Shira Lipkin Blogathon and Auction for Boston Area Rape Crisis Center
Fantasy author Shira Lipkin, last seen here as the poster child for our Readercon report, is holding a Blogathon on Saturday, July 31, to raise money for the Boston Area Rape Crisis Center.
What’s a Blogathon? We’ll let Shira explain it, as she’s so much cooler than us:
I’ll be posting short fiction and poetry, composed spontaneously, every half hour for 24 hours. That’s 49 pieces of story, automatic for the people. I’m also running an auction of wonderful stuff donated by wonderful people; each post will have a link to an auction item, and the story therein will be inspired by said auction item. (Auction will run July 26-August 2.) Yeah. Other people just post “I am so tired” for hours. I do Blogathon backwards and in heels. Because it wasn’t hard enough?
Man, that’s impressive. I get tired just writing about it. In fact, I think I’m going to go lie down.
More details are available at Shira’s blog, Scheherazade in Blue Jeans. Check it out, and help support a good cause.
Author photo by C.S.E. Cooney.
Here at the Black Gate offices we’ve sent the entire gaggle of lazy summer interns to the local
Steve Fahnestalk is a little overwhelemed with his first issue of Black Gate:
The Dead Matter
I don’t keep track of what cable network Nickelodeon does these days (I don’t have children), but even with the new logo I can’t imagine that the channel has altered much from the manic “no adults in the room” style that it started to specialize in during the mid-‘80s. That was the point when Double Dare and its profusion of goo heralded a rethinking of the channel’s former “education-and-imports” format it had used since its launch in 1979.
I’ve been telling you about this one for quite awhile and now it’s finally here!
It’s only polite to introduce yourself properly, and as this is my fourth posting on this blog, a proper introduction is really overdue. So: Who am I, and what am I doing here?
From his first appearance in print in the pages of The Story-Teller in October 1912, Sax Rohmer’s criminal mastermind, Dr. Fu Manchu took the world by storm. While Rohmer would complete three novels featuring the character between 1912 and 1917, the Devil Doctor would extend his domain to include film and comics in the fourteen years before Rohmer bowed to commercial demand and revived the series.