Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Booking a Hotel for Finncon

Finncon 2011 has announced their hotel deals (only in Finnish, at least at the moment).

All the hotels (except for Caribia, which is the closest to the convention) are located in or very near the center of Turku, about a 20 minutes’ walk (or under a 10 minutes' bus ride) from the university campus area where the convention is held. The official con hotel (where the GoHs will be staying, unless I’m mistaken) is the Hamburger Börs, smack down in the city center (Note: see Mirka’s comment below—the official con hotel is still being negotiated).

Update: The reservation code for at least the Hamburger Börs (possibly for others as well) doesn’t work for internet reservations—to book with the special Finncon price, send the hotel e-mail or call them.

  • Hamburger Börs (reservation code BFIN110715): 90 €/double room, 75 €/single
  • City Börs (reservation code BFIN110715): 76 €/double, 61 €/single
    same hotel as Hamburger Börs, cheaper rooms across the street, services at the main hotel
  • Seurahuone (reservation code BFIN110715): 72 €/double, 57 €/single
  • Holiday Club Caribia (reservation code FCAC 2011): 143 €/double, 119 €/single
    spa hotel about 900 m from the con site; some Animecon programming at the hotel)
  • Radisson Blu Marina Palace (Reservation code FCAC): 125 €/double, 105 €/single, 157 €/double with extra bed
  • Scandic Plaza (reservation code FCAC150711): 99 €/double, 90 €/single, 135 €/3 persons’ room

The special Finncon prices are valid until June 14 (or until the room quota runs out). All prices include breakfast. Most Hamburger Börs and all City Börs, Seurahuone, Marina, and Plaza rooms have free wi-fi. Caribia rooms have free broadband (wi-fi not specified).

If you’re looking for something more special, there are a couple of other options I can recommend. (Free wi-fi included in the room price with all of these as well.)

  • Centro Hotel is a boutique hotel that is famous for its excellent breakfast. Double room during the summer is 96 €/night
  • Omena Hotel is the most inexpensive alternative outside of hostels. The self service hotel has no staff present, but the hotels are clean and modern. Rooms go for 68 €/night at the moment (the prices go up as the event draws nearer), but each room has beds for four persons. Omena prices don’t include breakfast.
  • Park Hotel is a very charming small art nouveau hotel built in 1902 as a private villa. Each room in the hotel is individual. Double rooms go from 125 to 145 €/night, but if you want something special, this is a good choice.

Turku is full of events this summer, so it is probably a good idea to reserve your rooms soon!

Grants For Sf Zines

The Ministry of Education has once again announced the cultural grants for magazines for “having a discussion in society about culture, science, arts, or religion”.

  • Kosmoskynä (FSFWA) 800 € (same as last year)
  • Portti (TaSFS) 15 000 € (same)
  • Sarjainfo (The Finnish Comics Society) 17 000 € (last year 17 500 €)
  • Spin (TSFS) 2 500 € (last year 3 000 €)
  • Tähtivaeltaja (HSFS) 15 000 € (last year 17 000 €)

Sunday, March 13, 2011

Reading Circle at Turku Pub Meetings

At the mafia pub meeting this month, we agreed on starting a reading circle where those who want to participate can read an sf story and then discuss it at the next meeting. This might not go on every time, but at least occasionally.

The first story to read is Ted Chiang’s Nebula-nominated The Lifecycle of Software Objects. The text is available online, so everyone can read it before April’s meeting. Come join the discussion!

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Tähtivaeltaja Day 2011

The program for the Tähtivaeltaja Day minicon has been announced. The convention takes place in Domus Academica (Hietaniemenkatu 14 B) in Helsinki, on Saturday, April 16. The Guests of Honor are Ann and Jeff VanderMeer. Admission is free.

