Schedule Grid
Saturday 8:00 a :
Hynes Open for Setup Only
Saturday 9:00 a :
Hynes Opens
Saturday 9:00 a Hall A:
Registration Opens
Saturday 9:00 a Con Suite:
Con Suite Open
Saturday 9:00 a H102:
Drum Circle
Saturday 9:00 a Grand Ballroom:
Discworld: Soul Music
Saturday 9:00 a Liberty A:
Jewish Services
Saturday 9:00 a Republic A:
Risky/Safety [Dubbed]
Saturday 9:30 a :
KiddieCorp Professional
Childcare and Children's Programming and Activities Open
Saturday 9:30 a H203:
Christian Apocalyptic
Fiction and SF
Tom Doyle
Saturday 9:30 a Beacon A:
Moving to Music
[ages 1–7]
Clap and sing to the music of Jim
Cosgrove, a Kansas City children's folk singer.
Saturday 9:30 a Beacon F:
Edible Necklace
[ages 1–5]
Need a snack between activities? Make
one using low-sugar snacks and plastic lacing.
Saturday 9:30 a Conference:
Filk Office Opens
Saturday 9:30 a Exeter:
Reading
Marc Giller
Saturday 10:00 a :
Masquerade Registration
Open
Saturday 10:00 a H100:
Mechwarrior
Learn how to play the hit mechanized
battle simulation from Wizkids.
Saturday 10:00 a H102:
Rounds Singing
What is a round, you ask? Come learn
how to sing rounds and canons. Some are filk, some are not.
Lois H. Mangan
Saturday 10:00 a H107:
What's New from
Ace/Roc.
Ginjer Buchanan
Saturday 10:00 a H204:
SFWA Meeting
Saturday 10:00 a H205:
How Does Language
Influence Thought?
The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis (no, not
the Klingon) states that language completely determines thought,
i.e., if your language doesn't have a word for the concept, then
you can't even conceive of the concept. Many linguists consider
this nonsense, but all agree there is some truth to it. How does
the language we use shape the thoughts we have? Why is it
impossible to completely understand the concepts of another
language without learning it? What gets lost in translation?
Geary Gravel, John-Henri Holmberg,
Elizabeth Anne Hull (m), Kathy Morrow
Saturday 10:00 a H208:
Firefly
Marathon, Episodes 6-8
Saturday 10:00 a H209:
Galaxy Express
999 [Dubbed]
Saturday 10:00 a H210:
WSFS Business Meeting,
First Main Session
The WSFS Business Meeting is open to
all Worldcon members. Today's meeting will debate and vote on
amendments to the WSFS Constitution. The elections for the WSFS
Mark Protection Committee are scheduled for this meeting as
well.
Saturday 10:00 a H301:
The Space Elevator
The space elevator is moving from the
pages of science fiction to science fact. This presentation will
cover the state of the art of space elevator technology,
discussing the components of a space elevator and how it can be
built. There will be lots of time for Q&A!
Tom Nugent Jr.
Saturday 10:00 a H302:
Doorstops: Truly
Enormous Books and Series
Huge books, a never-ending
serieswhy are these herniators so popular? Why does it
take so many words to tell a good story? Does anyone edit
anymore?
Daniel Abraham, Kevin J. Anderson,
William C. Dietz, Beth Meacham (m), Martha Wells
Saturday 10:00 a H303:
Imaginative Fiction: A
Third World Perspective
Why are science fiction and fantasy
important to the Third World? And in what way could the Third
World be important to science fiction and fantasy? Fans, readers
and writers around the world are embracing imaginative fiction
and adapting and transforming it to reflect upon their societies
and their possible futures. Much Anglo-American SF glorifies
humans colonizing other worlds, but writers from post-colonial
cultures are more likely to identify with the conquered aliens.
As imaginative fiction crosses national and cultural borders,
how can we—Anglo-Americans and others—sample, learn
from, and enjoy the resulting rich brew?
A personal take on the subject from a
writer born and raised in India, with discussion to follow.
Vandana Singh
Saturday 10:00 a H304:
Reading (1-hour)
Neil Gaiman
Saturday 10:00 a H305:
The Perils of Pitching
Marc Giller
Saturday 10:00 a H306:
Great Moments from SF
Films
Since "movies are moments," let's
recall a few dozen of the really great ones.
Bob Devney (m), MaryAnn Johanson,
Daniel Kimmel, Mark R. Leeper, Kathi D. Overton
Saturday 10:00 a H309:
Where Art Meets
Science: The Genomic Sculptures of Mara Haseltine
New York artist Mara Haseltine has
devoted her career to probing the arena where art and genetics
intersect. She focuses in particular on large scale sculptures
that reflect current scientific knowledge of cell structures and
processes. For example The Waltz of the
Polypeptides is a sculptural landscape based on
electronic microscope and MNR imaging of ribosomes and proteins,
computer processed and fabricated into three dimensions using
milling and rapid prototyping technologies. Mara will discuss
this, the Inflatable and Molecular Subworlds Project, and other
works in a slide talk.
Mara Haseltine, Dennis Livingston (m)
Saturday 10:00 a H310:
Groundpounding 101
Just how fast could a nuclear steam
locomotive pull a transatlantic train? Would hexapedal draft
animals really be more efficient than quadrupeds? A short course
in the physics of ground transportation, with some fascinating
examples of technologies ranging from historic fact to
prototypes that led nowhere to the world's first commercially
operated high-speed magnetic levitation system.
Duncan W. Allen
Saturday 10:00 a H312:
What SF Writers
Are/Aren't Doing Today
Based on two talks at the 1968
Worldcon (Baycon): "What SF Writers Are Doing Today and Why"
(Brunner) and "What SF Writers Aren't Doing Today That They
Should" (Garrett). Expound!
John R. Douglas, Jim Grimsley, David
McMahon, Graham Sleight (m)
Saturday 10:00 a Art Show:
Art Show Opens
Saturday 10:00 a Art Show:
Denise Gendron,
Flutist
Denise Gendron
Saturday 10:00 a Auditorium:
Presenting Your
Costume: What Tech Can Do For You
Tips for making a presentation that
will show off your costume to its best advantage— how good
tech can enhance your work. We'll also show you some bad tech,
so that you can learn some of the differences. Learn some new
tricks to use during the Masquerade! Veteran Masqueraders, along
with technical and Masquerade staff will be on hand to give
advice.
Richard Hill, Kevin P. Roche, Larry
Schroeder
Saturday 10:00 a Beacon A:
Open Playtime [ages
1–6]
We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and
other kids to play with.
Saturday 10:00 a Beacon D:
Bug-Eyed Monsters
from Outer Space [ages 7–12]
Make your own little fuzzy Bug-Eyed
Monster to take home! Pick your colors, add your eyes, and give
it a name with Noreascon's own Fuzzy BEM specialist.
Susan de Guardiola
Saturday 10:00 a Beacon F:
Model Magic
Sculpture [ages 3-12]
Model magic is an air-drying clay that
can be colored using magic markers. We'll have a different theme
for each day's creation.
Saturday 10:00 a ConCourse:
Site Selection
Opens
Saturday 10:00 a Exeter:
Reading
Tobias Buckell
Saturday 10:00 a Gardner:
Discworld: a Kid's
View [ages 7–12]
Examine childhood life in
Ankh-Mohrpork or another fantasy world…how would it
differ from what you know now? What do you think would be the
same? Adults must have a child with them to be admitted
to this program item.
Terry Pratchett
Saturday 10:00 a Hall A:
Medieval Dagger
Fighting in the Middle Ages could be
brutal, and never more so than when combatants faced each other
armed only with daggers. See the skills needed to survive a
medieval knife fight, as taught in contemporary combat manuals.
Higgins Armory Sword Guild
Saturday 10:00 a Hall D:
Dealers Room Opens
Saturday 10:00 a Hampton:
Reading
Isaac Szpindel
Saturday 10:00 a Independence:
Toon RPG:
Codename Kids Part 1
The Kids Next Door Headquarters has
lost contact with the orbital station and potty stop. Your
team's job is to determine the cause and correct the problem. [6
players]
Saturday 10:00 a Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Alex Irvine,
Thomas Kidd, Karen Traviss
Saturday 10:30 a :
Meeting Fans in Marriott
Tamora Pierce
Saturday 10:30 a H203:
From the Fringes of the
Six O'Clock News: SF, Public Discourse, and the Mainstream
Heather Urbanski
Saturday 10:30 a H206:
The Ethics of Cloning
Join one of our Fan Guests of Honor,
and learn his take on this hot (and somewhat frightening)
advance in modern biomedical science.
Jack Speer
Saturday 10:30 a H303:
Fixing SF?
Does it need to be fixed? If so, why?
And how would you do it?)
Matthew Jarpe
Saturday 10:30 a H305:
The Speculative
Literature Foundation
Does science fiction need an arts
foundation? What kind of grants should it give? Who should get
them? What is "speculative literature" anyhow?
Learn about the Foundation's awards for
short fiction, grants for travel research and older writers,
small press co-operative program, and forthcoming technology
exchange and online classified programs. The SLF is intended to
serve you, the readers, writers, editors and publishers of the
spec lit community. Give your inputwhat can it do for you?
Mary Anne Mohanraj
Saturday 10:30 a H307:
SF/F/H in Board and
Card Games
Hear about the past, present, and
future of these games by a compulsive collector of the same.
W. Randy Hoffman
Saturday 10:30 a Clarendon:
Beyond the Human
Genome Project
…lies what? And where will this
(slightly-scary?) science be taking us?
Ronald Taylor
Saturday 10:30 a Dalton:
A Visit to Outer
Mongolia
Amy Thomson
Saturday 10:30 a Exeter:
Reading
Louise Marley
Saturday 10:30 a Hall A:
Renaissance Rapier
and Dagger
Watch the most romantic of swords in
action! The rapier is the best-known of swords, making it
appearance in everything from Shakespeare to swashbuckler
movies. In this presentation, the Higgins Armory Sword Guild
revives the lost art of its use as described in one of the
earliest systematic manuals of the rapier.
Higgins Armory Sword Guild
Saturday 10:30 a Hampton:
Reading
Liz Williams
Saturday 11:00 a Auditorium:
Masquerade Tech
Rehearsal—Section One
Masquerade and Technical Staffs
Saturday 11:00 a H100:
Steve Jackson Games
Tournament
Games include: NinjaBurger Card
Game, Car Wars Card Game,
Munchkin (all decks), Chez Geek, and
Illuminati: Crime Wars. Players will rotate between
games. You must sign up for this event. You must be in the room
by 11 am to play. [Experience required]
Saturday 11:00 a H203:
The Golden Duck Awards
and Literacy
Saturday 11:00 a H205:
Bad Anime
Tales from the slush pile.
Christine Carpenito, Teddy Harvia (m),
Neil Nadelman, William "Crash" Yerazunis
Saturday 11:00 a H206:
Women Warriors
Which ones we admire (Buffy, Xena,
Jirel, Paksanarrion) and why. Now butt-kicking women practically
have a genre of their own, but it's usually "pulp-fiction"
territory. Why is it still easier to imagine these heroines in
non-realistic fiction—and what does that say about the
shortcomings of both real-world fiction and the society we live
in?
