Friday, December 31, 2010

Win a set of Tobias S. Buckell's THE EXECUTIONESS and Paolo Bacigalupi's THE ALCHEMIST



Thanks to the kind folks at Subterranean Press, one lucky winner will receive a copy of both Tobias S. Buckell's The Executioness (Canada, USA, Europe, and Subpress) and Paolo Bacigalupi's The Alchemist (Canada, USA, Europe, and Subpress).

Here's the blurb for the shared world:

Magic has a price. But someone else will pay.

Every time a spell is cast, a bit of bramble sprouts, sending up tangling vines, bloody thorns, and threatening a poisonous sleep. It sprouts in tilled fields and in neighbors’ roof beams, thrusts up from between street cobbles, and bursts forth from sacks of powdered spice. A bit of magic, and bramble follows. A little at first, and then more— until whole cities are dragged down under tangling vines and empires lie dead, ruins choked by bramble forest. Monuments to people who loved magic too much.

In paired novellas, award-winning authors Tobias Buckell and Paolo Bacigalupi explore a shared world where magic is forbidden and its use is rewarded with the axe. A world of glittering memories and a desperate present, where everyone uses a little magic, and someone else always pays the price
.

And here's the blurb for The Executioness:

Magic has a price.

In Khaim, that price is your head if you’re found using it. For the use of magic comes with a side effect: it creates bramble. The bramble is a creeping, choking menace that has covered majestic ancient cities, and felled civilizations. In order to prevent the spread of the bramble, many lose their heads to the cloaked executioners of Khaim.

Tana is one of these executioners, taking the job over from her ailing father in secret, desperate to keep her family from starvation. But now her family has been captured by raiders, and taken to a foreign city.

So Khaim’s only female executioner begins a quest to bring her family back together. A bloody quest that will change lives, cities, and even an entire land, forever. A quest that will create the legend of The Executioness
.

And here's the blurb for The Alchemist:

In the beleaguered city of Khaim, a lone alchemist seeks a solution to a deadly threat. The bramble, a plant that feeds upon magic, now presses upon Khaim, nourished by the furtive spellcasting of its inhabitants and threatening to strangle the city under poisonous vines. Driven by desperation and genius, the alchemist constructs a device that transcends magic, unlocking the mysteries of bramble’s essential nature. But the power of his newly-built balanthast is even greater than he dreamed. Where he sought to save a city and its people, the balanthast has the potential to save the world entire—if it doesn’t destroy him and his family first.

The rules are the same as usual. You need to send an email at reviews@(no-spam)gryphonwood.net with the header "EXECUTIONESS." Remember to remove the "no spam" thingy.

Second, your email must contain your full mailing address (that's snail mail!), otherwise your message will be deleted.

Lastly, multiple entries will disqualify whoever sends them. And please include your screen name and the message boards that you frequent using it, if you do hang out on a particular MB.

Good luck to all the participants!

Random thoughts and ringing in the New Year!

 I had big plans on doing a thought provoking New Year's post, but got too busy doing actual work today! And, I am very, very grateful for that!  As I posted earlier this week, am working on several projects that all ganged up on me right at the end of the year and I am feeling hopeful that a busy end of year means a busy new year!

So far this week I've worked up these plans for a family room:

These plans for the Bachelor Pad in Cambridge:
This bachelor and I (who full disclosure is a dear, long time friend) spent four hours (seriously 4!) at the Boston Design Center yesterday picking out fabric for the window treatments. We looked at thousands of fabrics to find the one perfect one - which means he'll be repainting his newly painted bedroom because HE DIDN'T LISTEN TO ME when I suggested he wait to pick the paint until we picked the fabric. Oh well. I asked him if I could indulge in a moment of "I told you so". He said "no". Hehe.

And we're getting ready to do the final install for a little girl's fantasy bedroom that includes this bed:


Busy, busy. And, after the last 2-3 years we've had, I am incredibly grateful!  Grateful to have several great projects with wonderful clients who respect my word and vision, but are also very clear about what they want. I love working in true collaboration with clients and have come to realize that I could never be the designer who creates and plan and presents it to the client as complete. I want to let my designs develop organically and leave the clients feeling that they own the designs as much as I do.


