Future Worldcon and bid news

Future Worldcon and bid news

From Smofnews

Next year’s Seattle Worldcon 2025 (August 13-17) announced that its optional special Hugo category will be Best Poetry. An eligible poem is “within the speculative, science fiction, and fantasy genres, published in 2024, that is at least three lines.”

The Seattle Worldcon has also announced a Community Fund, starting with $30,000 in seed money, to assist four groups in attending: first-timers from the Pacific Northwest; LGBTQIA+ fans; BIPOC/AANHPI fans; and fans from anywhere in the Global South. Applications have not yet opened. Those wishing to donate to the fund can do so through the con’s registration portal.

LA in 2026, now LAcon V, won the vote easily to hold the 84th Worldcon on August 27-31, 2026 in Anaheim, California. Fears of a stealth write-in campaign were unrealized. Guests of Honor will be Barbara Hambly, Ronald D. Moore, Colleen Doran, Dr. Anita Sengupta, Tim Kirk, Geri Sullivan, Stan Sakai, and Ursula Vernon.

The bid for Kampala, Uganda in 2028 has changed its proposed location to Kigali, Rwanda.

The Brisbane in 2028 bid is reconsidering its dates for the convenience of those travelling to Australia for the 2028 solar eclipse.

Zines to share!

We have zines to share!

From Nic Farey, TH 78

An update to efanzines from Bill Burns:

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

  • League of Fan Funds Newsletter 2024: “Well, that was Amazeballs!”
  • Opuntia #580, edited by Dale Speirs
  • Nic Farey’s This Here…#78
  • Andy Hooper’s CAPTAIN FLASHBACK #69
  • Christopher J. Garcia’s Claims Department #75 & 76
  • WOOF #49 (2024), Christina Lake, Official Editor


    Bill

Zine to share!

The N3F sends us TNFF202408 and a letter from the president, George Phillies,  copied below. -CPL


Greetings from your President!

I attached yet another issue of The National Fantasy Fan. There’s a great deal in it. I hope you enjoy the contents. Note in particular the Round-Robin Bureau. The project uses a lot of Judy Carroll’s time, but if round-robin’s are becoming something of the past we should maybe try something different. Your opinions to me or her  (Judy Carroll <blueshadows2012@gmail.com>) will be most welcome.

Mentioning projects that have gone on for a while, I’ve been President of our club for close to a decade now. I’m happy to continue for the foreseeable future, but I just had my seventy-seventh birthday and would certainly be happy to start passing off aspects of this job to other people. At some point, matters will come to a stop, hopefully a smooth stop rather than something chaotic.

I currently edit this magazine, Eldritch Science, Tightbeam, and The N3f Review of Books. We just had a guest editor for Eldritch Science and could certainly use more. The magazine that’s actually the least work, though it doesn’t look that way, is The N3f Review. It’s long, but it’s all cut-and-paste, the only complicated part being to insert the cuts and pastes so the books are reviewed in alphabetical order by title. I have a list of sources, so all I do every month is go to those sources, see if they have produced book reviews for me, and put the reviews together. I also have wonderful people like Robert Runte and Tom Feller who send me reviews spontaneously. Those are most appreciated. Sending me more book reviews would also be appreciated. I confess that as I am myself an author I would certainly not complain if people would send me reviews of my own novels, but that’s too much to ask.

On a different note, we are two thirds of the way through the year. Once again, next January will launch the process that lets us create the annual N3F Laureate awards. If you see things that are Laureate-worthy, please jot down the nomination and send it to me. I’m perfectly happy to keep a file of those and put everything together at the end of the year. More nominations are good. Nominations in obscure categories like motion pictures, television, shorter fiction, and the like are certainly of great interest. If you see a fan writer or fan artist or fan poet you like, please consider nominating them to.

As always, I am phillies@4liberty.net.

Two Months Until the Return of the Super Sci-Fi Book Sale!

Coming in the Fall…

THE RETURN OF THE SUPER SCI-FI BOOK SALE!

