(1) EDMONTON VIRTUAL BID PARTY ON AUGUST 16. The Edmonton in 2030 Worldcon bid team, aware that a significant number of the fans they want to reach aren’t going to the USA this year for the Seattle Worldcon, have planned a virtual “Edmonton Online Bid Party – 2025” to be held on Zoom on August 16 from 3:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Pacific. It is free to attend. Full schedule at the link.
Olav Rokne stresses that the Edmonton committee “communicated with the Seattle Worldcon about it. We were very cautious because we do not want to be seen as stepping on anyone’s toes, so scheduled it in conversation with Seattle’s DH of programming. A lot of kudos go to Farah Mendlesohn, who championed the virtual bid party and has put in a lot of work pulling it together.”
Here’s the link to the event, which involves Canadian artists, authors and editors. There’s some discussions, intereviews, a gaming room, and other items:
EDMONTON ONLINE BID PARTY – 2025
Edmonton in 2030’s Volunteer Team is delighted to host a free online Bid Party during the 2025 Seattle Worldcon. Please join us as writers and artists from across Canada lead discussions and provide readings, some recorded and some live. There’s also a social space (Xenoceratops room) where you can hang out and another (Borealopelta room) where you can participate in a gaming session.
Join the event on Zoom on August 16 from 3 p.m. to 7 p.m. (all times are PST)
Room: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/83120967285?pwd=7Ci2nieyObcICRrUUcuRIXyF5JtEZx.1
CODE 729247
(2) OFFSITE WORLDCON EVENT AUGUST 14. Join Interstellar Flight Press at Worldcon in Seattle for an All-Human Reading at Seattle Beer Co. “A WorldCon Offsite Reading: Humankind”.
Date: Thursday, August 14th, 2025
Time: 7:00pm PST — 9:00pm PST
Location: Seattle Beer Co. 1427 Western AveFree to attend, 21+, RSVP Here
Featured Readers: Andrea Blythe; Priya Sridhar; Adria Bailton; Alex Kingsley; John Ciminello; Christopher Cokinos; Betsy Aoki; Ursula Whitcher; Tod McCoy; and Joe Haldeman.