Speaking of grateful - I wanted to send a shoutout to my compatriots at The Skirted Roundtable - Joni and Megan without whom I'd be a sad voice in the wilderness.  They are the best partners for this adventure and I am so proud to have started something that is still going on after nearly two years (note to self: change the blog banner - it will be two years in April!). Stay tuned for our first interview coming in the new year: Suzanne Rheinstein!  I am so grateful to all our listeners and commenters for sticking with us. We're not professional reporters and I know we sometimes ramble - so we appreciate you.

I'd also like to thank all those who regularly read ::Surroundings:: - my posting has been spotty this year due to external commitments and the need to, you know, make money. And I know I've been sadly a bad blog world citizen when it comes to posting comments on other blogs. I read the posts, I can assure you. But I promise to be better! So, I appreciate all the kind words and encouragement. It means more than I can say.

I watched Paris: The Luminous Years documentary on PBS last evening and highly recommend it! A little academic, but still, it has beautiful images, music and, of course, Paris! A great way to usher in the new year!

Wishing you all the best and a Happy  New Year! I am off to spend the evening on Cape Cod with a friend eating stuffed lobster, drinking champagne and enjoying a Craig Ferguson movie marathon. A friend, knowing of my undying love for that smart and sexy Scotsman of late night tv, gave me the complete collection of Craig's movies for Christmas. Yum!  And tomorrow, I start the dreaded diet. Like millions of others. But the need is great and I'm hoping my will power will be as well!

Happy New Year friends!

If you would like my help on your design project, I would love to chat with you! Please email me. Thanks!


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Shadowheart



In Shadowrise, Tad Williams elevated his game to a level we hadn't seen since the final volume of the Otherland series. I was pleasantly surprised and I couldn't wait to read the endgame in Shadowheart.

Here's the blurb:

Thousands of years ago the gods fought and fell in the deeps beneath what is now Southmarch Castle, then were banished into eternal sleep. Now at least one of them is stirring again, dreaming of vengeance against humankind.

Southmarch haunts the dreams of men as well as gods. Royal twins Barrick and Briony Eddon, the heirs of Southmarch’s ruling family, are hurrying back home as well: Barrick now carries the heritage of the immortal Qar inside him, and Briony has a small army at her back and a fiery determination to recover her father’s throne and revenge herself on the usurpers.

The cruel and powerful southern ruler known as the Autarch of Xis wants the power of the gods for his own, a power he can only gain if he conquers Southmarch. And nobody knows what the Qar want, only that the mysterious fairy-folk are prepared to die for it – or to kill every living thing in Southmarch Castle and in all the lands around.

It will come to an apocalyptic conclusion on Midsummer Night, when the spirits of the haunted past and the desperate struggles of the present come together in one great final battle. Many will die. Many more will be transformed out of all recognition, and the world will be forever changed
.

It's no surprise that the worldbuilding is once more my favorite aspect of this novel. As was the case with its predecessor, mythic resonance permeates Shadowheart, demonstrating yet again how vast in scope and vision the Shadowmarch series truly is. Revelations are made as Williams brings his myriad plotlines together, unveiling a grand tapestry which goes back through the centuries.

Though the principal protagonists understandably take center stage in this final installment, quite a few members of the supporting cast will find themselves in the middle of the action, thus influencing how the tale will play out in the end. This was a nice touch, for it showed that many of the secondary characters were not just filler material from the beginning. Tad Williams has many tricks up his sleeve, so expect a high number of unexpected twists and turns. We were aware that Barrick and Qinnitan were somehow connected, but what the author had in store for them was a real surprise. In terms of character growth, Barrick takes the cake. Though his storyline is not the only one which carries the tale in Shadowheart, he remains at the heart of what is unfolding. After growing on me in Shadowrise, I'm sad to report that I dearly wanted Briony to die in this one. You can't have your cake and eat it too, I guess.

