Preparing to Moderate a Panel – The Basics

I’ll be attending Arisia, a science fiction convention, this weekend. I’ll be doing some moderating, as I often do.

I’ve been attending sf cons since I was a young teenager, and serving on panels, and moderating them, for more than a decade. *blink* Yes, really.

Here are some basics of how to prepare to moderate.

1. Read the panel description ahead of time. Think through what the description seems to be asking for–since some descriptions are very brief or generalized, you might want to make notes about the direction you think the panel ought to take. Consider any other panels you might have heard on this subject. How will your take differ?

2. The panel might require research, or at the very least a list of questions for the other panelists that will help direct the discussion. What questions will you ask? How would you answer them? Research might include books or it might consist of reading a series of recent blog articles on the topic. I always feel more confident if I’ve made notes ahead of time, even if I don’t end up using them.

3. Decide if you’re going to ask questions and answer them, or only ask questions of the other panelists. In most cases, the moderator should be prepared to participate in the discussion.

4. Look over the list of other panelists and, if you don’t know them, email them, or at least look up their website. Note down some questions specific to their expertise which might be relevant. Also remember that last-minute schedule changes happen, so don’t count on any one panelist to carry the discussion.

5. Look over your schedule for the convention and the venue itself, to make sure you’ll have adequate time to get from place to place physically and adequate time for meals between panels. If you’re moderating, you really don’t want to be late!

Any other suggestions?

Posted in arisia, conferences | 1 Comment

Philadelphia Mummers 2011 Part 3

Saloon girl!

A pirate float!

You can’t have a parade without a Stormtrooper.

My favorite float had a circus theme.



And finally, I leaned over the police barrier for this view up Broad Street towards City Hall.

Posted in images, philadelphia, pirates | Comments Off on Philadelphia Mummers 2011 Part 3

Philadelphia Mummers 2011 Part 2

As promised, more pictures from the Mummers’ Parade on New Year’s Day.
That is one sexy French maid.

Grandma Gaga is doing her best to compete, though.

And then–ELVIS!!!

The Buccaneer Bakers! Pirates and baking, my kind of group.

Their pirate flag.

I’ll post a few more pictures tomorrow.

Posted in images, philadelphia, pirates | Comments Off on Philadelphia Mummers 2011 Part 2

Siegfried Sassoon, “The Rear-Guard”

The Rear-Guard

(HINDENBURG LINE, APRIL 1917)

Groping along the tunnel, step by step,
He winked his prying torch with patching glare
From side to side, and sniffed the unwholesome air.

Tins, boxes, bottles, shapes too vague to know;
A mirror smashed, the mattress from a bed;
And he, exploring fifty feet below
The rosy gloom of battle overhead.

Tripping, he grabbed the wall; saw some one lie
Humped at his feet, half-hidden by a rug,
And stooped to give the sleeper’s arm a tug.
‘I’m looking for headquarters.’ No reply.
‘God blast your neck!’ (For days he’d had no sleep,)
‘Get up and guide me through this stinking place.’

Savage, he kicked a soft, unanswering heap,
And flashed his beam across the livid face
Terribly glaring up, whose eyes yet wore
Agony dying hard ten days before;
And fists of fingers clutched a blackening wound.

Alone he staggered on until he found
Dawn’s ghost that filtered down a shafted stair
To the dazed, muttering creatures underground
Who hear the boom of shells in muffled sound.
At last, with sweat of horror in his hair,
He climbed through darkness to the twilight air,
Unloading hell behind him step by step.

–Siegfried Sassoon, Counter-Attack and Other Poems, 1918.

Posted in sassoon, wwi poetry | Comments Off on Siegfried Sassoon, “The Rear-Guard”

Arisia 2012 Schedule

If you’re attending Arisia this weekend in Boston (January 13-16), below is my schedule.

Schools for Magicians
Douglas, Friday 5:30 PM
Cecilia Tan (mod.), Mary Catelli, Frances K. Selkirk, Victoria Janssen, Ken Schneyer
A Hogwarts degree isn’t the only path from mundanity to magehood. Let’s consider how writers have portrayed schools, including Roke, Unseen University, Brakebills, and more. Why a school setting? Is it due to the innate familiarity for both reader and writer? Having a built-in rationale for info-dumps? How do these fantastical academies compare to SF’s schools for space cadets. As we look outside of Harry Potter, we’ll examine the continuing fascination with such sorcerous scholastic settings.

