Bruce Sterling
Cyberpunk novelist
DarthSidious: hey BurceSterling
Silver-eyes: greetings fair people of the small town of
auditorium
* taylor makes it rain over Darth * *
* LOST is cofused at Taylor's behavor *
taylor: LOL
* LOST lights taylor aflame *
I-Robot: it cannot be THE sterling
Moderator: So we are waiting for Gardner Dozois and
then we will start tonight's cyberchat with THE Bruce Sterling.
* taylor thackles LOST *
* Moderator twiddles thumbs *
* I-Robot slaps GardnerD around a bit with a large
trout *
* DarthSidious moves the rain over taylor after
changing it to gasoline *
* taylor makes it rain over herself * *
GardnerD: Ah, that's good trout!
Silver-eyes: so who is THE Bruce Sterling anyway?
BruceSterling: Hey man, even THE
Sterling occupies space and has mass like other physical beings
GardnerD: Hi, I'm here!
taylor: lol
WarpTen: Hi, Gardner.
Moderator: Okay everyone - showtime grows nigh. A
leetle Moderator magic...
* LOST makes taylor burn *
* taylor turns it back to rain * *
I-Robot: havent made the big leap into cyberspace yet
eh?
LOST: cool
Silver-eyes: ok thanx for the answer
* DarthSidious changes it back into gasoline *
* taylor turns in to water *
Moderator: We're going silent now - hold on to your
chairs...
taylor: lol
GardnerD: Surely THE Sterling can transcend all natural
laws, though! <g>
Moderator: THE Bruce Sterling should be able to type
now - and so should THE Gardner Dozois!
Moderator: Can you??
Moderator: Tommy - can you hear me???
GardnerD: If I can't, it's too late to learn NOW.
<g>
Moderator: Hmmmm...
Moderator: Bruce???
BruceSterling: Sphinx of black
quartz, judge my vow -- yes my alphabet seems functional here
*8-)
Moderator: Coolness.
GardnerD: Good. American Sign Language doesn't work
well online.
Moderator: Bruce Sterling's previous novels include the
bestselling HEAVY WEATHER and HOLY FIRE. He also wrote THE HACKER
CRACKDOWN and edited the cyberpunk anthology MIRRORSHADES. Depending on
whether you prefer Thomas Jefferson or James Brown, you can call Bruce
either the founding father or godfather of cyberpunk.
Moderator: I know you have questions - so let me have
them.
GardnerD: Which would he prefer? <g>
BruceSterling: Thomas Jefferson
preferred James Brown, according to the DNA evidence
GardnerD: Did he have his children, though?
BruceSterling: We're all
Jefferson's children, bubba
Moderator: Especially B Jefferson Clinton!
GardnerD: They had better uses for cigars in
Jefferson's day, though. <g>
BruceSterling: To hell with
sci-fi -- the world needs more about Monica
GardnerD: You mean Monica ISN'T sci-fi? This plotline
is REAL?
Moderator: I understand you were approached to ghost
the Lewinsky momoir, Bruce...
BruceSterling: Approached hell --
we're gonna run her for office
Moderator: We have a question from an audience member:
Moderator: Armungus> : Is Sci Fi dead?
BruceSterling: Why do people
always ask me this? *i* didn't kill it!
Moderator: That's not what Monica sez.
GardnerD: They saw you burying it in the back yard...
BruceSterling: *Beatnik* is dead.
They've all been shovelled under now, the powers-that-be can stop
worrying.
GardnerD: Why don't you tell them how you got started
writing, Bruce? That's always inspirational.
BruceSterling: Should I be
writing little "next" signs to show I've stopped
typing??
GardnerD: Just say GA or next.
Moderator: Yes, you should, Bruce!
Moderator: And we have tons of audience questions -
BruceSterling: okey-doke...
Well, I kinda doubt that my checkered literary career is all that
inspirational -- I sold my first novel
BruceSterling: when I was in
college
BruceSterling: When I tell people
this they get this very unhappy look
BruceSterling: It's like
"Gee, I was dead drunk during *my* sophomore year, now I'll *never*
catch up *8-/
Moderator: I'm sitting here crying myself...
Moderator: Teeps29> to <Moderator>: Your
thoughts on the continued impact of media SF on 'real' SF?
BruceSterling: It's like watching
a bear eat a chicken
BruceSterling: there really isn't
any detectable difference now
BruceSterling: it's all about
intellectual property and ancillary rights, basically
GardnerD: Is there a vice versa?