Since this book is the second part of what was supposed to be a single-volume Shadowrise, I was expecting the pace to be akin to that of its predecessor. After all, Shadowrise quickened the rhythm and it appeared that the proverbial shit was about to hit the fan. Surprisingly, Shadowheart starts rather slowly. Not as slow as Shadowmarch and Shadowplay were, but I was puzzled by the fact that this one didn't ride the wave created in the third volume. Still, it doesn't take very long for the storylines to come together around Southmarch Castle, and soon the rhythm is no longer an issue. The endgame itself might not be as great as that of To Green Angel Tower or Sea of Silver Light turned out to be, but the finale should satisfy most SFF readers out there. After quite a few unanticipated twists, the multilayered ending closes the show with a bang.

Had it ended there or soon afterward, Shadowheart would have been as good as or better than Shadowrise. The problem is that the finale is not even close to being the ending of the novel. There follows a 120-page epilogue of sorts which thoroughly kills the momentum of the book. I understand the need to tie up loose ends when the smoke has cleared, but this was overkill. It takes so much away from the great endgame. It probably should have been limited to 20 or 30 pages to settle things between the factions and characters. By dedicating such a vast chunk of the novel to the aftermath of the series, Tad Williams' narrative lost all the awesomeness it had generated along the way.

And it's kind of a shame to end on such a low note, especially when the book hit so many high notes prior to that long epilogue. . . Still, Shadowheart brings the Shadowmarch series to an engrossing end. Don't know if the series could have been structured in a way that would have made both Shadowmarch and Shadowplay as good as the last two installments. But all in all, it's another quality read by one of the masters of epic fantasy writing today.

The final verdict: 7.75/10

For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe

Thursday, December 30, 2010

The Hotties: 2010 Year-End Awards


Sure, we may not be as prestigious or glamorous as the Hugo, the Nebula, or the World Fantasy Awards, but winning a Hottie still means something, right!?! Well, maybe not but what the heck!?!

For the sake of posterity, I've also included my Top 10 SFF novels and the runner-up titles of the year in this post.

Without further ado, here are the 2010 Hotties Award!

Top 10 Speculative Fiction Titles of 2010

1- Under Heaven by Guy Gavriel Kay [Penguin Books, Voyager]
1- (tie) The Dervish House by Ian McDonald [Pyr, Gollancz]
3- Stonewielder by Ian Cameron Esslemont [Tor, Bantam Press]
4- Geosynchron by David Louis Edelman [Pyr]
5- Prince of Storms by Kay Kenyon [Pyr]
6- The Machinery of Light by David J. Williams [Bantam Dell]
7- Shadowrise by Tad Williams [Daw, Orbit]
8- Leviathan Wept and Other Stories by Daniel Abraham [Subterranean Press]
9- Bitter Seeds by Ian Tregillis [Tor]
10- Thirteen Years Later by Jasper Kent [Pyr, Bantam Press]
------------------------------------
11- Towers of Midnight by Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson [Tor, Orbit]
12- Warriors edited by George R. R. Martin and Gardner Dozois [Tor]
13- Songs of Love & Death edited by George R. R. Martin and Gardner Dozois [Gallery]
14- Who Fears Death by Nnedi Okorafor [Daw]
15- Shadowheart by Tad Williams [Daw]
16- The Terminal State by Jeff Somers [Orbit]
17- Blue and Gold by K. J. Parker [Subterranean Press]
18- The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson [Tor, Gollancz]
19- City of Ruin by Mark Charan Newton [Bantam Dell, Tor UK]
20- Arms-Commander by L. E. Modesitt, jr. [Tor]

PUBLISHER OF THE YEAR AWARD

- Pyr

With three Pyr titles in the Top 5 and four in the Top 10, it couldn't be any other publisher! The folks at Pyr celebrated their 5th anniversary this year. Keep up the great work! And long live! =)
FAVORITE SFF BLOG

- Fantasy Book Critic

It may suffer from a case of too many cooks in the kitchen at times, but it remains a terrific blog and a great speculative fiction source! Do check them out! Often!

MOST IMPROVED AUTHOR AWARD

- Ian Cameron Esslemont, Malazan co-creator and author of Stonewielder (Canada, USA, Europe). There were still a number of kinks to iron out following Return of the Crimson Guard. But now I feel that Esslemont truly found his voice.

Honorable mention: Mark Charan Newton, author of City of Ruin (Canada, USA, Europe).

