Fiction
2 … And What Can We Offer You Tonight? by Premee Mohamed … Review by
Perry Middlemiss
2 … The Brave and the Bold by Hans Schantz … Review by Ginger Man
4 … Darkness Beckons by Nicholas Woode-Smith … Review by Declan Finn
6 … Dead Acre by Rhett C. Bruno and Jaime Castle … Review by Graham
Bradley
8 … Defender of Llyans by Brian C. Hailes … Review by Graham Bradley
9 … Flowers for the Sea by Zin E. Rocklyn … Review by Perry Middlemiss
10 … For the Love of Death By Kal Spriggs … Review by Declan Finn
11 … Ghost of a Chance by Dan Willis … Review by J W Stepanek
12 … The Girl King by Mimi Yu … Review by Christopher Nuttall
15 … Hell Spawn: Saint Tommy NYPD by Declan Finn … Review by Jim McCoy
16 … The Icarus Plot by Timothy Zahn … Review by Declan Finn
18 … In Plain Sight by Dan Willis … Review by J W Stepanek
20 … Infernal Affairs by Declan Finn … Review by Michael Gallagher
22 … The Light That Never Was by Lloyd Biggle, Jr. … Review by Heath
Row
23 … Little Fuzzy by H. Beam Piper … Review by Heath Row
23 … New Writings in SF3 edited by John Carnell … Review by Perry
Middlemiss
23 … The Poppy War by Rebecca F. Kuang … Review by Christopher Nuttall
25 … Robosoldiers: Thank You for Your Servos, edited by Stephen Lawson … Review by JE Tabor
27 … Stress Pattern by Neal Barrett, Jr. … Review by Heath Row
27 … Sun-Daughters, Sea-Daughters by Aimee Ogden … Review by Perry Middlemiss
28 … Trouble Walked In by Mike Kupari … Review by Trevor Denning
29 … Twilight by Stephenie Meyer … Review by Heath Row
Non-Fiction
30 … Charisma +1: The Guide to Convention Etiquette for Gamers, Geeks,
and the Socially Awkward by Jessica Brawner … Review by Heath Row
Prose Bono
31 … Types of Editing for Your Work of Fiction … by A.C. Cargill
August 12-14 – When Words Collide & Canvention 42 –ONLINEOKThis year the festival is once again online and free to attend, including the Aurora Awards ceremony. Registration via Eventbrite is required.https://www.whenwordscollide.org/
On Saturday, August 13, starting at 5pm MDT, we invite everyone to join us for the Aurora Awards ceremony. Our Master of Ceremonies, author Mark Leslie Lefebvre, will be live streaming the ceremony on both his YouTube channel (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EkPw6Cu3P1c) and our YouTube channel (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LO7p4geRW6k). The event will also be streamed live on Facebook, with the URL becoming available here about one week prior to the event. This event is open to everyone and is free to watch.
About the Auroras and the Hall of Fame, from the When Words Collide website:
Each year a Canadian convention or festival hosts the floating convention known as Canvention. This year Canvention is being organized by the Canadian Science Fiction and Fantasy Association (CSFFA), a national non-profit society along with a host convention. CSFFA’s mandate is to give out the Aurora awards and induct people into CSFFA’s Hall of the Fame.
There are twelve different Aurora awards. They are given out for both professional and volunteer (unpaid) work in the genres of Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror. Works are nominated by members of CSFFA which all Canadians are welcome to join. The top nominated works are shortlisted for the Aurora ballot and voted on by CSFFA members. Through the generosity of the nominees and their publishers, CSFFA members also get to download electronic versions of almost all of the published nominated works.
The Hall of Fame inductees are determined by a jury of four experts and one coordinator from CSFFA.
Missed the meeting? It was a casual, virtual picnic, mostly on zoom.
Keith’s presentation on our field trip to the train museum is here, and the raffle prizes and virtual display table is here.
Keith’s presentation can also be accessed from the top menu. Click on activities/field trips/ . If you have photos of this event, please send them on to <president@monsffa.ca> so that they can be posted also.
Members of the club may watch a recording of the meeting under the members only tab. Usual password.
Dan Kenney has completed the diorama for his Blue Dragon and is now starting work on a new headpiece, a blend of Klingon & Jem-Hadar. His next project will be a full Jem-Hadar mask.
Wayne Glover send us pictures of his models:
Raffle Prizes! All you need to do is participate in today’s meeting!
Shortly after noon on Saturday, June 18, some dozen MonSFFen gathered, physically, face-to-face in the lobby of the Exporail Museum, located in the town of St-Constant, across the river, just south of Montreal. This outing marked our long-awaited but tentative return to in-person gatherings.