Terry McGarry (m), Elizabeth Moon,
Katya Reimann, Cecilia Tan
Saturday 11:00 a H301:
Is Wernher von Braun
Haunting NASA?
Wernher von Braun, often considered
the father of the space program, proposed building a space
station more than fifty years ago. Now we finally have one, and
NASA is planning to abandon it before it's properly up and
running. What's going wrong?
Is NASA stuck in the past, haunted by
the ghosts of obsolete proposals which it can't abandon? Was the
problem that Apollo didn't follow von Braun's plan, skipping the
re-usable space ferries, space stations, and orbital tugs in
favor of the Apollo lunge for the Moon? Was the mistake throwing
away perfectly good Apollo technology that could have taken us
back to the Moon and beyond years ago? Jonathan McDowell
Jeff Hecht (m), Les Johnson, Henry
Spencer, Allen Steele
Saturday 11:00 a H302:
Reality Ain't What It
Used To Be: Secret Histories and Urban Fantasies
Science fiction has always challenged
conventional notions of reality, but recent years have seen a
growing interest in speculative stories that dwell on ancient
conspiracies and secret histories, parallel dimensions which
interact in strange ways with our own and hidden corners of
great cities in which lurk creatures of myth and legend come to
life. Panelists can explore these cracks in consensual reality
and their implications for the future of SF itself as a genre
based largely on developments in science and technology.
There are more and more books where
the author, such as Tim Powers, re-examines the past and reveals
the "real" secrets hidden there. Supernatural conspiracies may
explain what we might have always thought of as dull historical
trivia, and underlying connections between the most disparate
events are elucidated with great verve. What the hell is going
on here? Are secret histories gaining on alternate ones? Why are
they so addictively enjoyable? How might the fantastic
reinterpretation of history practiced by such authors relate to
current events? And, in a world where Mae West slept with Ho Chi
Minh, what even stranger connections might make intriguing
reading?
Paul DiFilippo, Daniel Hatch (m), Alex
Irvine, Steven Sawicki
Saturday 11:00 a H303:
Really Alien Languages
Klingon looks pretty strange to an
English speaker, but it's still (just barely) within the
boundaries of possible human languages (after all, we know that
humans can learn it). What about really alien
languages? What are some possible features that would make a
language so different from any human language that no human
could ever become fluent in it? How would you transliterate it
so that people could make some reasonable attempt at pronouncing
it? (Assuming that humans are physically capable of pronouncing
it, that is.)
Suzanne Alles Blom, Nomi Burstein, Mark
Mandel (m), Lawrence Schoen, Timothy L. Smith
Saturday 11:00 a H304:
What's
Entertainment?—A Look at the Future
Entertainment probably started with
oral storytelling, followed by plays and written stories. The
twentieth century saw the rise of movies, radio, television, and
video games. What's next? The "feelies" from Brave New
World? Aroma symphonies? Digitally created actors (oh, we
already have them…)? Some perversion of virtual reality?
Our panelists have come back from the future to let us know.
Simon R. Green, Henry Jenkins, James
Stevens-Arce (m), Rick Wilber, Connie Willis
Saturday 11:00 a H305:
Sweat and Blisters: How
Much Reality Can We Stand in Fantasy Quests?
Why do people on quests in fantasy
literature never sweat? How do you handle all the inconveniences
like potty breaks, rain, bugs, rocks under your blanket,
carrying enough food and water, etc.? Does it matter?
Kage Baker, Glen Cook, Sean McMullen,
Peter Morwood, Josepha Sherman (m), Andrew Wheeler
Saturday 11:00 a H306:
Fantasy of Manners
How do we define it? How do we draw
the line, and what is its appeal? Is it a truth
(universally-acknowledged…) that only women can write it?
Lois McMaster Bujold, Ellen Kushner,
Madeleine E. Robins (m), Jo Walton
Saturday 11:00 a H307:
Collecting SF Art for
Fun and Profit
The value of SF and Fantasy artwork
has appreciated greatly over the years. Twenty years ago, $100
was expensive— now it's dirt cheap. Collectors give you
the ins and outs of collecting and protecting.
Pamela Scoville, Jerry Weist (m),
Robert K. Wiener
Saturday 11:00 a H309:
The Art of Ruth
Sanderson
From her home amidst the fields of
western Massachusetts, Ruth illustrates classical and original
fantasies for children of all ages. She's the queen of the young
adult picture book. Let her beautiful oils introduce you to
courtier cats, flame-feathered firebirds, pensive princesses,
and a ruby-red forest half as old as time.
Ruth Sanderson
Saturday 11:00 a H310:
Space Opera Noire
Space opera used to be all about
optimism, excitement, and fun. Now it's about darkness, danger,
and fun. How and why have modern masters such as Banks, Vinge,
MacLeod, Reynolds, and Hamilton driven so far into the dark? And
why are they mostly British?
Jim Frenkel, David G. Hartwell, James
Killus (m), Toni Weisskopf, Scott Westerfeld
Saturday 11:00 a H311:
Backups: Eternal Life
or Eternal Death?
Let's say we could record a person's
mind and play it back into a new body, so that the new person
couldn't be told from the old. Would that lead to immortality?
Or would it lead to an endless series of deaths followed by the
creation of a new person who just thinks he's the old one?
Essentially, what does it mean to be oneself?
M. M. Buckner, Bridget Coila, Terry
Franklin, Matthew Jarpe (m), John Moore
Saturday 11:00 a H312:
The Future of Food
Science fiction is full of people
eating full meals as pills or squeezing fully-nutritious goop
into their mouths. What will we eat? What should we eat? What's
on the table? Will the foods be GM, artificial, natural, or
highly organic?
Zara Baxter, Barbara Chepaitis (m),
Herb Kauderer, Samuel Scheiner, W. A. Thomasson, Karen Traviss
Saturday 11:00 a Art Show:
An Eclectic Art
Show Tour
Ctein, Teresa Nielsen Hayden
Saturday 11:00 a Art Show:
Retro Art Exhibit
Tour
Bob Eggleton
Saturday 11:00 a Autographing:
Autographing
Joseph DeVito, Toni L. P. Kelner,
Stanley Schmidt, Isaac Szpindel, Michael Whelan, Robert Charles
Wilson
Saturday 11:00 a Beacon A:
Open Playtime [ages
1–6]
We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and
other kids to play with.
Saturday 11:00 a Beacon D:
Drawing and
Cartooning. [ages 7–12]
Learn about drawing and cartooning
from one of the best.
Joe Bergeron
Saturday 11:00 a Beacon F:
Capes [ages
3–6]
Fabric and imagination help you create
your own cape with no sewing required.
Saturday 11:00 a Clarendon:
Working with Fiber
Mary C. Miller
Saturday 11:00 a Dalton:
About the Sci-Fi
Channel
How does it make decisions to cancel
or run things?
Craig Engler, Shara R. Zoll
Saturday 11:00 a Exeter:
Reading
Robert Buettner
Saturday 11:00 a Fanzine Lounge:
Talking Like
a Trufan: SF Slang from the Hectograph to the Web
Apas, annishes and Ackermanese. BEMs,
beanies and blogs. Cons, corflu and crudzines. These are the
ABCs of fanspeak. The gostak distims the doshes, but why don't
slans read sci-fi? Don't know? You're probably a neo. Come and
croggle as our panel of WKFs and BNFs explains the arcana of the
SF community, argues over etymology and generally displays the
art of fansmanship.
Andrew Porter, Joe Siclari, Jack Speer
(m), Milton F. Stevens, Erwin S. Strauss, Joel Zakem
Saturday 11:00 a Gardner:
Belly Dancing 101
[ages 7–12]
Dr. Karen teaches an introduction to
belly dancing.
Karen Purcell
Saturday 11:00 a Grand Ballroom:
Terry
Pratchett GoH Speech
Our Guest of Honor became Britain's
best-selling author by writing funny fantasies. He once said,
"We are trying to understand the fundamental workings of the
universe by a language devised for telling another where the
best fruit is." Come by and he'll probably say more things like
that.
Terry Pratchett
Saturday 11:00 a Hall A:
Medieval Combat
Have at you! Witness the subtle skills
of attack, parry, and grapple, as the knightly arts of the
falchion, halberd, dagger, and sword and buckler are brought to
life from forgotten medieval manuscripts.
Higgins Armory Sword Guild
Saturday 11:00 a Hampton:
Reading
Katherine Kurtz
Saturday 11:00 a Independence:
Toon RPG:
Codename Kids Part Two
This mission is so secret that it
cannot be revealed here. Part Two of a two-part adventure. You
do not have to play the first part to play this one. [6 players]
Saturday 11:00 a Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Elizabeth Bear, John Betancourt, Jack
Dann, Liz Gorinsky
Saturday 11:00 a Con Suite:
Knitting (and all
that)
Saturday 11:00 a Liberty A:
Odyssey Workshop
Discussion
Saturday 11:00 a Liberty C:
Firefly Discussion Group
Lee Ann Kaluat
Saturday 11:00 a Republic A:
Slayers
Return [Dubbed]
Saturday 11:00 a Docent Tour:
Village Tour (of
the Worldcon)
John F. Hertz
Saturday 11:30 a Dalton:
How Much of Our
Behavior is Gene-Guided?—One Writer's Approach
Charles Oberndorf
Saturday 11:30 a Exeter:
Reading
David B. Coe
Saturday 11:30 a Hall A:
Swordplay through the
Ages
The sword was the weapon par
excellence for hundreds of years and the symbol of nobility
and might. During that time its techniques changed dramatically.
From the subtleties of the knightly long sword to the simplicity
of the military saber, watch this demonstration of authentic
swordplay styles, as taken from surviving manuals.
Higgins Armory Sword Guild
Saturday 11:30 a Hampton:
Reading
Nancy Kress
Saturday 12:00 n H100:
HeroClix Booster
Draft
Play your favorite superheroes against
others in this Wizkids sanctioned event.
Saturday 12:00 n H102:
Bard of the Rings: A
Tolkien Filk Singalong
Erwin S. Strauss
Saturday 12:00 n H107:
What's Up at Del Rey
Books
Come meet the editors from Del Rey
Books, and hear what's up with some of your favorite authors,
including Stephen Baxter, John Birmingham, Arthur C. Clarke,
Eric Flint, Peter Hamilton, Robert E. Howard, Anne McCaffrey,
China Miéville, Richard Morgan, Harry Turtledove, and
many others.
Steve Saffel
Saturday 12:00 n H203:
The One-Foot SF and
Horror Film Reference Bookshelf
There are many film reference books,
some general, some aimed specifically at genre films. This panel
examines film reference books and tries to decide the truly
essential ones for a fan of SF and horror films. After all, you
can't get all your info off the Internet or in the
gutter…
Bob Devney, MaryAnn Johanson (m),
Daniel Kimmel, Mark R. Leeper
Saturday 12:00 n H204:
Is All This Labeling
Necessary?