BEST SFF MESSAGE BOARD

- http://asoiaf.westeros.org/

Honorable mention: http://www.sffworld.com/

Can't go wrong with either of these two, though discussions can get a bit livelier on Westeros. Don't have time to visit countless SFF websites and blogs. A quick visit to the forums of these two message boards will keep you apprised of everything that has to do with speculative fiction.

MOST OVERRATED NOVEL AWARD

- Abraham Lincoln Vampire Hunter by Seth Grahame-Smith

Still don't understand how this one turned out to be so popular earlier this year. . .

Honorable mention: Brandon Sanderson's The Way of Kings (Canada, USA, Europe, AbeBooks)

It was good, sure. But not the best thing since sliced bread as many made it out to be. . .



MOST UNDERRATED NOVEL AWARD

- Nnedi Okorafor's Who Fears Death (Canada, USA, Europe)

It garnered rave reviews, but still it looks as though this novel flew under everyone's radar. A shame. . .



BEST COVER ART AWARD

- Stephen Martiniere cover art for Kay Kenyon's Prince of Storms.

WORST COVER ART AWARD

- A tie between two visual turds: The French edition of Blake Charlton's Spellwright and Manly Wade Wellman's Battle in the Dawn.

Must see! Makes you long for Baen covers! I kid you not! Click on the two links if you don't believe me. . .

INTERVIEW OF THE YEAR

- The two Brandon Sanderson interviews I did with my WoT pals, Larry, Ken, and Adam. The first one was in May, while the second Q&A came in September. Good stuff!



UNEXPECTED SURPRISE AWARD

- Daniel Abraham's Leviathan Wept and Other Stories (Canada, USA, Europe, and Subpress).

Read this book! Nuff said!

Finished this one lying on one of the outside beds at The Garden Bar & Lounge in Zadar, Croatia. A great book, the sun, the Adriatic Sea, and the perfect setting. It doesn't get much better than this! ;-)

MOST DISAPPOINTING NOVEL AWARD

- Naomi Novik's Tongues of Serpents (Canada, USA, Europe)

I felt that the Temeraire series had been losing steam in the last two installments. I'm a big fan of the series, but this one relegated future volumes to the "Maybe" pile. . .

MOST PROMISING NEW VOICE AWARD

- Ian Tregillis, author of Bitter Seeds.

Can't wait for The Coldest War!

DUMBASS OF THE YEAR AWARD

- Terry Goodkind returns to fantasy in 2011 (he'll vehemently deny this, of course), so I'm expecting unforgettable quotes from him in the near future. But for 2010, the award goes to all those stupid e-Book readers who leave 1-star reviews on Amazon when titles are not available in electronic format. As punishment, authors slighted in such a manner should have the right to punch the culprits in the mouth till they draw blood. The guilty would, of course, be sentenced to buying a copy of said work, in hardback no less.



ROOKIE OF THE YEAR: BEST DEBUT

- Bitter Seeds by Ian Tregillis (Canada, USA, Europe)

The crème de la crème of SFF debuts this year!

MVP AWARD

- Lou Anders

Yes, two years in a row! Last year I said that as the heart and soul behind the Pyr imprint, this man is pretty damn close to being a genius. Scratch that! He is a genius! Though he doesn't have the means of the genre powerhouses at his disposal, Lou Anders nevertheless manages to work wonders year in and year out. To the powers that be at Prometheus Books: Give this man a raise! God knows he deserves it!

Abercrombie & Fitch Gets Caliente!

The cute and gorgeous latino A&F staffers at the new Abercrombie & Fitch in San Juan, Puerto Rico! (image source)
The all-American lifestyle has sailed over to Puerto Rico to open the coolest shop on the island! A&F San Juan opened on December 15 inside the mall Plaza Las Americas. The 10,000 square foot store is sure causing a caribbean stir amongs the croud! Check out the pictures of the opening day on the Abercrombie & Fitch facebook page!

Check Out the New a92 Tab!

Check out the a92 tab...I promise it's good!
Make sure to check out the newst tab, a92, that keeps you in the know on everything about the mischievious little sibling of Abercrombie & Fitch, abercrombie. There is just enough info on the little troublemaker to get you talking! Get to know what makes abercrombie kids the coolest kid on the block...the music, marketing and models! Read up on a controversy that got even Mike Jeffries nervous over, and why the plans to open a flagship in New York where shuttered. Ever informative, ever intertaining...ever The Sitch.

