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God-King Troubles & Other Vibes: A Sandymancer Playlist

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sandymancer by david edison

World-building is not easy work! A lot of perspiration and imagination goes into the craft of creating a world and communicating it in novel form.

David Edison is one such tune-inspired world-creator, and he’s sharing with us the playlist of songs he’s selected to represent his new fantasy epic Sandymancer!

Check it out!


 

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by David Edison

Writing is an act of magic, and songs are spells, so it’s natural that they weave themselves together; for some writers—for me—music is an essential component of creativity. I need song-magic to lift me out of the world and into that dreamy liminal state of bliss called flow. Music transforms me from a typist to a pianist.  

I do usually write with a one-size-fits all playlist, which is mostly for driving the energy levels, focus, and active joy I need to sit down and work. I also put effort into project-specific playlists, which is a crackerjack way to procrastinate.

I make weird association—I do write Weird Fiction, after all—so there’s always a bit of psychosis apparent in my playlists. Such is the fate of the neurospicy. As I write, I jump around from scene to scene as my attention shifts and splits, and very often it’s a song that sparks a connection between one scene and another. For that reason, I usually shuffle my playlists—and I’d recommend doing so with this one. Arranging the songs just so sounds like a fantastic way to lose lots of time and sanity, and one never wants more than just a bit of insanity. For flavor.

I’ve plucked out some songs to fit with the vibe beats in Sandymancer, and broken them down—somewhat airily—into loose vibe categories. I hope the songs cast their spells and tempt you toward Sandymancer, but if all fails, hit shuffle and enjoy some light psychosis courtesy of an author and his spiciness.

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Vibe I: Sing the World into Being

This is the music that fleshes out the Land of the Vine—its lost hymns, naughty shanties, and somber dirges. Songs out of time. ‘Round these parts, some folk call it world-building.

  • “Hallelujah” by Jeff Buckley
  • “Babylon” by David Carbonara
  • “The Wasteland” by Elton John
  • “Fox Confessor Brings the Flood” by Neko Case

Vibe II: Hayseed Longing

A village so decrepit that it has no name, where dreams and boredom wallow together. These are songs of survival, of hardtack dreaming, and of rough beginnings.

  • “Beg Steal or Borrow” by Ray LaMontagne & the Pariah Dogs
  • “Daddy Lessons” by Beyonce
  • “Little Earthquakes” by Tori Amos
  • “Let’s Burn Down the Cornfield” by Lou Rawls

Vibe III: God-King Troubles

Heal the world, break the world—you can’t please everyone. This music swells to tell the history of the Son of the Vine, the hidden sorrows and frustrations he so rarely shares.

  • “The Melting of the Sun” by St. Vincent
  • “Fire on Babylon” by Sinead O’Connor
  • “The Man Who Sold the World” by Nirvana
  • “Congregation” by Low

Vibe IV: Grit and Teeth

Before a teenager stares down a (wicked?) long-dead god-king, she listens to these songs for courage. Truth is, Caralee could teach music a thing or two about courage herself.

  • “I Don’t Believe You” by Magnetic Fields
  • “Battle for the Sun” by Placebo
  • “No” by Emma Dean
  • “Teenage Hustling” by Tori Amos

Vibe V: Sass Regina

On the other hand, Caralee is a queen of self-possession.  These are the tunes rocking in her heart, the spunk that fuels her as-yet-unearned confidence.

  • “I’m A Lady (feat. Trouble Andrew)” by – Santigold
  • “Giddy Up” by Dragonette
  • “Strange Little Girl” by Tori Amos
  • “I Feel Lucky” by Mary Chapin Carpenter

Vibe VI: Heads Will Roll

Mistakes were made.  Lessons were learned.  When two unstoppable objects collide – and also cooperate – there are bound to be consequences both grave and grand.  Such is the case for both Caralee and the Son of the Vine.  These are songs of the phoenix in the fire, and also its rebirth.

  • “Heads Will Roll” by Yeah Yeah Yeahs
  • “The Girl You Lost to Cocaine” by Sia
  • “A Favor House Atlantic” by Coheed and Cambria
  • “Take Me to Church” by Sinead O’Connor

Vibe VII: Magic is Magick is Science

These songs summon Power.  They fill the space with mystery, which is sacred.  They are the full-throated incantations that connect will to intention: the essence of all Magick.

  • “Hy-Brasil” by Allison Russel
  • “Bell, Book and Candle” by Eddi Reader
  • “Dark Horse” by Katy Perry
  • “Cantara” by Dead Can Dance
  • “Don’t Sweat the Technique” by Eric B. & Rakim

Vibe VIII: It’s the End of the World as We Know it (and I Feel Fine)

Some theories hold that writers are actually human beings, and what’s more – some seem to enjoy being happy. These are sillier songs that are just as infused with meaning as their more sober counterparts above (Please refrain from drinking and driving until you get to heaven).

  •            “Everybody Drinks and Drives in Heaven” by Leslie Stevens
  •             “Still Alive” by Aperture Science Psychoacoustic Laboratories
  •             “No Rain” by Blind Melon
  •             “Missionary Man” by Eurythmics

David Edison was born in Saint Louis, Missouri. He currently divides his time between New York City and San Francisco. In other lives, he has worked in many flavors of journalism and is editor of the LGBTQ video game news site GayGamer.net.