Authors, editors, artists and fans look
at what labels like "science fiction," "fantasy," "genre," etc.
do for us and to us. How do you actually define this
literature of the fantastic?
Brian W. Aldiss, Ellen Asher, John
Clute, Fred Lerner (m), James Morrow
Saturday 12:00 n H205:
Is It Fair?
Do magazines accept only on the basis
of the perceived quality of the submissions, or are there other
criteria in play? If there are, what are they and how important
are they?
Because no writer can support himself by writing
short stories, are short stories therefore "amateur" products?
Are short story writers less good than novelists? Does the
quality of current short stories say anything about this?
Scott Edelman, Carl Frederick (m),
Shawna McCarthy, Resa Nelson, Sheila Williams
Saturday 12:00 n H206:
Futurists and Science
Fiction Writers: Tools of the Trade
Science fiction writers often use
intuitive methods of trend extrapolation and media surveys to
work out the background to stories set in the future. So do
"professional futurists," the cadre of individuals from many
disciplines who have been advising government agencies and
corporations about the shape of possible futures over the past
thirty years.
What other methods are the futurists
using? Are futurists really writing non-fiction science fiction?
Do SF writers have anything to learn from futurists—and
vice versa?
Brenda Jean Cooper, Christian Crews,
Marc Giller, Dennis Livingston (m), Amy Oberg
Saturday 12:00 n H209:
My Youth In
Arcadia [Subtitled]
Saturday 12:00 n H301:
What is the Rock's
Motivation in This Scene?
How do you keep control of your cast
of characters and explain them to the reader without stopping
the story?
Theodora Goss, Stephen P. Kelner (m),
Chris Moriarty, Martha Soukup, Jo Walton
Saturday 12:00 n H302:
Why Write?
Do you write for simple pleasure? For
an audience? For posterity? All or none of the above?
Discuss—it's all valid!
Joe Haldeman (m), James Patrick Kelly,
William Tenn, Martha Wells, Gary K. Wolf
Saturday 12:00 n H303:
What New Writers Need
to Know
Having sold a few short stories or a
first novel, a writer often enters that awkward age between
being and nothingness. What are the best ways to approach a
nascent career, and learn the ropes about promotion, copyrights,
the IRS, etc. How do you move onward into the realm of name
recognition? And how do you capitalize on that shiny-new SFWA
membership anyhow?
Kevin J. Anderson, Sally Wiener Grotta,
Jane Jewell (m), Vera Nazarian, James Stevens-Arce, Eleanor Wood
Saturday 12:00 n H304:
Hear the Symbols Clash!
Are we literate enough to use
symbolism deliberately? When is it dangerous?
Jon Courtenay Grimwood, John Jarrold,
Kathy Morrow (m), Vandana Singh, Takayuki Tatsumi, Mary Turzillo
Saturday 12:00 n H305:
The Ethics of War
Machines
The military is investing serious
resources into developing military robots. Some are perfectly
benign, like robot logistical transport vehicles. However
others, like pilotless fighter aircraft, go well beyond benign,
and give robots the decision-making authority of when and whom
to kill. Ought we not be uncomfortable about turning over such
decisions to machines that lack the ethical understanding of
such actions?
Robert Buettner, Chris French, John G.
Hemry, Steven L. Lopata, Mike Shepherd-Moscoe, Ann Tonsor
Zeddies (m)
Saturday 12:00 n H306:
Learning to Love
Fantasy
Elves, hobbits, trolls, magic
gods…For some of us, the appeal of fantasy literature is
like the need for air— it's so obvious to us why we love
it. But a huge number of people out there can't get beyond what
they consider a lack of realism to appreciate it. What can we do
to introduce these people to fantasy in painless ways? What
arguments are there to explain our love of the genre? Bonus: How
do we convince strictly hard SF readers that there's something
there for them too (and yes, there is!)?
Patricia Bray, Paul Levinson, Yves
Meynard, Melissa Scott, Michael Swanwick, Andrew Wheeler (m)
Saturday 12:00 n H307:
Children's Play in the
Future
What will children be playing at in
fifty years? What will be the new toys: artificial pets,
weightless sports, alien games? Will anyone go outside anymore
to play with other kids? Will the whole concept of childhood
itself change? Maybe children will be "playing" at being CEOs or
space warriors…for real!
Jeffrey A. Carver, Kathryn Cramer,
Janice M. Eisen, Bonnie Kunzel, Isaac Szpindel (m)
Saturday 12:00 n H309:
Comics: A Slideshow
Barry Short
Saturday 12:00 n H310:
The End of Copyright:
Can the Arts Survive the Digital Age?
Can we continue to protect
intellectual property? Should we? If we don't, how will human
creativity change?
Cory Doctorow, Daniel Grotta (m), Sean
M. Mead, Steve Miller, Charlie Petit, James M. Turner
Saturday 12:00 n H311:
Terraforming Venus?
We've already "terraformed" the Earth
with global changes and the blueprints for Mars are already on
paper. What about Venus? The size is just right, and the orbit
isn't bad, but what sorts of problems will we face from a
sulfuric-acid greenhouse climate? How can we go about making a
heaven out of hell?
Terry Franklin, James Killus, Geoffrey
A. Landis (m), Carolyn Collins Petersen
Saturday 12:00 n H312:
The Rise of the
Paranormal Romance
It's now one of the fastest-growing
segments of the fiction market. Why? And why is it more than
just horny vampires and angsty werewolves?
Catherine Asaro, Charlaine Harris, Sue
Krinard, Sandra McDonald (m), Diane Turnshek
Saturday 12:00 n Art Show:
Tour of the Retro
Art Exhibit
Robert K. Wiener
Saturday 12:00 n Autographing:
Autographing
Lisa Barnett, Mike Brotherton, Esther
Friesner, Larry Ganem, Karen Haber, Jonathan Strahan, Laura
Underwood, John Zakour
Saturday 12:00 n Beacon A:
Belly Dancing [ages
3–6]
Learn the fun basics of belly dancing.
Karen Purcell
Saturday 12:00 n Beacon D:
Visual Storytelling
[ages 7–12]
A hands-on introduction to creating
your own comics.
Colleen Doran
Saturday 12:00 n Beacon F:
Yarn Bugs [ages
4–8]
Yarn, wiggle eyes and a lot of
wrapping will help build up these funny creatures.
Saturday 12:00 n Clarendon:
Out of Africa
Africa is stereotyped by images of low
technology and despair. However the continent is filled with
innovation. Poverty and a lack of societal infrastructure have
resulted in some quirky little inventions—both from within
and from without—like wind-up portable radios,
hand-twisted pressure clothes washers, solar powered stoves,
solar-powered water purifiers, and more.
Uncluttered emerging societies have
skipped whole generations of technology coming up with a whole
new way of doing things; for example you can find widespread use
of cell phones and even the Internet in countries where there is
little or no landine infrastructure. What other innovations and
interesting social developments have come out of Africa that we
rarely hear about? Can we dare hope that better things will come
out of Africa one day?
Grant Kruger, Laura Resnick, Mike
Resnick, Don Sakers (m)
Saturday 12:00 n Dalton:
Getting Started in
Media Costuming
So you want to be a character from
Star Wars, Lord of the Rings, a comic
book, or your favorite anime…How do you get started in
researching, designing, and (re-)creating your costume?
Kimberly Ann Kindya, Carol Salemi,
Shara R. Zoll
Saturday 12:00 n Exeter:
Reading
Jim Young
Saturday 12:00 n Gardner:
How To Draw Beasties
[ages 7–12]
Omar Rayyan
Saturday 12:00 n Grand Ballroom:
Troll
Bridge
Saturday 12:00 n Hall A:
Armored Combat
See the clash of fully-armored knights
as they would have fought in the Middle Ages! Hollywood's images
of armored combat rely on made-up moves and special effects.
Watch actual techniques, as described in medieval manuals, that
knights used in battle.
Higgins Armory Sword Guild
Saturday 12:00 n Hampton:
Reading (1 hour)
George R. R. Martin
Saturday 12:00 n Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Tobias Buckell, Wen Spencer, Jeff
VanderMeer, Robert Charles Wilson
Saturday 12:00 n Liberty A:
RFF/DYR/SFC
David Glenn Anderson
Saturday 12:00 n Republic A:
Iria:
Zeiram [Dubbed] [13 +]
Saturday 12:30 p Beacon A:
Open Playtime [ages
1–6]
We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and
other kids to play with.
Saturday 12:30 p Exeter:
Reading
Juanita Coulson
Saturday 1:00 p H204:
The Asimov Award
Talk and presentation of this award
for undergraduate writers.
Rick Wilber, Sheila Williams
Saturday 1:00 p H205:
What If Super Science
Were True?
…like FTL drives, time-travel,
immortality…all that really good stuff!
Susan Born, Walter H. Hunt, Eric
Landau, Tom Schaad
Saturday 1:00 p H206:
The SFWA Auction
The Emergency Medical Fund of the
Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America helps pay medical
expenses for writers in our genre. You can help by bidding for
and buying from a healthy assortment of donated books (signed
and un-), galleys, and other interesting stuff.
Keith R. A. DeCandido, Laura Anne
Gilman, Peter J. Heck, Jane Jewell
Saturday 1:00 p H208:
On Making a Movie
Mike Donahue
Saturday 1:00 p H210:
Filk Request Concert
Saturday 1:00 p H301:
Technological Cusp
Points and Alternate Histories
Many alternate histories focus on
political and/or war aspects, or some form of "what if this
great man/woman's life were different?" But much of the great
sweep of history has been due to technological events. What are
they? Consider what would have happened if they had been
delayed, discovered elsewhere, or usurped by other methods.
Movable type…the assembly line…the
telephone…MS- DOS? All fair game…
Duncan W. Allen, Michael Dobson, Sean
McMullen, Robert A. Metzger, Isaac Szpindel (m)
Saturday 1:00 p H302:
The Greatest Living
Science Fiction Writer?
Who is it? What about fantasy? Why?
John Clute (m), Gardner Dozois, Shawna
McCarthy, George H. Scithers
Saturday 1:00 p H303:
Maintaining a
Long-Running Series
You're writing book XVII of your
trilogy entitled Granny and Miles Party on Pern with
Severian, Hermione, and Hammer's Slammers. How do you fit
fresh inspirations into established frameworks? Fill in new
readers without zonking old ones? And the fun part: how do you
decide which characters you can kill next?
William C. Dietz
Saturday 1:00 p H304:
The Next Fifty Years:
Where Will the Next Big Things Come From?
In December 2003, the Sunday New
York Times identified "some developments today that could
have profound effects tomorrowthe causes of the next big
things." These included a growing elderly population in
developed nations; unanticipated epidemics; pressures on
democracy from religious fundamentalism and the campaign against
terrorism; the Internet and the rise of movement politics; high
tech warfare; and the spread of global capitalism. What wild
cards and longer-term trends should be added to this list? With
what consequences? Leading SF authors are invited to explore key
factors expected to shape society over the next fifty years.
