I met Ned in 2012 at ComicCon. We were on a panel together with John Scalzi, then a signing table

Ned was a kind, funny guy. I've got a signed copy of The Other Normals that reminds me our our conversation as we manned our respective stacks of books, reminiscing about our early gaming years and making kobold jokes with our readers.

Very sorry to see this news.

Ned Vizzini, young adult author, has died
Ned Vizzini, an award-winning young adult novelist and television writer, died yesterday. He was 32. He was a guest on the Gweek podcast twice (episodes 069 and 094) and Carla and I had a memorable 16-course dinner with Ned a…

Because +

Because +Dave Hill asked – a look at the ending of the Desolation of Smaug. Spoilers and dwarf fanboy love abound.

One More Hobbit/Desolation Post: Closure |
After my post yesterday, Dave asked me what I thought about the ending of the movie. He was a bit vague with the wording of the question, possibly to keep from spoiling people reading the conversation on G+, but as I’ve read his thoughts on the subject, I had a pretty good idea what he was …

I've really enjoyed the audiobook (narrated brilliantly by: Robert "My Voice is Bourbon and Gravel" Forster) – the 'character business' in each scene is charmingly dated, but the science and the questions the story raises are absolutely top-notch

This is one of those books that I'd point to when giving an example of what science fiction does better than anything else.

A New Translation of The One Russian Science Fiction Novel You Absolutely Must Read
If you’re going to read just one Soviet-era Russian science fiction novel, it should be Arkady and Boris Strugatsky’s dark, ambiguous Roadside Picnic. Originally written in the early 1970s, it’s back in print in English after 30 years, with a brand-new translation by Olena Bormashenko and a riveting afterword by Boris Strugatsky about how the book was butchered by Soviet censors. It’s a seriously intense tale of a man who risks his life and freed…