Win two steampunk time travel titles

I love time travel stories. Whether its Bill and Ted’s Excellent Adventure, Somewhere in Time, or Time Machine (1960 version), if it involves a mash-up of two or more time periods, I’m there with bells on. In this case, Christine Bell, whose latest book The Bewitching Tale of Stormy Gale I had the privilege of reading in advance of its release on May 28, 2012.

This is the sequel to The Twisted Tale of Stormy Gale, the adventure of a former Victorian street urchin turned time pirate who is adopted by an inventor and grows up in the 1990s with a brother named Bacon Frogs.

In this new adventure, Stormy is on the tail of a suspicious man seeking mercury in 1841 London, and ends up in the middle of a Salem witch hunt. A little bit Doctor Who, a little bit Mission Impossible (cue the theme music: dun dun da-da…), not too obnoxious on the steampunk, written as a first person narrative — which I found a hoot, but YMMV.

Christine Bell’s tales are a perfect storm for my reading pleasure. One rather frisky sex scene between Stormy and her husband, Dev the Loony Duke of Leister, is the only thing keeping me from sharing this with my almost 12-year-old daughter, who would deeply appreciate the heroine’s bold as brass personality and contemporary sense of humor. Living in Victorian London, Stormy laments, “God, I missed Google.” I would, too, Stormy, I would, too.

Would you like FREE digital copies (epub or pdf) of Stormy’s tales? Just leave a comment and one lucky winner will be chosen at random on May 30.

~ J.L. Hilton

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Real-life river dwelling tribes face genocide

This post originally appeared on the Contact – Infinite Futures SF blog on May 8, 2012.

I think one of the important features of science fiction has always been its ability to draw attention to injustice, to suggest better possible futures, warn us away from the paths we’re on, and to inspire new ideas — both social and technological.

My novel Stellarnet Rebel features an alien race called the Glin whose environment is devastated by Tikati invaders. Sure, it’s one of the common tropes in fiction. “Advanced technological power exploits/invades/destroys culture unable to defend itself.” You know it from AvatarStar TrekBabylon 5Star Wars and many, many more.

You also know it from history.

Unfortunately, there’s another real-world example happening right now, not in the distant past or imaginary future.

Brazil’s Awá tribe will face extinction unless more is done to protect their land rights, which are being abused by illegal loggers and cattle ranchers. Awá land within Brazil has been legally demarcated, but its boundaries are not respected. The Awá people have nowhere left to retreat. There are several accounts of them being killed. (Source: Survival International)

Read more or watch the video here.

~ J.L. Hilton

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One reader’s trash is another reader’s treasure

If there’s anything I’ve learned from being a published author, it’s one reader’s trash is another reader’s treasure.

I used to be a ruthless reviewer, when I wrote entertainment columns for newspapers. Movies, music, books, and events all filtered through my personal tastes and scathing sarcasm, for the sake of humor and meeting a deadline.

When no longer a columnist, I continued to gush my very subjective love or hate in places like Amazon, Facebook, Google reviews, Citysearch or blogs, laboring under the delusion that I had some kind of qualification based on my college education, editorial experience and highly-overrated sense of self importance.

Now that I know how easy it is for a misspelled word to appear in print — regardless of the fact that ten different sets of eyes read it — or how difficult it is to strike a balance between “enough detail to satisfy the readers who want excessive description” and “not bogging down the story with things that don’t matter” … I’m not as critical as I used to be.

I am a kinder, gentler reader now. When I write reviews, I will say “This is well-written and the characters are likeable, but I’m just not into crime dramas” or “The novel is light-hearted, and I expected something a little more serious.” Rather than, “THIS BOOK SUCKS. WHY DIDN’T THE WRITER CRAWL INTO MY HEAD AND MAKE THIS BOOK JUST FOR ME?!? WAAAAHHHH!” Which is pretty much, when I look back, what I was really saying when I wrote negative reviews in the past.

I’ve had readers say they loved my novel Stellarnet Rebel and re-read it five times. I’ve had readers say it sucked. I’ve had 5-star ratings on Amazon and Goodreads. I’ve had 2-star ratings. There are fans who understand the characters so well, they’ve made observations that blew my mind and suggestions I’ve incorporated into the sequels. And I’ve had critics who tore the work apart.

Anyone can write — or draw, sing, make a Youtube vid, whatever. But sharing it with the public is an act of courage. I understand that, now. We should encourage that bravery. And, yes, critique it, but in a useful way, understanding that we all bring our own baggage and agenda to every book we read.