Gregory Benford, John G. Cramer, Thomas
A. Easton (m), Larry Niven
Saturday 1:00 p H305:
Fannish Rivalry?
Why do some people insist on a rivalry
between literary and media SF, when so many of us like both? Ah,
rivalries. There are several others besides media vs. lit,
comics vs. lit., convention vs. fanzine fans, etc. Besides the
usual compare and contrast, the question is: Why can't we just
all get along? Why do we have these rivalries anyway?
Chris Barkley, Tom Galloway (m), Daniel
Kimmel, Bey King
Saturday 1:00 p H306:
What the Writer Needs to
Know
… that doesn't get into the
published story. A published story has a beginning, middle and
end. But there are events that occur before the story starts,
the characters have lives before [well, not always before, if
the story starts with the birth of the character or before then]
and after the story, and the writer needs to know more
information about people, events, geography, and history of the
characters and settings than the reader is ever going to see.
Just how much does the writer need to
know and what happens when the writer doesn't know? Can it be
faked? What can be left out? And when is it time to trim out
events and plots and themes that are interesting to the writer
and that were part of the impetus to write a story, but which
turn out to be extraneous to what the publishable story is
about?
Robert Reed, Lawrence Watt-Evans,
Martha Wells, Scott Westerfeld (m)
Saturday 1:00 p H307:
Game Designers' Tips and
Tricks
"I've got this great idea for a
game…" Are you sure? How can you turn your idea into the
next Monopoly or Fluxx? What goes into
a good RPG or LARP? Learn from the experts.
James Cambias (m), Leigh Grossman,
Thomas Harlan, Michael McAfee
Saturday 1:00 p H309:
Biological
Nanotechnology
It's getting so you can't swing a cat
without hitting a science fiction story that has some element of
nanotechnology in it and the media is all over nanotech like
stink on a skunk. How will nanotechnology impact our lives and
our health? Is nanotech the next big thin (no pun intended) or
is it just a load of hype and hooey? What's "condensed matter"?
Should you be worried about gray goo? Get the straight skinny
(or at least all the skinny that's fit to present) from an
expert in the field, with a multimedia slide presentation too.
Stephen C. Lee
Saturday 1:00 p H310:
Order in the (Alien?)
Court!
What happens when you're accused of a
crime on another planet? How have writers handled this in the
past—from Heinlein's Have Spacesuit, will
Travel to the Klingon court in The Undiscovered
Country? Is it possible to write about methods of
dispensing justice without depending on Terran history? Is the
idea of justice itself an Earth concept?
While we're on the topic of justice
and crime, will The Demolished Man's psychic cops
actually prevent crime? What are the implications of the
increasing dependence on technology in police and forensics
work? How will we catch Gully Foyle?
Christopher Cevasco (m), Harold Feld,
John G. Hemry, Jack Speer, Lisa J. Steele
Saturday 1:00 p H311:
Reinventing Genre
Fantasy
With so much genre fantasy being
published, what can be done to refresh our jaded palates?
Hilari L. Bell, Debra Doyle (m),
Elizabeth Hand, Alex Irvine, Katherine Kurtz
Saturday 1:00 p H312:
Tradeoffs between
Freedom, Security and Privacy
Is she free? Is he secure? Should we
know? It seems that to get more of one thing, you have to give
up something else. Since different people want different levels
of freedom, security and privacy, how can we reach a societal
consensus on the tradeoffs? What happens when smart dust watches
everything we do, scanning technologies monitor what we think
and microbots will take action?
Where is all this going? Where should
it go? What can we do? Is Big Brother coming at last, just a bit
behind schedule?
Cory Doctorow, Joseph Lazzaro, James
Macdonald, Don Sakers (m), Teresa Nielsen Hayden
Saturday 1:00 p Art Show:
Ellen James, Harpist
Ellen James
Saturday 1:00 p Autographing:
Autographing
Kage Baker, Jim Butcher, Tanya Huff,
Don Maitz, Terry McGarry, Benjamin Rosenbaum, Nick Sagan
Saturday 1:00 p Mended Drum:
Literary Beer
Eileen Gunn, Paul Levinson, Michael
Whelan
Saturday 1:00 p Beacon D:
Puppet-Making
Workshop [ages 7–12]
With a master puppeteer, we'll explore
the world of make believe and make hand or finger puppets.
Michael Sharrow
Saturday 1:00 p Beacon E:
D&D Character
Roll [ages 7+]
Beginning D&D (Dungeons and
Dragons) session; come learn how to play.
Arthur Shattan
Saturday 1:00 p Beacon F:
Magnetic Bookmark
[ages 5–8]
Stopping in the middle of a page can
be so confusing when you get back to reading! Create a
fun paper bookmark that will mark the line to start reading
again.
Saturday 1:00 p Clarendon:
Spicing Up Your
Filk Performance
Look at voices, accents, face and body
expression, pacing, and…?
Bill Sutton, Brenda Sutton
Saturday 1:00 p Dalton:
Drawing the Human
Figure in the Action Pose
Are your drawings and paintings
looking a bit staid and stale? Take a second look at your
figurescan they be better? This lecture-demo addresses
stiff or tired figures and attempts to evoke an emotion from a
sense of action in the drawing stage (even in a sitting or lying
character). In the collectible card games business, the art gets
reduced down so small that an action has to be instantly
recognizable. Therefore, emphasis will be placed on drawing the
figure in contrapasto (counter pose), exaggerating the
look of movement, balance and perspective to convey an action
scene in an instant. Examples of masters and comic artists will
reinforce the theme.
Ed Cox
Saturday 1:00 p Exeter:
Reading
Mitchell Freedman
Saturday 1:00 p Gardner:
Daggers and Shields
and Swords, Oh My! [ages 7–12]
Have at you! Witness the subtle skills
of attack, parry, and grapple, as the combat arts of the sword
and buckler, dagger, long sword, and small sword are brought to
life in this presentation.
Higgins Armory Sword Guild.
Saturday 1:00 p Grand Ballroom:
Trailer Park
Saturday 1:00 p Hampton:
Reading
Frederik Pohl
Saturday 1:00 p Independence:
Shadowrun
RPG: What Lies in the Dark Part One: Snatch and Grab
Some idiot has hired you to go down to
the Cape [Cape Cod, that is] and make some easy money. Some
dotty old recluse has a very rare antique that your handler has
hired you to retrieve. The whole job looks easy. The island has
little in the way of security and just happens to be far enough
from shore that the UCAS Coast Guard won't even know you're
there. If all goes well you might even stop in Hyannis and grab
some rays before heading up to Beantown. This should be money in
the bank…Click
Whirr
sputter
Uhhh,
what was that? [6 players. May bring your own character
up to 30 Karma, or use a pre-generated character.]
Saturday 1:00 p Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Colleen Doran, Elizabeth Moon, Charles
Oberndorf, Melinda Snodgrass
Saturday 1:00 p Republic B:
The Beast
from 20,000 Fathoms
Retro Hugo Nominee for Best Dramatic
Presentation
Saturday 1:30 p H203:
Teaching With vs.
Teaching About SF
Priscilla Olson
Saturday 1:30 p H204:
Breaking In
Author, agent, and editor talk about
how to get that first novel sold.
Joshua Bilmes, Moshe Feder, Brandon
Sanderson
Saturday 1:30 p H210:
Filk One-Shots Concert
Saturday 1:30 p H303:
Fifty Ways to Leave the
Planet
Non-obvious ways to get into
space—each in 30 seconds or less!
Jordin T. Kare
Saturday 1:30 p Beacon A:
Magic Show [ages
3–6]
Daniel Dern works some of his magic
and storytelling for you.
Daniel Dern
Saturday 1:30 p Dalton:
How to Write a Fight
Scene
James Alan Gardner
Saturday 1:30 p Exeter:
Reading
Roger MacBride Allen
Saturday 1:30 p Gardner:
Roman Legionary and
Gothic Knight [ages 7–12]
The Roman Legionary helped conquered
the known world two thousand years ago. The Knight was the most
powerful force on the battlefield five hundred years ago. Each
wore plate armor and carried a sword, a spear, and a dagger, but
they were very different. Come hear a Legionary and a Knight
explain their equipment and how they fought, and try to guess
what would happen if they were to face each other in battle.
Saturday 1:30 p Hampton:
Reading
Allen Steele
Saturday 1:45 p H203:
Using SF to Teach
About…(1.5 hours)
An academic roundtable.
Michael A. Burstein (m), Barbara
Chepaitis, Theodora Goss, Leslie Howle, Larry A. Lebofsky,
Dennis Livingston
Saturday 2:00 p H100:
Blood and Cardstock
Players' Choice
Open demo session. Learn how to play
exciting games like Showbiz and Counting
ZZZs.
Saturday 2:00 p H107:
What's New from Warner
Aspect
Come listen to Jaime Levine, Editorial
Director, and Devi Pillar, Assistant Editor, tell you about the
next year's worth of titles from Warner. We'll have book
giveaways and contests. Authors Greg Benford, Karin Lowachee,
Alison Baird and Kevin J. Anderson will be giving readings or
short talks.
Saturday 2:00 p H205:
The Future of Energy
Our economy is currently dependent on
sources of energy that are depletable and/or located in
politically unstable regions. How long can we really count on
oil? What are the realistic prospects for moving to a more
sustainable energy system? Is there any role for fusion, solar
power satellites and other fossil-fuel replacements? What is the
role of better energy storage systems? Are there any real
prospects for compact "off-the-grid" power?
Since technical fixes can only take us
so far towards a sustainable energy ecology, what about more
fundamental changes in life styles, consumption values and
conservation?
Catherine Asaro, David Friedman, David
Nichols, Samuel Scheiner (m), David Stephenson
Saturday 2:00 p H206:
Remembering Hal Clement
For decades, the Boston area's beloved
Hal Clement (Harry Stubbs [1922–2003]) was best-known for
a novel issued in 1953. But Mission of Gravity was
succeeded by at least 10 more—the last, Noise
published the month before his death. Let's recall our friend's
lifelong scientific rigor, human vigor, optimism, and faith in
the transformative power of curiosity. He was a writer and a
gentleman and was taken from us far too soon. Remember him.
Matthew Jarpe, Anthony R. Lewis, Shane
Tourtellotte
Saturday 2:00 p H208:
Reading/Film
Resa Nelson
Saturday 2:00 p H210:
Concert
Mary Crowell
Saturday 2:00 p H301:
What Do You Passionately
Read?
…Besides fantasy and SF? Of
course you want to finish that new trilogy (which has suddenly
expanded to five books), but even the most devoted fans have
other interests.
Bibliophiles get together to discuss
the non-SF/F books they love, from historical fiction to murder
mysteries to biographies, with other stops in between.
Chris Barkley (m), Laura Anne Gilman,
Mary Kay Kare, Toni L. P. Kelner, Lawrence Watt-Evans
Saturday 2:00 p H302:
Whatever Became of the
Space Merchants?
