle-aged man. I suppose it works out.

— JS
The Big Idea: Andrew Romine
Posted on November 13, 2024 Posted by Athena Scalzi 5 Comments

We can’t all be Jedi, or captains of the Enterprise, but maybe we can be Ellen Ripleys, maybe we can be heroic in our own right. Venture on and see how author Andrew Romine explores this concept in the Big Idea for his newest novel, The Mosquito Fleet.
ANDREW ROMINE:
How Do You Want to Go to Space?
My first (sadly, fictional) voyages to space were aboard the Millennium Falcon and the starship Enterprise. I think I was 12 or 13 when I first saw Ridley Scott’s Alien, and it must have been late night on HBO or Cinemax (I’m not quite old enough to have caught the first run in theaters). I was prepared to be terrified, but I didn’t expect the deep sense of wonder that preceded that infamous chestburster scene, nor the scrappy, breathless fight for survival that followed.
I rooted for the blue collar crew of the Nostromo harder than for Luke Skywalker or Captain Kirk. After all, you knew those guys were going to prevail. Things weren’t so certain for Alien’s space truckers; they were way out of their league against a sinister and unstoppable force of nature.
Alien could have been just another monster movie, but the credible vibes of the flawed crew and their ordinary, working world elevated it. They acted in turns heroically, selfishly, and in full-on animal panic. Just like real people.
The ships that make up my “Mosquito Fleet” are inspired by actual maritime history. The term has been used to describe a number of small flotillas of trawlers, schooners, ferries, gunboats, and other sailing vessels. These fleets are often a hodgepodge of civilian ships plying the coastal waters of settled areas where there are no roads or rails.
One such ragtag fleet served the Puget Sound region of western Washington state in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Chartered by the Puget Sound Navigation Company (or otherwise independently operated) these ships hauled passengers and cargo from destinations both settled and wild. When I first started dreaming up the characters of The Mosquito Fleet, I knew I wanted to go to space on a ship like that and tell the story of hardworking spacers who try to make ends meet by hauling passengers from one area of wild space to another…
The weary crew of the Grass is Greener are just looking to complete a long route to a remote colony world. The captain has health worries, and the engineer works too hard to keep the ship running. Naturally, there’s a synthetic crew member aboard too. Lira is the stim-addled navigator, haunted by the disaster that destroyed her previous ship.
In the Alien films, androids are often portrayed as the (not-so) secret villains, tools of the corporate plot that dooms our heroes. In Lira, I wanted a synthetic that is as much at the whims of life on the edge of space as her crew. She has no secret source of strength or company directive to fall back on. She’s just trying to make a life one day at a time like everyone else.
Antagonist Durance Pike, like many absolutists, longs for a simpler world that truly only exists in his mind. As one routine ferry voyage comes to an end, this farmer-turned-agitator falls prey to the siren call of a lifeforce beyond his reckoning.
The novel follows the journeys of other spacers, too, never veering far from Lira and Pike’s central stories. There’s Nikela Abreu, a corporate flunkie determined to extract profit for the Company in the wake of Pike’s trail of destruction while grappling with unpleasant truths from her own past. Cam is a spacer aboard an aging tug who by saving an adrift castaway uncovers a dark secret that could change the Spinward Colonies forever.
The spacers of The Mosquito Fleet are mere specks of dust in the cosmos, confronting horrors from beyond the deep time of the universe, but they are not small people. They all go to space hoping to pay the rent, get health care, and escape from the poor choices of their pasts.
To me, they are far more interesting than the Rebels of a galaxy far, far away, or the brave explorers boldly going to Space. I hope The Mosquito Fleet convinces you a little bit of that, too.
The Mosquito Fleet: Amazon|Barnes & Noble|Kobo
The Big Idea: Yaroslav Barsukov
Posted on November 12, 2024 Posted by Athena Scalzi 8 Comments