Attention all SF&F readers! MonSFFA is pleased to announce the post-pandemic re-launch of our popular, fund-raising SF&F used book sale!

In just two months, the club’s Super Sci-Fi Book Sale will return! Mark Saturday, October 19 in your calendars! The sale opens to the public from 12:00PM to 3:30PM!

Tell All of Your Friends!

Amazing prices on thousands of amazing stories by science fiction and fantasy authors from Asimov to Zelazny!

We’ve got plenty of inventory left over from past sales, plus lots of fresh stock, including items from the legacy of our late friend, collector, and club member Sylvain St-Pierre! And we’re clearing it all at our astonishingly low prices!

Piles of Paperbacks! Boxes of Books! An Astounding Assortment Available, Including…

Trade Paperbacks and Hardcovers! Anthologies and Specialty Books! Magazines and Comics! Plus DVDs! UNIMAGINABLE, UNBELIEVEABLE, UNBEATABLE BARGAINS!

Publications en Français Aussi!

The Lowest Prices In the Galaxy! Bulk Book Bargains; the More you Buy, the More you Save!

EVERYTHING! MUST! GO!

Zines to share!

Update from Bill Burns:

First site update after my return from Worldcon, and the following new issues are at https://efanzines.com

David Grigg’s The Megaloscope #13

Leybl Botwinik’s CyberCozen – August 2024

Henry Grynnsten’s Wild Ideas #50

Garth Spencer’s The Obdurate Eye #42

Opuntia #579 , edited by Dale Speirs

Octothorpe #116 the Hugo-winning fannish podcast by John Coxon, Alison Scott and Liz Batty


Bill

Star Wars: A New Hope, under the stars

https://westmount.org/en/event/movie-in-the-park/

Movie in the Park

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away…

 

A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away…

Join us in Westmount Park for a screening of Star Wars: A New Hope (1977) under the stars.

Prizes will be given for best themed costumed.

Don’t forget to bring your chair or blanket!

Info: 514 989-5226

AUGUST 17 MonSFFA MEETING; Post 2 of 2, 5:00PM – Thank You, Wrap-Up

5) THANK YOU

We thank club members Keith Braithwaite, Danny Sichel, Mark Burakoff, and Cathy Palmer-Lister for their contributions to this afternoon’s programming, as well as all of our contributing participants, and everyone who helped to plan and run this meeting. Finally, of course, we thank all of you who joined us here in person, and on ZOOM; don’t forget to comment on today’s get-together (www.MonSFFA.ca).

6) NEXT MONTH’S MEETING

We meet next on Saturday, September 14, 1:00PM-5:00PM. We hope to see you then, whether in person or via ZOOM!

And be sure to attend our Super Sci-Fi Book Sale on Saturday, October 19! Spread the word! Please let your family, friends, and neighbours know about this book sale!

7) SIGN-OFF

Until we gather again, keep well and enjoy the rest of your summer.

AUGUST 17 MonSFFA MEETING; Post 1 of 2, 12:30PM – Introduction and Agenda

1) INTRODUCTION

Welcome to MonSFFA’s August 17, 2024 meeting! This afternoon’s proceedings are soon to get underway. We are meeting live and in person at our meeting hall in Le Nouvel Hotel, downtown! For those joining us online, today, see the instructions, below (at the end of this post), to join in and participate on ZOOM.

Our programming agenda begins at 1:00PM; the meeting will conclude by 5:00PM. This opening post has gone up shortly before the meeting’s start time to allow folk to gather online at their leisure.

A closing post will go up at 5:00PM to officially thank today’s presenters/discussion moderators, and to publish the date of our next event.