BruceSterling: I don't think they
can be distinguished any more
BruceSterling: movie tie-ins are
just like the old pulps were
BruceSterling: Sf started as a
spinoff from a radio mail-order catalog
BruceSterling: we always do very
well in anomolous areas that aren't respectable literature
BruceSterling: I worry more about
MOVIES than I worry about the *effect* of movies
BruceSterling: Movies really
don't look much like movies any more
BruceSterling: they're all about
selling the Cd and the running shoes
BruceSterling: over to you
GardnerD: Did you read it when you were a kid? Or did
you come to it late?
Moderator: <George-Kennedy> : Where do you think
sf is going to head towards since alot of the standard sf stuff is
starting to come true, like cloning and such.
BruceSterling: Yes I read SF
omnivorously from age 12 onward, and the next trend in SF will be all
about hot goo
BruceSterling: the computer
revolution is over
BruceSterling: it's all about the
computer provisional government now
GardnerD: By "hot goo," do you mean biotech?
BruceSterling: the next wave of
weirdness is biological
BruceSterling: the cloning isn't
the half of it
GardnerD: Rather than hacking computers, we'll be
hacking ourselves?
BruceSterling:
"biotech" sort of, but I don't think that's the term we'll end
up using
BruceSterling: It's the Viagra
Age
BruceSterling: mostly we'll be
hacking microorganisms and *functional pieces* of organisms
BruceSterling: membranes,
hormones, that sort of thing
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: Station Identification time: our guest
tonight is science fiction writer Bruce Sterling and yes, you can ask
him ANYTHING. Just shoot the question to me, Moderator, as a private
message.
GardnerD: You must have done a lot of interesting
research for HOLY FIRE, which has an advanced medical technology theme.
GardnerD: How deep did you get into this?
BruceSterling: How deep do you
want it, fella?
Moderator: Full Impact.
BruceSterling: you oughta check
out www.biomednet.com
BruceSterling: they got banner
ads for desktop genetic sequencers in that site
BruceSterling: and they're trying
to get people to write science fiction for them
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: <Spooky> are we going to have
circuits so we can "Page" each other?
BruceSterling: I can page you
right now, Spooky
GardnerD: We already do--we call them
"voices."
BruceSterling: next!
Moderator: <gaia> : best tip for a "wannabe
fulltime scifi writer" with a couple of published stories??
(sweden)
BruceSterling: Write
novels.
BruceSterling: Get a spouse who
works
GardnerD: Genetically CREATE a spouse who works, if all
else fails! <g>
BruceSterling: Keep at it because
the big rewards don't show up till you've been at it quite a
while
Moderator: This spouse that works seems to be a theme
in these ASIMOV cyberchats, Gardner!
BruceSterling: it *is* doable,
even out of Sweden
GardnerD: Yeah, the spouse that works is a vital part
of modern literature, unless you like living in cardboard boxes.
GardnerD: How long did it take you to start selling
regularly, Bruce?
BruceSterling: Well, the stuff I
wrote has always sold almost immediately, but I've had trouble producing
stuff in the past
Moderator: And when was your wife able to quit that
day-job???
* Moderator smiles *
BruceSterling: It took me a long
time to figure out how to write proper short stories, for
instance
GardnerD: You were part of a local "author's
scene," in Austin, weren't you? Did that help?
BruceSterling: My wife quite her
job about ten years ago
BruceSterling: No question that a
local writers workshop can be hugely useful and helpful.
BruceSterling: We're still
running ours -- we had a "Turkey City" meeting about two
months ago.
BruceSterling: It went
surprisingly well, I thought. next
Moderator: <chattus> to <Moderator>: Who
are some of his favorite sf authors?
BruceSterling: Wells, Stapledon,
Jules Verne
BruceSterling: I'm very
interested in the work of Lovecraft and Dunsany
BruceSterling: They're not SF
people but I seem to learn a lot from them somehow
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: You stopped writing SF for awhile, to become
a technojournalist. Was that deliberate?
Moderator: <Drikmor> Hello to Mr. Sterling. In
Involution Ocean, does the word "Syncophine" has any special
meaning? (umm yeah silly, but it bugged me once:)
GardnerD: Answer him first.