…And he sleeps in unicorn corpses, tauntaun style.


Order Sandymancer Here!

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Programmable Reality and Our Mediated Future

Exadelic by Jon EvansJon Evans thinks a lot about the future and has oodles of experience writing exciting novels full of action and suspense. In his new techno-thriller, Exadelic, Evans blends these two facets into a thoroughly exhilarating portrait of a future where artificial intelligence discovers occult magic and reality is revealed as something frighteningly malleable. Today, Jon is here to talk us through aspects of his ideation for Exadelic.

Check it out!


In 2021 I finished my novel Exadelic, then set it aside to cool for a few months, as is my way. Upon rereading it, I did not think: ‘Aha, fame and fortune, mine at last!‘ Instead I thought: My God, what have I done?’ It’s an unusual book. Reviewers and early readers call it “really weird” and ”mind-bending” and “absolutely wild” — and those are the raves. But here’s the thing. While the book has not changed … it’s suddenly a lot less weird than it was two years ago.

Exadelic begins in the present day, with a massive AI breakthrough with potentially drastic consequences. Back then, the notion that something vaguely similar might actually happen in our semi-foreseeable future was a laughable idea relegated to Twitter’s wackier fringes. Today the discourse is very different. I give you four recent headlines:

The Financial TimesThe EconomistThe New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal, respectively. Not exactly a list of publications known for starry-eyed science-fiction extrapolation, and/or wild-eyed prophecies of doom! …But here we are.

Exadelic supposes our knee-jerk fears of AI doom are quickly superseded — because the breakthrough AI, when trained on ancient texts of occult magic, discovers that fundamental substrate of our universe is actually an interlocking swarm of cellular automata, more like software than hardware. (A notion not original to me; Stephen Wolfram has long suggested our universe is fundamentally “a vast array of interacting computational elements.”) As such, apparent violations of the laws of physics, sometimes a.k.a. ‘magic,’ are merely side effects of bugs in that substrate. But if the universe is more like software than hardware, it may have some sort of programmer … which, we soon learn, apparently looks with extreme prejudice on any discovery of its secrets.

Is the notion that our entire universe is ultimately made of software, which is full of bugs, which can be hacked and wielded as magic—and therefore a universe in which reality itself is programmable—kinda bonkers? Well, yes. But does a bonkers universe-as-software story work surprisingly well as a metaphor for our uncertain-but-guaranteed-super-weird future in which our perceived realities will be constantly mediated by multiple tiers of software? Reader, I believe it does.

My original elevator pitch for Exadelic was “Imagine Olaf Stapledon wrote a hell-for-leather action thriller.” (Most of my previous books were thrillers.) That’s a deep cut; few people now read Stapledon, who wrote not so much ‘novels’ as ‘philosophical histories of humanity and the universe.’ But SF has always been the home for big ideas, and such ideas—maybe even especially when crazy—can light up our collective space of possibilities in unexpected ways. My hope is that Exadelic may in some small way add to our ongoing conversation about big crazy ideas.

Jon Evans is an author, journalist, travel writer, and software engineer. His journalism has appeared in The Guardian, Wired, Quartz, The Globe & Mail, The Walrus, and (weekly, for a decade) TechCrunch. He has traveled to more than 100 countries and reported from Iraq, Haiti, Colombia, and the Congo. He the CTO of HappyFunCorp, was the initial technical architect of Bookshop.org, and is the founding director of the GitHub Archive Program, preserving the world’s open-source software in a permafrost vault beneath an Arctic mountain for 1,000 years. Exadelic is his first novel in over a decade.

Order Exadelic Here:

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Halloween* Activities & Romance Tropes: Conspiring Fates

The Atlas Six by Olivie BlakeLove Halloween? Us too, and “us” (of course) includes bestselling author of The Atlas Six (now available in trade paperback) and peerless essayist / suggester of things-to-do, Olivie Blake.

We are THRILLED to have her on our blog for not one, but THREE features where she’ll give a romance trope rundown, and provide a spooky scary Halloween activity to match!

Check it out part one right here, and watch out for subsequent additions to these series, which you can expect to see roll out per the following timeline:

Conspiring Fatesur here already lol
So Wrong It’s Right – Wednesday, October 19
Hits Different When It’s SFF – Tuesday, October 25


By Olivie Blake

(*Let it be known that provided one is not a coward, these activities need not be singularly confined to Halloween. I fully expect to see this post adapted for St. Patrick’s Day, Flag Day, and International Women’s Day.)

I’ll tell you the truth: I love love. And I don’t just mean wholesome love. As someone who describes their own work as both a six-person love story and a deranged family drama, I find that there’s nothing more satisfying than throwing people together and watching sparks fly (and on occasion watching those sparks become arson).