(3) STRANGE TV BREW. Space.com remembers “’Lexx’ appeal: A deeply underrated sci-fi classic that was equal parts Farscape, Star Wars, and Red Dwarf”.
What would Star Wars be like if Darth Vader was possessed by an insect, Luke Skywalker became a walking corpse, and the Death Star got hijacked by the worst person you know?
The answer is Lexx, a bizarre-but-brilliant sci-fi TV series that ran for four seasons between 1997 and 2002. This forgotten show shared DNA with Red Dwarf, Star Trek, and other sci-fi media, yet it was such a unique spectacle that it deserves better than to be lost to the sands of time.
Lexx followed the exploits of a mismatched, fugitive starship crew: security guard Stanley Tweedle (Brian Downey), part-lizard love slave Zev/Xev Bellringer (Eva Habermann / Xenia Seeberg), reanimated assassin Kai (Michael McManus), and robot head 790 (Jeffrey Hirschfield), who was alternately obsessed with the latter two….
(4) GRRMVILLE. The Hollywood Reporter takes readers to visit “George R.R. Martin’s Santa Fe Kingdom: Top Attractions”.
Forget dragons and dire wolves. In George R.R. Martin‘s corner of the realm — otherwise known as Santa Fe, New Mexico — power looks more like a movie theater, a short-haul railway line, a bookstore and a bar. And while winter may not be coming anytime soon, a surprising number of business ventures are.
Over the past decade, the 76-year-old Game of Thrones creator has been building his own offscreen empire — a quirky, culture-loving kingdom in northern New Mexico, where he owns or funds a growing number of institutions. There’s the Jean Cocteau Cinema, the beloved art house theater he rescued in 2013. There’s Meow Wolf, the psychedelic art collective he helped fund (and house, in an old abandoned bowling alley). And there’s the historic Santa Fe Southern Railway, which he’s not only brought back to life but turned into something of a movie star….
…. In 2013, he purchased the Jean Cocteau Cinema — a long-closed, single-screen movie house in the city’s Railyard District — which he reopened as a venue for film screenings, author events and game nights. Then, right next door, he opened Beastly Books, offering sci-fi and fantasy titles, rare editions and plenty of GRRM swag. Tucked just behind it is Milk of the Poppy, a medieval apothecary-themed cocktail bar. All three are owned by Martin’s Highgarden Entertainment….
(5) GARY BUSEY GUILTY PLEA. “Gary Busey Pleads Guilty to Sex Crime Charge Tied to Horror Movie Event” reports the New York Times. (Article is behind a paywall.)
The actor Gary Busey pleaded guilty this week to one count of criminal sexual contact, admitting that he had touched a woman inappropriately at a horror movie convention in New Jersey three years ago, his lawyer said.
Several women accused Mr. Busey, 81, of misconduct and harassment after the convention, Monster-Mania Con, which took place in August 2022 at a hotel in Cherry Hill, a Philadelphia suburb.
A week after the convention, Mr. Busey was charged with two counts of fourth-degree criminal sexual contact, one count of fourth-degree attempted criminal sexual contact and one count of harassment.
Mr. Busey, who lives in Malibu, Calif., entered his guilty plea via Zoom on Thursday.
“He personally is glad to put this behind him and move on,” Mr. Busey’s lawyer, Blair Zwillman, said on Friday. Mr. Zwillman said that “the actual factual allegations more mirrored what is considered a disorderly persons offense in New Jersey.”
Mr. Busey, Mr. Zwillman added, pleaded guilty to the charge that corresponded to “touching the buttocks of a female over the clothing.” He said that Mr. Busey faced a maximum sentence of five years’ probation and a $500 fine but that he would ask for a fine only….
(6) HEY, DUDE! Maureen Dowd says, “Attention, Men: Books Are Sexy!” in a New York Times op-ed. Link bypasses the paywall.
…Some of the most charming encounters I’ve had with men were about books.
Mike Nichols once turned to me at a dinner in L.A. and told me his favorite novel was Edith Wharton’s “The House of Mirth.” I was startled because I have read that book over and over, finding it a great portrait of a phenomenon that is common in politics. Someone makes a wrong move and is unable to recover, slipping into a shame spiral. (This does not apply to Donald Trump.)
I went to interview Tom Stoppard in Dorset a few years ago. The playwright has no computer and is not on social media. He writes with a Caran d’Ache fountain pen with a six-sided barrel.
Stoppard had a romantic-looking bookcase full of first editions of Jane Austen and Charles Dickens. He complained that his book collection was regularly raided by “American burglars.”
It was ensorcelling….
(7) ONE FAN’S BALLOT. It may be too late to vote for the Hugos but it’s not too late to have an opinion. Joe Stech’s new Compelling Science Fiction Newsletter is devoted to “Ranking the 2025 Hugo Best Novel nominees”. Not many will expect to find this title in last place:
6. Someone You Can Build a Nest In, by John Wiswell
It may be surprising to some of you that I’ve put this one at the bottom of my list, considering that it won both the Nebula and Locus awards this year. I want to be clear that it’s a good book, bad books generally don’t make it onto the Hugo finalists list, it just wasn’t as interesting to me as the other nominations this year.
The book is a monster story told from the perspective of the monster. The author does an incredible job of making the reader empathize with someone who literally eats people — the book is actually a romance between monster and the woman who saves her.
Needless to say, in order to make a literal monster empathetic you’ve got to make the rest of the characters particularly nasty, and so this is mostly a story about surviving and finding love in a hostile world. Well-executed, but not my typical cup of tea.
(8) CONAN ADMIRER. A Woman of Letters discusses Robert E. Howard, Conan, and Weird Tales: “This pulp fiction journal had sleazy covers and a low circulation. But it still produced an iconic character.”
For the past week, I’ve been reading a set of stories, written by Robert E. Howard in the early 1930s, about a tall, brawny, sword-wielding adventurer named Conan.
These stories take place in a fantasy world that resembles the early Iron Age, and in these tales, Conan is sometimes a thief, sometimes a war-leader, sometimes a King, sometimes a pirate, but he is always a simple guy who doesn’t care for civilized ways, and who tends to get into a lot of conflict with the assorted nobles, wizards, merchants, and other rich, settled people amongst whom he finds himself.
These Conan stories were originally published in a pulp fiction journal called Weird Tales that specialized in fantasy, science fiction, and horror stories. And the most interesting thing about Weird Tales, and about pulp fiction in general, was that it was a niche product.
In the larger fiction journals, like The Saturday Evening Post, there were stories for men, women, boys, girls—the whole family. That wasn’t true with Weird Tales. It was a journal targeted to young men and boys. And it was a journal with a relatively small circulation, by 1930s standards, which struggled financially and often had difficulty paying its writers.
Nonetheless, we still read Conan today because he resonated very strongly with this niche of readers. These readers, some of them, built a part of their identity around liking these stories, and they fought for decades to republish these stories and to give them some broader critical attention.
I have to say, having now read a number of Conan stories, I also feel a desire to explain how and why they’re good. Because on the surface, these stories are not good. That’s because the writing is quite overwrought and full of cliches….
… If you were submitting stories to a science-fiction or fantasy journal today, in 2025, and you turned in a story written this way, it would get rejected, because amongst fans of contemporary sci-fi short stories, this sort of writing is a source of derision.
Nonetheless, I have to say…I enjoyed reading Conan. I even enjoyed reading these passages. The very passages you’ve just read—they are the passages I clipped out as being unusually good! Because these are the most Conan-like passages I came across, and the whole reason to read Conan is for passages like these….
(9) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.
[Written by Paul Weimer.]
August 2, 1948 — Robert Holdstock. (Died 2009.)
By Paul Weimer: I am here just to talk about Mythago Wood, and I think that is all right. It’s old enough now that it is slipping out of direct reference in the genre conversation, but it is and was seminal and I can see its influences today. More on that in a bit.