BruceSterling: Syncophine just
sounds like a cool name for an addictive drug, especially if you are 20
years old when
BruceSterling: you make it
up
BruceSterling: I can do
small-scale journalism and continue to write SF but if I have a
nonfiction book contract I really do
BruceSterling: have to knuckle
down and pay attention to getting the facts straight and conducting the
interviews
BruceSterling: I take my work as
a journalist pretty seriously
BruceSterling: I have a
journalism degree, even
BruceSterling: It turns out to be
very useful to me as a creative artist
BruceSterling: I like to get out
in the real world and mix it up with people who have something to
lose
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: How did you get into journalism and
non-fiction?
Moderator: <chattus> What did you think of John
Glen's last flight?
BruceSterling: The John Glenn
thing was hugely interesting to me, I'm very intrigued bu new social
roles for old people
BruceSterling: The idea of geezer
heros is really something unusual
BruceSterling: I see this as a
hot social trend, really
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: <I-Robot> : What does the AOL/Netscape
merger hold in store for the future of the net?
GardnerD: Stephen Baxter keeps predicting that
"geezers" will be important in space exploration.
BruceSterling: God knows we're
gonna have plenty of spare geezers
BruceSterling: More geezers than
any civilization has ever had, ever, ever
BruceSterling: better get used to
the idea
BruceSterling: try to play to its
strengths
Moderator: I am Boomer - hear me Geeze.
GardnerD: Baxter's argument is that we'll use them
because they're expendible--but, I dunno. There are always plenty of
young expendible people around, too.
BruceSterling: especially since
you are very likely to become a geezer yourself
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: I already passed that threshold some time
back! <g>
Moderator: <Teeps29> The underground setup in
'Taklamakan' struck me as weirdness for the sake of weirdness. Is there
some meaning I'm missing?
BruceSterling: Yeah. You're
missing the point because you're a square
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: <Neoplasm> : Have you setteled in on a
regular research vs. writing ratio or do you just wing it?
BruceSterling: I wing it
GardnerD: ("Taklamkan" is Bruce's novella in
the Oct/Nov issue of ASIMOV'S SCIENCE FICTION, by the way.)
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: How did you get into doing technojournalism?
BruceSterling: Well, I like to
write journalism about things I happen to know something about
BruceSterling: there was a big
market opportunity there
BruceSterling: no one knew
anything about anything
BruceSterling: it was natural to
turn to a science fiction writer under those circumstances
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: How did you forge your connection with WIRED
magazine?
Moderator: Station Identification time: our guest
tonight is science fiction writer Bruce Sterling and yes, you can ask
him ANYTHING. Just shoot the question to me, Moderator, as a private
message.
BruceSterling: I happened to know
some of the founders through other situations -- they came looking for
me, basically
BruceSterling: They made me a
pitch
BruceSterling: they sounded so
crazy it was impossible to turn down
BruceSterling: They're always
coming up with weird schemes for me
BruceSterling: You'd be surprised
how many of them I manage NOT to do
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: What's some of the more interesting things
you've investigated as a journalist?
BruceSterling: Oh, the giant dams
in China were pretty interesting
BruceSterling: CERN in Geneva is
a very remarkable place
BruceSterling: Burning Man was
well worth my time
BruceSterling: I still have
friends in Saint Petersburg
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: Your piece on the new Russia was fascinating,
I thought.
Moderator: <chattus> : What is coming after
cyberpunk?
BruceSterling: It really leaves a
mark if you go there and keep your eyes open
BruceSterling: The thing after
cyberpunk is tie-in product, basically
BruceSterling: the structure of
publishing and distribution are radically changing
BruceSterling: amazon.com,
barnesandnoble online, that's what came after cyberpunk
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: How conscious was the creation of cyberpunk?
Or did it just sort of evolve on the fly?
BruceSterling: hard to say
really... there were several different things going on there
simultaneously
BruceSterling: people learning
how to write -- people learning how to respond to the writers
BruceSterling: individuals and
groups
BruceSterling: actual
accomplishments and hype
BruceSterling: ideology and
PR
BruceSterling: and time doesn't
stop passing
BruceSterling: It was well worth
doing, I can tell you that much
BruceSterling: I wouldn't do it
again in the world of SF, but I would definitely do it again in some
other field of endeavour
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: I've heard critics talk about
"post-cyberpunk" work. Do you believe there is such a thing?
Moderator: George-Kennedy>: Ever run into anything
in your research that blew your mind about how far some of our tech has
advanced?