Paneling 101: A Primer
Revere, Fri day 8:30 PM
Jonathan Woodward (mod), Ann Crimmins, Christopher Davis, Victoria Janssen, Hugh Casey
A panel on doing panels, for noobs and the plain unaware. Etiquette, preparing, benefits, the role of the moderator, how to moderate, how to handle a rogue panelist, how to handle a rogue audience member.

Point of View
Douglas, Sunday 1:00 PM
Elaine Isaak, Michael A Ventrella, David Sklar, Victoria Janssen, Joshua Palmatier
The use of different points of view can reveal or obscure elements of your story from the audience. Do certain points of view only work with certain types of stories? What are the strengths and weaknesses of each form?

Posted in conferences | Comments Off on Arisia 2012 Schedule

Siegfried Sassoon, “Glory of Women”

Glory of Women

You love us when we’re heroes, home on leave,
Or wounded in a mentionable place.
You worship decorations; you believe
That chivalry redeems the war’s disgrace.
You make us shells. You listen with delight,
By tales of dirt and danger fondly thrilled.
You crown our distant ardours while we fight,
And mourn our laurelled memories when we’re killed.
You can’t believe that British troops ‘retire’
When hell’s last horror breaks them, and they run,
Trampling the terrible corpses—blind with blood.
O German mother dreaming by the fire,
While you are knitting socks to send your son
His face is trodden deeper in the mud.

–Siegfried Sassoon, Counter-Attack and Other Poems, 1918.

Posted in sassoon, wwi poetry | Comments Off on Siegfried Sassoon, “Glory of Women”

Philadelphia Mummers 2011 Part 1

Check out this lovely review of The Duke & The Pirate Queen at The Discriminating Fangirl!

On New Year’s Day, a friend and I went to the annual New Year’s Day Philadelphia Mummers’ Parade. I took a ton of pictures, so even a selection is going to take me a couple of posts.
Supermen!

Note the Superman curl.

There goes Clark Kent!

A few of the floats.

Who Dat Froggy Carr?

These Frogs posed for me. The brick building behind them is the historic Academy of Music.

Still more Frogs!

Still Life Between Brigades.

Posted in images, philadelphia | Comments Off on Philadelphia Mummers 2011 Part 1

Kindle Field Test

A few days ago, I returned from a two-week vacation that involved a lot of traveling, both in airplanes and in cars. I brought along my Kindle (which I bought in late November), one trade paperback novel (Cold Magic by Kate Elliott), and the most recent issue of the SFWA Bulletin (the size of a slim magazine).

I still enjoy reading paper books a bit more than reading on my Kindle; it takes more effort for me to ignore the flash of a page turn on the Kindle than it does to simply turn a paper page. But for this sort of trip, where I’m gone for quite a while, the Kindle was invaluable; it weighs about what a book weighs, but takes up less room, and can hold an entire library.

One issue with the Kindle on airplanes is that you’re not allowed to use them during takeoff and landing. For my initial flight, I read the SFWA Bulletin, which I finished and discarded. On the return flight, I confess I slept most of the way, so it didn’t matter (I had the paperback, just in case).

For the most part, I read on the Kindle. I only read from the paperback in the evenings; it was too bulky to carry around in my purse. The Kindle kept me company while waiting in lines, on portions of the car journeys, and when waiting for everyone else to be ready to leave for the next destination.

My scattered activities favored the Kindle as well; I was able to switch among several different books, discarding a few free ones that I began but couldn’t get into reading, and skimming several for possible future review.

I charged the Kindle a day or so before I left. It still had battery life the day before I left, even though I’d used the wireless a number of times. To be safe, I recharged the night before I flew home.

It was a major boon not to have to find room for books in my luggage!

Posted in reading, technology | 2 Comments

Betty Neels, Outside of Time

I am not nearly the connoisseur of Betty Neels’ 134 novels as the gracious hostesses of specialist blog The Uncrushable Jersey Dress. But, having read about a half-dozen of her novels, I now venture to have some general thoughts on the contemporary world Neels portrayed.

So far, every Neels novel I’ve read features a young English woman who works as a nurse and is overlooked and underappreciated, particularly by her family and by men…until she meets an older man, distinguished, Dutch, a doctor of some variety. (Neels herself was a nurse, and her husband was Dutch, though not a doctor.) The stories are told from the heroine’s point of view, and most of the tension arises from her dilemmas (shortage of money, family problems) and her confusion about the hero and his intentions. His intentions are, of course, to marry her, but he never says so until the end; until then, he just does nice things for her and confuses her because she can’t comprehend why he is being so nice. There’s an innocence about the heroine’s feelings, and a gentleness that makes these novels very soothing.

