Awards Eligibility 2018

I had a couple of stories out this year that are eligible for awards (both Australian and international) and thought I’d round them up for ease.

First up is the story I’m most proud of, “Don’t Pack Hope” which came out at Nightmare Magazine in April. The story follows a trans guy who is packing essentials in a zombie apocalypse. It’s available as both text and in podcast form.

“Don’t Pack Hope” had a couple of really lovely reviews, from Charles Payseur over at Quick Sip Reviews and from Maria Haskins on the Barnes and Noble SF&F Short Fiction roundup. “Don’t Pack Hope” is also on the Recommended Reading List for the Nebula Award, amongst splendid company.

Next up is my horror story “Unstrap Your Feet” which is up at GlitterShip, both as text and a podcast. As a bonus, I read this one for the podcast! It was a lot of fun! The story is quite dark, however, so CW for domestic violence in this one. Quick Sip Reviews also covered this story, to my delight.

Finally, my dark fantasy story “One and Two” up at Kaleidotrope, in which sibling gods meet up and discuss bonds and sacrifice. This story also showed up at the B&N SF&F Short Fiction roundup.

All of the stories are available to read for free, if you’d like to! Shout out your eligibility posts in the comments, and happy reading.

You can find my Clarion West classmate Lora Gray’s post here:

https://loragray.weebly.com/news

A Couple of Stories Out

Hello, friends!

In case you missed them, I’ve had a couple of stories out recently:

One and Two – Kaleidotrope.

This is a dark fantasy story that explores sacrifice, gods, familial bonds and our connection with the natural world. I wrote it after I heard that the world’s oldest tree had been cut down – a tragedy, but one that has largely been swallowed by our continual trashing of the planet.

“One and Two” was also a story that helped me to work through my feelings around losing my twin sister when we were toddlers.

Don’t Pack Hope –  Nightmare Magazine #67

This story explores survival in a zombie apocalypse by an Australian trans man. I don’t usually set things in Melbourne, but this story hits very close to home. As I mention in my author spotlight, I don’t specifically identify as trans, but I have certainly been questioning my gender identity lately and am comfortable identifying as non-binary (she/her or they/them pronouns are both OK for now). This story was very much a thought experiment in terms of gender and ties in very closely with a lot of my personal experiences. It was fairly terrifying to put it into the world, and I hope you enjoy it!

I have some good news about this story that I can’t share yet, but believe me, I wigged out a LOT.

The next story I have slated to come out will be “Unstrap Your Feet” at GlitterShip, the LGBTQ podcast. I also did the narration for it, so you can hear me read my story myself!

 

 

Clarion West Questions?

I’m getting a couple of hits on my blog that seem to relate to my posts on Clarion West so I’d like to firstly welcome anyone who is thinking of applying, or who has applied! 

Please feel free to ask questions in the comments if you’re looking for something I haven’t covered, or even if you’d like to say hi!

My classmate Elizabeth Bartmess has written a great post on attending Clarion West as a person with a disability, which is also a pretty great general information post in terms of the day to day workshop experience.

Best of luck with your applications, and if you’ve submitted already and are anxiously awaiting news, I feel for you. ❤

If Nothing We Do Matters, All That Matters is What We Do

So it has been a rough couple of days. Longer than that, really, but the election has brought a hell of a lot of frightening things to the surface.

I’m terrified.

I say this as an Australian, with many people in the US that I love and cherish, including, but not at all limited to many of my Robin Hobb message board family, the speculative fiction community and the bulk of my Clarion West classmates. I say this as someone who is going to feel the impact of the next presidency both on a personal level and on a global scale. I say this as someone without a vote. I say this as someone who lives on the other side of the world, who, most of the time, can’t be in the States physically.

I’m terrified. But I’m here.

The last couple of days have been a riot of self-care. I stopped writing. I’ve been swimming, walking, doing yoga, seeking hugs, being kind to myself, all in a desperate attempt to quell the anxiety roaring through my body. Thank you to everyone who helped to keep me steady.

It was an upward spiral, and I’m levelling out now. Shit is manageable.

So. Now I can be here for you, my friends. A lot of you are in the States, and although I’m going to be visiting soon, I won’t be able to see you all in person. But if I can help, from all the way over here, with a phone call or a virtual hug or a Skype or just with an email filled with kind words, I will do that. Please reach out to me if you need an ear. Please let me know if talking will help.

I plan on sending some money to Planned Parenthood and other important places, but other than that, I don’t know what to do aside from taking care of my people.

If you’re reading this, you’re one of my people. Hufflepuff law.

You can reach me here, via email at emmakateosborne(at)gmail.com or on Twitter as @redscribe. If you need a Skype or a call, I can give you my details from there.