BruceSterling: My mind doesn't
blow as easily as it once did now that I'm in my mid 40s
BruceSterling: But I saw some
stuff in SCIENCE magazine a couple of weeks ago that yes, blew my
mind
BruceSterling: new applications
for silicon, basically
BruceSterling: not
computational
BruceSterling: manufacturing
apps
BruceSterling: micro electronic
mechanical systems
BruceSterling: tiny little gears,
tiny little chemical reaction chambers
BruceSterling: if that stuff is
for real it could make the 20th century look like the 14th
century
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: After a few years, you started writing SF
novels again. Why?
BruceSterling: I had enough time
free to do it
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: <Neoplasm> : Would this marketing
evolution happen to include Bruce Sterling and William Gibson action
figures?
BruceSterling: I saw a guy once
in a "Sterling and Gibson" t-shirt that he had made himself
out of a photocopy
BruceSterling: of the back of
DIFFERENCE ENGINE
BruceSterling: the basic problem
there is about retail distribution and inventory
BruceSterling: you can't
manufacture and sell just 3000 action figures
BruceSterling: you need abour
30,000 to keep your profit margins up
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: The Playmobil Cyberpunk line...I like it.
Moderator: <greg48> : Your opinion, if any, of
Kevin Mitnick and his present situation
BruceSterling: Kevin ought to
have his day in court. You can't keep people locked up indefinitely
without a trial.
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: <George-Kennedy> : Oppinion of
Gibson's X-Files episode, if you saw it
BruceSterling: Yeah I saw it, and
I enjoyed it, but I don't watch that much dramatic-series TV
BruceSterling: "Behold the
Anteater" on the History Channel, that's more my speed *8-)
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: How did THE HACKER CRACKDOWN come about?
BruceSterling: Well, there's
nothing like having the Secret Service blow into town and bust a bunch
of people you know
BruceSterling: tends to
concentrate your attention wonderfully
BruceSterling: you should try it
-- ha ha ha
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: Station identification time - we're chatting
with science fiction writer Bruce Sterling & ASIMOV SF MAGAZINE
editor Gardner Dozois
Moderator: If you want to ask Bruce a question,
Moderator: shoot it to me as a private message.
Moderator: <chattus> : Any movies or tv on the
horizon?
BruceSterling: not from *me,*
bubba
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: How come???
Moderator: Serious question.
BruceSterling: they don't pay
enough
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: Are you working on a new non-fiction book?
About what?
BruceSterling: I'm not working on
one, but I have plans for two or possibly three nonfiction books
BruceSterling: they'll be about
media studies and environmental design studies
BruceSterling: a little difficult
to describe but they'll be about how the world works
BruceSterling: rather HG
Wellsian, I suppose
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: <gaia> : Internet and the new ways of
communicating is basically something for the wealthy countries. How can
we solve this?? Any ideas??
BruceSterling: Well, I always get
a little nervous when somebody implies that every semiliterate rugmaking
Kurdish
BruceSterling: housewife in
southwest turkey needs a T-1 trunk in order to go on living
BruceSterling: I think the
Internet is an extremely powerful technology
BruceSterling: its downsides have
not been properly recognized
BruceSterling: Whenever
advanced-nation people go to Third World villages and say "look at
all this cool
BruceSterling: free tech we're
giving you" that is a danger sign
BruceSterling: I'd like to see
some research done on getting people in the G-7 countries *off* the
Internet
BruceSterling: For instance, do
*You* think you could give up your modem without a very serious pang
and
BruceSterling: some rearrangement
of your personality and your commercial activities?
BruceSterling: Did you ever
*vote* on whether you were supposed to need this thing?
BruceSterling: think about
it
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: Cybermall trumps medina - story at eleven.
Moderator: <I-Robot> Will you be engaging in any
more co-authorship with William Gibson?
BruceSterling: Maybe; Bill and I
are still on good terms, but it'll have to be one hell of a good
concept
BruceSterling: We've both got a
lot on our plates these days
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: You have a new novel out, don't you? What's
it about?
BruceSterling: It's a political
novel about a campaign advisor in America in the 2040s
BruceSterling: I wanted to do a
novel in which a politician is the hero
BruceSterling: Now I'll never
have to do such a perverse thing again *8-)
GardnerD: What's the title?
BruceSterling: nexgt
BruceSterling: DISTRACTION
GardnerD: Is there another novel in the pipeline after
that?
BruceSterling: yeah, I'm working
on a novel now called ZEITGEIST
BruceSterling: it's my
"Leggy Starlitz" novel
BruceSterling: this guy has been
a continuing character in a series of shot stories I wrote
BruceSterling: I figured it was
time for him to have his own book
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: Speaking of short stories...