MonSFFen will recall that the last time we gathered together in the same room for a club event was on the occasion of our March 7, 2020 club meeting at the downtown Hôtel Espresso. Shortly after that meeting, the COVID-19 pandemic was officially declared, lockdowns initiated, and all club events suspended until further notice! We soon opted to move our monthly get-togethers online for the duration of the pandemic, which, take note, is not yet entirely over, though considerably moderated. We continue to gather online every month, even as we prepare for an anticipated return to in-person monthly meetings very soon.
Exporail houses the nation’s largest collection of locomotives, rail coaches and cars, and railroad equipment and paraphernalia, representing Canada’s railway heritage, dating back to the early days of steam and streetcars. Steampunk fans will surely delight in this museum, strolling among the elegantly appointed passenger cars, and the massive nuts-and-bolts steam locomotives, their cabs replete with a plethora of pipes and valves and levers.
The museum also featured several exhibits devoted to the history of toy trains, and a sizable, operating HO-scale model-railroad layout, of particular interest to the collectors and scale-modellers in our group. Furthermore, we braved the day’s rain to walk about outside, where were parked on sidings additional engines and cars awaiting restoration. We both explored the museum on our own and benefitted from a guided tour of some of the notable trains in the collection, including a first-generation Montreal Metro car!
For the benefit of those who were unable to join us on this field trip, we present, here, a photo gallery of our visit to the Exporail museum. (All photos by Keith Braithwaite unless otherwise indicated.)
The main “Angus” pavilion was our starting point. From the lobby and leading into the cavernous primary exhibit area, a short passageway served to display an assortment of track-laying tools, uniform caps, signage, promotional models, toy trains, plaques, historical photographs, and other railroad accoutrements. Interpretive videos screened on television monitors, as well.
Within the exhibit area itself, numerous locomotives, coaches, and railroad cars were grouped together on sidings amongst which we were able to meander, effectively taking a stroll through Canadian railway history.
Street Cars, Montreal Metro
In one corner and belonging to the Montreal City Passenger Railway was an early stagecoach-like vehicle, which had been pulled through city streets by a team of horses, presaging rail transportation.
An open-air, sightseeing type was among several street cars on exhibit, including the “Rocket,” which we were able to board. Period advertising signage was reproduced as a detail of this car’s restoration.
Regrettably out of service on this day is an operating street car that carries patrons on a brief tour around the museum grounds outdoors. It was undergoing work in a maintenance garage adjacent the Angus building.
Familiar to Montrealers was a first-generation Metro car, its sky-blue colour and white trim easily recognized. A vintage map of the Metro system, circa mid-1960s, was among the details featured aboard this car—the Metro then was but a fraction of the circuit it is today.
Passenger Coaches
Exporail’s collection includes a number of passenger coaches, from vintage to more modern, and we were able to view the interiors of some of these trains by way of an elevated platform.
Moreover, we were able to board a couple of the coaches for a closer look at the ornate decorative flourishes of a bygone era, and such features as fold-out upper and lower sleeping berths, a rather compact washroom, and a coal-fired stove positioned at one end of the coach, providing heat for the entire car. Passengers seated closest to the stove were charged more for their tickets!
We also boarded a mail car and learned about the pick-up/delivery system employed to move mail across the vast expanses of this country, in a time when carrying the mail was an important function of Canada’s railways.
The Age of Steam
A highlight of our visit was the opportunity to view the many mighty steam locomotives in the collection, from smaller—relatively speaking—workhorse engines to formidable, giant powerhouses and streamlined behemoths, some of which we were able to board for a close-up look at the crew compartments. Given the enormous size of these locomotives, their cabs were a surprisingly cramped space to work for engineer and crew!
We were able, as well, to descend into a pit and have a gander at the undercarriage of one huge locomotive, and view, in a secondary pavilion, a couple of European-made engines, the showcase example of which was the beautiful, aerodynamic, A4-class “Dominion of Canada.”
Built in 1937 for British Railways’ London-Edinburgh line and originally dubbed “Woodcock,” this locomotive was cutting-edge railroad technology in its day. Renamed “Dominion of Canada,” it was rescued from the scrap heap in 1965 after having been put out of service, restored by British Railways, and shipped to Canada just in time for this country’s Centennial Celebrations in 1967.
Also on view in this secondary pavilion was the exquisitely reconditioned “John Molson.”
The age of steam gave way to diesel-electric power, and Exporail’s inventory includes a number of fine examples of these more contemporary locomotives.
There were on site a couple of boxcars, too, and this being Canada, special snow-removal equipment.
Model Railroading and Toy Trains
The Angus pavilion also featured several anterooms dedicated to model railroading and toy trains. A large, finely detailed model of Canadian National’s number 5606, locomotive and tender, marked the entrance to these rooms, and within was spotlighted a toaster-sized model of an engine imported from England for service on Canada’s first railroad, the Champlain and St. Lawrence, running between La Prairie and St-Jean-sur-Richelieu beginning in 1836.
