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So we (Queen of Swords Press) put out a fab new edition of Point of Sighs (Astreiant #5) by Melissa Scott last week and Melissa just remembered that she create a tea blend for it and for Point of Hearts, the brand new Astreiant novel that we're releasing first quarter of 2025! I'm looking forward to trying them both!
Point of Sighs Tea Blend
Point of Hearts Tea Blend


My beloved Bingley's Teas is on indefinite hiatus due to issues beyond anyone's control so I might see if I can use Adagio's blending option to create a new tea for us next year.
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So it never rains and all that. The current renter of my services, ie. the day job where I am a contractor, had told me back in October that I "was doing a great job" and they wanted to convert me to being an FTE. Now they are wildly dysfunctional and in a healthy job market and without a dying wife and chronic burnout, I would have politely declined. But under current circumstances agreed to the conversion "once they got the budget and planning sorted out." Fast forward to today when I find out from a reliable source that there will be not hiring and that there will in fact be layoffs and I can plan on being one of them. Unsure of timeline, but rumor has it they will start next week. Fortunately, I have been trying to treat each week like it might be my last one on this gig because of aforementioned dysfunction and have done some planning...but they had just extended me to June. I could live with not going FTE, but June would have been a solid date to plan for and I could get a number of things done around the house as well as planning for whatever future I may have. So now I get to add job hunting anxiety and probably commuting to my newly-honed mortal terror that my wife will hang on long enough that the safety net that supports her in hospice disappears. I was hoping she would pass soon for her sake as well as my own, but now I get to throw money into the mix just to make it all perfect. *Screams into the void*

How are things apart from that? Queen of Swords Press is putting out a new title tomorrow!Point of Sighs (Astreiant #5) by Melissa Scott is a terrific installment in the Rathe and Eslingen series set in the magical city of Astreiant and I love it to pieces. I also just sent Melissa the edits for the brand new Astreiant novel, Point of Hearts (coming out early in 2025). Its so good and I'm so excited!

I've also got another submission to look at and have heard rumors more are on the way. And I have started overhauling the next werewolf novel so hoping to dig into that. I also picked up a very part time gig in January vetting arts grant proposals. And I have a few ideas about pitches and class proposals and so forth, always assuming I can continue to do the queer fiction and nonfiction work I've done for decades now. I accepted an invite to be guest at Readercon this summer - I've been wanting to go for years and decided that now is the time. I'm also planning on Seattle Worldcon, seeing these are both things that I pay significant costs up front for.

Apart from all this, I'm stocking up on needful things. I had a successful house cleanout sale and give away this last weekend that dented things a bit. I'm spending time with friends and going to events and donating and buying things from tiny businesses in hopes that they can survive the times ahead. I'm working on reconnecting with folks I haven't talked to for a while. I have some plans for retraining in a new field if that becomes necessary. And so it goes onward, step by step, Sending everyone who needs one a giant hug for the here and now.

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The next volume in the Astreiant Series, Fairs’ Point (Astreiant #4) by Melissa Scott, is here
And Melissa Scott talks about how she and Lisa A. Barnett were inspired to come up with the idea of dog racing as a sport in Astreiant here.

Speaking of the Astreiant Series, we have a great deal running on Google Play this weekend . Bundle any 2 of the first 3 books and get 25% off!

11/29 (today) is also the last day to get 60% off the audiobook for Catherine Lundoff’s Silver Moon! Don’t sleep on this one! 
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Starting with the least pleasant one. Jana has deteriorated a lot in the last few months. She is rapidly becoming nonverbal and is having increasing motor control issues. It is next to impossible to talk to her, at least for me, and it's breaking what's left of my heart in that regard. This disease can absolutely fuck off into the sun.

