(1) CANADIAN ZOOM DURING WORLDCON. The Montreal in 2027 and Edmonton in 2030 Worldcon bids are planning to run an “online party” during the Seattle 2025 Worldcon — – actually a concurrent virtual program — either Friday August 15 or Saturday August 16 (or possibly both). They are recruiting through this form: “Montreal and Edmonton: online bid party”.
…As well as a hang out room, we want to showcase how amazing the Canadian and Indigenous Science Fiction Community is. We are interested in authors who want to read, artists who want to show and talk about their work; musicians who might want to take us through a medley of their music; podcasters who might want to run a session; anyone who fancies running an interview or Q&A; and researchers who might want to give a short talk. We will have multiple zoom rooms and an actual program…
(2) GARTH NIX HONORED. Congratulations to Australian author Garth Nix, who has received the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) in the General Division. (“King’s Birthday Honours List 2025” at ARTShub.)

Mr Garth Nix, NSW
For service to literature as an author.
The author of over 40 books including the Old Kingdom series (including 7 novels), 1995-2021; The Seventh Tower series (including 6 books), 2000-2001; and The Keys to the Kingdom series (7 books), 2003–2010, was also a National Library of Australia Ambassador (2018). Among the many prizes won are a slew of Aurealis Awards, the Ditmar Award, Best Novel 2021, Best Australian Novel (2002), the Golden Duck Award for Excellence in Children’s Science Fiction (1999) and the Australian Book Industry Award, Book of the Year for Older Children (2021).
(3) TOMORROW. On June 14, Gabrielle Zevin will give an author talk at the Glendale (CA) Central Library at 4:00 p.m. as part of “One Book, One Glendale”. Full information at the link. (Seating limited to 200, get tickets tomorrow at the library at 2:30 p.m.)

Join us with author Gabrielle Zevin to discuss the New York Times bestseller and our One Book, One Glendale selection, Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow. A glorious and immersive novel about two childhood friends, once estranged, who reunite as adults to create video games, finding an intimacy in digital worlds that eludes them in their real lives.