Mythago Wood and its sequels center around Ryhope Wood, a fragment of ancient forest in England. It’s strange and mysterious, it is exactly the sort of place, back in Little, Big, that Crowley would describe as “the further you go in, the bigger it gets”. It’s a place where myths can coalesce into substantial beings, and if you dare to go into the woods, interact with them. The Mythago Wood cycle is mainly the story of the Huxley family, and their encounters, violent, dangerous and passionate, with the Mythagos. The Mythagos generally are born out of Celtic myth or Celtic influenced myth, and there can be and often are multiple versions of a mythago running around in the wood at the same time. I remember at least four versions of Guiwenneth of the Green, for example, only one of them being Guinevere of Arthurian myth and legend. And they need to be treated very carefully and differently. They are not human, they are born out of the myths of humanity.

The strangeness and inescapable allure, if not outright obsession, that the Huxley family has with the wood and its inhabitants is the story of Mythago Wood and its sequels and prequels. Because, like time itself in the wood being a somewhat fluid and strange thing, the novels overlap and take place in different time periods, rather than being a straightforward narrative. These are novels that, in modern parlance, work on vibes, and the vibe is mythology and deep ties to ancient and often terrible powers.
As I suggested above, I think of Little, Big by John Crowley as a forerunner and an inspiration for this book. Or maybe something was in the water, since Little, Big came out only a couple of years before Mythago Wood. But since then, Holdstock’s works has influenced other writers. I can see the mythological influence of the Wood and Holdstock’s ideas today upon the work of Paul Cornell, Juliet McKenna, Jen Williams, Gareth Harnahan, and other British writers that handle the mythic, the supernatural, the ties to ancient beings and powers that are not human. The Britishness, that strong sense of place and myth that Mythago Wood has may be a little off putting to people from outside the British Isles, perhaps, and maybe that, too, is why he is not as well regarded. Also, the books after Lavondyss in the series aren’t quite as crisp and good as the earlier ones. The first book may well be the best.
There need to be audiobooks (and new ebooks) of the Mythago books so that more readers can come to appreciate Robert Holdstock’s work, particularly the original.

