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Entries by Pamela Sargent (345)

Thursday
Mar192020

In case anyone is curious....

.... I am well and staying at home, living as hermetically as possible, as is my partner, George ZebrowskiAs it was a pleasant spring day yesterday, I took a short walk then, the first for some time, of a couple of blocks to my bank and then to the grocery store for a bunch of bananas, but made sure to keep the requisite six feet away from my pals, the bank manager and produce guy, putting up my hands palms out to show them I had my protective gloves on while they nodded at me and feeling as though we were all simulacra, or zombies, going through our usual greetings. Don't plan to go out for a while now and don't really have to---there's nowhere to go anyway with just about everything shut down--unless the weather is good enough to take a walk around the neighborhood while keeping well away from anybody else who's out. To everyone out there, stay safe and healthy.

Wednesday
Jan292020

"His Two Wars"

A new story of mine, "His Two Wars," is available in Short Things, an anthology of stories based on John W. Campbell's classic novella "Who Goes There?", the basis for both the 1951 and 1982 movies entitled The Thing. My story brings two of that story's characters, MacReady and Norris, to Hawaii on December 6, 1941. A Kindle edition of Short Things is out from Amazon and the trade paperback edition can be ordered from Wildside Press here (in the U.S.) and here (for international orders).

Sunday
Dec012019

Odds and Ends: An Update

A writer I know describes posting on a blog as "speaking into a void," but in the hope that someone out there might be listening, here's an update. I finished a new story of some 8,000 words, "His Two Wars," and it's been paid for and scheduled for an anthology that hasn't yet been published. I also wrote an introduction to a new collection of short fiction by my friend and fellow writer, Chelsea Quinn Yarbro. If you're unfamiliar with Quinn's writing, here's what Peter Straub has to say in praise of her work: "Chelsea Quinn Yarbro is one of our finest writers and craftspersons, incapable of a sloppy sentence, a slack paragraph, or a fuzzy thought." 

And my novelette "Dream of Venus" (2000) is apparently going to be translated into Estonian, my first publication in that language. More about these bits of news when I have more details. In the meantime, I'm writing what may turn out to be a piece of short fiction, although I've had short stories grow into novels in the past.

As for news that isn't so vague, Open Road Media, which has almost all of my fiction available as e-books, has launched an "author follow" feature, so if you are interested in following me there, go to this page and click on "Follow" for news from them about my books and writing. All three volumes of my Seed Trilogy are still available from Tor.

Friday
Jan042019

A Foreign Sale

I have the contract and an advance check for a new Spanish edition of my historical novel Ruler of the Sky, first published in Spain in 1994 (as Gengis Kan: El soberano del cielo). Ediciones Pàmies in Madrid is the new publisher.

Friday
Oct192018

A New Paperback Edition

My 2015 novel Season of the Cats is now out in a trade paperback edition from Wildside Press and available from Amazon, independent bookstores, and from the publisher here

James Morrow had this to say about the novel: “Pamela Sargent has given us a delectable confection, wrought from an irresistible recipe: a dash of Fritz Leiber, a touch of Neil Gaiman, a dollop of Roald Dahl—plus a full measure of her characteristic adroit plotting and compelling prose. At once whimsical and sardonic, Season of the Cats will enchant all fans of off-beat fantasy.”

And Pat Cadigan, twice winner of the Arthur C. Clarke Award, commented: “This is a sneaky book. You think you’re reading it; it’s actually stalking you. This is a story that may seem familiar at first but that’s only how it pulls you in. Trust me, you’re about to be unsettled in ways you never imagined.”