Take care of yourselves, and each other. ❤

 

On How it Was – Clarion West 2016

I’ve wanted to write about my Clarion West experience for weeks, but I kept putting it off just because I’m struggling with the idea of doing the experience justice. How could I possibly put to words how tremendous, how life-changing, how epic the entire experience was?

I’ll try.

Firstly, yes, it was magnificent. I am not being hyperbolic in the slightest – though there were tired patches and a few incredibly minor squabbles, I valued every single damn minute of Clarion West. Hell, it took me six years to get in, and I knew the entire time that I’d only get it once, and that I had to make every moment count. So I did, and even then, there are classmates that I didn’t spend as much time as I would have liked to with, and there were things that I missed out on doing. I also slept way less than I should have (6 hours a night was about the average, with some nights around the 3-4 hour mark). The lack of sleep wasn’t due to writing (although it certainly was on a Monday night when Team Tuesday – myself, Jess Silbaugh-Cowdin and Cadwell Turnbull – were on a deadline). The lack of sleep was due to fun, because fuck going to sleep when there are games of Coup and Catan to play, and ciders to drink, and jokes to be made, and conversations to be had.

Yeah, I slept so little that I actually hallucinated tiny lightning bolts behind my eyes in Week 5.

So, my class. What can I say about my class? They’re family, and I love them. Honestly, the first two days seemed to stretch on for two weeks, and the first time we all sat down to dinner at the giant tables, it felt like the formation of a new tribe, a forever-family.

They are, in alphabetical order:

Taimur Ahmad – Sparky, joyful and talented. Adores mountains. Wrote something new and challenging every week.

Betsy Aoki – Generous and kind. Someone who cares deeply for each of us. A poet, with wonderful prose and Samurai blood, who should not be fucked with. Ever.

EN Bartmess – Astounding dedication to research. A killer swordswoman with a sharp and wry sense of humour.

T Jane Berry – Shrewd, organised, experimental. TJ can switch gears from humour to horror with envious ease.

Octavia Cade – Stoic, scientific, analytical, blunt. Taught us to science properly.

Paul DesCombaz – Loves his dogs and his records and writes terrifying and/or hilarious horror. I want to be like Paul when I grow up.

Alex Filipowicz – Ridiculously well-read, and probably the most literary of us. Alex really likes long sentences. An honest and brave human.

Lora Gray – A beautiful soul who writes prose that’ll make you weep. Sees everything with the eyes of an artist.

CA Hawksmoor – An unspeakably brave heart. Writes astonishingly lovely words.

Jon Lasser – Hospitable and kind, always looking out for people, always generous with time and critiques.

S Qiouyi Lu – Unstoppable, careful, patient, kind.

Gunnar Norskog – Resilient, kind. I’m proud of Gunnar for pushing himself.

Shiv Ramdas – A bard, who can joke and challenge and critique and support all at once. Shiv fell asleep everywhere.

Mitchell Shanklin – A golden retriever of a human who hugs like a champion and writes heartfelt and often experimental stories. Was the first to call me “Em-dash.”

Jessica Silbaugh-Cowdin – Loyal as all fuck. Writes gorgeous, aching stories that hit your heart with a hammer. One third of Team Tuesday.

Gabriel Teodros – The most peaceful person I’ve ever met. Cares deeply about people. Writes found-families, real worlds.

Cadwell Turnbull – Feminist extraordinaire. Writes multiverses and goddesses and stories that go deep. One third of Team Tuesday.

You can find all of their bios and writing and websites at teamarsenic.com

Why Team Arsenic? There’s a great write-up on the site, but in summary, we were the 33rd Clarion West class, and arsenic is the 33rd element (thanks, Jess, for figuring that out!) We found so much meaning in arsenic as a symbol. It’s a healing poison, a catalyst for change. We all changed, and grew, and wrote stories that explored the deep and difficult parts of ourselves. I’m proud of that, and I’m exceptionally grateful that we were in a class that supported that exploration. Eight of us have tattooed the alchemical symbol for arsenic on our bodies, and others will do so in the future. Tattoos or not, we’ve all been stamped with the experience.

arsenic

Our instructors were spectacular people. Paul Park came in and put the fear of god into us, thrashing out our bad habits and hammering down lessons we’d use countless times over the next five weeks. Stephen Graham Jones took us beyond our comfort zones, pushed our endings to be stronger, darker, harder, more complicated. Elizabeth Bear refined us, asked us to be as elegant and daring as we could be. Nora Jemisin taught us new ways of seeing worlds, of understanding people. She challenged us to go beyond our experiences and to push past difficulties. Sheila Williams taught us to trust in our stories, to constantly reach out to others in the community, to find our people. Michael Swanwick, who subbed in for Geoff Ryman, taught us to examine our character relationships, and to have faith in who we will be in the future.