The essence of a Neels romance isn’t affected by the setting, not really. Which is a good thing, because, with slight variations, the setting is always the same, no matter the decade in which it’s ostensibly set. It’s my humble opinion, having read only a small selection so far, that Neels World is outside of time, much in the way that the classic Regency Romance is outside of time. Betty Neels’ voice as an author overrides any need for contemporaneity with publication date.

In both these subgenres of Romance, Regency and Neels, the setting is like the setting for a jewel (the story); it’s there to set off the jewel, not upstage it. These settings create familiar atmosphere for the reader. Outside of the novel’s atmosphere, the story can’t breathe; but within that atmosphere, it’s a special thing all its own.

Neels, as I mentioned before, was a nurse, and used a lot of specific detail about nursing to enrich her novels. She knew her world very well. But it wasn’t necessary for her particular stories to track, for example, changes in nursing practice over her lifetime. That wasn’t important to the story she wanted to tell, and that her readers wanted to read. So she didn’t discuss it. As time goes on, elements of her novels might seem more and more outdated, but the “old-fashioned” morals don’t matter. Neels’ authorial voice supports the story. For 134 novels. I only hope I can do so well one day!

“London may be a swinging city, the permissive society may be the normal way of living in the big cities, marriage may have become an old fashioned ceremony to be laughed at, but here, in the village, such goings on are very much on a par with the more sensational Sunday papers; not quite to be believed.” —Dear Reader Letter from Betty Neels, The Magazine of Harlequin Romance V. 1 No 3: August, 1973.

Related Post:
Betty Neels’ Books Rock, a guest post by Magdalen Braden.

Some Neels books that have recently been reprinted:
A Girl in a Million
The Final Touch
The Quiet Professor
Henrietta’s Own Castle
A Valentine for Daisy
A Girl Named Rose
The Most Marvellous Summer
Never Say Goodbye
A Kind of Magic
Damsel in Green
Never the Time and the Place

Posted in contemporary, reading, romance novels | Tagged | Comments Off on Betty Neels, Outside of Time

Sexy Pirates

This post was originally written for The Smutketeers; I’ve expanded it here.

Why did I want to write about pirates? Well, because they’re sexy. It’s the outfits, you know. All that silk and tattered finery! The amazing tattoos. The cutlasses. The way they grab hostages and lock them in cabins for their own pleasure. And finally, the isolation. Being stuck on a ship together is like the traditional “trapped in a lonely cabin” story, only with the possibility of being eaten by sharks. It’s just plain fun. I had a blast reading the back cover blurbs on a pile of pirate romance novels, and making lists of all the tropes.

I was never the biggest fan of pirates before. I enjoyed reading the classic Captain Blood in high school and, more recently, saw the first Pirates of the Caribbean movie. I’ve read some pirate and sea adventure romances, and am looking forward to reading, in particular, Captured by Beverly Jenkins. I researched Asian pirates, particularly Japanese pirates in conflict with China and Korea, which was really fascinating. But my true loves so far as ocean novels goes are the Napoleonic sea adventure novels by C.S. Forester (the Hornblower series) and Patrick O’Brian (the Aubrey-Maturin series). (Yes, I’ve seen all of the film and television adaptations, but I love the books best.)

Since my novel was set in a fantasy world, I decided to combine these two sub-genres, pirate romances and sea adventures, for The Duke and the Pirate Queen. I took elements from my reading on Asian pirates and combined them with Napoleonic-era European ships and the tropes of sea adventure novels. The heroine, Imena Leung, is the daughter of an Imperial admiral who married one of her barbarian captives. Imena fought pirates, so really she’s a privateer, but the world doesn’t see her that way, and now pirates are after her again, when she thought she’d put it all behind her. And now she isn’t just protecting herself, but her lover.

For my pirates, I had fun both with making them eeeevil and also making them a bit more complex than one’s standard mental image of a pirate who is all outfit and greed. I ended up with two major pirate characters. One of them I made into a flamboyantly angry and greedy villain. The other was more ambiguous; at times she appears cruel and violent, but there are also good reasons for some of the things she does.

I used the pirates’ attack as a way of propelling several aspects of the plot. First, their attack created an opportunity for a big action scene! But eventually, their attack also led to emotional revelations for the hero and heroine.

Pirate attack is better than relationship therapy? Who knew?

Posted in pirates, the duke | Comments Off on Sexy Pirates