Moderator: <chattus> I have heard that the short
story is the heart of sf. Your reaction.
BruceSterling: I agree
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: What SF writers do you still read? Any new
people you like?
BruceSterling: Well, I'm kind of
taken with this new Ken MacLeod book
BruceSterling: I'm trying to see
whether I can finish it
BruceSterling: It's all about
space=travelling Communist commandoes who orbit the rings of
Jupiter
GardnerD: What's not to like? <g>
BruceSterling: it reads like the
Scottish Trotskyite SCHISMATRIX
BruceSterling: it is truly
super-weird
BruceSterling: I admire that in a
guy
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: When do you know a thought is going to
germinate into a short story as opposed to, say, a novel?
BruceSterling: When I have a plot
for it, basically
BruceSterling: if you can get it
all over with in a hurry, good for you
BruceSterling: just push the
concept right through the reader's head like a painless jolt of
electricity
BruceSterling: that's the heart
of SF, all right
BruceSterling: elaborate SF
plotting tends to boil down to action-adventure stuff
BruceSterling: lots of raygun
melodrama and palace intrigue
BruceSterling: it really doesn't
work as well as the short material
BruceSterling: good for
big-screen worldbuilding though, if you're into that sort of thing,
which I am
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: Do you think SCHISMATRIX had a big effect on
the new British Space Opera school? (I think it did...)
Moderator: <Neoplasm> : On your recent world
jaunt for Wired, did you run across a city that is replacing Prague as
the new 'place to be'?
BruceSterling: There's no
question that SCHISMATRIX had a major effect on this Ken MacLeod
book
BruceSterling: It's full of
SCHISMATRIX in-jokes
BruceSterling: As for what's hip
after Prague costs too much
GardnerD: Ditto Paul McAuley, and even Iain Banks.
BruceSterling: people tell me
Ljubljana's not bad
BruceSterling: Slovenia
BruceSterling: if you're a
carpetbagger you can go to Russia and live like a king
BruceSterling: if you don't mind
the risk of getting shot
BruceSterling: and bad
sanitation
BruceSterling: and massive
alcoholism
BruceSterling: and hookers all
over the place
BruceSterling: and scary excesses
of all kinds
BruceSterling: really cool
architecture though
BruceSterling: ha ha ha
Moderator: You say them as though they were BAD things.
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: <The> : So then, do you see the short
story as a kind of instant philosophy?
BruceSterling: Well, its what
Stanislaw Lem calls "The Spearhead of Cognition"
BruceSterling: the point being to
make people THINK differently
BruceSterling: not be entertained
or thrilled, but to have their thought processes altered
BruceSterling: not so much
philosophy as a kind of hands-on psychotherapy
BruceSterling: it's why Sf
writers tend to swerve very easily into a cult guru status
BruceSterling: it's about
head-tripping the readership
BruceSterling: messing with their
minds
BruceSterling: it can be
done
BruceSterling: easily
BruceSterling: and it's a very
attractive thing to a certain kind of person
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: <George-Kennedy> When you were young,
was there a specific piece that you read that made up your mind to get
into the writting biz?
BruceSterling: No not really;
when I was young I was reading all the time
BruceSterling: I would read milk
cartons, classified ads, straight through encyclopedias
BruceSterling: starting with the
"A"s
BruceSterling: I was a
fanatic
BruceSterling: i still am
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: Would you be pleased or dismayed to run
across a Bruce Sterling cult?
BruceSterling: I pretty much have
one already, actually
BruceSterling: but I'll be okay
as long as I can avoid the temptation to build an armed compound
somewhere in Guyana
BruceSterling: As long as you
don't actually have acolytes in your immediate physical vicinity
BruceSterling: as long as you're
just a voice on paper
GardnerD: Don't serve Cool-Aid, is my advice...
BruceSterling: I think you can
manage wel enough
BruceSterling: it is most
definitely an occupational hazard
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: 'm obsessive about work habits. How do you
write? First thing in the morning on a computer or late at night on
yellow legal pads? Special baseball hats worn backwards? Any rituals?
BruceSterling: i tend to work
rather spasmodically
BruceSterling: I have to have the
Muse with me
BruceSterling: I'm getting a
little better at that as time goes on
BruceSterling: I'm actually
becoming more productive in mid-life
BruceSterling: I'm very patient
now, I'm willing to sit still and keep typing until I know it's working
out properly
BruceSterling: In my younger days
I was more imaginative but also much more frenetic and frazzled
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: Gibson told me once he got visited by
fanatical NEUROMANCER fans, intense 14-year-old girls in black Spandex.