Hollister Keeps It Warm in Pendleton Blankets and Throws

It is ALWAYS warm inside Hollister Co.'s vintage surfshop inspired stores. Good lord can it get stuffy...even in the summer (blame it on the intense lights). But what ever, it gets the whole SoCal vibe going!!! Part of staying warm and cozy during the chilly nights of wintertime in southern California is hanging with the crew on the beach - sitting around a bonfire (crackling ever nicely) and wrapped around in a comfy plaid blanket (and maybe around someone hot as well!).

HCo has just the perfect blankets for the occasion, all thrown over its wonderfully comfortable leather seats! You know what I am talking about. The patterned blankets on the seats in the lounge room in front of the cash wrap. Sooo awesome are these blankets, and of great quality...they are Pendleton blankets. Leave it to A&F to choose only Pendleton (esteeped all-American heritage, and recently featured in Vogue) to supply the blankets and throws for its HCo stores. The styles that are displayed in HCo stores are not available from Pendleton anymore, but the brand others other great looks that I recommend you check out! (This one is particularly nice!) Go ahead and purchase one. Use it as part of your room's decor to give it more of a Hollister look, or spray it with SoCal fragrance and wrap it around yourself next time you're under the SoCal stars...

I wanna make it

                                                           pacman-rings
flower rings

lipgloss-ring



hihi don't you adore them? :) Let me know! You can still keep following me ;-) <3

Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Another positive review!

The Speculative Horizons anthology garnered another positive review, this time from Roland's Codex.

Here's an excerpt:

In the end, Speculative Horizons offers a broad variety in its five stories, and although that could lead to some disconnection from the collection, I am sure everyone could find something of worth there. Personally, I fell in love with Duncan's story (see what I did there), as well as with Buckel's, which made me look for other works of the guy. Also, the book is made for a good cause and that adds to its worth. I would definitely recommend it if you can afford the steep price.

If you want to help raise funds for cancer research, or if you are just curious and wish to give the anthology a shot, it's now available for pre-order via the Subterranean Press website. Otherwise, if you want to get it at a discount, it's also available on various Amazon sites: Canada, USA, Europe.

You can read an extract from C. S. Friedman's short story here, and one from Hal Duncan's short story here.

*** Please remember that anything purchased via the Amazon links (used or new) throughout December will help raise funds for Breast Cancer Research.

New George R. R. Martin podcasts

While you await the eagerly anticipated A Dance With Dragons (Canada, USA, Europe), there are two new podcasts featuring George R. R. Martin you can listen to. =)

The first one is at The Bear Swarm!

The other is at Television Zombies.

Enjoy!

how could you be so heartless....


Hi girls, hot stuff in here! But first of all, I apoligize for the late post.. I had it busy: playing hockey.. But I'll make it up to you right now... Orlando Bloom is owning my post and god I like him!;-) He's extremely hot! THE actor of my dreams.. rrrrr ;) Say "like him" or "dont like him", reactions please <3
 'Pirates of the caribean'
 Orlando met al eerder vernoemde beauty op mijn blog: Zoe Saldana!

Tuesday, December 28, 2010

US cover art for China Miéville's EMBASSYTOWN and Mark Charan Newton's CITY OF RUIN


- Embassytown by China Miéville (Canada, USA, Europe)



- City of Ruin by Mark Charan Newton (Canada, USA, Europe)

Monday, December 27, 2010

Excerpt from M. L. N. Hanover's VICIOUS GRACE


SFF author Daniel Abraham writes urban fantasy under the pen name M. L. N. Hanover, and he's just released the third installment in The Black Sun's Daughter series. Vicious Grace (Canada, USA, Europe) is the sequel to Unclean Spirits (Canada, USA, Europe) and Darker Angels (Canada, USA, Europe).

Here's the blurb:

When you're staring evil in the eye, don't forget to watch your back. . .