There were so many moments that I’ll never forget. I can’t capture them all, but some of them are: Umbrella (with actual umbrellas), lake swim, Alki, watching Cae and Alex kayak (Cae-yak) in Greg Bear’s lake, COUP, going to Seattle Pride with Lora, Mitch and Taimur, the Bear Dance Party, Betsy’s chickens, shouty poetry night, Battlestar Galactica night (especially the speeches), five shots of Kraken, watching the Summer Games with Nora, the Be Steadwell gig with Gabriel, Jess and Cadwell, tattoos, Cadwell and S playing piano, hanging at the EMP playground after the Locus awards, dimples, the 3 minutes of Neko Case that Lora and I managed to listen to before Shiv hijacked the music, losing MarioKart to S and Jess, Washington cherries, Joe’s cooking (Joeeeee), Laphroaig, tiny bunks, flasks named for characters, karaoke, sword fights on the lawn, juggling, car trips, S’s full-body emojis, the local cafes, I am a loyal servant of Arthur, the basement crew, the front step crew, pillow fights, the readings… Oh, everything.  I could list so many more moments. (Class, add them in the comments?)

I need to thank Huw Evans and Neile Graham (and all of the volunteers, drivers, workshop assistants and party hosts – Lauren Dixon especially) for running everything flawlessly and looking after us. Thank you to Joe and Esther, for supporting us as we wrote. Thank you to all of the Seattle writers who welcomed us to the community.  Thank you to our mystery muses and to our Skype muses, for being so generous with your time and wisdom. Thank you to everyone who ever supported me and cheered me on when I felt like giving up.

I am so fucking grateful that I got to attend Clarion West in 2016. It changed my life. It gave me a new family. It pushed me to grow and taught me more than I could ever say.

I’ll never forget it.

Clarion West Class of 2016!

I’m thrilled to announce that I’ll be a member of the Clarion West class of 2016! I can hardly believe I’m writing these words. You may know that I’ve been trying to get into Clarion for a long time – six years, to be precise. 

I received the top-tier rejection from Clarion West at least five of those times, and made the wait list for Clarion UCSD once. Every time that I got the rejection emails, I was crushed. I put so much hard work and emotional energy into my applications, and to be knocked back time and time again was so hard. 

You know what, though? I’m nearly certain that I wouldn’t have made it in this year if I hadn’t tried all of those other times. Every single application was a step closer to this one. Every story I wrote helped me to get better at some aspect of the craft, and each round of applications introduced me to scores of other hopefuls who have gone on to get in (or not, yet) and to kick arse and take names in the SFF community. I don’t begrudge the previous applications for a second. 

I guess this year was just my year?

If you’re reading this and you weren’t lucky enough to score a place this year – I am sorry. I’ve cried those tears, and I’ve felt that heartsick ache when new classes shout out their acceptances. Last year I had to physically leave my work to go sit in a park so I could messily cry for about an hour (although a lovely stranger did come to see if I was OK, so there’s proof that kindness still exists in the world). If you didn’t make it, I hope that you try next year, and again until you make it. It’s not silly or ridiculous to keep trying. KEEP TRYING. I hope with all of my heart that you make it someday, and I am always available for cheerleading and support if you want to reach out. 

I also want to thank everyone who ever commiserated with me, and everyone who kindly reached out to me when I announced my rejections. Thank you to everyone who ever read and/or critiqued my work. A special thank you to Clarion instructors and students  past and present, who have been so supportive and encouraging when I’ve talked over my desire to attend. Thank you to all of the writers and editors and agents out there who make up this awesome community, and who have cheered me on. Thanks to the Melbourne Clarion hopefuls (Sofie Bird in particular) for taking this journey with me, and for the tequila shots. Thanks to my friends and family for always supporting me, and for understanding that sometimes I need to go and write. Thanks to the UCSD Class of ’13, who have been so warm and lovely and wonderful. 

And thank you to Eliza Tiernan, my darling love, whom I met trying to get into Clarion, who has been there and loved me, and who keeps refusing to read new drafts until I take the last round of critique seriously and actually put in more dialogue. 

I made it. I MADE IT. 

Up and Coming: Stories by the 2016 Campbell-Eligible Authors

In the wild, now! You can download for free (during March only) at Bad Menagerie (or one of the mirror sites) right here

  
Cover by Holly Heisey

First up, let me profusely thank SL Huang and Kurt Hunt and the many people working behind the scenes on this astounding anthology.

