World Fantasy Convention In A Really Large Nutshell, Part I

It was a long and arduous journey from New York City to San Diego last Thursday. Oh, the delays! Oh, the taxiing! Oh, the stand-bys!
However, two things made the journey incredibly pleasant. One was my traveling companions, Ellen Kushner and Delia Sherman, who both travel so often that they have it down to an art form.
When I told her I liked to arrive at the airport two hours early, Ellen replied:
“I’m more like Peter Sellars, who said he likes airplanes to be like taxicabs: He gets to the airport, gets on one, and it leaves.”
Daunting! But, see, it worked!
The second thing was the book I read on the airplane. It was Delia’s book, actually released during the convention. It’s a Young Adult time-travel fantasy called The Freedom Maze. I sank into its story as doth the unwary sheep in the treacherous highland bog, and emerged from the last page as we were landing in Texas. Where, due to earlier delays in New York, we’d missed our connection flight.
But have no fear, gentle readers! Even though I was certain I’d never make it to World Fantasy in time for my VERY FIRST EVER WORLD FANTASY READING, the Gods of the Air (and my two traveling companions, AKA fairy godmothers) were with me. Lo was I shunted onto the next flight, the Last of the Stand-By passengers, while Ellen and Delia waved goodbye and sent me texts saying:
“We are eating BBQ and feeling no pain.”
They were booked on the next flight out. I was on my way. I fell promptly asleep.

The Empty House and Other Ghost Stories (1906)
This is the fifth in an ongoing series of posts about Romanticism and the development of fantasy fiction; you can find previous installments
Now that there’s actually more than one good fantasy show on network television, I’ve decided to step back from the detailed Supernatural post mortem (so to speak) and instead to provide a weekly update on the happenings of these fantasy television series all at once. So, here we go with the breakdown for last week’s shows:
Well, just as everyone is remarking on how the new conversant iPhone is making science fiction true to life, one pretty big part of the science fiction imagination remains just that; while the 21st century has not only arrived, we’re a decade into it, but we won’t be taking any sight seeing trips to Mars in the near future. Even a suborbital cruise will have to wait until 2013. The overly ambitiously and to-date technically impossibly named 

Swords from the Sea