~ J.L. Hilton

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I will be a panelist at NC Spec Fiction Night

I will be a panelist at the Spring 2012 NC Speculative Fiction Night: The Science of Science Fiction 5-7 pm, Sunday, April 15 (my birthday). Includes a half-dozen local and regional authors, artists, and creators with short readings, talks, and a science fiction role-playing game demo.

This is an official event of the North Carolina Science Festival, showcasing science and technology and the educational, cultural and financial impact of science in our state. It wil also be the launch of Bull Spec issue #7.

My fellow panelists will be David Drake, Natania Barron, Stephanie Ricker, Jeremy Whitley, and Steve Segedy.

Location: Sci-Fi Genre, 3215 Old Chapel Hill Rd, Durham, NC 27707

~ J.L. Hilton

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A writer and a parent: Living in two worlds

The selkie wizard shed his seal form and stepped onto the sand. The white-capped waves of the

Knock at the door. Child enters without waiting for an answer. “Mom, look at this thing I made with the glue and the toothpicks, and its stuck here, and it looks like a thing.”

“That’s awesome, honey. Now, Mommy’s working. It’s 8:30. You need to brush your teeth and get in bed.”

“OK. Goodnight, Mommy.” Big kiss.

“Goodnight, honey, I love you.”

The selkie wizard shed his seal form and stepped onto the sand. The white-capped waves of the Farnorth Sea receded, only to throw themselves at his feet again in supplication, as if begging him not to leave. The Temple of

Door bangs open. “Mom, I just hurt myself when I was getting my pajamas on. I was closing the drawer and then I went oof and it was ow and I bonked my knee and I laughed.”

“Are you OK?”

“Yeah. It was just funny.”

“OK, then you need to go to bed. Goodnight.”

“Goodnight.” Another kiss.

The selkie wizard shed his seal form and stepped onto the sand. The white-capped waves of the Farnorth Sea receded, only to throw themselves at his feet again in supplication, as if begging him not to leave. The Temple of Skymorn lay ahead, its ancient bronze steps crusted with verdigris. He had to reach the top of the labyrinthine staircase before the third moon rose. A simple task, if

Door flung open. Older child says, “Mom, why are there underpants in the bathroom sink?”

“I don’t know. Is the washing machine empty?”

“Yes.”

“Then put them in there.”

“Well, I would, but I just went to the bathroom and I have to wash my hands first. But I can’t wash them in my bathroom, because of the underwear.” Though why washing one’s hands before moving dirty underwear from a sink to a washing machine is a mystery to me.

Enters my bathroom with all the subtlety of a barbarian hoard.

The selkie wizard shed his seal form and stepped onto the sand. The white-capped waves of the Farnorth Sea receded, only to throw themselves at his feet again in supplication, as if begging him not to leave. The Temple of Skymorn lay ahead, its ancient bronze steps crusted with verdigris. He had to reach the top of the labyrinthine staircase before the third moon rose. A simple task, if one needed only to run.

This was his fifth attempt at retrieving the Ray of Dawn, a seraphic fire gem with unquenchable light. Without it, the undead merrow minions of the Murk Lord would

Previous child enters. “Mom, why is she in your bathroom when –?”

“GET OUT. EVERYONE GET OUT. I AM WORKING. WHERE’S YOUR FATHER? AND PUT THAT UNDERWEAR IN THE WASHING MACHINE.”

In case anyone is wondering why it takes me so long to write anything, now you know.

~ J.L. Hilton

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Imagination will continue, with or without paper

In opposition to eReaders, I’ve been hearing a lot of people say, “But I like books. I like the way they smell, I like turning pages, I like libraries and book stores…”

I’m going to dust off my psych degree for a sec and suggest that maybe people like the way printed books look and smell because they’ve learned to associate those extraneous qualities with something they love. Sort of like catching a whiff of your lover’s cologne, your stomach jumps, your heart races, even though it’s some other guy walking by.

I love the weird way the water smells inside the Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Disneyland. But if someone told me I could ride that rides — and millions more — anytime I wanted to activate my holodeck device… only, I’d have to give up the watery smell… I’d say, “No way. If it doesn’t have the smell, and I don’t have to wait in long lines, and it doesn’t include over-priced churros, forget it.”

No I wouldn’t.

