Tiffani Angus
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End-of-year Newsletter Sneak Peek

29/12/2023

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An excerpted look at some of what I liked this year:

Year-end Wrap Up
It's fun to look back and see what you did each year, what you read, what you watched, where you went. All the cool stuff! I'd like to share my favorite stuff this year so you can discover some new things to read or watch in 2024.

TELEVISION
The Lazarus Project: Although there are only two seasons of this available so far, I only just learned about it a couple of weeks ago and I LOVE IT! It is time-travel/time-loop shenanigans and is just bananas, in the best way. It's one of those shows that you pause to have a little confab with your partner or fellow viewer to say, "Wait ... ok, so if so-and-so is in X year but then Y happens, do they do [redacted] or [redacted]? Or do they end up in [redacted]?" And then your brain breaks.

For All Mankind: If you aren't watching this (on Apple TV), you are missing out on some amazing storytelling. Even if your reading/viewing doesn't lean towards space-heavy SF, give this a try for the human stories. It's really engaging as well as an interesting look at how changing one historic event causes a domino effect of other small changes.

Interview with the Vampire: I read this book in the mid-'80s as a teenager, which started my love of vampire fiction. But this ... THIS! ... does what the film in the '90s couldn't: it fully gives in to the queerness of the book. The change from the late eighteenth century to the very early twentieth century adds extra layers to the narrative, with its look at race relations in the American South. Plus, it really does drive home how terrible it is to be in a toxic marriage ... forever.

BBC's Ghosts: We all love it. We're all kinda devastated it's over. I will never not laugh at Robin. (Also, there is a great companion book that just came out in time for gift-giving; I gave it to myself this year and it's hours of fun reading.)

What We Do in the Shadows (series, but film, too of course!) and Our Flag Means Death: Taika Waititi is a fucking treasure. Kooky, quirky, violent, queer, canny, out-of-their-time and -depth vampires in New York on the one hand and kooky, quirky, violent, queer, canny, and (some) out-of-their-depth pirates on the other. And beneath all of that, so much heart. I've been watching Shadows since its inception, but Flag got me to go back and do a full re-watch, and now I am impatiently waiting for series 2 to be available here in the UK.

FILMS

Barbie: It's a Barbie world and we're just living in it.

Ok, so just 'film': singular. When I sat to write this, I couldn't really remember what I'd watched this year! It just wasn't a big film year for me, I guess. I think that the post-pandemic going-to-the-cinema outing hasn't quite returned to "normal." So I'll tell you what I did in the run-up to Christmas: I marathoned the extended versions of Lord of the Rings. Including breaks for the loo and cooking, it took me 14 hours. Every minute was fabulous.

BOOKS
What books did I love this year? Well, you'll have to sign up for my newsletter to find out more!

The newsletter also contains information about my upcoming publications, links to events and stories, etc., as well as peeks at what is going on with Underhill Academy. AND discounts or promo codes when available. (and, as expected, I won't share your email address with anyone nor will you get any marketing emails related to Underhill Academy; I just use that platform to send out the newsletter.)




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Subgenre Deep Dive: Steampunk (the start of a new guest column!)

7/12/2023

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Here is an excerpt from my new guest column on the British Fantasy Society's website.

...
Genre definitions and designations can be both helpful and somewhat harmful to writers. They help because they give us training wheels when writing and reading; we know what we like, it has this label, and we can find—or write—more of it. Despite these being marketing labels, genres can come with their own “rules” and guidelines. The problem, however, is when the “rules” get twisted and are used to gatekeep, limit, and exclude. Enter: subgenres. While bookshops and some libraries organise books by genre (Romance, Crime, Science Fiction, etc.), nobody organises by subgenre, and that’s where the fun starts.

Subgenres, in some cases, do have their own sets of guidelines, but these are based on the context they sit in, the primordial genre soup they grew out of, and the expectations that readers have built over time (and that have changed and will change over time). Are there walls, though? Not really. The fun thing about subgenres is that they’re wiggly, with the spaces between them about as rigid as Nickelodeon green slime. That isn’t to say that diving in with no real understanding of what a subgenre is, and why it is, is always the way to go. I’m here to give you some insight into various subgenres of fantasy and horror (and occasionally science fiction, when they cross over because they definitely do!) so that as you go out into the big writing (and reading) world you have some insight into where these subgenres come from and know where you’re stepping into the “conversation” of SFF/H.

The subgenres I’ll be exploring here will be ones that Val Nolan and I covered in our guide Spec Fic for Newbies: A Beginner’s Guide to Writing Subgenres of Science Fiction, Fantasy, and Horror (Luna Press, 2023), as well as ones we are covering in the upcoming volume 2 (and possibly volume 3!) of the same. I’ll provide a bit of history about where it came from and where it is now along with a recommended reading (and viewing) guide. For more, including activities, check out the original source: Spec Fic for Newbies. 


This month is a look at STEAMPUNK. I’ve chosen this one because it’s gone through a lot of changes and evolution from its early days, and because (unfortunately) too often today if someone clamps a copper gear onto a story it gets labelled steampunk. 
​

There’s so much more that’s waiting to be unpacked and played with, though. 
...

To read the full article, find it on the British Fantasy Society's website.
And check back the first Wednesday of each month for a new deep dive!


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    Tiffani Angus

    Mostly thoughts on writing and the creative life.

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