For the first time in forever, JaynÉ Heller's life is making sense. Even if she routinely risks her life to destroy demonic parasites that prey on mortals, she now has friends, colleagues, a trusted lover, and newfound confidence in the mission she inherited from her wealthy, mysterious uncle. Her next job might just rob her of all of them. At Grace Memorial Hospital in Chicago, something is stirring. Patients are going AWOL and research subjects share the same sinister dreams. Half a century ago, something was buried under Grace in a terrible ritual, and it's straining to be free. JaynÉ is primed to take on whatever's about to be let loose. Yet the greatest danger now may not be the huge, unseen force lurking below, but the evil that has been hiding in plain sight all along—taking her ever closer to losing her body, her mind, and her soul. . .

The author provided this extract for your reading pleasure.

Enjoy!
----------------------------

Two hours with a strong cup of morning coffee, Google, and Wikipedia yielded this:

When it was built in 1921, Grace Memorial was the second largest hospital in a city that was thick with them. Cook County Hospital was only a mile away, and Grace’s red brick towers and colonnaded walks, cathedral-style entrance and massive network of wards and offices were a response to the older hospital's preeminence. But the original buildings changed fast; almost as soon as Grace opened for business, the construction crews came in.

In 1929, the Bureau of Prohibition raided the hospital, recovering enough gin, rum, and beer to feed Chicago's speakeasies for a week. The men responsible for building the network of smuggler's tunnels and secret warehouses fled or were arrested, and the hospital itself almost didn't survive the scandal. All through the 1930s, Grace Memorial had a reputation as Chicago's hospital of last resort. A prostitution ring ran out of it from 1936 to 1939. One whole wing was demolished as structurally unsound.

The Manhattan Project came to its rescue in 1942. While Fermi conducted the first controlled nuclear reaction at the University of Chicago, the Army Corps of Engineers quietly took control of Grace Memorial, retooling it for research on the effect of radiation. When, in 1946, that project ended, a new group stepped up with the stated intention of making Grace Memorial a functioning hospital again. President Truman himself signed the documents that transferred control of the buildings away from the army. Over the next half-decade, Grace Memorial became a cause celebré among the highest ranks of Chicagoan society. Mies van der Rohe and Declan Souder -- the two great lights of Chicago architecture -- competed for the chance to redesign it with van der Rohe dropping out at the last minute to go work on Farnsworth House.
In the 1970s, it entered into partnership with the University of Illinois at Chicago -- one of the largest medical schools in the nation -- and became a teaching and research hospital with the joint missions of serving the poor and supporting cutting-edge medical research. If that particular pairing sounded a little ominous to me, no one else seemed to blink. The worst scandal it had been involved with since then was a 1998 report about failures to conform to the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Nothing online mentioned ominous dreams or boxes in dark earth. None of the graphics were of weirdly staring eyes or improbably-jointed hands. I hadn't really expected the Internet to deliver all the answers, but there was nothing there to give me traction. My little spate of research did give me enough background to understand what I was looking at when, after a half-hour drive through the rain-scrubbed streets, we got there.

"Wow," I said. "Ugly."

Ex craned his neck as Aubrey drove us all past.

"It looks like ten other buildings that got in a car wreck," he said.

"It's worse inside," Kim said. "When I was interviewing for the job here, they asked how well I read maps. I thought it was a joke."

She was understating the case. After we stuck Kim's permit to the window and found a space in faculty parking, she led us to her office. The public areas of the hospital were pleasant enough -- well-lit, with living plants and relatively humane paint jobs -- but as soon as Kim used her key card to get us past the wide metal Authorized Personnel Only doors, things got weird. We passed through two long, looping hallways to an elevator that said we were on the second floor even though we were still at street level. Then up three levels to floor 5-East (as opposed to 5-West which was actually the floor below). Kim led us through two more sets of locked doors with bright orange biohazard markers on them, and we stepped into a cramped area wider than a hallway but too narrow to be a room where three desks huddled together. A black man with thinning white hair nodded to us as we passed.

"This has got to be a joke," I said as Kim unlocked the final door. "Who designed this place, and where'd they put my cheese?"

"All hospitals are like this to some degree," Aubrey said. "My postgrad research was a collaboration with some MDs at the University of New Mexico. I always had to meet people at the front of the place and guide them in."

"I remember that," Kim said. "Grace is worse."