A few wonderfully intricate model railroad layouts were on exhibit, including a pintsized set-up enclosed within a suitcase! Glass display cases showcased a variety of miniature locomotives and railcars, the most popular and common scale among model railroaders being HO, or 1:87.
A big, impressive HO layout occupied most of one large room, with operating trains snaking through miniature forest and mountain, tiny, lifelike town and city.
Toy trains and accessories were featured as well, from simple wooden models to metal and plastic replicas of varying sizes and levels of detail. Several of the famous and very collectible Lionel electric trains were included, here.
Railyard
As the rain let up a little, we made our way outside to explore the many trains parked in the railyard—locomotives, passenger coaches, boxcars, flatcars, maintenance vehicles, all awaiting refurbishment.
Recreated were a couple of passenger train stations and platforms, one of which harkened back to an era when passengers were segregated by gender as they awaited their train, the women in one waiting room, which was heated by a coal-burning stove, the men in the other, without any source of heat! The station’s ticket office was positioned between the two, with service wickets on either side. Luggage carts, and the office’s furniture and antiquated equipment completed the recreation.
As the time came to put a caboose on our field trip, we made one last stop before departing: the gift shop! We left having enjoyed a most pleasant afternoon exploring a most interesting museum.
Make your favourite sandwich or prepare a tasty snack, pour yourself a cool, refreshing drink, and join us for an hour or two, or for the whole afternoon as we get together online to chat via ZOOM and enjoy each other’s company!
With the seventh wave now upon us and COVID numbers climbing locally, we’ve postponed our in-person club BBQ-in-the-Park until Sunday, August 28, by which time, we are told by authorities, the seventh wave should have dissipated.
So, in the meantime, we’ll be getting together for a casual video-chat this afternoon! No presentations, just light, informal programming, and the chance to catch up, discuss the latest in sci-fi entertainment, or share with the group thoughts on recent books read or screen sci-fi enjoyed. If you’re working on any nifty SF/F-related crafting or other projects, or perhaps recently visited a fun and interesting vacation destination, tell us all about it, and share any photos you snapped with the group!
Do join us for an afternoon of conversation and camaraderie right here, right now!
If you’re not fully equipped to ZOOM, you can also join in by phone (voice only); in the Montreal area, the toll-free number to call is: 1-438-809-7799. If you’re from out of town, find your ZOOM call-in number here: Call-In Numbers
Also, have this information on hand as you may be asked to enter it:
REMINDER: MonSFFA will host a Summer e-Picnic tomorrow, Saturday, July 23, right here on this Web site beginning at 1:00PM!
Make your favourite sandwich or prepare a tasty snack, pour yourself a cool, refreshing drink, and join us for an hour or two, or for the whole afternoon as we get together online to chat via ZOOM and enjoy each other’s company!
With the seventh wave now upon us and COVID numbers climbing locally, we’ve postponed our in-person club BBQ-in-the-Park until Sunday, August 28, by which time, we are told by authorities, the seventh wave should have dissipated.
So, in the meantime, we’ll be getting together for a casual video-chat tomorrow afternoon! No presentations, just light, informal programming accessible on the Web site, and the chance to catch up, discuss the latest in sci-fi entertainment, or share with the group thoughts on recent books read or screen sci-fi enjoyed. If you’re working on any nifty SF/F-related crafting or other projects, or perhaps recently visited a fun and interesting vacation destination, tell us all about it, and share any photos you snapped with the group!
Do join us for an afternoon of conversation and camaraderie right here at www.MonSFFA.ca tomorrow, Saturday, July 23, beginning at 1:00PM!
MonSFFA will host a Summer e-Picnic this Saturday, July 23, right here on the club’s Web site beginning at 1:00PM!
Make your favourite sandwich or prepare a tasty snack, pour yourself a cool, refreshing drink, and join us for an hour or two, or for the whole afternoon as we get together online to chat via ZOOM and enjoy each other’s company!
With the seventh wave now upon us and COVID numbers climbing locally, we’ve postponed our in-person club BBQ-in-the-Park until Sunday, August 28, by which time, we are told by authorities, the seventh wave should have dissipated.
So, in the meantime, we’ll be getting together for a casual video-chat this Saturday! No presentations, just light, informal programming accessible on the Web site, and the chance to catch up, discuss the latest in sci-fi entertainment, or share with the group thoughts on recent books read or screen sci-fi enjoyed. If you’re working on any nifty SF/F-related crafting or other projects, or perhaps recently visited a fun and interesting vacation destination, tell us all about it, and share any photos you snapped with the group!
Do join us for an afternoon of conversation and camaraderie right here at www.MonSFFA.ca this Saturday, July 23, beginning at 1:00PM!