Okay, that said, I'm doing some things for self-care. My current day job contract is also rife with unpleasantness so this is beyond essential.
  1. I went to a bed store on Lake Street on Sunday and bought a new bed, one both fancy and on sale. It is fabulous and I also got a bed base that can be adjusted at the head and the feet. I have been in constant pain from my hip and leg for over a year now (there are good days and bad days) and I have a more pronounced limp and a harder time getting up if I sit too long. My sleep is wildly irregular. Our bed is nearly 25 years old and the mattress is at least 10 so it was past time. I lay on the sample bed in the store chatting up the sales guy while I played with the controls and for five glorious minutes, nothing hurt. Shows up next weekend and I am very excited.
  2. I acquired an awesome tea pot with a cephalopod on it, also on sale.
  3. I have made time for writing (next werewolf novel has cleared 10k words on this draft) and I am working on a new Joanna Russ-related project that I'll announce soon.
  4. I am walking more and trying to remember to stretch.This worked well last week when my power was out for 2 days and the car was sealed in the garage. I walked a lot of places.
  5. Next up: buying a new, more ergonomic office chair.
  6. Seeing a massage therapist this week and continuing with my weekly online movement class with Cassandra Shore,
  7. Doing some of the end of life planning stuff that I need to tackle. I realize that this isn't self care for everyone, but it is for me.
  8. Calming my schedule where I can so I have more time for rest and friends. I'm going to hear the Tannahill Weavers at the Cedar this week, among other things.
Also this weekend, I tabled at the inaugural Carver County Pride with author Abra Staffin-Wiebe and had a fine time. We even had one of the semi-mythical "I'll take one of everything" book shoppers. It's happened to me once before in person and it is the BEST. Anyway, lovely weather, good event, nice people, would do again.

I put out a new-to-us novella though Queen of Swords Press last week. Point of Knives (Astreiant #2) by Melissa Scott answers the big question: when are Nico and Philip going to get together? Oh, and solve a murder mystery? Great stuff! :-)

Look for Michael Merriam and me at the Queen of Swords Press booth at Pagan Pride at Minnehaha Falls this Saturday, if you're local. And more to come.


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It's late May and I already feel like this has been a year already. Last week's "fun" involved a Denial of Service attack on the Queen of Swords Press website. It took about 4 hours for me to get in and get it stopped because the flood of spam from a server in Moldova kept crashing things, but I did eventually get things locked down. Eventually, I'll fix the Contact Form so it works again, but I thought I'd give it a week or so for things to settle down. The rest of the week was less dramatic, but I'm already behind and scrambling to get caught up, so it didn't help. :-(

This weekend was mostly good. I miss the hell out of being at WisCon and it feels very weird to be in town. I had a lot of ouch (the weather has been exciting), but also a fun couple of short plays with Jody Wurl at the Crane Theater, a delightful trip to the Minnesota Streetcar Museum with Michael Merriam as part of my "do things I've never done locally plan," a lovely breakfast with Caroline Stevermer and a very nice hot beverage with Jennie Goloboy at a new-to-me coffee place. I also visited Jana and she basically told me to leave, so that was fun. She's getting on better with her PCA these days than me so I keep getting her checked on every week. Less frustrating for me and likely more useful for her.

Apart from that, it's all errands and terrifying meetings about Twin Cities Pride. I somehow missed the memo that it's now over 500k attendees and it will be our first year as a vendor. There's so much stuff to deal with! I'm a freaked. But that said, come see us in the Queer Writes tent in Loring Park next to the bridge to the Sculpture Garden! I will have books and such!

June also features a whole lot of other stuff (see pinned post above) so there will be other opportunities to see me and my authors. In other news, Kate Larking, who some of you know from Sirens Con days, has spun up her own marketing and publicity biz. I'm looking to bring her on to help me tackle some things I have dropped the ball on, like juicing up our backlist and getting things linked together more sensibly for cross promotion. Let me know if you need a contact for her - she also helps organize Kickstarters, coaches in person bookselling and sundry other related tasks. In addition to that, I'm applying for the Independent Book Publisher's Association Innovative Voices Program. It's a "leveling up" mentorship and grant program for indie publishers and I'm very pleased that Betsy Miller of Thinking Ink Press, one of last year's recipients, has agreed to recommend us. Now to come up with something more coherent than, "OMG! We're publishing the entire Astreiant Series by Melissa Scott and Lisa A. Barnett, plus a new novella this year!" to say about us.