Run into any Sterling fans of a similarly intense sort?
Moderator: <gaia> : Does your family ever read
what you write??
BruceSterling: i get quite a lot
of e-fanmail from Sterling devotees
BruceSterling: many of them are
computer-intrusion kids
BruceSterling: some of them are
cops, however
BruceSterling: it seems to work
out, more or less
BruceSterling: next
Moderator: <gaia> : Does your family ever read
what you write??
BruceSterling: Well, my wife is
my foremost critic
BruceSterling: she's had a lot of
influence on my work
BruceSterling: I have a very
large family on both maternal and paternal sides
BruceSterling: half of Texas
seems to be related to me in one way or another
BruceSterling: but they're not
all eager readers
BruceSterling: nor should they
be, I suppose
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: Nancy writing anything these days/
BruceSterling: Well, yes, my wife
Nancy has the proverbial novel-in-the-desk-drawer
GardnerD: Nag her from me. <g>
BruceSterling: You're publishing
novels?
GardnerD: No, but I'm publishing short stories, and
always on the lookout for good ones.
GardnerD: And I published one of hers I liked some
years back.
BruceSterling: I'll let her know,
but when you're the Mom of a preschooler your daily life is like trench
warfare
BruceSterling: next
GardnerD: You should send me something new, too, for
that matter! <g>
Moderator: Preschool life-forms seem like a good place
to stop.
BruceSterling: I'm working on a
short story right now, actually
BruceSterling: it's a historical
fantasy
GardnerD: Good. I want to see it.
BruceSterling: and I have an idea
for a short SF piece
BruceSterling: I'm hoping I can
get something done here after Thanksgiving
GardnerD: You do one of those every once in awhile
(historical fantasies). Any plans to write a novel of that sort?
BruceSterling: Then I'm off on
the DISTRACTION book tour and so forth
Moderator: Bruce Sterling's new novel is called
DISTRACTION - and you're watching as Gardner snags first North American
rights to Bruce's short story in progress!
BruceSterling: I tend to think of
history as a form of science fiction
Moderator: Gardner as you know is the editor of
ASIMOV's SF MAGAZINE - but you might NOT know that ASIMOV's has a
website:
BruceSterling: this new book I'm
working on is set in the present day
Moderator: http://www.asimovs.com
BruceSterling: it's the first
book I've ever written that is strictly contemporaneous
GardnerD: Before you hit the road, write the story and
send it to me. <g>
Moderator: Check it out.
GardnerD: Do you find that harder than working in the
future, or the past?
BruceSterling: There's no time,
Gardner, I';m on a plane tomorrow morning *8-)
GardnerD: Write it on the PLANE...<g>
Moderator: Bruce - where on the web can we read yr
nonfiction work???
BruceSterling: Two children on
the plane, man, it'll never happen
GardnerD: If you were Pohl and Kornbluth, you'd turn
out a whole novel before you touched down...
Moderator: One word, Bruce: benadryl.
BruceSterling: try
www.well.com/conf/mirrorshades
Moderator: I used to be a pediatric nurse and you can
trust me.
Moderator: So - thanks, Gardner & Bruce.
BruceSterling: We live to serve!
*8-)
Moderator: I'm gonna open this baby up to open chat -
GardnerD: After the conference, stop by the ASIMOV'S
website and subscribe! We just published Bruce's major new novella...
Moderator: Yes, http://www.asimovs.com
GardnerD: and we'll have more from him in the future if
I can talk him into it!
BruceSterling: Adios! Don't be a
stranger!
Moderator: And you're WATCHING live as Gardner talks
Bruce into it!
Moderator: All we need is the webcam...
Moderator: Hold on...
GardnerD: <zends virtual bribe to Bruce>
BruceSterling: so long everybody
--gotta go pack a suitcase now *8-)
BruceSterling: .
* Moderator taps microphone *
catfishmn: When you finish a rough draft of your
manuscript, how many rewrites do you personally do before submitting to
your editor and how many rewrites does your editor normally have you do
afterwards?
GardnerD: Night, Bruce!
Moderator: This thing on??
catfishmn: oops
GardnerD: Have a good flight!
gaia: yes
I-Robot: bye bye
gaia: bye
gaia: thanx
Moderator: Thanks everyone - there WILL be a transcript
up in the chat transcript area very shortly.
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