…and where did the broad
heavy-handed satire go? And why?
Steve Carper (m), Mitchell Freedman,
Harry Harrison, Barry N. Malzberg, Frederik Pohl
Saturday 2:00 p H303:
The Perils of Promotion
How do you promote your work? What are
some of the backlashes you might encounter? How can conventions
hurt or help?
Steve Antczak, Paula Guran, Jay
Caselberg, Ben Jeapes (m), Jean Lorrah, Theresa Mather
Saturday 2:00 p H304:
Great Clichés in
SF and Fantasy
Hidden powers, quirky sidekicks, true
names…bookish teens, rebel cops, sexy robots, haircut
aliens…devils' bargains (quashed by lemon laws), and dark
lords without impulse control…splitting up to look for
the monster!…dueling till the death (or the sequel?).
Take a look at the really good (well,
maybe in the eye of the beholder?) clichés of the field,
and tell us what makes them so popular.
Don D'Ammassa, Craig Gardner, David
Levine (m), Josepha Sherman, S. M. Stirling
Saturday 2:00 p H305:
Lies I Learned at the
Movies
Let's discuss at least a few of the
thousands of scientific facts that movies teach us—that
turn out not to be true. Our favorite: the title of the 1969
"historical" epic about a volcano disaster, Krakatoa, East
of Java. For the geographically-challenged among us,
Krakatoa's west… of Java.
Bob Devney (m), Tamara Jones, Peter
Morwood, John Pomeranz, John Scalzi
Saturday 2:00 p H306:
Alternate Prehistory
Do new discoveries in paleontology
offer ideas for alternate history? Is this prehistory an
untapped resource for alternate history?
Robert Buettner, David C.
Kopaska-Merkel, Robert J. Sawyer (m), Michael Swanwick
Saturday 2:00 p H307:
Living With a Martian
Mary Turzillo
Saturday 2:00 p H309:
Pictures from Mars
A show of the latest and greatest from
the red planet. The Spirit and Opportunity rovers and the Mars
Express orbiter have shown that Mars was once a wet world. How
wet and for how long? What else have we learned about Mars from
the mountains of data they have returned? How good is the
evidence for life on Mars? What should the next rovers do? What
can a sample return mission tell us? What can astronauts add?
Geoffrey A. Landis
Saturday 2:00 p H310:
Writing the Young Female
Protagonist
From Podkayne of Mars to Alanna of
Tortall, young girls have often been vivid and well-loved
characters in science fiction and fantasy. How does one write
such a character? If you yourself are not a young girl, how can
you get into the mindset to make your character believable?
Anne Harris, Mindy Klasky, Louise
Marley, Tamora Pierce, Mary H. Rosenblum (m), E. Rose Sabin
Saturday 2:00 p H311:
If Rome Never
Fell…
Imagine…two millennia of Roman
rule. Rome continues to fascinate writers. There have been a
number of novels set in Ancient Rome, including several popular
mystery series. Rome has also been the setting for a number of
popular fantasies. And a number of science fiction books have
based their societies loosely (or not so loosely) on that of
Rome.
This panel looks at the continuing lure
of the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire.
Esther Friesner, Thomas Harlan, Mark L.
Olson (m), Susan Shwartz, Robert Silverberg, Harry Turtledove
Saturday 2:00 p H312:
How to Use Science and
Technology in SF—Or Should We?
Loosely patterned after the 1951
Worldcon (Nolacon) topic, "More—Science in Science
Fiction—Less". Verne's Nautilus, the fully
automated culture in The Machine Stops, the two-way
video in 1984, the computerized political data base
in Double Star, Asimov's robotics, organlegging in
Larry Niven's stories—when does something resonate and
when doesn't it? Are there any general principles? Most
importantly…Is having real science in these books
actually necessary?
What are the merits of science fantasy
vs. science fiction?
John G. Cramer, Terry Franklin,
Rosemary Kirstein, Larry Niven, G. David Nordley (m)
Saturday 2:00 p Art Show:
Art Show Tour
Suford Lewis
Saturday 2:00 p Autographing:
Autographing
Lois McMaster Bujold, David B. Coe,
Kathryn Cramer, Diane Duane, Phyllis Eisenstein, George R. R.
Martin, Jeff VanderMeer
Saturday 2:00 p Mended Drum:
Literary Beer
Daniel Hatch, Melissa Scott, Liz
Williams
Saturday 2:00 p Beacon A:
Movie [ages
1–8]
Movies will be announced on the Movie
Board outside the room.
Saturday 2:00 p Beacon D:
LOTR:
The Movie or the Book? [ages 7–12]
Each of these art forms has some
advantages. What are they? Tolkien fan and movie buff jan howard
finder went to New Zealand to see the movie set and has much to
say about it. Compare your ideas abot the merits of the movie
and the book with those of other LotR fans.
jan howard finder
Saturday 2:00 p Beacon F:
Storytime [ages
1–6]
Listen to some fun tales.
Saturday 2:00 p Clarendon:
Harmony Workshop
Basics of adding harmonies to melody:
where, when and how. Emphasis on vocal harmonies, both planned
and ad hoc.
Lynn Gold
Saturday 2:00 p Dalton:
Self-Publishing/Selling Quality Commercial Art Books
Designing a book of photographs as
art, the brave new world of digital printing and why it is so
cool, designing a book of photographs technically so that it
goes to press without problems. How to find and work with a
press. Marketing, distribution, etc. When is it all worth it?
Laurie Toby Edison, Geri Sullivan
Saturday 2:00 p Exeter:
Reading
Kelly Link
Saturday 2:00 p Gardner:
Have Wand, Will
Travel [ages 7-12]
A magic show especially for kids.
Bill Brang
Saturday 2:00 p Hampton:
Reading
Brian W. Aldiss
Saturday 2:00 p Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Katya Reimann, Mike Resnick, Jonathan
Strahan, Connie Willis
Saturday 2:00 p Liberty C:
Stratificational
Linguistics Discussion Group
…or Why I Sometimes Scream
While Watching Stargate SG-1.
Christopher Hatton
Saturday 2:15 p H209:
Maetel Legend
[Subtitled]
Saturday 2:30 p H206:
Strange Adventures: The
Eccentric World of Julius Schwartz
Giant hands! Superhero abuse! Spacemen
in peril! Dust monsters! And did I mention giant purple
gorillas?
When Julius Schwartz edited a comic,
you knew what you would get: taut storytelling, excellent art, a
minor science lesson and a dose of weirdness treated as if it
were just another everyday occurrence. A light-hearted salute to
the member of First Fandom who became perhaps comics' greatest
editor, with a slideshow retrospective presented by comics
historian Barry Short.
Bob Greenberger (m), Barry Short, Jerry
Weist
Saturday 2:30 p H210:
Concert
Bill Sutton, Brenda Sutton
Saturday 2:30 p H307:
Surgery in Space
Robert I. Katz
Saturday 2:30 p Dalton:
Interfacing Art:
Illustration and Written SF
Janny Wurts
Saturday 2:30 p Exeter:
Reading
Elizabeth Hand
Saturday 2:30 p Hampton:
Reading
Gary K. Wolf
Saturday 2:30 p Republic B:
Invaders
from Mars
Retro Hugo Nominee for Best Dramatic
Presentation
Saturday 3:00 p H203:
Computer Game
Technologies and Education
Henry Jenkins
Saturday 3:00 p H204:
Toward a Posthuman
Future?
Is it even possible for humans,
including science fiction writers, to imagine a future without
humans?
Frank White
Saturday 3:00 p H205:
Smallville
The hip and edgy story of Clark Kent's
teenage years in a Kansas farm town caught fire when it appeared
on TV in 2001. Why does this series work so well? Is it the
weird effects of Kryptonite? Clark's slow development of his
super-powers? Guest stars such as his real father, Jor-El? What
other people from the greater Superman stories would you like to
see—or is there a limit on how many future hints we can
take?
Michael A. Burstein, Pam Fremon, Tom
Galloway (m), Kimberly Ann Kindya, Nicki Lynch
Saturday 3:00 p H206:
Tough Love for New
Writers
Give it up: there are already too many
writers. Let's face it, even with a lot of help, the best to be
expected from most new writers is that they will produce a lot
of mediocre sludge. In fact, most people who attend "how to"
panels at conventions won't even do that well. Moreover, there
are is already so much good to read that the field doesn't need
such sludge. The panel's advice to wannabe writers: give it up
now and get a real job. (An honest appraisal of the new writer's
chances.)
Gavin Grant, David G. Hartwell, Steve
Miller, Priscilla Olson (m), Teresa Nielsen Hayden
Saturday 3:00 p H208:
A Chuck Jones Tribute
The great animator gave us the Retro
Hugo nominee Duck Dodgers. What are the essential
Chuck Jones works and why is he still so influential today?
Paul Barnett, Pamela Scoville
Saturday 3:00 p H209:
Final Yamato
[Subtitled]
Saturday 3:00 p H210:
SF Cabaret
Welcome, welkommen, bienvenue to the
SF Cabaret, a presentation of works touching on SF and fantasy
themes. Not filk, not folk, not quite jazz, but an art form with
similarities to those genres devoted mostly to presenting
classic American songs and show tunes or recent material written
in that style in intimate club settings. Why shouldn't modern
cabaret songs reflect SF and Fantasy concerns anyway? Here are
some that do.
Dennis Livingston
Saturday 3:00 p H301:
Creativity on Demand
Your first novel took five years to
craft. Now you've got a deadline and an editor breathing down
your neck. How do published authors cope with the pressure of
deadlines and editor/reader expectations? What tips can they
share for coping with the times when your muse won't cooperate
and you still need to produce ten thousand words by Friday?
Patricia Bray, Keith R. A. DeCandido,
William C. Dietz (m), Stephen P. Kelner, Rebecca Moesta, Deborah
Ross
Saturday 3:00 p H302:
Novels You Write/Novels
You Talk about in Bars
Well, first of all, are they your own
or someone else's? And if they're your own, are you just talking
instead of actually writing them? Will the story you end up
writing be as good as the one you talked about?
Ellen Kushner (m), James Macdonald,
James Morrow, Charles Oberndorf, Charles Stross, Robert Charles
Wilson
Saturday 3:00 p H303:
Stem Cell Research
How can we/should we encourage
re-thinking the opposition to it? What are the promises of this
research?
Jed Shumsky
Saturday 3:00 p H304:
Who Thought of
That, Why, and How Come It's So Popular?
A look at some of the seminal ideas of
modern SF.
Don D'Ammassa, Anthony R. Lewis, James
Minz (m), Darrell Schweitzer
Saturday 3:00 p H305:
Alternate History
Challenge Match
Panelists get a weird alternate
present, and have to reverse-engineer how it came about.
