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Readercon 22: Saturday, Poetry Slan, Rhysling Award, and … Up

C.S.E. Cooney Rhysling Award Winner 2011 (long form) w David Lunde, former winner and editor of the SFPA anthology. Ms. Conney won for her poem: "The Sea King's Second Bride" . Congrats, also kudos for a terrific dramatic presentation.

I won’t say I slept in Saturday morning at Readercon, but I didn’t stir myself from the room until 10am when the panels started.

Before that I enjoyed some quiet writing time working on a review of 7th Sigma by Steven Gould, which is really good sf without being tech heavy at all. Stay tuned for more on that soon.

The panels I’m keenest on are often the year in review ones, What novels and short stories people though were worth reading. I’m always amazed that despite the fairly high volume of books I read, there’s often little overlap between what other reviewers read and what I read. In the year in novels panel, which was entirely manned by Locus contribs, I accused them of only reading books that weren’t fun, which isn’t quite true…but it’s not all that far off either.

The Year in Novels: Gary Wolfe , Liza Trombi (l), Paul Witcover, Graham Sleight Continue reading

Again, The Robot Revolution: Robopocalypse by Daniel H. Wilson

[amazon_link id=”0385533853″ target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]Robopocalypse: A Novel[/amazon_link]Note: This review first ran 6/8/11 in SFSignal.

Scientists have a grand tradition of turning from writing academic papers to science fiction to transmit their manifestos from the ivory tower to the tech-savvy populace…and beyond. Daniel Wilson has been easing into sf with a string of books about the future, including Where’s My Jetpack?, a look at what happened to the future of sf’s golden age, and the very well-received How to Survive the Robot Uprising. Continue reading

Soup #24 Yankee Bean and Hot Dog Soup

Hot Dog Bean Soup by Andy Warhol

It’s the Fourth of July, or thereabouts. So I’m wondering what soup to cook that adequately recognizes Independence Day, American Style. Fortunately, there aren’t any soups that easily come in red, white, and blue. It’s the blue that makes it hard, a subject I covered on my What Color Is Your Soup project a while back.

Hot dogs and beans are about as classic fare as you could imagine, though, and if Campbell’s Hot Dog Bean soup was good enough for Andy Warhol to posterize, it must be cool. No, that’s not logic of any sort, and yes, Warhol was no doubt making the opposite statement.

Hot dogs and beans are about as classic fare as you could imagine, and if Campbell’s Hot Dog Bean soup was good enough for Andy Warhol to posterize, it must be cool. No, that’s not logic of any sort, and yes, Warhol was no doubt making the opposite statement.

But retro does have its own cool factor, and it’s not like I’m about to outgrow my childhood taste buds anytime soon. So cry havoc and loose the dogs of soup!

Yankee Bean and Hot Dog Soup

  • 1 Lb dried Navy beans
  • 1/2 large onion
  • 3 stalks celery
  • 3 medium carrots
  • 3 slices bacon
  • 2 quarts water
  • 1 tbs Better than Bullion Organic Chicken Base
  • 1 tbs salt
  • 1 pkg hot dogs (Ball Park Beef Franks)

Soak the beans overnight, or for at least 12 hours and you’ll wind up to just about two quarts of beans after you drain them off. Chop and saute the onions and bacon with a tbs of vegetable oil until the bacon is done and the onion translucent, then add the carrots and celery in for another five minutes. Add the beans, water and chicken base. Of course, you can just use chicken stock if you have it. Simmer for two hours, or until the beans are good and tender.

I always stress at about the hour and a half mark thinking the beans are never going to soften up…but they do.When they’re done, take two cups of beans from the pot and puree them until smooth. Then return them to the pot to give it the cooked all day texture. Add the tbs of salt.

Cut the hot dogs into 1/4 in thick slices and brown ligtly on both sides, then add them to the soup and simmer for fifteen minutes to get the flavors to blend.

At this point, I had to add another 2-3 cups of water to get the consistency thin enough to pass for soup, but otherwise, that’s all there is too it.

Hot dawg!

On a Stick

Creamy vanilla ice cream with
Crunchy bacon bits mixed in
A little salty
Dipped in dark chocolate
Several times to get it just thick enough
To hold the sprinkling
Of crushed roasted peanuts
Then dipped in funnel cake batter
And crisped in a deep fat fryer
Full of bubbling vegetable oil
Until the outside is just crispy
With a light layer of bubbled foam
Between the hot crunchy outside
And the cold creamy center
Dusted with powdered sugar
And served in the classic manner
Which is to say
On a hot summer’s night
Amid the sounds and the lights
Of a county fair
From the window of a tin trailer
With the smell of generator exhaust
And the glare of naked light bulbs
By a girl with knowing eyes
Who hands you this unholy sacrament
On a stick

HP1102w: Basic Laser-Printing With Easy Wireless Setup

[amazon_link id=”B0036TGGVO” target=”_blank” container=”” container_class=”” ]HP LaserJet Pro P1102w Printer (CE657A#BGJ)[/amazon_link]We’ve been nursing our HP1012 laserjet along for a number of years, and I say nursing, not because there was anything wrong with it, but because it’s drivers were designed for Windows XP, and the Windows 7 drivers never really worked that well, making it unwilling to network across my home LAN. Otherwise it’s always been reliable. Continue reading