Libraries aren’t beautiful because we like seeing paper stacked on shelves. They’re beautiful because they represent possibility, revelation, power, knowledge, imagination, discovery. An eReader is beautiful for the same reasons. Even more beautiful, in fact, because I can put it in my pocket and have it with me always.

You know what I like? I like a good story. I don’t read books for the smell. I don’t read so I can turn pages or hear paper crinkle. I read to be entertained, educated, inspired, or all of the above.

To those who are afraid eReaders will make books “go away,” I say, don’t panic. Novels, novellas, reference works, encyclopedias, biographies and all of that won’t go anywhere, any more than music went away when we transitioned from minstrels to opera houses, or from wax cylinders to records to 8-tracks to cassettes to CDs to mp3.

The work will always be there, the delivery devices will just change. In fact, there will be more books to choose from than ever before.

I’ve actually heard people say, “digital will get lost, but paper is forever.” So, if you have a digital camera, aren’t you afraid all of your pictures will go away? If you do your banking online and use a debit card, aren’t you afraid your money will go away?

Maybe digital pages don’t make any noise. Maybe they can’t be grasped and flicked with a sharp and satisfying snap of your wrist. But if you’re engaged in the words upon them, why would that matter? What matters are wonderful tales, insightful theories, and the unprecedented proliferation and distribution of storytelling and information.

To me, disgruntled grumbles bibliophiles decrying the momentum of the digital age sound like this:

I just love the feel of a buggy whip in my hand. It’s nothing like a steering wheel. I enjoy bouncing at 8mph over a rutted dirt road. Horses and carts will never go away completely. What will happen if we run out of this gasoline stuff after awhile, anyway? And how can we guarantee there will be replacement parts for all of these cars? They’re too expensive for most people to have one. Horses will always be around. And buggies. I love my buggy collection.

In a perfect world, I’d like to see the option of choice, with all books available as both digital and print-on-demand, just to make everyone happy. But the fact is that digital book sales continue to grow, while paperback sales continue to fall, and eReader owners buy more books, on average, than people without eReaders.

“(A)lmost three-quarters of eReader users are reading 6 or more books in an average year. Among those who do not use an eReader, the numbers are reversed… three in five non eReader users are reading 5 or fewer books on average in a year.” (Marketwatch)

So you can see where things are heading. Just keep calm and keep reading. It will be fine.

~ J.L. Hilton

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The not-so glamorous life of a writer

Being a published author, like being a reporter, is one of those “glamorous” jobs that isn’t.

Anyone not in the news business may think being a newspaper reporter means looking like this guy. Reporters hang out with celebrities and politicians, travel to foreign countries, have abrasive meetings with wise-cracking editors, skulk around in parking garages with trench-coated whistle-blowers, win Nobel Prizes, and occasionally hump Superman, when we’re not otherwise coordinating our liberal agenda with the heads of the Illuminati.

And sure, there are a few reporters like that. Just as there are a few authors named Stephen King, George R. R. Martin, J. K. Rowling, or Stephenie Meyer.

But for most people in the news biz — the ones working in community newspapers and downsized dailies — being a reporter means working in a dank, windowless room, eating anything people are willing to leave on the broken filing cabinet in the corner. Two-day old Thanksgiving pies, scraps from the catered advertiser luncheon, and a bag of stale circus peanut candy are all mighty fine eatin’ to a group of cynical, over-worked, underpaid ambulance-chasers.

When I worked as a reporter, my days sometimes started at 7am, sometimes ended at 2am, depending on town meetings, random crime and publishing deadlines. I worked every single holiday. Yeah, if I had a dollar for everyone who’s ever asked me, “Why did you have to work on (insert holiday here, including CHRISTMAS)?” and I answered, “Well, you got a paper that day, didn’t you? You think magic elves made it?” then I might have been able to afford a decent lunch.

I spent the bulk of my time not actually reporting anything but inputting information — letters to the editor, local high school sports stats, announcements from the Chamber of Commerce, etc. This was back in the old days, the late ’90s, before everyone had email that I could copy and paste.

When I wasn’t copying information out of the police blotter by hand into a paper notebook and decoding all of their numbers and acronyms — technically it was “public information” but that didn’t mean they would make it easy for the public to understand — I was playing phone tag over the latest Marine killed in training exercises on the local military base, or taking pictures of empty, broken car seats at the sites of auto accidents. Yay, fun.

Humping Superman is one of the few job perks of being a newspaper reporter.

