
Preachers Who Are Not Believers
Wow. Here’s an absolutely fascinating article about the dilemmas faced by religious leaders who no longer believe in the doctrines of their churches, featuring anonymous and candid interviews with five such individuals: Preachers Who Are Not Believers
A sample: What gives them this impression that they are far from alone, and how did this strange and sorrowful state of affairs arise? The answer seems to lie in the seminary experience shared by all our pastors, liberals and literals alike. Even some conservative seminaries staff their courses on the Bible with professors who are trained in textual criticism, the historical methods of biblical scholarship, and what is taught in those courses is not what the young seminarians learned in Sunday school, even in the more liberal churches. In seminary they were introduced to many of the details that have been gleaned by centuries of painstaking research about how various ancient texts came to be written, copied, translated, and, after considerable jockeying and logrolling, eventually assembled into the Bible we read today. It is hard if not impossible to square these new facts with the idea that the Bible is in all its particulars a true account of actual events, let alone the inerrant word of God. It is interesting that all our pastors report the same pattern of response among their fellow students: some were fascinated, but others angrily rejected what their professors tried to teach them. Whatever their initial response to these unsettling revelations, the cat was out of the bag and both liberals and literals discerned the need to conceal their knowledge about the history of Christianity from their congregations.
Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast Jonathan Coulton Interview
Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast Dan Carlin Interview
The Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast, Episode 15: The Black Death! Archimedes! Counterfactuals!
Dan Carlin, host of the Hardcore History podcast, joins us to discuss the history of the future, the origins of the centaur legend, and what the Black Death can teach us about postapocalyptic fiction. Dave and John get medieval on your assumptions about historical fantasy.
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Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast Holly Black Interview
The Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast, Episode 14: Fairies! Unicorns! Action Figures!
Holly Black, author of White Cat and The Spiderwick Chronicles, joins us to discuss scary trees, mobster magicians, and why unicorns are awesome. Dave and John battle evil internet fairies.
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Dan Simmons on Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins
Wow. You have got to listen to Rick Kleffel’s 2009 interview with Dan Simmons regarding Simmons’ novel Drood. The interview concerns Dickens and his friend Wilkie Collins, author of the The Moonstone, the grandfather of all detective novels. It also concerns Collins’ staggering drug habit, his lifelong belief that he had a doppelganger (whom he believed had written all his best material), the race to invent the detective novel, Dickens’ public readings that were so powerful they were guaranteed to cause a dozen women in the audience to faint, and his belief that mesmerism is what allowed him to accomplish this, and also the horrifying train accident that killed everyone except aboard except Dickens, his mistress, and her mother, and the endless mystery surrounding Dickens last, unfinished novel The Mystery of Edwin Drood, which Simmons believes would have cemented Dickens’ place as the grandfather of the detective novel in place of Collins. (Simmons also talks about how Drood will be the next movie directed by Guillermo del Toro after he finishes The Hobbit.) One of the most amazing interviews I’ve ever heard. Here’s Part 1 and Part 2.
Way of the Wizard Anthology Deadline = March 31st
The deadline for the John Joseph Adams anthology The Way of the Wizard is at the end of this month, so if anyone’s written any good wizard stories recently, make sure to send them in ASAP. Here are the guidelines.
Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast to Interview Holly Black
Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy will be interviewing Holly Black tomorrow afternoon, so if anyone has any questions they’d like us to ask her, feel free to suggest them.
Blanka’s House Cleaning Service
So someone just stuck this to my mailbox:

Blanka, huh? I dunno. I confess I have mixed feelings about having this guy clean my house:

Though honestly I guess it couldn’t get much messier…
Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast John Langan Interview
The Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast, Episode 13: Horror! Academia! Our Deepest, Darkest Fears!
John Langan, author of House of Windows, joins us to discuss Henry James, being a professor, and reading comic books in math class. Dave and John talk about what scares them.
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The Living Dead 2 Anthology Table of Contents
Jonh Joseph Adams reports that he’s turned in the final manuscript for The Living Dead 2, which includes my story “The Skull-Faced City.” Here’s the cover copy and table of contents:
Two years ago, readers eagerly devoured The Living Dead. Publisher’s Weekly named it one of the Best Books of the Year, and Barnes & Noble.com called it “The best zombie fiction collection ever.” Now acclaimed editor John Joseph Adams is back for another bite at the apple — the Adam’s apple, that is — with 43 more of the best, most chilling, most thrilling zombie stories anywhere, including virtuoso performances by zombie fiction legends Max Brooks (World War Z, The Zombie Survival Guide), Robert Kirkman (The Walking Dead), and David Wellington (Monster Island).
From Left 4 Dead to Zombieland to Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, ghoulishness has never been more exciting and relevant. Within these pages samurai warriors face off against the legions of hell, necrotic dinosaurs haunt a mysterious lost world, and eerily clever zombies organize their mindless brethren into a terrifying army. You’ll even witness nightmare scenarios in which humanity is utterly wiped away beneath a relentless tide of fetid flesh.
The Living Dead 2 has more of what zombie fans hunger for — more scares, more action, more … brains. Experience the indispensable series that defines the very best in zombie literature.
* Introduction — John Joseph Adams
* Alone, Together — Robert Kirkman
* Danger Word — Steven Barnes & Tananarive Due
* Zombieville — Paula Stiles
* The Anteroom — Adam-Troy Castro
* When the Zombies Win — Karina Sumner-Smith
* Mouja — Matt London
* Category Five — Marc Paoletti
* Living with the Dead — Molly Brown
* Twenty-Three Snapshots of San Francisco — Seth Lindberg
* The Mexican Bus — Walter Greatshell
* The Other Side — Jamie Lackey
* Where the Heart Was — David J. Schow
* Good People — David Wellington
* Lost Canyon of the Dead — Brian Keene
* Pirates vs. Zombies — Amelia Beamer
* The Crocodiles — Steven Popkes
* The Skull-Faced City — David Barr Kirtley
* Obedience — Brenna Yvanoff
* Steve and Fred — Max Brooks
* The Rapeworm — Charlie Finlay
* Everglades — Mira Grant
* We Now Pause For Station Identification — Gary Braunbeck
* Reluctance — Cherie Priest
* Arlene Schabowski Of The Undead — Mark McLaughlin & Kyra M. Schon
* Zombie Gigolo — S. G. Browne
* Rural Dead — Bret Hammond
* The Summer Place — Bob Fingerman
* The Wrong Grave — Kelly Link
* The Human Race — Scott Edelman
* Who We Used to Be — David Moody
* Therapeutic Intervention — Rory Harper
* He Said, Laughing — Simon R. Green
* Last Stand — Kelley Armstrong
* The Thought War — Paul McAuley
* Dating in Dead World — Joe McKinney
* Flotsam & Jetsam — Carrie Ryan
* Thin Them Out — Kim Paffenroth, Julia Sevin & RJ Sevin
* Zombie Season — Catherine MacLeod
* Tameshigiri — Steven Gould
* Zero Tolerance — Jonathan Maberry
* And the Next, and the Next — Genevieve Valentine
* The Price of a Slice — John Skipp & Cody Goodfellow
* Are You Trying to Tell Me This is Heaven? — Sarah Langan
Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast Corey Olsen Interview
The Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast, Episode 12: Hobbits! Balrogs! My Precious!
Corey Olsen, host of the popular podcast The Tolkien Professor, joins us to discuss hobbits, elves, and balrogs. Dave and John chat about Guillermo del Toro’s upcoming adaptation of The Hobbit.
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Lightspeed Magazine Issue 1 Table of Contents
Lightspeed Magazine has announced the lineup for their debut issue:

This issue will include my short story “Cats in Victory.” (For more on the origins of this story, see here.) To celebrate, I’ve been kicking it old school with some classic Cats in Victory adventures from the early ’80s. Here’s some of the cover art, which provides ample evidence of a young mind totally warped by jingoistic, toy-peddling Saturday morning cartoons. I also like the part about “The Black Hole … of Darkness!” Obviously my talent for striking, memorable titles is simply innate.

Sitting is Bad For You
I hope everyone saw this article: Stand Up While You Read This
Here’s the gist of it:
It doesn’t matter if you go running every morning, or you’re a regular at the gym. If you spend most of the rest of the day sitting — in your car, your office chair, on your sofa at home — you are putting yourself at increased risk of obesity, diabetes, heart disease, a variety of cancers and an early death. In other words, irrespective of whether you exercise vigorously, sitting for long periods is bad for you.
I hate sitting, in general, and I loathe situations where I have to sit still for hours on end: airplanes, long movies, fancy restaurants, etc. I’m always standing/pacing, and people are constantly telling me to act like a normal person and sit down. Well read it and weep, sitting people, you’re all gonna die, bwahahahaha!
HBO Greenlights Game of Thrones
Winter is coming … to HBO! The pilot apparently looks good, and the network has committed to producing 10 episodes. Of course you can never tell how these things are going to turn out, but a Song of Ice and Fire show that’s similar in quality to HBO’s Rome would really be something. Here’s the first image they’ve released, from the opening scene:

Michael Whelan Way of Kings Cover Art
Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast Alexandre Philippe Interview
The Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast, Episode 11: Star Wars! Ewoks! The Almighty Sarlacc!
Alexandre Philippe, director of the documentary The People vs. George Lucas, joins us to discuss Jar Jar Binks, movie merchandising, and death threats from Star Wars fans. Dave and John chat all things Star Wars.
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Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast Tom Rogers Interview
The Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast, Episode 10: Space Battles! Giant Ants! Physics!
Tom Rogers, author of Insultingly Stupid Movie Physics, joins us to discuss leaping hulks, giant ants, and why shooting down alien spaceships is harder than it looks. Dave and John examine the role of science in science fiction.
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Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Carrie Vaughn Interview
The Geek’s Guide to the Galaxy Podcast, Episode 9: Vampires! Werewolves! Unicorns!
Carrie Vaughn, author of the Kitty Norville urban fantasy series, joins us to discuss strong heroines and werewolf-related romance. Dave and John discuss vampires in film and fiction.
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Ryan Maguire’s Ale House Destroyed by Fire
Dammit. Just saw on Bill Shunn’s blog that Ryan Maguire’s Ale House has been destroyed in a fire. For years this is where we’d all head after the New York Review of Science Fiction Reading Series to enjoy the food, conversation, and waitresses with nigh-incomprehensible Irish accents.

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