Michael Dobson, Mitchell Freedman,
Peter J. Heck, Evelyn C. Leeper, S. M. Stirling, Toni Weisskopf
(m)
Saturday 3:00 p H306:
Vamps
In the Middle Ages they tore your
throat out; in the Victorian Age, death was sex, so ambiguity
allowed some extra thrills. Now, in
our…differently…repressed age, vampires are both
openly sexy and sympathetic. Is our culture growing up, or just
getting very very kinky? What are the challenges and advantages
to breathing new life into the un-dead? And when (why) did the
vampire go from serious to silly? When did decadence become
decadent?
Ellen Datlow, Charlaine Harris, Tanya
Huff (m), Cecilia Tan
Saturday 3:00 p H307:
The Stfnal Clubman
How's your SF club doing? Ideas for
starting, reviving or killing off a local science-fiction club.
What can people do in their own community to gather together
fans? How do you build up membership? What pitfalls should you
be aware of? And why you should join NESFA even if you don't
live here…
Genny Dazzo, David R. Howell, John
Pomeranz, Hank Reinhardt, Sharon Sbarsky (m), Diane Turnshek
Saturday 3:00 p H309:
Authors or Editors: Who
is Closer to the Readers?
Magazine submissions are judged by
editors whereas contests are usually judged by writers. Do they
select different types of stories? If they do select different
types of stories, then which of them (editors or authors) are
more representative of the tastes of the readers?
Paul DiFilippo (m), Carl Frederick,
Beth Meacham, Patrick Nielsen Hayden
Saturday 3:00 p H310:
If There Were No
Star Wars…
…there might not have been an
SF media boon in the '80s (and Spielberg's career would end
after the disastrous 1941 and Harrison Ford would
have been working as a carpenter and would never have met
Calista Flockhart…). And there would be no
ST:TNG, since the marketplace could not yet support
a fourth network (i.e., Paramount). Keep on working through the
ripples. Where would we be?
Chris Barkley, Steven Sawicki, Lawrence
Schoen, Ben Yalow
Saturday 3:00 p H311:
The SF/F Detective
Why are so many SF/F detectives cast
in the somewhat pulpy hard-boiled Private Eye mode? (And is
there anything wrong with that?) Discuss what makes a good genre
mystery guy.
Charles Ardai (m), Barbara Chepaitis,
Simon R. Green, Paul Levinson, John Zakour
Saturday 3:00 p H312:
Can SF Change the World?
Utopias and dystopias and everything
in between. How has SF influenced the people actually inventing
the future? Was any of today's world inspired by the SF of the
past? What of today's SF will inspire the future? And, can SF
warn us about futures we don't want?
Daniel Hatch (m), Elizabeth Anne Hull,
Stephen C. Lee, Ernest Lilley, Mark W. Tiedemann
Saturday 3:00 p Art Show:
Tour of the Retro
Art Exhibit
Joe Siclari
Saturday 3:00 p Autographing:
Autographing
Catherine Asaro, Carol Berg, John
Betancourt, Jeffrey A. Carver, Robert A. Metzger, Chris
Moriarty, Melissa Scott
Saturday 3:00 p Mended Drum:
Literary Beer
Geary Gravel, Rosemary Kirstein, Don
Maitz, Charlie Petit, Ann Tonsor Zeddies
Saturday 3:00 p Beacon A:
Movie [ages
1–8]
Movies will be announced on the Movie
Board outside the room.
Saturday 3:00 p Beacon D:
Tamora Pierce
Get-Together [ages 7–12]
Come talk with the popular YA author
about her books, her ideas, recording with Full Cast
Audio… (Kids only, please!)
Tamora Pierce
Saturday 3:00 p Beacon E:
D&D Game [ages
7+] (Arthur Shattan)
Beginning D&D (Dungeons and
Dragons) session; come learn how to play.
Saturday 3:00 p Beacon F:
Magic Wands [ages
212]
Turn a chopstick into a magic wand to
bring your imagination to life.
Saturday 3:00 p Clarendon:
Parody Workshop
There's parody, and then there's
parody which is cleverly constructed, involves wordplay and
draws on the original material for both style and meaning. Some
basics from an acknowledged master.
Bob Kanefsky
Saturday 3:00 p Dalton:
Turn Left at Orion:
Using a Small Telescope
You keep hearing about all this neat
stuff in the sky, but you never manage to go out and see any of
it. What do you need to go look for these fascinating objects?
How much can you see with binoculars, a small telescope, or just
the unaided eye and a dark sky? Experts talk about the
possibilities.
Guy Consolmagno
Saturday 3:00 p Exeter:
Reading
P. J. Plauger
Saturday 3:00 p Gardner:
Instant Costuming
Challenge [ages 7–12]
Create your own costume with the help
of expert costumers! Then wear it to the Time Travel Dance right
after this panel.
Thomas Atkinson, Ming Diaz
Saturday 3:00 p Grand Ballroom:
Special Studio
Sneak Preview
Saturday 3:00 p Hampton:
Reading
Jack Dann
Saturday 3:00 p Independence:
Deryni
Adventure
Join Ann Dupuis, publisher of the
upcoming Deryni Adventure Game, for a roleplaying
adventure involving Sendai the Magnificent and his troupe of
travelling performers. Katherine Kurtz is co-GM for this
adventure.
Ann Dupuis, Katherine Kurtz
Saturday 3:00 p Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Brian W. Aldiss, Jack L. Chalker,
Stanley Schmidt, Sarah Zettel
Saturday 3:00 p Liberty A:
Bujold Fandom
Discussion Group
Jerrie Adkins
Saturday 3:00 p Republic A:
Ruin
Explorers [Subtitled] [Not Rated]
Saturday 3:00 p Docent Tour:
Village Tour (of
the Worldcon)
Tom Veal
Saturday 3:30 p H303:
The Author as a Brand
What shapes an author's brand image,
and who does a great job of branding? Why is it great? How does
the co-branding of their books impact authors? What can authors
do to improve their brand images?
Sean M. Mead
Saturday 3:30 p Exeter:
Reading
James Alan Gardner
Saturday 3:30 p Hampton:
Reading
Jo Walton
Saturday 4:00 p H100:
Camelot Legends
Quest with King Arthur and the Knights
of the Round Table. Players assemble companies of knights and
compete with their opponents to complete quests. Once the final
adventure is complete, the players with the most glory shall be
victorious! [24 players]
Saturday 4:00 p H107:
Eos Presents Upcoming
SF/F Titles
Eos Senior Editor Diana Gill and Jack
Womack present the upcoming titles of interest from Eos and
HarperCollins, including books by Neal Stephenson, Terry
Pratchett, Dave Duncan, Sean Russell and more. Join us for
handouts, contests and candy, plus the best new science fiction
and fantasy for Fall 2004.
Saturday 4:00 p H203:
How to Design Your
Academic Career for a Job in Space
An imaginative (not prescriptive)
approach to making college really work.
jan howard finder
Saturday 4:00 p H204:
Lyrical Language
Is it a good idea to bounce the reader
out of the story by making her aware of how beautifully you
write? Define "beautifully." And, under any circumstances, is
"style" really so necessary?
Fruma Klass, Justine Larbalestier (m),
Kelly Link, Terry McGarry, Delia Sherman
Saturday 4:00 p H205:
Bad Con Advice
for Newbies
Please—bring a sense of irony!
Fannish etiquette, with a twist.
David Levine, Laurie Mann, Sandra
McDonald, Priscilla Olson
Saturday 4:00 p H206:
Speculative Physics and
Space Travel
Wormholes, quantum teleportation, and
other ideas on the edge of modern physics are all fair game!
John G. Cramer, Les Johnson (m), Henry
Spencer
Saturday 4:00 p H301:
Why is Everyone So
Scared of Genre Poetry?
Or is it just that people are scared
of poetry?
John M. Ford, Joe Haldeman, David C.
Kopaska-Merkel (m), Janna Silverstein
Saturday 4:00 p H302:
The Numinous in Science
Fiction and Fantasy
Okay, we know that "numinous" isn't a
noun, but there is something, well, noun-like in the
way some authors can invoke a feeling about stuff beyond our
everyday experience. But the numinous does seem to show up more
in our genre than in most others. Why? Why can some authors give
us this sense so effortlessly, while others try to get us there
and don't quite make it? (And it is so often missed!) And why
would a bunch of rational science-oriented people care about
that kind of thing in the first place? Is this because SF is at
its roots interested in the same things as fantasy and fantasy
has a particularly close relationship with the numinous, or is
it just that the numinous is a great way to get a Sensawonder
fix?
Lois McMaster Bujold, James Macdonald
(m), Farah Mendelsohn, James Morrow, Deborah Ross
Saturday 4:00 p H303:
The Writer and
Role-Playing Games
How can playing role-playing games
help/hurt your writing?
Michael Dobson, Michael Gilmartin,
Thomas Harlan, Walter H. Hunt (m), Wil McDermott
Saturday 4:00 p H304:
Postcapitalist Social
Mechanisms
A look at the reality and potential of
such things as reputation/abundance/gift economies and the
like—as found in Doctorow's Down and Out in the
Magic Kingdom, Stross's Macx stories, and a
wealth of others…including fandom itself.
M. M. Buckner, Cory Doctorow, David
Friedman (m), Benjamin Rosenbaum, Charles Stross
Saturday 4:00 p H305:
The Business of Art:
What New Artists Need to Know
For conventions alone, there's framing
to hanging to personal presentation to closing a sale—not
to mention the ins and out of prints and record keeping. And
overall, there's promotion, copyrights, artists' organizations,
sales tax, contacts…Knowledgeable people share their
expertise.
Paul Barnett (m), Ctein, Thomas Kidd,
Don Maitz, Theresa Mather, Margaret Organ-Kean
Saturday 4:00 p H306:
Seduction of the
Innocent?
Hey little girl…wanna read some
Heinlein? How can you keep your children from growing up
mundane?
Janice M. Eisen, Laura Frankos (m),
Beth Hilgartner, Louise Marley, Persis Thorndike
Saturday 4:00 p H307:
The Fruit Fly Genome in
C Major
Discussion and demonstration of a
program to translate the fruit fly genome into "music."
Carl Frederick
Saturday 4:00 p H309:
Art for Video Games
For those of you who enjoy video
games, here's a chance to see a little bit of how they are made.
From concept artwork to modeling and texturing, there's a lot of
work that goes on behind the scenes before characters make it
into the game.
Mike Dashow
Saturday 4:00 p H310:
Snowball Earth: When the
Planet Froze
At least twice between about 750 and
600 million years ago, the Earth froze over—literally.
Glaciers rolled over the equatorial regions and ice covered most
of the planet. The last ice age was a mere light frost in
comparison. Some scientists now hypothesize that Earth lurched
from icehouse to greenhouse and back again four or more times
between 760 million and 550 million years ago. A talk by the
proposer of this theory, with a look at past and future
climatological conditions on the Earth (are we heading for
global warming or another big freeze?).
Paul Hoffman
Saturday 4:00 p H311:
Alien Genres
What will non-human romance novels be
like? Alien mysteries? Westerns? Science fiction?