Oh, and hey, the Pride StoryBundle launches on 5/31! Stay tuned!

As always, more soon.



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I'm always thrilled when Melissa Scott has a new science fiction novel coming out and this time around, it's the first book of a trilogy. Finders is due out from Candlemark & Gleam in December of 2018 and is based on Melissa's stories in To Shape the Dark and The Other Half of the Sky. No cover art yet, but looking forward to that as well!

   You have a new science fiction novel, Finders, coming out from Candlemark & Gleam in December 2018. Can you tell us a little about it?

 

Cassilde Sam is a barely solvent salvage operator, hunting for relics in the ruins left by the mysterious Ancestors—particularly the color-coded Elements that power most of humanity’s current technology, including the ability to navigate through hyperspace. Cassilde is also steadily fading under the onslaught of Lightman’s, an incurable, inevitably fatal disease. She needs one last find big enough to leave a legacy for her partner and fellow salvor Dai Winter.

When their lover and former colleague Summerlad Ashe reappears, offering them a chance to salvage part of an orbiting palace that he claims contains potentially immense riches, Cassilde is desperate enough to take the gamble, even though Ashe had left them both to fight on the opposite side of the interplanetary war that only ended seven years ago. The find is everything Ashe promised. But when pirates attack the claim, Cassilde receives the rarest of the Ancestors’ Gifts: a change to her biochemistry that confers near-instant healing and seems to promise immortality. 

But the change also drags her into an underworld where Gifts are traded in blood, and powerful Gifts bring equally powerful enemies. Hunted for her Gift and determined to find Gifts for her lovers, Cassilde discovers that an old enemy is searching for the greatest of the Ancestral artifacts: the power that the Ancestors created and were able to barely contain after it almost destroyed them, plunging humanity into the first Long Dark. Haunted by dream-visions of this power whispering its own version of what happened, Cassilde must find it first, before her enemy frees it to destroy her own civilization. 

 

   Your stories, “Finders" and “Firstborn, Lastborn " in the anthologies The Other Half of the Sky and To Shape the Dark are, on the surface, very different from each other. One is about tech scavengers searching for scraps from an ancient interstellar civilization, while the other is about AIs at war with each other, using humans as pawns. You've mentioned that they inspired your new novel - can you talk about these stories and how they relate to the novel?

 

The novelette-length version of “Finders” that appeared in The Other Half of the Sky was very much a direct inspiration for the novel—the first three chapters are essentially a reworking of that story. (Keeping the novelette anywhere near Athena’s word limit for the anthology was like wrestling an octopus into a very small tin can. It could be made to fit, but there were lots of waving tentacles and much effusion of ink. The version that is in the novel is nearly double the size of the original novelette.) It also finishes the story, which by the time I’d finished the novelette I was determined to do. I’d gotten very fond of the characters, and I wanted very much to work out what happened to them after the events of the novelette. 

“Firstborn, Lastborn,” on the other hand, was a very late submission to To Shape the Dark—I think it went in literally on the last possible day. I had been poking at the idea for a while, wrote a draft in a frenzied 3 days, and then looked at it in despair and decided I’d have to tell Athena I wouldn’t have a story for her after all. However, I was too tired to write that email at that point, and when I looked at the story again the next morning, it was better than I’d remembered. I poked at is some more, and sent it in and was delighted to have it accepted. But the characters kept nagging at me, and I started making notes on the larger story of the relationship between the two women and between them and the AI. As I worked on it and on expanding Finders, I realized that the world of “Firstborn, Lastborn” was in fact the world of Finders’ mythical Ancestors—that “Firstborn, Lastborn” was the “real” story behind one of the foundational myths of the salvage culture 

 

   Will Finders be part of a series? 