The most famous person I ever interviewed was “America’s Top Psychic” Kenny Kingston. The only politicians I hung out with were the small-town city council members who judged the Pioneer Days Outhouse Races. I was once stalked by a reader who sent me letters in which he talked about skinning women. Yeah. The police got involved in that one.

Granted, humping Superman was one of the few job perks, but the rest was a mostly crazy, sad, dangerous, thankless job that often involved phone conversations like this one:

Me: “Hello? This is Lois Lane with the Daily Planet.” (Not really, but names are changed to protect the not-so-innocent.)

Caller: “You hate my son’s school!”

Me: “Which school is that, ma’am?”

Caller: “West Shitborough High School! All you ever write about is EAST Shitborough High.”

Me: “I wrote about West Shitborough last week. Every week, I alternate schools.”

Caller: “I bet you graduated from East Shitborough!”

Me: “No, I just moved here from the other side of the country. I don’t have a preference for either East or West Shitborough.”

Caller: “Well, you screwed up all of your information. The principal’s name is Mrs. BROWN, not Mrs. BRAWN.”

Me: “Yes, I know. My editor changed it. We had an argument and he insisted he knew her personally.”

Caller: “So, it’s your editor who hates West Shitborough!”

Me: “Yes. Would you like me to transfer you to him?”

Caller: “No, I want to keep yelling at you! YOUR name is in the byline!”

So, why didn’t I leave for a better-paying, less-stressful job? Because I believe with my whole heart and mind in freedom of the press. Because I loved being a part of something that was so important to so many people — information. And I’ll not deny that my passion for printers ink poured into my novel, Stellarnet Rebel, though journalists are replaced by interstellar bloggers, in my version of the future.

I did eventually leave the job, in part because I became a mother and chose to pursue other interests that didn’t involve constant contact with death, murder, politics and idiocy.

But, returning to my original point, there’s a big difference between what people perceive a writer to be, and what she really is. Ever writers of fiction.

Unlike being a reporter, being a writer means working in a dank, windowless room, eating anything people are willing to toss at you for free and … oh … wait a minute …

This post was inspired by a conversation on my Facebook author page, where I solicited ideas for promotional swag. I was asked why I, the author, had to deal with marketing.

Fact is, first-time authors don’t get a lot of promotion, and there are thousands of great books published every year that you’ve probably never heard of because they weren’t made into movies — and that’s not including all of the self-published and small press offerings. Carina Press does give me stickers, postcards, graphics, ads, etc., and lines up blogging and other opportunities for me. But, from what I’ve heard, many publishers, even large print houses, don’t do that much.

As Michael Ray King says in his article, “Writing Myths Perpetuated,” and which I’ve found echoed throughout the author community:

Your book must be written – true – it must be well-edited – true – and your book must be marketed – true.  But that marketing is not going to be your publisher.  I know a seven-time New York Times bestselling author that received $50,000 for promotion of his new book.

Large dollars you say?  In advertising dollars that $50K won’t go anywhere nationally.  Nor regionally for that matter.  This is not money for the author either.  This is the advertising budget.  For a seven-time New York Times bestselling author.

My point here is that you, the author, will have to market and promote your book.  You will spend your money, your time,  your resources and your effort to get this baby off the ground.  Writing the book is only 5-10% of the work.

One of thousands of examples is when Mary Robinette Kowal published her first regency-period fantasy novel Shades of Milk and Honey with Tor. She came up with the idea of giving away sandalwood fans as promo items, and personally purchased and stamped them with her book’s website. I know, because I got one from her at a coffee klatch during NASFiC in 2010. She also produced her own book trailer, as many authors do.

My parting hope is that I leave you, Reader, with the knowledge that authors need you. If you love a story, tell your friends. Share on Facebook and Twitter. Leave a review on Amazon, B&N, Google books, or Goodreads. Writers love to hear from you, but we’d prefer to read a blog post about how much you enjoyed our work so we can repost it and use it in our PR and social media.

I also invite you to become acquainted with niche and small press book publishers — those like Mocha Memoirs Press, whose recently-released title Moses: The Chronicles of Harriet Tubman Book 1 is a kickass steampunk, supernatural action-adventure. Or authors like SM Reine, whose self-published 19 Dragons was one of the most engaging stories I’ve read in a long time.

Don’t assume that the limited selection you see on the brick-and-mortar bookstore shelves are ALL of the books you could possibly read. Don’t assume that our promo swag came from some New York office. Don’t assume that having a published novel means we’re suddenly quitting our jobs and signing movie deals.

