Guest Post: Pimping the Prognosticators.

Not by me this time.  Not even about me,  a couple of gratuitous paragraphs notwithstanding. I’m currently hunched over a pint of Keith’s waiting for the BUG to show up, and subjecting Echopraxia to its final polish before I send it off next week.  If I was going to show you anything, it would be the cool slides I’m working up for next month’s talk at FinnCon— but that would be more sizzle than steak.

On the other hand, Steve Saus here is more that willing to pick up the slack with his pitch for a new kickstarter antho; and given the fact that I’m eyeing crowd-sourcing as an increasingly attractive option when it comes to my own work, I’m happy to cede the floor.

Fellow mammals, Steven Saus:

I’m not exaggerating when I say that Blindsight fascinatingly disturbed me in a way few others have.

And a huge chunk of the reason for that emotion can be summarized – with a touch of whimsy – in the portion called “The Book of Oogenesis”. Or less whimsically as “It’s biological determinism, stupid.”

I had been reading the works of George Herbert Mead at the time – particularly Mind, Self, and Society. At first, I thought it was a good counterpoint to biological determinism. One of Mead’s central arguments is that our idea of “self” is not an innate experience, but only arises through interaction. More importantly, a mediated interaction. Sensations, speech, gestures, even written words all serve as the medium in which self arises. Self, in Mead’s viewpoint, is not some ineffable element. Self is not simply a biological machine clicking (or squishing) away, but a dialectic of action and response.

And then you start thinking about emergent complexity. You think about how simple biological organisms can interact in fascinating, complex ways. You look around at the cell phones and speeding automobiles and fancy clothes, and determinism rears its head again, whispering and giggling.

Take that far enough, and we get back to an older idea that if we just had sophisticated enough equations, we would know the future.

…and then we’d have to start two foundations, hide one from the other and, well, it gets complicated from there.

All this went through my head when Nayad Monroe pitched the idea for What Fates Impose last year. She’s put together an anthology of tales about divination and fortune telling. It’s a great lineup of award-winning authors, including Maurice Broaddus, Cat Rambo, Tim Waggoner, Beth Wodzinski, Ferrett Steinmetz, and Lucy Snyder. I think fellow readers of the ‘crawl will especially enjoy Ferrett Steinmetz’s story “Black Swan Oracle” (an excerpt is here).

We’re currently running a Kickstarter to fund the anthology. And this guest post is – aside from a platform for me to introduce you to George Herbert Mead – supposed to help that Kickstarter.

I know, I know, another Kickstarter, another book to read. Heck, I’m a reader myself, with a to-read bookshelf that is threatening to collapse. But when I started reading the stories Nayad had collected for this book, I didn’t want to stop. I made time to read them. Because I found that even though there were other books I could read, there were no other books I wanted to read.

I’d like to ask two small things of you. Take a moment to check it out at bit.ly/kickfate. The video features Alasdair Stuart (of Pseudopod) reading a portion of his introductory essay “Singing From the Book of Holy Jagger”. I love hearing Alasdair talk about stories and culture and life; I think you’ll enjoy it as much as I do.

Second, I’d like to ask you to help spread the word. We have a special page to make it a matter of three clicks at bit.ly/sharefate. If you can’t back the Kickstarter financially, this is a quick and easy way to still help us out.

Now that you’ve read my words, now that my self has existed in the space between my writing and your reading, will you click? Will you click those links, or will you pass them by?

Thanks in advance.

Steven Saus



This entry was posted on Thursday, June 20th, 2013 at 12:49 pm and is filed under misc. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.
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Ken Kennedy
Guest
10 years ago

Definitely will check this out, Peter…and let me tell you now, I’d Kickstarter the *crap* out of anything with your name on it! I’d be starting around $100 w/o even knowing what was involved, and I’d go up from there if the bonuses were jazzy.

H Brown
Guest
H Brown
10 years ago

I really admire your writing, and your fondness for cats even more, but seriously you have crappy taste in beer.

MP in DC
Guest
MP in DC
10 years ago

I have to agree with Ken, if you ever did anything kickstarter related I would support the crap out of it as well. I would lean on all my friends to do the same. I might even make my cats get kickstarter accounts and ask them to use their treat budget to help out (I would refund them of course).

And one of the bonus pledges should involve beer…

Jeremy
Guest
Jeremy
10 years ago

Can someone explain how a kickstarter helps write a book? Is the money used to publish it?

Steven Saus
Guest
10 years ago

Heya! I’m the publisher (and guest blogger in question).

Clarification: Peter’s a pal; I knew he was deep in the middle of novel writing, so he’s not in this anthology. I may just snag him for a future one, though.

Jeremy: It depends. In this case, I’m simply using the money to pay the authors; the text of the book is already mostly ready to go. Some folks (like Matt Forbeck) have raised money to have an advance prior to writing the novel so they can eat.

H Brown
Guest
H Brown
10 years ago

H Brown,

Keith’s isn’t IPA, and Corona isn’t even beer.