World Fantasy con report: Day 4 by Alan DeNiro – costumes and departures

There has seemed in the past to be some tension between two philosophies, if you will, with costumes at World Fantasy. One: costumes are highly unprofessional at a highly professional con, and are to be strongly discouraged. The other: It’s Halloween, damn it, and there’s such a thing as bending over backwards in order to seem proper. The latter view (thankfully, in my view) was on display enough last night to show perhaps a bit of a sea change.
Read more after the jump!
World Fantasy con report: Day 3 by Alan DeNiro: the books

World Fantasy is a bibliophile’s dream, and a wallet’s nightmare. It starts out in bountiful excess: as soon as one checks in at the con, one receives a giant bag o’ books. Each bag is a little different–though there are similarities–and this year’s crop has many nifty surprises: an audiobook of Margo Lanagan’s Tender Morsels, The Hollow Earth by Rudy Rucker, the superb Eclipse One anthology…there is always the chance for reproduction of what’s already on one’s shelf. For example, between my wife and I we now officially have four copies of John Shirley’s Living Shadows (great book, btw! I reviewed it for Rain Taxi a few years ago). Luckily there is a swap table for good books to find the right homes.
More after the jump…
World Fantasy con report: Day 2 by Alan DeNiro

Alan DeNiro is back with more from San Jose and the World Fantasy Convention. As he put it, there will be some space-time discontinuum in this post, because it will include a few pictures from a distant time known as…yesterday…as he reflects on a couple different panels and sundry other items.
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World Fantasy con report: Day 1 by Alan DeNiro

So. The novel that I’m working on now, the “new” one, has had in the past a working title of World Fantasy. I go back and forth on its ability to provide any kind of “shelf context,” and I’ll likely change some parameters with the novel itself (its structure, characters, etc., etc.). But what drew me to that potential title in the first place, in a novel of near-future virtual realities, is whether (and if so, how) the world we see around us is constructed by certain phantasias. How we pretend that the world isn’t, in fact, interconnected to a large degree and that we let ourselves dwell on localisms at the expense of the underlying realities (political, social, whatever) that shape our interactions with each other and even our thoughts.
Read on for how these reflections illuminate Alan’s experience at the World Fantasy Convention…
World Fantasy Convention report: Day 0 by Alan DeNiro

Greetings all. This is Alan DeNiro. Thanks to this site for the opportunity to post miscellany and musings throughout the World Fantasy Convention, which is taking place in San Jose, California, this year. In, oh, about 8 hours, I’ll be on a plane from the Twin Cities, and we’ll see what happens.
More after the jump…
Jan-ken-pon – Tomio’s Want List: Alan DeNiro’s Total Oblivion, More or Less
Tomio’s Want List is a subpostgenre of Jan-ken-pon (which has no known boundaries) that showcases items I run into that have to find here way on to my shelves, man-compound, longbox (with mylars), or deposit box. Usually, these are pretty much off the cuff, and often times (like most desires) are based on very little reason. There is reason here though, as you well know if you have had the pleasure of reading Alan DeNiro’s collection Skinny Dipping in the Lake of the Dead, which was published by Small Beer Press, and in line with the quality you’d expect from everything they publish. Via twitter today I was led to this baby though.
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Book Review – Atomik Aztex (guest reviewer Alan DeNiro)
Author: Sesshu Foster Publisher: City Lights Publishing Publication Date: 2005 Sesshu Foster’s oracular Atomik Aztex is a novel of alternate history that posits the existence of an America where the Spanish conquistadors didn’t conquer Mexico, thus turning the Aztecs into a major world power. The what-if postulation allows the author to puncture a comfortable view [...]
Why I Write Science Fiction: An Apology by Alan DeNiro
Adding to the neo-classic hits of essays and articles I’ve been collecting is another piece from Alan DeNiro. Today, BookSpot Central is proud to represent Why I Write Science Fiction: An Apology. DeNiro is the author of Skinny Dipping in the Lake of the Dead (Small Beer) and working on Total Oblivion, More forthcoming from Bantam. You can check out Mr. DeNiro at The Goblin Mercantile Exchange.
I want to thank Mr. DeNiro for allowing us to represent Why I Write Science Fiction: An Apology . . .
Petals of the Rat: loose notes for a new movement by Alan DeNiro
Not one, but now two Ratbastards! Back with my mission to showcase vintage articles, essays and manifestos from talented types, today BookSpot Central is proud to represent Petals of the Rat: loose notes for a new movement. Deniro is the author of Skinny Dipping in the Lake of the Dead (small Beer) and working on Total Oblivion, More forthcoming from Bantam. You can check out Mr. Deniro at The Goblin Mercantile Exchange.
I want to thank Mr. Deniro for allowing us to represent Petals of the Rat: loose notes for a new movement . . .