The program (mostly in Finnish) covers such diverse topics as superheroines in comics, realfantastik vs. dystopias, translating sf, underwater nazi zombies, speculative books (i.e. books that don’t exist), and sci-fi comics karaoke (where the participants perform their favorite comics book page in front of the audience). These things are always great fun, and this year the GoHs are extraordinary—don’t miss this for the world!
  • 12.00 Ovet auki
  • 12.15 Supermimmit ja miehet, jotka haluavat saada heiltä turpiinsa
    Miksi sarjakuvien supernaiset ovat niin paljon parempia kuin oikeat?
    Rami Rautkorpi (pj), Petri Hiltunen, Toni Jerrman, Pekka Manninen, Otto Sinisalo
  • 13.15 Reaalifantasiaa vai dystopiaa? Kotimainen spekulatiivinen fiktio nyt.
    Millaista on suomalainen tieteis- ja fantasiakirjallisuus vuonna 2011?
    Vesa Sisättö (pj), Saara Henriksson, Eija Lappalainen, Tiina Raevaara, Petri Salin
  • 14.15 Cryo Couch Live (in English)
    And and Jeff VanderMeer bare their minds in front of a live audience!
    Toni Jerrman interviews
  • 15.30 Kuinka The Quantum Thiefistä tuli Kvanttivaras
    Spefin suomentajat keskustelevat ammattinsa erityispiirteistä
    Juha Tupasela (pj), Antti Autio, J. Pekka Mäkelä, Johanna Vainikainen-Uusitalo
  • 16.30 Vedenalaiset natsi-zombiet über alles!
    Miksi natsit ovat yhä hyviä vihollisia – tulivat he sitten Kuusta tai merenpohjasta?
    Toni Jerrman (pj), Petri Hiltunen, Ilja Rautsi, Syksy Räsänen sekä yllätysvieras
  • 17.30 Weird Fiction Today (in English)
    The panelists dig deep into strange genre literature
    Jukka Halme (pj), Hannu Blommila, Ann VanderMeer, Jeff VanderMeer
  • 18.30 Profeettoja ja velhoja
    Miksi suosikkisarjakuvien tekijät muuttuvat tämän tästä mielipuoliksi?
    Otto Sinisalo kertoo ja näyttää mallia
  • 19.15 Pelimiehet avautuvat
    Tietokonepelit alfasta omegaan
    Petri Hiltunen (pj), Henri Hakkarainen, Jyrki J. J. Kasvi, Veikko Laeslehto, Mikko Rautalahti
  • 20.15 Nyhjää tyhjiöstä
    Spekulatiiviset kirjat
    Syksy Räsänen (pj), Hannu Blommila, Aleksi Kuutio, Tiina Raevaara, Ilja Rautsi
  • 21.15 Myy kirja -kisa
    Juuri sinä voit voittaa! Ota mukaan haluamasi kirja ja lue siitä pätkä lavalla niin haltioituneesti kuin mahdollista. Show-elkeet sallittu! Max 2–3 minuuttia per esitys. Voittajat palkitaan ruhtinaallisesti.
    Juontajana Vesa "Strippari" Sisättö
  • 22.00 Scifi-sarjakuvakaraoke
    Eläydy Hopeasurffariksi, Halo Jonesiksi, Teräsliljaksi tai Kapteeni Hyperventilaattorimieheksi. Valitse suosikkisarjakuvasivusi ja esitä se itse tai kaverisi kanssa. Halutessasi voit tuoda mukana myös oman sarjakuvasivusi. Parhaat suoritukset palkitaan hulppeasti!
    Juontajana Vesa Kataisto
  • 22.45 Tiedon väärti
    Turkasen totinen tieteistietovisa
    Vetäjänä Jukka Halme
  • 23.45 Kalkkunatrailereita
    Maistuvat einekset pitävät aivonnälän loitolla
  • 00.15 Ohjelma loppuu ja hupi alkaa
    Vapaata seurustelua avaruuden käymättömillä korpimailla
  • 02.00 Ovet kiinni

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

Tähtifantasia Award Nominees

The Helsinki Science Fiction Society has announced the shortlist for the Tähtifantasia award (for best translated fantasy book published in Finnish last year). The nominees are (accompanied by the jury’s comments):
  • Yövartiosto (Night Watch) by Terry Pratchett (Karisto)
    “One of the best tales by the master of humoristic fantasy deals with the essence of time and unjustice in society”
  • Tuulen nimi (The Name of the Wind) by Patrick Rothfuss (Kirjava)
    “A debut novel that honors the traditions of fantasy and is of high literary quality, deals with the magic in words and music”
  • Viimeinen toivomus (Ostatnie życzenie) by Andrzej Sapkowski (WSOY)
    “A thought-provoking short story collection that utilizes the eastern European fantasy tradition with skill”
  • Hiljaisuus soi H-mollissa (The Earth Hums In B-Flat) by Mari Strachan (Karisto)
    “A description of a family that transforms from a murder myster into a growth story; enchants with its magical realism”
  • Kuolemattomien kaarti (The Year of Our War) by Steph Swainston (Like)
    “An original, genre blending novel that doesn’t shy away from the brutal”
The Tähtifantasia award winner is decided by a jury of experts, comprising critic Jukka Halme, critic Aleksi Kuutio, writer and editor Anne Leinonen, and the representative of the Risingshadow fantasy fan forum Osmo Määttä.