It’s really not as glamorous as you think.

~ J.L. Hilton

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Bots and bulges at StellarCon 36

I spent the weekend at StellarCon 36,  a science fiction & fantasy convention in High Point, North Carolina. It was a fun three days, full of interesting people.

Mark Poole was the StellarCon artist guest of honor. He’s from South Carolina and illustrated more than 1000 cards for games such as Magic, White Wolf’s Vampire, Battletech, and World of Warcraft.

Here Mark’s holding an autographed print that is now in my possession.

Friday night, we were on the “Steampunk Artwork and Costuming” panel together, with Kelley Hightower and Markell Lynch from ConTemporal.

Saturday I moderated “The Role of the Publisher in Today’s Market” with panelists John G. Hartness, Misty Massey, Baen publisher Toni Weisskopf and Bull Spec founding editor Sam Montgomery-Blinn.

The panel consensus was that publishers aren’t going anywhere, regardless of the ease of self-publishing, because creating a successful, widely-read book requires more than just writing a book and uploading it to Amazon — it needs things like good cover art, ads, promotion, accounting, quality editing, branding, wide distribution, social media and other elements that are very difficult to achieve alone.

I met Batman and I got all twitterpated. I was kind of surprised at myself, because it’s not like I have a poster of him on my wall or anything. But I grew up watching reruns of the old Batman TV show and I loved the earlier Batman movies, so I guess there’s still some nostalgic squee in me.

After a long day in the dealer room promoting Stellarnet Rebel and peddling my jewelry, I had the honor of feeling completely exhausted and irrelevant on the “Dystopian Literature” panel at 9pm Saturday with uber distinguished guests Nicole Givens Kurtz (author, publisher, teacher), Tedd Roberts (scientist, writer, teacher, moderator) and StellarCon special writing guest Michael Z. Williamson (who I mixed up with Michael A. Stackpole, the other special writing guest, because I’m an idiot, so MZW I apologize).

My sum total contribution to the panel was, “Hi, I’m J.L. Hilton. I wrote a cyberpunk novel. The end.”

No, not really, but it felt that way. I think the most profound thing I had to offer was the suggestion that a defining characteristic of a dystopia was its inability to tolerate deviance. Also, that Stellarnet Rebel, while cyberpunk, did not have the “technology is dehumanizing” theme in many cyberpunk/dystopian novels. Rather, it portrays technology as the thing that brings people together and mobilizes them against injustice.

By late Saturday night, I was pretty much feeling like this zombie. But not as lively, clean or pretty. In my hotel room, my Sleep Number bed was haunted (and for the record, my sleep number is hyphen underscore, if anyone is wondering), the HVAC rattled all night, and the toilet paper rollers squealed like medieval torture devices rusted by the blood of a thousand heretics, waking my minion friend Lilith when I had to use them in the middle of the night.

Sunday, after a half a Xanax and abandoning the bed in favor of sleeping in the over-stuffed chair/ottoman combo, I was feeling … if not refreshed, at least a little less like an undead prom date. As the founder of Raleigh’s annual Can’t Stop the Serenity charity event, I represented Browncoat fans on the “Westerns in Space” panel, moderated by Karen McCullough. My fellow panelists were author/podcaster/historian Amy H. Sturgis, NYTimes best-selling author Michael A. Stackpole (who’s written Star Wars and Battletech books, among other things), and Albin Johnson, special StellarCon fan guest and founder of the 501st Legion.

R2-KT was created by the R2 Builders after the death of Albin Johnson’s daughter Katie from brain cancer. It was her wish to have a pink version of R2-D2. R2-KT was inducted as an actual character in the Star Wars universe when she appeared in the series Clone Wars. Today, R2-KT travels the country to entertain children, raise awareness of pediatric cancer, and raise money for such charities as Make-A-Wish and Children’s Cancer Fund.

I was asked why I loved Firefly and Serenity during the “Westerns in Space” panel, and the obvious answer is that I love Westerns, maybe more than I love Science Fiction or Fantasy. Seriously. “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” is one of my favorite movies. “Have Gun Will Travel” is one of my favorite TV shows. “Red Dead Redemption” is one of my favorite video games. Westward I, II and III are my favorite PC games (and playing Westward IV is the only thing that would make me abandon my Linux OS, at least for a few hours).

But more than that, I like the gunfights, the garb, the whore houses… y’know, all the tropes. I like the idea of the the outlaw or antihero, living on the edge, doing what’s right and/or doing what needs to be done, in spite of the rules or social conventions, or lack thereof.