Elizabeth Caldwell, Tanya Huff, Sue
Krinard, Michelle Sagara (m), Teresa Nielsen Hayden
Saturday 4:00 p H312:
Is SF "Respectable"?
How do others see us? Discuss the joys
and sorrows of telling others you're a SF writer/artist/fan.
What are your interlocutors' first reactions? Are we getting any
more respect lately? Why do film-makers and novelists insist
their stories of technological and social change in the future
are "not really science fiction?" Is SF the Rodney Dangerfield
genre? Will mundanes ever stop the Trekkie trash talk?
Bob Eggleton, Fred Lerner, Robert J.
Sawyer, Karen Traviss, Pat York (m)
Saturday 4:00 p Autographing:
Autographing
David G. Hartwell, Alex Irvine, Katya
Reimann, Robert Silverberg, Jack Speer, Scott Westerfeld
Saturday 4:00 p Mended Drum:
Literary Beer
George R. R. Martin, Michael Swanwick,
Mary Turzillo
Saturday 4:00 p Beacon A:
Playground Games
[ages 47]
Play basic rule games in a more
organized manner than open playtime (Duck, Duck, Goose; Animal
Tag; Simon Says, etc.]
Saturday 4:00 p Beacon D:
Movie Critic for a
Day [ages 7–12]
Have an opinion on the movies geared
towards kids these days? Have a big favorite? Voice your
opinions with a professional movie critic, and hear what he has
to say.
Daniel Kimmel
Saturday 4:00 p Beacon F:
Origami for the
Young [ages 46]
Japanese paper folding with big sheets
of fun paper and a few simple folds.
Saturday 4:00 p Clarendon:
Culture-Building
Workshop (2 hours)
(Limited to 30)
Hilari L. Bell
Saturday 4:00 p Dalton:
Adaptive Technology
for Disabilities: Artificial Vision
Joseph Lazzaro
Saturday 4:00 p Exeter:
Reading
James Stevens-Arce
Saturday 4:00 p Fanzine Lounge:
DUFF/TAFF
Reception
Saturday 4:00 p Gardner:
Time Travel Dance
[ages 7–12]
Bring your time machine and dancing
feet! Costumes encouraged. Wear your favorite costume, or one
you've just made, and dance from the Renaissance to the present.
Susan de Guardiola
Saturday 4:00 p Hall A:
SFWA Musketeers
Melanie Fletcher, Esther Friesner,
Laura Anne Gilman, Jay Caselberg, John G. Hemry, Lee Martindale,
Elizabeth Moon, Vera Nazarian, Madeleine E. Robins, Selina
Rosen, Susan Shwartz, Steven H Silver, Laura Underwood, Liz
Williams
Saturday 4:00 p Hampton:
Reading
Sheila Finch
Saturday 4:00 p Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Lisa Barnett, James Alan Gardner, Bob
Greenberger, Mark W. Tiedemann
Saturday 4:00 p Liberty A:
Writing and
Publishing Erotica Discussion Group
Saturday 4:00 p Liberty C:
Buffy/Angel Discussion Group (Anne Davenport)
Saturday 4:00 p Republic B:
Duck Dodgers
in the 24 1/2 Century
Retro Hugo Nominee for Dramatic
Presentation
Saturday 4:04 p Republic B:
The War of
the Worlds
Retro Hugo Nominee for Dramatic
Presentation
Saturday 4:30 p H203:
The Seminal Role of Mary
Shelley
Frankenstein has been called the first
SF novel. It introduced such themes as the ethics of science,
the nature of life, and the way humans may react to the alien
(and vice versa). What was Shelley's actual influence on
subsequent SF?
Brian W. Aldiss
Saturday 4:30 p H307:
Elizabethan English as a
Second Language
Can thee speak Elizabethan
English…or dost thou know that should be "canst thou"?
Verily, Elizabethan English is oft misused in historical and
fantasy writing. Advice on how to write it correctly or at least
mangle it knowingly.
Kage Baker
Saturday 4:30 p Dalton:
Clothing & Costume
in Literary SF/Fantasy
What you wear determines how you move,
what you can and cannot do, and where you can go. What other
issues can be affected by your dress? An examination of the
field.
Thomas Atkinson
Saturday 4:30 p Exeter:
Reading
John Scalzi
Saturday 5:00 p H102:
Concert by New England
Guitar Circle
Saturday 5:00 p H203:
SLOFs: Who and Why?
The Secret Librarians of Fandom are
lurking everywhere, waiting to pounce on you with recommended
reading or a good place to research X. Who are they? Why are
they in fandom? Why are they librarians? How you can avoid them
or find them when you need them?
Mary Kay Kare, Fred Lerner (m), Steve
Miller, Val Ontell, Don Sakers
Saturday 5:00 p H204:
The Brain, the Universe,
Consciousness, and Free Will
Why do we feel like we have free will
even though all the neuroscientific evidence says it's an
illusion? Is it possible to fit true free will into the universe
as modern physics understands it? Where does consciousness come
from? Would a sufficiently complex computer have it (and an
illusion of free will to boot)? Van presents a complete theory
of the nature of consciousness and free will that answers these
and other questions;no prior background in physics,
neuroscience, or philosophy of mind is needed.
Eric M. Van
Saturday 5:00 p H205:
How Does SF Portray
Islam?
What portrayal of Islam? The religion
and culture of the Muslim world are infrequently the subjects of
SF stories, which says something about the parochial nature of
much of the genre. When the Muslim culture and religion do come
up, it is in stereotypical ways. Yet Islam has evolved and
diversified in as many ways as Christianity; there is no reason
to think it won't continue to do so, on this world or others.
Jon Courtenay Grimwood, Shariann
Lewitt, Harry Turtledove (m), Sarah Zettel
Saturday 5:00 p H206:
Pulp Eye for the Art Guy
Wherein the Rubber Science Guy, the
Stereotype Guy, the Bad Prose Style Guy, the Twisty Plot Guy,
and the Fan Guy all offer advice to the hopeless artiste!
Keith R. A. DeCandido, Alex Irvine,
Matthew Jarpe, Kelly Link, Allen Steele (m)
Saturday 5:00 p H210:
The Filkado
A fannish operetta by Gary McGath and
Terry Wells. See how many puns you can catch as the
Punsman—who uses his brain as a weapon to create a pun
barrage against evildoers—defends the planet Nesfa from
the depredations of the music pirates led by the lovely Captain
D.J. Thoris. The Punsman is aided by the Nesfanese Lord High
Evil Genius, Dr. McKoko, and the great military leader Commander
Tomakatisha.
Harold Feld, Suford Lewis, Mark Mandel,
Michael McAfee, Gary D. McGath, Timothy L. Smith
Saturday 5:00 p H301:
The Sidewise Award
On this timeline, at least, the
Sidewise Award for Alternate History was established in 1995 to
recognize the best stories and novels of the year in that
subgenre. See you there, when and if.
Evelyn C. Leeper, Steven H Silver
Saturday 5:00 p H302:
The Monster in the Maze
There is a monster. It's lurking in
the shadows, waiting. There is always a monster. It might be the
Minotaur in the Labyrinth of Crete or an alien aboard a deserted
spaceship, but it is always there. Why? What is the monster, if
it's more than the dark shadow of the self. Explore the monsters
that haunt our sleeping and waking hours, and how we may (with
luck and wisdom) find and defeat them. Discuss some works that
did this (and examine if they did it successfully)
Stephen Dedman, Neil Gaiman, Simon R.
Green, Yves Meynard, Robert Sheckley
Saturday 5:00 p H303:
How to Make a Hugo
Rocket
Peter Weston
Saturday 5:00 p H304:
Technology Today!
Is the personal computer "moribund"
(Charlie Stross) and have no technological toys taken its place?
Show and tell about the newest (and weirdest)!—and what's
in store in the near future.
Mark L. Olson, P. J. Plauger, Edie
Stern (m)
Saturday 5:00 p H305:
Genetic Engineering
…and frankenfoods, and
post-human existence (fact and fiction). A discussion of the
real and imagined dangers and possibilities of genetic
engineering. They are not what you think.
Samuel Scheiner
Saturday 5:00 p H306:
Meta-Gay: Has G/L/B/T
Been Mainstreamed?
Used to be you had to look long and
hard to find g/l/b/t characters in science fiction and fantasy;
now they're everywhere! And the list of our g/l/b/t genre
authors could keep you reading for years. Is there anything
unique that the g/l/b/t community still has to offer to science
fiction and fantasy? To fandom?
The 2004 Gaylactic Spectrum Awards will
be presented during this panel.
Billie Aul (m), Melissa Scott, Jed
Shumsky
Saturday 5:00 p H307:
Geek Girls Unite!
What are the perils and benefits of
lacking a Y-chromosome in the traditionally male-dominated
worlds of science, technology, and science fiction? Examine
gender dynamics, deconstruct cultural assumptions, and flaunt
your geek pride in a roundtable discussion of how we girls
really can do anything.
Liz Gorinsky
Saturday 5:00 p H309:
Can SF Be Outdated?
Is there a future for science fiction?
Is it possible that SF as a literary genre has actually run its
course? This seems like a strange question when SF has
penetrated every corner of pop culture, from movies to video
games, and most bookstores carry shelves devoted to a thriving
output of new novels. But look more closely and what appears may
be endless variations on clinched SF themes that arguably ran
their course decades ago. Meanwhile, mundane reality seems to
have caught up with SF in the daily newspaper, and a "sense of
wonder" is available in any science magazine. Or is SF as we
know it undergoing its own evolution in style and subject
matter? Now that we're "in" the future, what is there to write
about?
John Clute, Gregory Feeley, Jay Lake,
Dennis Livingston (m)
Saturday 5:00 p H310:
Saluting Jack
Williamson: Eight Decades and Counting (1.5 hours)
Jack Williamson was born in 1908 in
the Arizona Territory — before it was a state. His family
moved on to New Mexico in a covered wagon. Williamson published
his first story in 1928, coined the word "terraforming," and has
lived to see spaceships and the Internet. At 94 years old, he is
the oldest writer to win the Hugo and the Nebula. Come celebrate
his work and the man himself, as we contemplate what Jack
Williamson has in store for us in his next eight decades of
writing…
Jack L. Chalker, Scott Edelman, Jim
Frenkel, David G. Hartwell, Larry Niven, Frederik Pohl, Mike
Resnick, Stanley Schmidt, Joe Siclari (m), Melinda Snodgrass,
Jack Speer, Michael Swanwick, Eleanor Wood
Saturday 5:00 p H311:
Pson of Psychohistory
Could Hari Seldon have been onto
something? What are the really emergent social sciences, and
what do they bode for the future?
Steve Carper, Michael F. Flynn, Daniel
Hatch (m), David McMahon, Charles Oberndorf
Saturday 5:00 p H312:
SF Love Scenes
The group looks at great SF erotic
love scenes. They discuss who does it well, and give examples.
Panelists— for amusement or instruction—may also
want to read examples of particularly bad ones.