(10) COMICS SECTION.
- Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal surprises Lex Luthor.
- Brewster Rockit provides a sad excuse.
- Cornered has an odd prescription.
- Free Range autographs for witches.
- Loose Parts fails one test but passes another.
- Rhymes with Orange tries to keep up with the times.
- xkcd goes back to a word’s origin.
(11) SUPER SET INSPIRATION. “Cincinnati’s Union Terminal enjoys attention generated by ‘Superman’” says NPR outlet WVXU.

Cincinnatians have long known Union Terminal was the inspiration for the Hall of Justice in the comic book world. Now it’s canon.
The home of the Cincinnati Museum Center is featured in the latest Superman movie. Museum spokesman Cody Hefner says it’s too early to tell if the movie has affected paid attendance, but there is anecdotal evidence people are taking notice.
“What we’ve seen lately as people come in, they kind of poke their heads in the doors and say ‘Hey, can we come in here? We just want to see the building. Can we take a picture?’ ” he says. “And we see them take this photo of the rotunda and then almost run out the door gleefully, like they’re on a scavenger hunt or they finally just captured a picture of Bigfoot or something.”
Hefner says the Museum Center is trying to capitalize on that new interest.
“And reintroduce people to some of the superheroes who occupy our building today — our curators, paleontologists, the dinosaurs, the Children’s Museum, the exhibits,” he says. “But also the history of superheroes; the soldiers who shipped off and came home during World War II, the Holocaust survivors who walked through Union Terminal and built their lives here in Cincinnati. It has a heroic history.”
Hefner says Superman is known worldwide, and that means Union Terminal now has international fame.
The building was the model for the original Hall of Justice featured in a 1970s cartoon series, the SuperFriends….
(12) QUANTUM AMBITIONS. Futurism reports “Scientists Just Launched the First Quantum Computer Into Space”.
The world of quantum computing has barged into a new frontier: space.
A tiny quantum computer housed in a satellite is now in orbit around Earth, ScienceNews reports, residing some 330 miles above our planet after being launched aboard a SpaceX rocket last month.
It’s a trailblazing experiment intended to test how well these delicate devices can survive the extreme conditions of space, where they could allow satellites to quickly and efficiently perform intense calculations on their own….
…Built in just eleven days, the idea behind the device was to “shrink a whole quantum laboratory down to the size of a satellite payload,” [said Philip Walter, a physicist at the University of Vienna] in a statement before the launch. It’s safe to say that they delivered on that premise. At a size befitting its quantum ambitions, the finished device is less than a gallon in volume, weighs just 20 pounds and some change, and will on average use only 10 watts of power, and no more than 30.
The potential — and we stress potential — advantage of using a quantum computer in space is that it can perform “edge computing,” or process data directly on the satellite. Otherwise, that data needs to be beamed down to Earth, put through calculations on a ground-based computer, and sent back up, which expends extra time and energy….

(13) ENJOY ONE PIECE CUISINE. Today One Piece Cafe opened its new location at 241 San Pedro St. in Los Angeles’ Little Tokyo area. It follows the first one opened in Las Vegas. Check their LA Menu here.



[Thanks to Chris Barkley, Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Paul Weimer, Olav Rokne, Michael J. Walsh, Mark Roth-Whitworth, Steven French, Kathy Sullivan, Teddy Harvia, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, and John King Tarpinian for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Andrew (not Werdna).]