Art imitates life. Or maybe life imitates art? It certainly seems that way in author Yaroslav Barsukov’s Big Idea for his newest novel, Sleeping Worlds Have No Memory. Come along and see for yourself the parallels drawn between our two worlds.
YAROSLAV BARSUKOV:
When I was writing the Big Idea essay for my Nebula-nominated novella Tower of Mud and Straw, I had no clue I had a prophetic book on my hands. Tower, a work of science fantasy, had been outlined in December 2019 and written in the period from January to May 2020, a year before the first Russian military buildup near Ukraine’s borders and two years before the war started.
There’s a version of Russia in both the novella and my new novel Sleeping Worlds Have No Memory, which is inspired by it (and no, you don’t need to have read the novella—an extended Director’s Cut of it forms the novel’s first half). More specifically, the kingdom of Duma is based on the 19th-century Russian Empire, with a dash of Austro-Hungary thrown in for good measure.
Everybody is expecting an invasion, and that’s why they’re building this mammoth tower—as a deterrent. People talk at length about how there have always been rumors of Duma attacking, even when they were kids. There’s even a burned-down village by the name of Poltava (a victim of a recent border dispute) the heroes visit at one point; the real Poltava is a city and a region in Ukraine that came within an inch of being invaded by Putin’s forces. Kirkus, who did a starred review of the novella (they also gave Sleeping Worlds a starred review a couple of weeks back!), thought these were Cold War vibes. Hell, I thought so too! We were so wrong …
After Tower of Mud and Straw had made the Nebula shortlist, there was an immediate interest from Russia’s largest traditional publisher, Eksmo. The translation came out in February 2022, just a month before the war, and some of the Russian bloggers couldn’t even read it. “I switch on the TV, news comes on, I turn it off and pick up a fantasy book instead—and it’s the exact same stuff!”
I’ve always been shy about saying I’d predicted the war. I used to say the novella had anticipated it—until a reviewer of Sleeping Worlds pointed me to something one of the character says.
“Consider this: if the tower doesn’t get finished within the next two years, Duma will attempt an incursion.”
The sentence was written in April 2020.
April 2020 + 2 years = April 2022. I was off by two months.
I just had breakfast the other day with the wonderful award-winning writer from Odesa, Anna Mikhalevskaya (I’d narrated one of her beautiful stories for PodCastle), and she said, “It’s like, it’s all there, right on the page.” I never intended to write a prophetic piece, mind you; it all happened by itself. And it wasn’t the first time—in 2019, StarShipSofa ran a story of mine in which Reagan ends the Cold War by raising a black dome over Russia’s European part, effectively plunging the country into international isolation. In 2017, I penned a novella about a magical plague in Vienna, which had people self-isolating and measuring saturation—albeit not with oxygen but with magic.
So for the new novel, Sleeping Worlds Have No Memory, I tried to predict the end of the war. Consciously, this time. Of course, there’s no end in sight, and I had to reach for speculative elements: the nature of reality, quantum mechanics’ observation theory. In a fantasy novel, yep. I know I’m crazy!
But if you think I’m a little too crazy, I’ve got more for you. In Sleeping Worlds, part of the action takes place in Duma’s capital. I envisioned the city as home to a huge seagull population. As soon as he arrives, the main character asks the woman who brought him there, “Seagulls? But we’re nowhere near the sea, right?” She responds with, “They look regal, but they really are flying rats. They feed on garbage.” Lo and behold, it’s August; I fly to Glasgow for the Worldcon. I go out for dinner—and there they are, the seagulls. “But Glasgow doesn’t have a coastline, right?” And the person next to me goes, “Doesn’t matter—the gulls are scavengers, they eat shit off the ground …”
Sleeping Worlds also deals extensively with propaganda and the distortion of truth, a lot of which we were seeing right now, during the latest US election race. There are no foreigners in Duma, no criminals, no neurodiverse, and their own tower (spoiler alert!) is “an instrument of peace.”
You could write it all off as coincidence(s). Or not. In any case, don’t listen to anyone, not even me—instead, I’d love you to pick up Sleeping Worlds Have No Memory and make up your own mind.
Sleeping Worlds Have No Memory: Amazon|Barnes & Noble|Kobo|Powell’s




Whatever Everyone Else is Saying