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Finnsmofcon 2011

On Saturday, many of the Finnish fandom’s active members gathered in the Tampere winter swimmers’ sauna cabin for the annual smoffing meeting. This year there were more people than I remember there ever being (someone said they counted 70 participants), and it showed a bit; the building was bursting at the seams.
Before the traditional general co-operation meeting, there was the annual meeting of the Finncon association. It was business as usual—closing of the previous year, looking at the plans for the current year. A new board for the association was elected. Karo Leikomaa continues as chair, and Harri Kiiskinen and Pasi Vihinen continue as members of the board. New members this year are Ari Seppi from Tampere and Saija Aro from Espoo (but also representing Jyväskylä).

The co-operation meeting went smoothly, thanks to Jukkahoo who chaired the meeting very efficiently. This year most of the societies present had also done as was asked, and prepared their presentations beforehand, so there was much less going back-and-forth, remembering activities bit by bit, than in the previous few years. This is a practice I hope will continue in the following years. I would like to see the meeting be a bit more efficient still: in my opinion it’s not necessary to go over all the standard stuff that continues from year to year: publishing a club zine, having regular pub meetings, etc. These things could be collected in a info letter, for example, and use the meeting time for discussing things that aren’t exactly the same each year (such as bigger events, and also changes to the usual routines of course).

The usual activities took place after the meeting: sauna + swimming in the lake (quite a few braved the icy lake, despite the freezing weather), filking, raffle, announcing the NoFF delegate (Susanna Leppälahti from Turku will be attending a convention somewhere in the Nordic countries this year), the NoFF auction (which, if I remember correctly, took in about 400 €; a great result), informal meetings, and of course eating and drinking with friends from all over Finland. We also saw a sneak preview of material from the long awaited Iron Sky movie. And had a meeting of the Señor Humidor’s Wondrously Scientifictional Cigar Society. Nice cigars in good company—who cares if it was cold enough to freeze the beer I was drinking while smoking the cigar.

This year the meeting time was longer than before, and I thought it worked very well. The Finncon association meeting was held before the regular meeting (which is excellent, because it takes a while and not everybody needs or wants to be present for it), and also the evening ran longer because the place for reserved for the whole evening. This made for a much more relaxed evening—there are so many activities that the evening has felt very rushed. What I’d like to see in the future would be making the evening less strictly programmed. For example, I would reserve the sauna for a longer period, not just a couple of hours. I’m sure there are people, for example, who aren’t that interested in the hour-long raffle, or the filking session, but would like to relax in the sauna instead. I see no need to try to put all the activities back-to-back, thinking everyone will want to participate in every one of those.

# # #

Tampere

On Sunday, a few of us met for the now quasi-traditional brunch. As always, this was more of a nice and relaxed meeting of friends, taking a couple of hours before heading home. Something said during the brunch caught my attention, and we discussed the idea further with Harri on the way back. Jukka suggested that the co-operation meeting could officially be a two-day event, and I think this would be an excellent idea. It would allow for more time to have smaller meetings (such as a board meeting for the Finncon association) without having to try to cram it all in one evening—and naturally also leave more room for socializing on Saturday. Not everyone who attends the general meeting on Saturday would want (or need) to attend the Sunday part, so a much smaller venue would do.

Sunday’s schedule could be something like:

  • brunch, 10–12 (enough time so that those who don’t want to be up at 10 can attend, but I’d still say start earlier so that us who are up earlier can take our time with the brunch—and please find a place that actually does open when announced, unlike the venue used this year)
  • meetings, starting at noon (those who prefer to sleep in can skip the brunch)
  • end the day around 5 or 6 (with perhaps a pizza break during the day)

My idea of the ideal Smof Sunday would be a very relaxed, loosely programmed day. There could, and should, be some scheduled meetings (the aforementioned Finncon association board meeting would be a good candidate, and perhaps for example a FSFWA meeting as well), but there should also be plenty of time for informal smoffing. This would be a great opportunity for discussing the upcoming events in more detail (Finncon planning), bouncing ideas off other “smofs”, and just socializing. Does this sound like something people would like to try? I’d be game for trying this on for size next year. How about you?

My thanks for the organizers! Next year the meeting will be held on Saturday, February 25. See you in Tampere!

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...