Amy Sturgis used the term “unsung hero” and that strummed a chord in me. The “unsung hero” is one of the concepts at the very core of Stellarnet Rebel. The idea that someone does something heroic just because it’s the right thing to do. The person who makes hundreds of personal sacrifices, day in and day out, without praise or reward or big epic battles. And, maybe, beyond the rugged individualism, that is why I love westerns.

Thanks, Amy, for that epiphany. And thanks to everyone who made StellarCon 36 fantastic fun.

Other highlights of my StellarCon 36 experience included author Michael D’Ambrosio, who I met a couple years ago at NASFiC and who was so helpful to me during the process of finding Stellarnet Rebel a publisher. The guys from Firetower Studios were there — I met them in January at Illogicon and my kids love Jeremy Whitley‘s Princeless comics. I was introduced to the art of Mary Layton and met Kathryn Dickerson of the Sleeping Dragon, whose critters made use of my publisher’s swag.

~ J.L. Hilton

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Team Duin vs Team Belloc

This post originally appeared on the Contact – Infinite Futures SF blog on February 26, 2012.

I love all of my characters, whether they’re heroes, villains, gamers, pub musicians or AI sims. But the two alien protagonists seem to divide readers into Team Duin or Team Belloc.

Duin is intelligent, eloquent, resourceful, and passionately devoted to the cause of liberating his people, the Glin, from their insidious Tikati oppressors. At only 40 years old, he’s considered an “elder” on his planet, and can fly a space ship, quote Shakespeare, construct an orrery, or entertain children will equal ease. Depending on which reader you ask, he’s either sexy, patriotic and paternal… or he’s a pedantic pain in the ass.

Belloc is a mysterious young outcast with uncanny abilities and a tragic past. My sister dubbed him “emo Glin” and declared herself the captain of his fan club before the book was ever published. He kicks ass and spouts romantic sentiments, and… GASP …quits playing his video game when the heroine needs him. Truly a fantasy male. Depending on which review you read, he either gets in the way and should have been shunted off into the sequel… or he’s the best part of Stellarnet Rebel.

Both characters interact with the heroine, Genny O’Riordan, and while there are romantic elements to the story, there’s also a lot of action, adventure, and computer geekery. My goal was to create an unconventional friendship between the characters in the midst of the plot — after all, the two of them are aliens, not bound by human conventions. But many readers still feel the need to take sides. It amazes me that I’ve created two very different personalities who evoke such strong reactions.

What do you think? I’d love to hear whether you’re “Team Duin” or “Team Belloc” — or like me, you’re “Team Everybody”! If you haven’t read the book, which team do you think you’d be on?

~ J.L. Hilton

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My StellarCon 36 schedule

I will be on the following panels for STELLARCON 36 March 2-4, 2012:

Friday 7:00 PM – Steampunk Artwork and CostumingA discussion on steampunk, what it means, and how to capture its spirit in costume or on canvas. Panelists: J.L. Hilton, Mark Poole, Stella Price (moderator), ConTemporal.

Saturday 2:00 PM – The Role of the Publisher in Today’s MarketWith writers now able to bring their works to print themselves, are publishers still needed? Authors and publishers discuss e-publishing, small-press publishing, and the large publishing houses. Panelists: Barbara Friend Ish, John G. Hartness, J.L. Hilton (moderator), Misty Massey, Toni Weisskopf.

Saturday 9:00 PM – Dystopian LiteratureAuthors discuss how political philosophy can influence depictions of dystopia. Panelists: Nicole Givens Kurtz, J.L. Hilton, Speaker to Lab Animals (moderator), Michael Z. Williamson.

Sunday 10:00 AM – Westerns in SpaceBoth Firefly/Serenity and Star Wars (especially the original three moves) have been described as “Westerns in Space.” What about them makes us call them that, what distinguishes them from other SF stories, and why do we love it so much? Panelists: J.L. Hilton, Albin Johnson, Karen McCullough (moderator), Michael A. Stackpole.

When not in panels, I will be in the dealer’s room selling my original steampunk and spacepunk jewelry, and promoting Stellarnet Rebel. The StellarCon dealer’s room will be open during the following hours:

Friday: 5:00 PM-9:00 PM
Saturday: 10:00 AM-6:30 PM
Sunday: 10:00 AM-4:00 PM

Hope to see you there!

~ J.L. Hilton

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