All posts by Cathy Palmer-Lister

Zines to share

More zines to share:

From the N3F:

FanAct202303 and Origin202303

Added today at https://efanzines.com are:

Journey Planet #70 & 71, edited by James Bacon, Chris Garcia et al

Leybl Botwinik’s CyberCozen – March 2023

Opuntia #545, edited by Dale Speirs

Henry Grynnsten’s Wild Ideas #33

Octothorpe #79, a regular fannish podcast by John Coxon, Alison Scott and Liz Batty, is now on line

John Thiel’s Event Horizon #11


Bill

Aurora Awards & CSFFA Updates for March 2023

Aurora Awards & CSFFA Updates
for March 2023

Springtime is almost here, and with it the awards process kicks into high gear! The nomination period for this year’s Aurora Awards have opened. This newsletter also features a call for a CSFFA secretary to join the Board. And if you are considering applying to professional development grant, don’t hesitate as there are only a few weeks left. More information below.

In this newsletter:

  1. Aurora Awards News: 2023 Nominations Are Open
  2. CSFFA Board of Directors Vacancy
  3. CSFFA 2023 Professional Development Grant Deadline: March 31st

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Aurora Awards 2023: Nominations Are Open

You can now nominate for the 2023 Aurora Awards for works done in 2022. There are ten (10) categories.  You may nominate up to five (5) different works in each category. You do not have nominate in all categories or select five works in a category. Nominate what you know and what you enjoyed. Do NOT nominate the same work more than once. Duplicate entries of the same work will be voided.

Nominations will be open until 11:59pm EDT on April 22nd. At that time your choices will be locked. You must have a paid CSFFA membership to participate (annual membership is $10). Log into your account and click the Nomination icon on the member’s home page.

Note: The top five works by five different nominees will be chosen to be on the final ballot in each category. If a nominee has two works with the same number of nominations in the top five, they will be asked to select one to be on the ballot.

About the nomination form plus a few tricks:

  1. The nomination form consists of ten sections (one for each award category)
  2. Each section has five lines of drop-down lists of the approved eligible works in the category you are on. You may only nominate works from the drop-down lists.
  3. You can enter your selections in any order and if you wish to remove one, select the blank line at the top of each drop-down list.
  4. You do not have to nominate in all the categories, and you don’t have to select five works in a category.
  5. Do not nominate the same work more than once. Duplicate selections of the same work will be voided.
  6. To move through the drop-down lists, you can either use your mouse to scroll down or you can key in the first letter of a work and the list will move to the first work starting with that letter.
  7. You can go to the eligibility lists from the members-only page at any time to view what has been approved and use the URL link to look at online information about it.
  8. After you have selected works in a category you must click the Save button or your choices will be lost if you leave the nomination form.
  9. Each category has its own save button.If you close the form before you Save or Update your changes they will be lost, and you will have to start again.
  10. If you refresh your screen or come back to it later your selections will be visible.You may change your choices at any time. Categories that you have already saved works will display Update rather than Save.
  11. You may continue to change your choices until we have closed nominations.
  12. Nominate what you know and enjoyed. This is your chance to have a say what is on the final ballot. Make it your own choices.

CSFFA Board of Directors Vacancy

Your CSFFA board needs a secretary!

The secretary is a full member of the board, equally participating in discussions and decisions. Meetings are monthly (except December), the last Tuesday of each month (8 p.m. E.S.T.: attendees are in Quebec, Ontario, Alberta, British Columbia.)

Meetings happen via Zoom. Meetings typically last 60 minutes.

Duty of the secretary is to write the minutes of board meetings. In the event that the secretary can not attend a meeting, the meeting is recorded.

Interested? Email president@prixaurorawards.ca

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CSFFA Professional Developmental Grant

Grant deadline one is fast approaching! Get your application in by March 31, 2023, 11:59pm MT. In case you missed any of the details you will find them below.

This grant is to enable CSFFA members to pursue education and professional development that helps them expand their skill set. Starting in 2023 we will be awarding a total of $2,500.00 over the year to new writers, writers new to the genre or writers changing focus, for example short story to novel.

This Grant will be awarded to successful a successful applicant or applicants to cover up to 75% of the cost of developmental avenues such as:

  • Courses
  • Retreats
  • Writing software
  • A book coach or editorial fees for their first book

There will be two submission windows in 2023. The first is January 1st to March 31st, with funds awarded by May 15th and June 1st to August 31st with funds awarded by Oct 15th.

Funds will be distributed at the discretion of the Board and based upon applications submitted per submission windows until the full amount of the grant is paid out. Any unawarded funds will be distributed at the discretion of the Board or rolled over into the next grant year.