Author Biography: GABRIELLE ZEVIN is a New York Times best-selling novelist whose books have been translated into forty languages. Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow was published by Knopf in July of 2022 and was an instant New York Times Best Seller, a Sunday Times Best Seller, a USA Today Best Seller, a #1 National Indie Best Seller, and a selection of the Tonight Show’s Fallon Book Club. Following a twenty-five-bidder auction, the feature film rights to Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow were acquired by Temple Hill and Paramount Studios. She is currently writing the screenplay.
(4) AI ON THE VINE. Jason Sanford has a vast roundup about and commentary on AI in “GenAI Grapevine for June 2025”. He begins —
Will GenAI Change How People Think and Experience the World?
I’ve written before that artists and writers are the canaries in the coal mine with regards to what the tech companies pushing generative AI systems plan for the coming years. Essentially, the threat genAI poses to the livelihoods of artists and writers will soon expand to numerous other areas of people’s work and life.
But why did these corporations come after writers and artists first? Essentially, we’re the low hanging fruit – our works were easy for corporations to access and pirate for training their AI systems. As an added bonus from the corporate point of view, most writers and artists are economically weak. Yes, there are artists and writers whose work has made them rich and powerful, but they’re the exception not the rule.
And equally as important: while artists and writers may generally be economically weak, what we create is powerful. Stories and art change the way people think and experience the world around them. That ability is something the rich and powerful have long coveted and attempted to use for themselves….
(5) NOT THIS ONE. A Deep Look by Dave Hook finds a clinker in its run through 1949 — “’From Off This World: Gems of Science Fiction Chosen from “Hall of Fame Classics”’, Oscar J. Friend & Leo Margulies editors, 1949 Merlin Press”.
The Short: I just read From Off This World: Gems of Science Fiction Chosen from “Hall of Fame Classics“, Oscar J. Friend & Leo Margulies editors, 1949 Merlin Press, all reprints from Science Wonder Stories/Wonder Stories/Thrilling Wonder Stories. My favorite story was the superlative “A Martian Odyssey” novelette by Stanley G. Weinbaum, Wonder Stories July 1934, and my “Hidden Gem” was “The World Without“, a Parling & Klington short story by Benson Herbert, Wonder Stories February 1931. It was dramatically uneven, with an average overall rating of 3.29/5, or “Good”. This is one of the lowest ratings I have ever given an anthology I finished reading. Not recommended….
(6) CHINA ENFORCES ‘DIGITAL OBSCENITY’ REGULATIONS. “Police in China arrest female authors of homosexual novels in crackdown on ‘boys love’ fiction genre” reports ABC News (Australia).
Female writers have been summoned by police for posting and sharing homosexual romance stories online, in a widespread crackdown on the “boys love” genre in China.
If convicted, they could be subjected to detention, financial penalties or even prison sentences.
Many of the targeted writers published their work on Haitang, a Taiwanese website popular with fans of boys love fiction — a genre that features romantic relationships between male characters, often depicting sex scenes.
Some of them have been documenting their experiences on Chinese social media.
A writer who goes by the pen name Sijindejin said she was served a notice in May to present herself at a local police station in Gansu province — about 970km away from her village in Chengdu.
Sijindejin, who says she grew up in a “poor village”, bought the cheapest flight available and took her first plane trip to comply.
According to Chinese laws, police in any part of the country who claim they have received complaints about an individual can call them in for questioning.
Having only made 4,000 yuan ($857) after writing for years, Sijindejin said she never knew it could be a crime….
… Three lawyers, representing some of the writers, also posted about the crackdown, noting the scale of action has been widespread, with estimates that at least 100 writers have been affected.
Radio Free Asia reported that police in remote north-western Gansu province had called in dozens of writers, with some subsequently being detained, fined or charged with offences that could result in prison terms….
…China last updated its laws on “digitally obscene” content in 2010.
Those regulations said the “production, reproduction, publication, trafficking, dissemination” of any obscene works that generate more than 5,000 clicks online, or that make profits of more than 5,000 yuan ($1,072), should be treated as a crime….
There have also been some protests about this crackdown outside of China; here’s a recent Mastodon post of photos of a protest in (apparently) Washington DC: “Charlie’s Notebook: FreeWritersofHaitang”.

(7) CRAIG MCDONOUGH OBITUARY. Massachusetts sff fan Craig McDonough died June 12. Leslie McDonough announced:
My husband Craig McDonough died yesterday. He had been suffering from heart disease for some time. He was formerly very active in fandom, especially Boskone and Readercon and, more recently, Arisia. Many years ago he was also active in the SCA.
Among his contributions to fandom was editing the first edition of the NESFA Hymnal, a collection of filksongs, which came out in February 1976, in time for Boskone XIII.
(8) MEMORY LANE.
[Written by Cat Eldridge.]
June 13, 1980 — The Girl, The Gold Watch & Everything
Forty-five years ago, a rather charming film premiered in syndication this evening as produced by Paramount. The Girl, The Gold Watch & Everything was based on the novel of the same name by John D. MacDonald, who of course did the Travis McGee series. I know I watched it and I know I like it even four decades on.
It was written by George Zateslo who hadn’t written anything prior to this save an episode of CHiPS. After writing this, he’d write the script for the sequel, The Girl, the Gold Watch & Dynamite, originally titled the The Girl, the Gold Watch, and Everything Else before they realized that was way too long. Or so they thought.
The two cast members to note here are Robert Hays as Kirby Winter and Pam Dawber as Bonny Lee Beaumont. That because the story is —
SPOILER ALERT
a rather thin SF plot involving a young male who inherits from his millionaire uncle a gold watch that has the power to stop time. A series of quite unlikely and comic adventures ensue. And yes there’s a girl involved. Thie girl is entirely, I believe, why the novels were written, but then a girl was always present in John MacDonald’s Travis McGee novels as well.
END OF SPOILER ALERT
An episode of the Twilight Zone, “A Kind of Stop Watch”, has essentially the same story as that of “The Girl, the Gold Watch & Everything”. A lot of Twilight Zone fans would claim very loudly that McDonald ripped off Serling’s script. That episode, however, aired in October of 1963, the year after the publication of the novel on which the movie is based. Sigh.
Can y’all remember how far back this story plot device goes? I assuming it’s present in the beginning of the genre, isn’t?