2) MEETING THEME FOR AUGUST

MonSFFen are asked to offer their top picks of the genre’s coolest gizmos and gadgets, as seen on TV or in the movies, or from within the pages of SF/F literature. For the purposes of this list, we’ll define a gizmo or gadget as a technological or magical device small enough to hold in one’s hands or carry on one’s person—a Star Trek phaser or tricorder, for example, Thor’s hammer (assuming, of course, you are sufficiently worthy to wield it!), a magic wand, Excalibur, a lightsaber, Batman’s utility belt, or a Bat-a-Rang—you get the idea. So, as cool a technological marvel as may be the starship Enterprise, the Batmobile, the Seaview, the Millennium Falcon, Clarke’s Orbital Tower (space elevator) or Niven’s Ringworld, they are too big to qualify for this list! Which gizmos or gadgets do you think are among the coolest, and why? We ask club members to come prepared to contribute an item or two to our list!

3) THIS AFTERNOON’S AGENDA

Today’s programming agenda is as follows:

1:00PMGame: Bug-Eye Bet!

We resurrect a game created by our late friend and fellow club member, Sylvain St-Pierre, in which still photographs and video clips from SF/F movies or TV shows are shown to players, who must then answer a series of questions focused on the minute, inconsequential, trivial details of that which they have just seen! Bets are placed on how accurate will be their recall of said details.

 1:45PMTom Swift and his Science Fiction Book Series

A primer on the numerous Tom Swift sci-fi/adventure books, ranging from the 1910s to the present day. The adventures of the original Tom Swift and later, his descendants, introduced many a young lad to science fiction, and in its nascent years, helped to popularize the genre.

2:45PMBreak!

Raffle, announcements, brief discussion of club business, including upcoming book sale and preliminary plans for club’s Christmas Dinner and Party 2024.

3:00PM The Multiverse

We examine the concept of “the Multiverse” in science fiction, including those famously depicted in both Marvel’s and DC’s comic book superhero stories.

4:00PMSci-Fi’s Coolest Gizmos and Gadgets!

MonSFFen offer their top picks of the genre’s coolest gizmos and gadgets, as seen on TV or in the movies, or from within the pages of SF/F literature. For the purposes of this list, we’ll define a gizmo or gadget as a technological or magical device small enough to hold in one’s hands or carry on one’s person—a Star Trek phaser or tricorder, for example. Which gizmos or gadgets do you think are among the coolest, and why? We ask club members to come prepared to contribute an item or two to our list!

Please Note: While we strive to keep on schedule, we do, sometimes, fall behind a little, or find ourselves having to reshuffle the order of items on the agenda for one reason or another, or reschedule planned presentations/discussions. Therefore, please understand that all programming is subject to change!

4) JOIN THIS AFTERNOON’S VIDEO-CHAT ON ZOOM!

To take part in this afternoon’s meeting online, join our ZOOM video-chat, which will run throughout the next few hours. Simply click here and follow the prompts: This Afternoon’s MonSFFA Meeting on ZOOM

If you’re not fully equipped to ZOOM, you can also take part by phone (voice only); in the Montreal area, the toll-free number to call is: 1-438-809-7799. From out of town? No problem; find your ZOOM call-in number here: Call-In Numbers

Also, have this information on hand as you may be asked to enter it:

Meeting ID: 824 9474 2228
Passcode: 204149

The sci-fi fun begins at 1:00PM! Thanks for joining us today, and enjoy the meeting!

Smof news re World Con in Scotland

SMOF News, volume 3, issue 50
Worldcon news roundup, and news in brief. 
Petréa Mitchell

Click here to view on line.

News From Worldcon

Glasgow 2024, the 82nd World Science Fiction Convention was held in Glasgow on August 8-12.

Awards awarded

The Hugo Awards were presented with no further controversies beyond the fraudulent voting uncovered last month. Full voting statistics and an administrator’s report on disqualifications and withdrawals are available with the list of winners.

The First Fandom Awards for fannish achievements were given at the opening ceremony. (Official site not yet updated, but the list of winners is available at File 770.)

The Nommo Awards were presented by the African Science Fiction Society.

The Sidewise Awards for alternate history were also presented.

Future Worldcon and bid news

Next year’s Seattle Worldcon 2025 (August 13-17) announced that its optional special Hugo category will be Best Poetry. An eligible poem is “within the speculative, science fiction, and fantasy genres, published in 2024, that is at least three lines.”