I’m thrilled that the following stories of mine are included in the anthology, all of them appearing for the first time without a paywall:

– The Box Wife – Horror short story first out at Shock Totem: Curious Tales of the Macabre and Twisted (October, 2014) 

“The Box Wife” will also appear in the Year’s Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2014 and is forthcoming at PseudoPod.

– Zip – SF short story at Bastion Science Fiction Magazine (August 2014)

– Clean Hands, Dirty Hands – Historical fantasy short story at Aurealis Science Fiction and Fantasy (June 2014)

There are also many fantastic stories from rising stars in the SF community today. Over a million words of stories! 

I very much hope that you enjoy.

New Story in Review of Australian Fiction

ICYMI, my horror story “The Hammer of Happiness” appears in the latest issue of the Review of Australian Fiction alongside Kaaron Warren’s “The Doll Beautician.”

RAF_VOL17_ISS_3

Both stories explore manufacturing relationships, love. We think they fit together perfectly, but if you intend to read, be warned – both stories are… very dark.

“The Hammer of Happiness” is somewhat of a partner story to “The Box Wife,” which is currently available in the Year’s Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2014, and which will be coming out in March at Pseudopod.

 

Year’s Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2014 to Include “The Box Wife”!

Apparently, this is the little story that could.

I’m very excited to announce that “The Box Wife” which originally appeared in Shock Totem issue #9 will also be included in the Year’s Best Australian Fantasy and Horror 2014!

years-best-fantasy-and-horror-v5.web_

The full TOC is as follows:

  1. “Shadows of the Lonely Dead” by Alan Baxter [Suspended in Dusk]
  2. “The Changeling” by James Bradley [Fearsome Magics]
  3. “Soul Partner” by Imogen Cassidy [Aurealis 74]
  4. “The Bullet & The Flesh” by David Conyers & David Kernot [World War Cthulhu]
  5. “The Corpse Rose” by Terry Dowling [Nightmare Carnival]
  6. “The Oud” by Thoraiya Dyer [Long Hidden Anthology]
  7. “Metempsychosis” by Jason Franks [SQ Magazine]
  8. “Of Gold and Dust” by Michelle Goldsmith [Andromeda Spaceways Inflight Magazine 60]
  9. “1884” by Michael Grey [Cthulhu Lives: An Eldrich Tribute to H.P.Lovecraft]
  10. “Escapement” by Stephanie Gunn [Kisses by Clockwork]
  11. “Vox” by Lisa L. Hannett & Angela Slatter [The Female Factory]
  12. “Of The Colour Tumeric, Climbing on Fingertips” by Gerry Huntman [Night Terrors III]
  13. “Dolls for Another Day” by Rick Kennett [The Ghosts & Scholars Book of Shadows: Vol 2]
  14. “Chiaroscuro” by Charlotte Kieft [Disquiet]
  15. “Kneaded” by SG Larner [Phantazein]
  16. “Yard” by Claire McKenna [Use Only As Directed]
  17. “A Prayer for Lazarus” by Andrew J. McKiernan [Last Year, When We Were Young]
  18. “Signature” by Faith Mudge [Kaleidoscope: Diverse YA Science Fi]
  19. “The Preservation Society” by Jason Nahrung [Dimension6]
  20. “The Box Wife” by Emma Osborne [Shock Totem: Curious Tales of the Macabre & Twisted #9]
  21. “Shedding Skin” by Angela Rega [Crossed Genres]
  22. “The Love Letters of Swans” by Tansy Rayner Roberts [Phantazein]
  23. “The Badger Bride” by Angela Slatter [Strange Tales IV]
  24. “New Chronicles of Andras Thorn” by Cat Sparks [Dimension6 Annual Collection 2014]
  25. “The Walking-stick Forest” by Anna Tambour [Tor.com]
  26. “Necromancy” by Kyla Ward [Spectral Realms #1]
  27. “Bridge of Sighs” by Kaaron Warren [Fearful Symmetries: An Anthology of Horror]
  28. “Lady of the Swamp” by Janeen Webb [Death at the Blue Elephant]

I’m thrilled to be included in such a great issue. If you’re inclined to do so, you can preorder the issue at Indiebooksonline.

“The Box Wife” is also slated to appear in PseudoPod in the near future.

Shed!

So today I got to write in Chuck Wendig’s writing shed. Yep. It’s a thing that happened. 

  
The write-in was incredibly useful – I drafted a bunch of scenes and worked out some character notes for the novel I’m working on. 

I have until December 1st to finish the editing. Or Libba Bray is going to punish me via my most hated song, Jessie’s Girl. 

Hurrah, external deadlines!