Thursday, April 12, 2007

Send Jukkahoo to Japan

Jukka the interviewerIt’s time to vote in JETS, if you haven’t already!

The Japanese Expeditionary Travel Scholarship is a special fund created to assist a European science fiction fan, elected by popular vote of other European fans, to travel to and attend Nippon 2007, the Yokohama Worldcon. That fan should be Jukka Halme from Finland.

Why Jukka? He has been active in most aspects of fandom in Finland for a couple of decades: fanzines (writing for many Finnish zines, as well as illustrating and editing), conventions (attending and running—including chairing the largest-ever Finncon last year), PR (reading and recommending fiction for publication, speaking of sf to the public at large, editing sf fiction and non-fiction works), etc. He’s a true fan with a great interest in fandom, as well as an expert on sf literature.

Who can vote? Any European sf fan who has been active in fandom before 2005 (or who attended Interaction).

How to vote? Go to the JETS site and follow the instructions. Basically, you contribute to the fund (minimum 6 euros when you send the payment by PayPal), and send your vote via e-mail to the administrators. (Johan Anglemark has posted a text-version of the ballot on the Swedish fandom forum—you can copy it to your e-mail from there.)

Act now! The deadline for voting is this Friday (April 13) at midnight (GMT). So, send your vote in now! If you need help with PayPal, contact me and I’ll help you with that. No. Excuses. Vote. Now.

Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Book Your Åcon Trip & Hotel

Åcon is approaching, and the deadline for travel and hotel booking is upon us. So, if you haven’t already, act now!

The deadline for the hotel room special offer is this Friday. Reserve your rooms now. Also, Friday is the last day to reserve the special-price cruise through the convention.

Åcon will be special—do not miss it!

Update: The deadline has been extended to Sunday.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Buffy Fans Gather

The Finnish fans of Buffy the Vampire Slayer gather for the fifth time at FinBuffy on June 9 in Jyväskylä to meet, hang out, test their trivia skills, etc.. More info on the FinBuffy website.

Monday, April 09, 2007

Usva Competition Winners

The short story competition “Arjen outous” (“strangeness of the mundane”) winners have been announced. The competition was organized by the Usva e-zine, and it has four winners because each member of the jury picked an individual winner from the entries.

The winners are:

  • Rat Masterson, by Tuula Hautala (picked by Petri Laine)
  • Vetehinen, by Jussi Katajala (picked by Boris Hurtta)
  • Puitten Juuret, by Juri Nummelin (picked by Liisa Rantalaiho)
  • Pohjavirtoja, by Katariina Juntunen (picked by Petri Salin and Irma Hirsjärvi)

Congratulations to the winners! The winning stories plus other selected entries will be published in the Usva issue 2/2007.

Friday, April 06, 2007

April Mafia Thoughts

Quite a good turnout tonight, even if some of the regulars were missing. Some things I jotted down during the evening (some of these were actually jotted down by others, but I’m shamelessly stealing their bits):

  • Swedish horror stories always seem to follow the same pattern
  • we started to compare our roots, but stopped almost immediately, after both Kaisa and Harri told they can trace their lineage back to people that lived in Turku in the 16th century
  • politics (beyond Ben’s ridiculous fears) was discussed
  • hedgehogs rule—and swear
  • send Jukkahoo to Japan (and back, please)
  • Paris Hiltunen really is Hitler’s brain (don’t ask)
  • Mafia zine drank itself under the table

Tonight’s zine (drank itself under the table) contains the Finland part of Juliette Woods and Damien Warman’s GUFF report of their trip to Finland. A highly recommended piece of fanwriting (which you can get if you subscribe to Banana Wings also, or—if you live in Finland—in Spin sometime in the future too).

Also, we had a long discussion with Pasi about the future of the Turku fandom (and the Uni sf club in particular) which I hope will also be followed with some concrete results in the near future.

Thursday, April 05, 2007

Tähtivaeltaja Hits 100 Issues

Tähtivaeltaja, Finland’s premier sf zine, started appearing 25 years ago (as Time & Space for the first few issues), an the 100th issue just came out. That’s quite a feat, and what makes it even more amazing is that it’s been edited by the same guy, Toni Jerrman, basically the whole time!

Tähtivaeltaja has never been content to just tread water, but instead it’s been constantly improving and looking for new things (and telling all about them too). Its main emphasis is and has been science fiction, but horror, comics, rock music, and different subcultures have also been strongly represented. Nowadays the zine doesn’t contain nearly as many accounts of people drinking booze or Toni raving about crappy gigs of bands nobody has ever heard of1) as it used to, but the zine is no less interesting. Tähtivaeltaja is the place to look for for information about new and interesting writers, upcoming trends in science fiction and fantasy, and informed book reviews.

The 100th issue is no exception to the usual quality. There are interviews of Jeff VanderMeer and Warren Ellis, a translated short story by Alastair Reynolds, the winning entry for last year’s erotic short story competition by Mari Saario, and a comic by Petri Hiltunen—in addition to the normal mix of news, reviews and columns, of course. As an additional bonus, attached to the issue is a 40-page Jeff VanderMeer chapbook about the King Squid. Excellent reading, as always!

Congratulations to Toni for the milestone! I’m looking forward to reading the next 100 issues.

1 By the way, one of those unknown bands he used to go on and on about way back when was The 69 Eyes—which I think quite a few have since come to know…

Sunday, April 01, 2007

Tähtivaeltaja Award Nominees

The Tähtivaeltaja award is given annually to the best science fiction book published in Finland during the previous year—it can be a novel or a short story collection; a translation or an original Finnish work. Tähtivaeltaja-award is given by the Helsinki Science Fiction Society which is also behind the Tähtivaeltaja semiprozine. Of the sf books published the previous year five best books are selected for the short list. The winner is chosen by a jury of experts.

The nominees for the best science fiction book published in  Finland in 2006 are:

  • Steve Aylett: Atomi (Atom)
  • Stepan Chapman: Troikka (The Troika)
  • Benoît Duteurtre: Tyttö ja tupakka (La petite fille et la cigarette/The Little Girl and the Cigarette)
  • Michel Houellebecq: Mahdollinen saari (La possibilité d'une ile/The Possibility of an Island)
  • J. Pekka Mäkelä: Alshain (an original Finnish novel)

The winner will be announced in May at the Tähtivaeltaja day minicon.

(Thanks to Toni Jerrman for the info.)

Finlandia Award Nominees 2018

The Finlandia Award nominees for this year have been announced, and there are a couple of familiar sfnal names in the mix. Magdalena Hai’s K...