I sincerely hope so! As I said above, the short story “Firstborn, Lastborn,” turned out to be the non-mythical past of the Finders universe, and there is a third book, Fallen, that deals with the intermediate culture, the Successors, that lies between the two. I’m actually writing them in reverse chronological order, with Finders coming first and set in the last iteration of this society, when most of the ultra-sophisticated, AI-mediated technology of “Firstborn, Lastborn” has been lost and the survivors have rebuilt their society by scavenging the wreckage of the Ancestral worlds. Fallen, which is the next book I hope to work on, jumps back to the Successor period, when the Gifts that are so rare and mysterious in Finders are the commonplace basis of a glittering and terribly fragile society. And then the third book, Firstborn, chronologically the earliest, will tell the “real” story of Anketil and Irtholin and the AI War—the myth that underlies both the previous novels. 

 

   Does Finders have any relationship, such as setting or time period, to any of your earlier work? 

There’s no concrete relationship, though I think Finders touches on many of the same themes as my other work—like them, it’s about working people with jobs and lives who choose to get involved in something bigger than themselves. A couple of the early readers have commented that it reminds them of my early Silence Leigh trilogy (Five-Twelfths of Heaven, Silence In Solitude, and The Empress of Earth), and I can see that. Both deal with a peculiar technology that often acts like Clarkean magic, and both involve a complicated three-way relationship.

  

   Most of your work has LGBT or Q protagonists; is this true of Finders? As a writer, can you talk a little bit about why queer protagonists are important to you?

The main character of Finders, Cassilde Sam, is involved in a longtime polyamorous relationship with her two working partners, Dai Winter and Summerlad Ashe. The men are certainly bisexual, and in my head, Cassilde is as well, though there’s little chance to show that in the novel.

I suppose I write queer characters for the simplest and most fundamental of reasons: I’m queer myself, and want to read and write characters who share that core nature. On a broader level, though, SF/F offers opportunities to tell queer stories that aren’t necessarily about today’s immediately contested issues. It’s possible to imagine a world in which queerness is not an issue, for example—to draw a picture of what we might want society to become. This is not to say that stories that draw directly on contemporary conflicts aren’t valuable and important, but SF/F lets us tell both, and I think it’s important to take advantage of that. 

And also… As we progress (and as a society the US has made enormous progress in the last 30 years, despite the recent setbacks), I want to celebrate and retain the things that I loved about the old queer community. They were things forged by oppression, virtues by necessity, and yet they made a world that gave me a home when I most needed it. The playfulness, the multiple masks and names and costumes, the acknowledgement of sex as a legitimate and valuable choice even in the face of AIDS, the willingness to act to protect each other—all of these things shaped me and my writing, and I want to carry them forward as part of what it means to be queer

 

   What else are you working on?

Let’s see… I seem to be incapable of sticking to any one project or even one type of project! Besides Fallen, I’m very nearly finished with a medieval fantasy, Water Horse, about the queer king of a beleaguered kingdom and his struggle to twist free of his prophesied fate. I’ve just finished the fifth Points mystery, Point of Sighs, and have started plotting the next, Point of Graves; I have an on-going space opera serial on Patreon with Don Sakers, The Rule of Five, and Jo Graham and I have begun plotting the next book in our 1930s occult aviation adventure series, Fire Season (The Order of the Air). After that, I have some thoughts about rural cyberpunk in a world after the seas have risen; bootleggers and the fae in Depression-era Arkansas; and manmade monsters fighting Martians in a steampunk AU. And, with a bit of luck, I may have a new project in an entirely new genre!

 

Weblinks: blog melissa-scott.com

                 LiveJournal mescott.livejournal.com

                 Astreiant Patreon patreon.com/astreiant

                 Rule of Five Patreon patreon.com/ruleof5

                 Twitter @blueterraplane
 

Bio:

            Melissa Scott was born and raised in Little Rock, Arkansas, and studied history at Harvard College.  She earned her PhD from Brandeis University in the comparative history program with a dissertation titled “The Victory of the Ancients:  Tactics, Technology, and the Use of Classical Precedent in Early Modern Warfare.” She has published more than thirty original novels and a handful of short stories, most with queer themes and characters, and is known for her expansive and effective world-building. She has also written authorized tie-ins for Star Trek: DS9, Star Trek: Voyager, Stargate SG-1, Stargate Atlantis, and Star Wars Rebels. 