Of course, I’m also a human being, and while some might find it overly sentimental to be thus taken with the perennial pursuit of happily ever after, I would argue that nothing concerns us more as a collective. Is there anything more defining of our species than the desire to live, laugh, love? As an Instagrammable wall near my usual coffee shop sans serif-ly puts it, people are the best thing that can happen to anyone—which, to me, is precisely as true as the inverse is true. 

In any case, we’re well into the season of the macabre (or Lit Girl Autumn, for all those who celebrate) and for some of us, Halloween is our Super Bowl, our Joker, and our Valentine’s Day all rolled into one. In an attempt to help you navigate the complexities of finding love amongst the mortals (or not—I see you, paranormal romance junkies!) I’ve devised the following list of suggested Halloween activities based on your favorite romantic tropes. 

Starting things off with a group of tropes I’ll theatrically call Conspiring Fates:

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Friends to Lovers

If your favorite trope is friends-to-lovers, you love seeing a new side to someone who’s always been there. Lingering. Haunting you, like a ghost. But in a hot way! Anyway, since you’re all about the levels to it, why not take one of your unlikely sides out for the night? Skip the party and go roller derby. Did you know there are basically no rules? (I’m being told that’s inaccurate but it sounds open to interpretation.) Better yet, invite a friend you’ve told yourself you’d only sleep with if you were stranded on a desert island because honey, we’re in tropeville now. Imagine the prospects… the adrenaline rushing through your veins, the carnal intimacy of recreational violence, a moment locking eyes with your close platonic friend over the sensual application of an ice pack… Oh god—don’t look now, but that person we hate from school/work/the evil empire/the deli is here, probably stalking you. Ugh. Let’s get out of this fantasy and move on. 

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Unrequited Love

Oh, so you love pain? That’s cute. Your Halloween plans are an evening of primal screams! In case you don’t know what a primal scream is (though you probably do, since your preferred form of romance is Suffering™) it’s when you go somewhere you won’t be arrested or institutionalized to engage in what Merriam-Webster calls “a violent outpouring of raw emotion” (sidebar, that definition is metal as hell) until everything seems, you know, generally all right again. As the mother of a toddler, I engage in many primal screams and can tell you that when done correctly, it really does approximate orgasm. A similar energy—should you be confined indoors on account of inclement weather or Victorian seaside convalescence—would be a cathartic cry, which is essentially the same thing but weeping. Though, try not to disturb your neighbor, who—oh come on, it’s your coworker/rival inheritor to the Genovian throne! Of course it is. Ugh, we hate them. Moving on.

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Memory Loss

You like things tragic, don’t you, but with a little bit of gaming the system for that happily ever after workaround. For you, might I recommend a seance? I know it seems a little on the nose, what with it being Halloween, but listen, nobody ever complains about presents at Christmas. The truth is you’re a touch greedy, aren’t you? You want the angst of unrequited love plus the benefit of falling in love twice, which is basically like wishing for more wishes. Wow, you’ve really talked me around to this, I like your thinking. Honestly, why shouldn’t you have it all? Summon the spirits babe, we’re dialing up the other side to find out what consequence for romantic hubris awaits us. 

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Star-Crossed Romance

There’s a very fine line between this and unrequited love in terms of pain, because while the star-crossed lover at least gets to have something mutual (a definite plus), it likely comes with the side effect of a tragic death (:/). But hey, who doesn’t love movie night at the cemetery! It’s the perfect Halloween activity, because 1) there might be vengeful spirits 2) sitting under the stars is serene and good for your mental health 3) the spirits might not be that vengeful 4) it’s romantic because it reminds us that in the end we return to the earth! Of course, this is a fairly popular Halloween activity so you may run into someone you don’t like, such as that coworker/former friend turned dragon gem traitor/rival restaurateur who has shown up to this looking all breezy and sexy. Look at them over there being disgustingly winsome/revoltingly stoic/tall! Excuse me, my friend and I came here to be hot goths in peace and we are leaving.

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Second Chance at Love

This trope is having a bit of a renaissance this year, owing to what some might call a Persuasion adaptation and others a yassified travesty (I take no position on this matter of course, I am merely your romance concierge). For those who love this particular trope, might I suggest engaging in one do-over to spark another? We all have the one who got away, of course, and in all likelihood, we were also all once the subjects of an institution that now needs money, man hours, and time. If relationship karma works the way Hollywood has convinced me it probably does, then why not kick it off by volunteering at your former elementary school? Spend the evening with several small children (dressed as the characters from the franchise starring a handsomeish white guy and his friends) because hey, you never know what may lead you back to the road not taken. Besides, not only will you do some good for your community and potentially cross paths with the love of your life, you might also run into your mom’s friend Susan, who really likes your hair this way and thinks it’s great you’ve finally made something of yourself! Thanks, Susan, we will definitely friend your nephew on Facebook, his comedy does sound edgy and his podcast seems great!

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Olivie Blake is the pseudonym of Alexene Farol Follmuth, a lover and writer of stories. She has penned several indie SFF projects, including the webtoon Clara and the Devil with illustrator Little Chmura and the BookTok-viral Atlas series. As Alexene, she has written a young adult rom-com, My Mechanical Romance. She lives in Los Angeles with her husband, new baby, and rescue pit bull.

Purchase The Atlas Six Here:

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