(9) COMICS SECTION.
- F Minus has a new POV for the closet monster problem.
- Frank and Ernest combines H.G. Wells with Shakespeare.
- Spectickles updates another fairy tale.
- xkcd agonizes about a big number.
(10) MURDERBOT AFTER-ACTION. Alex Brown is doing Murderbot episode reviews at Reactor: “Murderbot Coded”.
(11) SF 101. Colin Kuskie and Phil Nichols devote episode 55 of the SF 101 podcast to “Reviewing the Hugo Short Stories”.
Every year, we review the short stories shortlisted for the famous Hugo Awards. It’s our way of keep abreast of trends in the field of science without having to read a ton of longer works!
All of the shortlisted stories are available online for free (see links below), so why not take a look at them yourself, and see if you agree with Colin’s and Phil’s assessment?

(12) BEWARE LILYPAD. “’Toy Story 5′ First Look Reveals Return of Jessie and an All-New Enemy” at Movieweb.
…[Pete] Docter confirmed that Toy Story 5 will explore the challenges of the digital-first world from the perspective of the toys. “It’s Toy meets Tech,” he said, per The Hollywood Reporter. The original gang will be forced to grapple with the takeover of technology in their home, with eight-year-old Bonnie Anderson now the proud owner of a tech tablet (pictured below). Its wide-eyed and friendly exterior might prove deceptive, as it threatens to steal Bonnie’s attention away from the toys, as she finds herself drawn towards screens over playthings….

(13) DRAWING CARD. Chinese fan Riverflow has given his Hugo trophy to one of his friends to display in a coffee shop called “Ansible” they are opening in Chengdu. We do not know whether this is a temporary or permanent loan.

(14) THE ETHICS OF BRAIN-READING DEVICES. [Item by SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie.] One area of science that is decidedly SFnaly adjacent, if not just a few years ago would be considered decidedly SF, is that of the use of technology to read thoughts: techno-telepathy if you will. Yet recent advances are such that we are beginning to actually do this. However, such technology has ethical implications. As SF fans we are all too aware of Orwell’s ‘thought police’…
An article in this week’s Nature looks at the ethics behind this technology. You can access it here.
For two decades, Ann Johnson has been unable to walk or talk after she experienced a stroke that impaired her balance and her breathing and swallowing abilities. But in 2022, Johnson was finally able to hear her voice through an avatar, thanks to a brain implant.
The implant is an example of the neurotechnologies that have entered human trials during the past five years. These devices, developed by research teams and firms including entrepreneur Elon Musk’s Neuralink, can alter the nervous system’s activity to influence functions such as speech, touch and movement. In April, they were the topic of a meeting in Paris, hosted by the United Nations scientific and cultural agency UNESCO, at which delegates finalized a set of ethical principles to govern neurotechnologies.
The recommendations focus on protecting users from technology misuse that could infringe on their human rights, including their autonomy and freedom of thought. The delegates, who included scientists, ethicists and legal specialists, decided on nine principles. These include recommendations that technology developers disclose how neural information is collected and used, and that they ensure the long-term safety of a product on people’s mental states….

(15) VIDEO OF THE DAY. “How Thunderbolts Should Have Ended”.
[Thanks to Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Mark Roth-Whitworth, Ersatz Culture, Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, Teddy Harvia, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, and Chris Barkley for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Andrew (not Werdna).]