She won the John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer in 1986, and Lambda Literary Awards for Trouble and Her Friends, Shadow Man, Point of Dreams (written with long-time partner and collaborator, the late Lisa A. Barnett), and Death By Silver, written with Amy Griswold.  She has also been shortlisted for the Tiptree Award.  She has won Spectrum Awards for Shadow Man, for the short story “The Rocky Side of the Sky,” Death by Silver, and Fairs’ Point.

            Lately, she has collaborated with Jo Graham on the Order of the Air, a series of occult adventure novels set in the 1930s; the fifth book, Oath Bound, was published at the end of 2015.  She has also continued the acclaimed Points series, fantasy mysteries set in the imaginary city of Astreiant, most recently with the forthcoming Point of Sighs.  In addition, she and Amy Griswold have begun a series of gay Victorian fantasies with murder, starting with Death By Silver, and continued in A Death at the Dionysus Club.  Her most recent short story, “Firstborn, Lastborn,” is in the Athena Andreadis-edited anthology To Shape the Dark, and she is co-author, with Don Sakers, of the serial space opera The Rule of Five, which can be found on Patreon.  She is @blueterraplane on Twitter.

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 My Diversicon schedule - this also will include the traditional Saturday at 5ish autographing 
Saturday, July 22
 
4:00-4:55 PM, Krushenko's Annex (Northern Pacific)
Panel: You've Got Magic on My Crime Scene!--Police Procedurals in Fantasy
Catherine Lundoff, mod.; Melissa Scott, Phyllis Ann Karr
 
Sunday, July 23
 
3:00-3:55 PM, Main Stage (Soo Line)
Bidding Farewell to the Red Shirts and Side Kicks: LGBTQ Protagonists in Science Fiction and Fantasy
Catherine Lundoff, mod.; Melissa Scott
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2008 Haunted Hearths and Sapphic Shades interview with author Melissa Scott. See the Sacchi Green post for general book info.


Can you talk a bit about your inspiration for your story "One Horse Town"?

I've always been fascinated by the idea of familial ghosts, the kind that one inherits, and of the equivocal protection/danger they can provide. And I had spent a lot of time around horse people over the last four or five years, so the two seemed to fit well. Plus the scariest ghost story I've every read involves a ghost horse, and I think I was trying to exorcise it!

Have you ever had an encounter with a ghost?

Once. I was staying at Lisa's parents' house (Lisa being my late partner), and was sitting in her room doing some embroidery. The room had three doors: one into another bedroom, one into the hall, and one into the bathroom. And as I was sitting there, I heard someone come up the stairs and go into the bathroom. But the door didn't close, so I looked up, and no one was there. I assumed I'd been mistaken, and went back to work. And then I got the feeling that someone was looking at me - that very distinct sense of presence when someone is paying attention to you. I was absolutely sure that there was someone standing in the bathroom door watching me - but there was no one there. I put my embroidery down on Lisa's desk, and went downstairs where the rest of the family was - and they were all there, all accounted for - and explained what had happened. I was more than a little freaked out, but Lisa's mother just nodded and said, "that'll be the ghost." Apparently no one had ever seen it, but it moved things around periodically, so when something disappeared you just had to wait for the ghost to give it back. I waited a while, then Lisa and I went back upstairs. I had pretty much talked myself into believing I'd imagined the whole thing - but my embroidery had been moved from the desk to the bed, and unrolled so that the full pattern was visible. I can't explain that one any other way!

What's your favorite ghost story (you can pick a movie if you prefer)?

William Hope Hodgson's "The Horse of the Invisible." That's the story I was trying to exorcise with "One Horse Town" - but there's nothing like a really well done Victorian ghost story to stick in your subconscious!

What are you working on now and where can readers find out more about you?

Currently I'm working on a novel about a bootlegger, his Duesenberg race car, and a lucky "thunderstone" (two pieces of the 1930 Paragould meteor were found, and the third landed in my novel). It's an expansion of a short story, "Mr. Seeley," that I sold to the anthology _So Fey_. As for more information - my website is Melissa-Scott.com.

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