Catherine Asaro (m), Jim Butcher, Wen
Spencer, Karen Traviss, Paul Witcover
Saturday 5:00 p Art Show:
Art Show Tour
Jane Frank
Saturday 5:00 p Art Show:
April Grant, Fiddler
April Grant
Saturday 5:00 p Autographing:
Autographing
Gregory Benford, Kathleen Kudlinski,
Stephen Leigh, Terry Pratchett, Robert Reed, Karl Schroeder, Jim
Young
Saturday 5:00 p ConCourse:
Fan History Tour
Mike Resnick
Saturday 5:00 p Mended Drum:
Literary Beer
John G. Cramer, Ellen Kushner, Lawrence
Schoen
Saturday 5:00 p Beacon A:
Open Playtime [ages
1–6]
We'll have tunnels, balls, blocks, and
other kids to play with.
Saturday 5:00 p Beacon D:
Astronomy for Kids
[ages 7–12]
Practice seeing the night sky, and
learn about the wonders of the stars.
Larry A. Lebofsky
Saturday 5:00 p Beacon F:
Rocks for Kids [ages
310]
Learn about and handle some of the
precious stones that go into making beautiful jewelry from some
one who knows.
Saturday 5:00 p Dalton:
Using Feathers in
Costuming
Carol Salemi
Saturday 5:00 p Exeter:
Reading
Larry Ganem, John Zakour
Saturday 5:00 p Hampton:
Student SF & F
Contest Awards
John Pomeranz
Saturday 5:00 p Liberty A:
Kingdom of Gondor
and Arnor
Holding American Idol-style
auditions for the position of King!
Saturday 5:00 p Con Suite:
Kaffeeklatsch
Kevin J. Anderson, Debra Doyle, Rebecca
Moesta, Andrew Porter, Toni Weisskopf
Saturday 5:00 p Republic A:
Armitage
III [Subtitled]
Saturday 5:00 p Docent Tour:
Village Tour (of
the Worldcon)
Laurie Mann
Saturday 5:15 p H209:
Queen
Emeraldas [Subtitled]
Saturday 5:30 p H305:
Beyond Hubble and
Keck—Really Big Telescopes
Between really BIG telescopes and
other clever technologies, what can we find out about extrasolar
planets — and when (if ever) will it be worth going to
visit them?
Jordin T. Kare
Saturday 5:30 p Dalton:
Workshop: Dramatic
Posing and Costume Presentation
Ming Diaz, Carol Salemi
Saturday 5:30 p Exeter:
Reading
Elizabeth Bear
Saturday 5:30 p Republic B:
It Came from
Outer Space
Retro Hugo Nominee for Best Dramatic
Presentation
Saturday 6:00 p :
Masquerade Registration
Closes for the Day
Saturday 6:00 p H107:
Fahrenheit
451
A round-table discussion of the 1953
Retro Hugo nominated novel.
Kenn Bates
Saturday 6:00 p H203:
Alien Takeovers,
Conspiracy and Paranoia Before and After The Puppet
Masters
Oscar De Los Santos
Saturday 6:00 p H208:
Klingon
Documentary
Saturday 6:00 p Mended Drum:
Literary Beer
Nicholas A. DiChario, Leigh Grossman,
Thomas Harlan
Saturday 6:00 p ConCourse:
Information Closes
Saturday 6:00 p ConCourse:
Site Selection
Voting Ends
Saturday 6:00 p Exeter:
Reading
Carrie Vaughn
Saturday 6:00 p Grand Ballroom:
Robot
Stories
Saturday 6:00 p Hall D:
Dealers Room Closes
Saturday 6:30 p H100:
Mechwarrior
Tournament
Bring your mechanized army and test it
in this Wizkids sanctioned tournament.
Saturday 6:30 p H203:
Horror in the College
Classroom: Teaching English Through a Gothic Lens
Mary Findley
Saturday 6:30 p H210:
Concert by New England
Guitar Circle
Students of Robert Fripp play complex
polyrhythmic music.
Saturday 6:30 p Exeter:
Reading
Lawrence Schoen
Saturday 7:00 p H209:
Gundam Movie
III [Subtitled]
Saturday 7:00 p Conference:
Filk Office
On-Call
Saturday 7:00 p Exeter:
Reading
Pat York
Saturday 7:00 p Independence:
Shadowrun RPG:
What Lies in the Dark Part Two: Eeny, Meany, Mo: Catch a Wizard
by His Toe
Hey Chummer you know the score.
Wizards, people, and pets they all go missing. It happens. Money
is money, and you're itching for cash. When a corporate
benefactor pays for your schooling they expect you to work off
the debt. (Indentured servitude is a reality in 2064 if you
can't afford school.) If you decide to run off short of
graduation they will find you. That's your job, find some
snot-nosed MIT&T punk, drug him and return him to whoever
wants him. At least that's what you thought. Things made sense
before this run, now all hell is breaking loose. Some knowledge
of the system background is useful but not necessary.
This
is a direct tie-in with "What Lies in the Dark part One: Snatch
and Grab". [6 players. May bring your own character up to 30
Karma or use a pre-generated character.]
Saturday 7:00 p Republic A:
Blue Seed
13—18 [Subtitled]
Saturday 7:00 p Republic B:
Marvin the
Martian Cartoons
Saturday 7:30 p Art Show:
Music
Saturday 7:30 p Beacon D:
Games and Crafts
during the Hugos [ages 7+] (Randy Hoffman, Persis Thorndike)
Saturday 7:30 p Exeter:
Reading
Robert I. Katz
Saturday 8:00 p H208:
Free
Enterprise
Saturday 8:00 p Auditorium:
The Hugo Awards
Bestowing the most famous honor in
science fiction, the Hugo ceremony is indeed The Big One. Come
watch some of our most towering talents endure hours of squirm
in hopes of one magnificent minute of squeal.
Neil Gaiman, William Tenn, Terry
Pratchett, Jack Speer, Peter Weston
Saturday 8:00 p Beacon E:
Gummi Wars [ages
7–12]
It's a battle to the scrumptious death
for these candy armies! The gummi candy has slowly been taking
over shelf space at the candy shop. The traditional candy is
angry they are losing favor. Tempers have built up and now it's
an all out war to see who will win the shelf space! This is a
3-D tabletop war simulator that uses candy instead of
miniatures. On one side you have the gummi candies. On the other
you have the more traditional candies such as Peppermint
Patties, Butterfinger bars, and even packs of chewing gum. Teams
will be made at the start of the game.
Saturday 8:00 p Clarendon:
Open Filk
Saturday 8:00 p Dalton:
Open Filk—No
taping
Saturday 8:00 p Gardner:
Drum Circle
Saturday 8:00 p Hall A:
Registration Closes
Saturday 9:00 p H100:
Blood and Cardstock
Games Players Choice
Open demo session. Learn exciting
games like Showbiz and Counting ZZZs.
Saturday 9:00 p Conference:
Filk Office
Re-opens
Saturday 9:00 p Exeter:
Filk Rendezvous
Saturday 9:00 p Gardner:
Open Filk
Saturday 9:00 p Hampton:
Open Filk
Saturday 9:30 p Republic A:
Filler
(BS-Omake Theaters)
Saturday 10:00 p H205:
Tolkien Fan
Get-Together
Tolkien fans can meet to try to
reconcile Tom Bombadil's statement that he is "Eldest" with
Gandalf's statement that Fangorn is "the oldest of all living
things." Or, to discuss the Glorifindel problem?
Additionally, how would the history of
Middle-Earth have differed if Sauron had returned to Aman and
received the judgement of Manwe at the end of the First Age,
rather than remaining in Middle-Earth? Describe resultant
cultural differences which would have taken place in the Second,
Third, and Fourth Ages. Special emphasis should be given to the
cultures of the Grey Havens, Numenor (including the Dunedain and
the black Numenorans), the Rohirrim, the Dunlendings and others
descending from the peoples of the White Mountains, the Ents,
the peoples of Khand, the Orcs (particularly those tribes living
in the Grey, Misty, and Ash Mountains, and the Mountains of
Shadow), the Elevn peoples of Gil-Galad (including Elrond and
the likelihood of Rivendell's being constructed), the Hobbits
(beginning from when they were living in the Vales of Anduin),
and the Haradrim (both Near and Far Harad must be covered for
full credit).
Saturday 10:00 p H206:
Genre Erotica
Why would you write SF/F/H erotica
when you can just write SF/F/H? When you could just write
erotica? What things can you do in this cross-genre that you
really can't do anywhere else? Doesn't all this genre stuff just
get in the way of the main point of the erotica? Give examples.
Explore the edges of sexuality…the displacement of desire
and repression, sex and power relationships, trans- sexual or
transpecies (or simply transcendent?) sex…or just talk
about sex, death, and rock and roll…
Billie Aul (m), Stephen Dedman, Melanie
Fletcher, Victoria McManus, Cecilia Tan
Saturday 10:00 p H208:
Fall of a
Saga
Saturday 10:00 p H209:
Pet Shop of
Horror [13 +]
Saturday 10:00 p Art Show:
Art Show Closes
Saturday 10:00 p Mended Drum:
Concert by Bill
& Brenda Sutton
Saturday 10:00 p Republic A:
3 x 3
Eyes: Legend Of the Divine Demon [Subtitled] [16 +]
Saturday 10:30 p H209:
Pet Shop of
Horror [13 +]
Saturday 10:30 p Con Suite Foyer:
Music
Saturday 11:00 p H209:
Pet Shop of
Horror [13 +]
Saturday 11:00 p Mended Drum:
Concert
Rosemary Kirstein
Saturday 11:00 p Mended Drum:
Concert
Rosemary Kirstein
Saturday 11:00 p Conference:
Filk Office
On-Call
Saturday 11:00 p Exeter:
Open Filk
Saturday 11:00 p Gardner:
Filk Rendezvous
Saturday 11:30 p H209:
Pet Shop of
Horror [13 +]
Saturday 11:30 p Mended Drum:
Concert
Mary Crowell
Saturday 12:00 m :
Childcare Closes
Saturday 12:00 m H209:
Perfect Blue
Saturday 12:00 m Grand Ballroom:
Rocky
Horror Picture Show
Live stage performance presented by
the Teseracte Players
Sunday
Sunday 0:30 a H209:
MS 080 Team
[Subtitled]
Sunday 0:30 a Republic A:
Reign: The
Conqueror #8—13 [Dubbed] [16 +]
Sunday 1:00 a H209:
MS 080 Team
[Subtitled]
Sunday 1:00 a Mended Drum:
Karaoke
Sunday 1:00 a Mended Drum:
Last Call at the
Mended Drum
Sunday 1:00 a Gardner:
Open Filk
Sunday 1:30 a H209:
MS 080 Team
[Subtitled]
Sunday 2:00 a :
Hynes Closes
Sunday 2:00 a :
Pedestrian Overpass to
Marriott Closed
Sunday 2:00 a Grand Ballroom:
Shock
Treatment
Live stage performance presented by
the Teseracte Players of Boston
Sunday 2:00 a Con Suite:
Con Suite Closes