Successful applicants will be contacted by CSFFA and an announcement will be made on our website, newsletter, and/or during the Aurora Awards.

All decisions by the CSFFA Board are final.

Application Submission Guidelines

  1. Applicants must be members of CSFFA in good standing.
  2. Current Board Members or family members of the selection committee are not eligible for this grant.
  3. Former Board members must have vacated their position for a minimum of one year prior to application.
  4. Must be a new writer or new to the genre of Science Fiction, Fantasy, Speculative fiction, or any subgenres of these main genres.
  5. Must be unpublished or have publications that are less than 50 copies in speculative fiction, science fiction, fantasy, or any sub genres of these main genres.
  6. Provide contact Information
  7. A 1,000-word proposal is to be submitted detailing the following:
  8. What the endeavour is, along with a description and weblink
  9. A timeline for the endeavour (must be less than one year)
  10. Expected results from the endeavour
  11. A short bio
  12. If awarded, the applicant is asked to submit upon completion a 500-word description on the results and experience of the endeavour. The applicant must also be in agreement that their name and or photo will be used on the website, newsletter or both.

Applications must be submitted by 11:59:59 MT on the last day of each submission period. Any late submissions will be automatically transferred to the next submission period for consideration.

Submission of applications are to be made to PublicityCSFFA@gmail.com

Copyright © 2023 Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association, All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you opted in via our website.

Our mailing address is:
Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association
1065 Henley Rd
Mississauga, ON L4Y 1C8
Canada

Zine to share!

From Israel, Lebyl’s CyberCozen:  CCMarch2023-v01

This month’s roundup:

• More Yiddish-related SF material dedicated to my dear departed father, David Botwinik (o”h – ע”ה ): o Part G of the Yiddish SF short story “Kamf-Nign” by Leybl Botwinik (with English translation)

• Star Trek vs. Star Trek vs. Star Trek – Part III (The Next Generation Series (TNG))

• Sheer Science – What Artificial Intelligence Teaches Us About What it Means to be Human

• Book review: “More Zion’s Fiction” – More next month NOTE mistake in last issue. Should be: – … Story #16: “Askuni-Askuni” – by Dafna Feldman Our usual tidbits from the Web. +

MARCH e-MEETING, POST 3 of 6: It’s Time for a Break!

Get your Bheer & Chips!
It’s time for the break!

NEWS

WARP: Danny is waiting for your submissions. Reviews, fiction, and letters of comment, art, puzzles, photos of your creations, all are welcome! Otherwise it’s going to be a very thin issue!

Membership: A review of our roster shows we still have a few members whose payments are overdue. We are reviewing our membership rates and benefits, and there may be a few small changes as a result.

Sci-Fi Soundtracks (Vinyl): No takers yet on the SF/F soundtrack LPs  and related records from Sylvain’s collection! Guess nobody owns a working turntable anymore! See the collection here (PDF): Sylvain’s Sci-Fi LPs, Complete List 

Last chance to acquire any of these LPs is today, so act before the end of the meeting if you are interested!

DISPLAY

Dan Kenney is scratch-building a Romulan War Bird.

 Wayne is working on a Klingon Cruiser.

1/536 Kronos 1 1/350 I’thing Boom, Command Pod
RAFFLE PRIZES

Click the thumbnails to view full size image.

Sturmovik Neko Girl, Japanese Capsule Toy, donated by Brian Knapp.

From Sylvain’s collection: The Animated Cerebus, by Dave Sim. A set of 45 colour prints (about 9″ x 12″) making up three flip-card animated stories. The cover sheet is signed by Dave Sim.

Another picture from the Animated Cerberbus

From Sylvain’s collection: 8 movie lobby cards (8″ x 10″) – two from each movie: The Incredible Shrinking Woman with Lily Tomlin – 1980 Battlestar Galactica – 1978 Futureworld – 1976 The Thing – 1982

Alan Dean Foster and Eric Frank Russell: Design for Great-Day Good condition

Boris, series 1, from Sylvain’s legacy, box of 90 cards, each card described on the back

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Black Lagoon “Gill Man” dead at 93

Black Lagoon actor dead at 93

Ricou Browning, who starred as The Gill Man in the 1954 movie Creature from the Black Lagoon, died Monday of natural causes. He was 93. Browning reprised Gill Man for the sequels Revenge of the Creature (1955) and The Creature Walks Among Us (1956). His other acting credits include the 1958 TV show Sea Hunt, and as a stuntman he worked on 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (1954). Browning was the creative force behind the 1963 Flipper movie and subsequent TV show. He directed on that show and directed scenes in films including Thunderball and Caddyshack.

See trailer for the movie Here: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0046876/

READ biography from wikipedia