The Seattle Worldcon has also announced a Community Fund, starting with $30,000 in seed money, to assist four groups in attending: first-timers from the Pacific Northwest; LGBTQIA+ fans; BIPOC/AANHPI fans; and fans from anywhere in the Global South. Applications have not yet opened. Those wishing to donate to the fund can do so through the con’s registration portal.

LA in 2026, now LAcon V, won the vote easily to hold the 84th Worldcon on August 27-31, 2026 in Anaheim, California. Fears of a stealth write-in campaign were unrealized. Guests of Honor will be Barbara Hambly, Ronald D. Moore, Colleen Doran, Dr. Anita Sengupta, Tim Kirk, Geri Sullivan, Stan Sakai, and Ursula Vernon.

The bid for Kampala, Uganda in 2028 has changed its proposed location to Kigali, Rwanda.

The Brisbane in 2028 bid is reconsidering its dates for the convenience of those travelling to Australia for the 2028 solar eclipse.

Business Meeting Summary

The WSFS Business Meeting took up nearly all its allotted time across four days of Worldcon. A full set of videos is available on YouTube for those who want to relive it in real time. If you would just like a summary of the results, pull up the agenda (PDF) for reference, and read on.

Many items were referred to committees, some of which are still open to additional members. To join one, contact businessmeeting@glasgow2024.org by 1700 BST (UTC+1) this Friday, August 16.

The Retro Hugos are on their way to removal with the initial passage of proposal F.19. This change will need to be ratified next year.

The controversial proposal to restrict which countries can hold Worldcons (F.13) was referred to a committee of its own. This one is not open to additional members unless they are representing a potentially affected country. F.12 (restricting the voter pool) was voted down.

The proposal to create a new Asian Science Fiction Convention (ASFiC) in parallel with NASFiC (E.12) was defeated. It was expected that this would provoke proposals to remove NASFiC, but none were submitted this year.

The censure motions which could not be printed due to local laws were referred to a Committee of Investigation, elected at the meeting by secret ballot. This committee cannot add further members. F.16 (making censures more censurious) was voted down.

Further motions to address the Chengdu results directly, D.13 (the formal apology) and D.14 (retroactively adding more finalists) were passed with significant changes. D.14 is now a constitutional amendment allowing the Business Meeting to retroactively change finalist lists and must be ratified in Seattle to take effect.

A Hugo Process Study Committee was formed and is still open to more members. It was handed F.5 (requiring more transparancy around disqualifications), F.6 (separating Hugo administration from individual Worldcons), F.7 and F.8 (restrictions on disqualifications), F.9 (barring of wayward administrators), and the part of F.10 which would create an oversight committee.

F.10 was divided into three other pieces, two of which were voted down. The remaining part, about Hugo software, was referred to its own committee.

F.11 (another oversight committee), F.17 (Best Editor Long Form wording change),F.18 (art category wording changes) were passed for ratification in Seattle. E.8 (figuring out word counts for non-English works) was ratified.

E.7 (Independent Film category), E.9 (Best Fancast modification), and E.10 (removing US-centric language rules) were all defeated. The Glasgow committee ran an advisory vote of the general membership about the independent film category, in which “No” won with 57.7% of the vote.

A Business Meeting Process Study Committee was also formed and is also open to further members. It was given F.14 (ratification of WSFS constitution changes by a wider vote of Worldcon members) to study. F.15 (holding subsidiary Business Meetings throughout the year) was defeated.

Among lower-intensity proposals, E.1 through E.6, plus E.11 were all ratified. F.1 through F.4 were passed for ratification next year. Various standing rule changes and eligibility extensions were also passed, though the extension for Godzilla Minus One was revoked after the full Hugo voting statistics showed that it had nearly been a finalist this year.

SMOF News thanks the Glasgow Worldcon volunteers who provided play-by-play reporting on Discord for members who could not be present in person.