The office was too small for all of us to fit comfortably. There wasn't even space to put down the backpack I used as a purse. A thin window had wedged itself in one corner, daylight spilling across one wall. Kim’s computer hummed and whirred, a screen saver cycling through images that I assumed fit in with her work: x-rays of skulls, bright pink-and-white pictures of what might have been flesh, drawings of complex microorganisms with joke labels on them like "extra cheese" and "On the Internet, no one knows you're infectious." The air smelled of oil and old carpet.

"We do our actual lab workups down in Pathology or over on the UIC campus," Kim said as she dug through a small metal filing cabinet, "but the paperwork's all here."

"Who are you working with?" Aubrey asked.

"Alepski and Namkung," she said. Aubrey crossed his arms and leaned against one wall.

"Didn't expect to hear those names again," he said.

"Namkung's the official lead, but she came here because Alepski and I were willing to sign on if the study was based out of Grace. They ask about you sometimes."

"And what do you tell them?" he said with a laugh in his voice.

"That you're traveling the world," Kim said. "They're comfortable with that. It's a good team. One of the nice things about working with them is that sometimes the residents will actually consult with me."

"Why wouldn't they?" Ex asked.

"I've got a Ph. Alepski and Namkung both went on to get MDs, and so I'm respectable by association," Kim said, as if that explained everything. When she stood up, she had a card in her hand. I caught a glimpse of an old picture of Aubrey on it and a silver magnetic strip. "I got guest researcher access for Aubrey on the strength of the papers we did together. It won't get you on the medical wards, but if you need to get in there, you can use it to sweet-talk the nursing staff."

"And the rest of us?" Chogyi Jake asked.

"Are limited to public areas or else going chaperoned," Kim said. "Or you can get a white coat, carry a clipboard, and scowl a lot. That's usually enough to keep anyone from bothering you."

"Security would be difficult with this many people," Chogyi Jake said.

"More than people, it's the different systems," Kim said. "On any given ward, you've got the nurses and technicians who work there, and the doctors who come in and out. And then the therapists. And the social work staff. And security and the physical plant guys. Janitorial. Kitchen staff. Compliance inspectors from the state and the fed. And the researchers like me. And the patients. And the families. And everyone answers to a different set of management, if they answer to anyone at all. Everyone has different methods for interacting with everyone else. It's a complex tissue. By and large, if you aren't keeping someone from doing their job, they don't much care whether you're there or not."

"So don't piss off the security guys," Aubrey said as he clipped his new ID card to his belt. It was just a little square of plastic, but it made him look like he belonged there. It was such a small thing to be a disguise.

"That should be all right," I said. "We're just getting the lay of the land, right? Basic recon."

"Fair enough," Kim said. "Where did you want to start?"

"I assume there's a chaplain," Ex said. "Resident priest might have more of an idea of the spiritual state of play than the other staff."

"And is there a mental health service?" Chogyi Jake asked with his customary smile. "Possession can be mistaken for mental illness."

"There are three, actually,” Kim said. “Adult, pediatric, and geriatric, but the psych wards are high privacy. They're strict about keeping patient information away from anyone but physicians and family. If we get someone specifically that we want to look at, I can try to talk to the attending. But even then it'll be tough."

"Maybe just the commissary, then," Chogyi Jake said. "Where the nurses and technicians would be likely to eat."

"Is there something you're looking for?" I asked.

He spread his hands in a gesture I took to mean anything interesting.

"I'd like to see Oonishi's lab," I said. "Dreamland. If that's where this thing is showing up, that seems like a good place to start."

"I'm fine with any of it," Aubrey said. "How do you want to do this? All stick together, or split up the party?"

The last questions were directed at me. All gazes shifted. While it was true that I was responsible for signing all the checks, I still hadn't quite gotten my head around being the boss. Moments like this one left me squirming inside, but I put my brave face on.

"Let's split up," I said. "Cover some ground. I figure the chaplain is going to be someone you can get to without going through restricted access areas. The staff commissary, maybe not. So how about Ex tackles the priest, Aubrey and Chogyi Jake can go schmooze with the locals, and Kim can introduce me to Oonishi. It's eight-thirty now, so find out what you can, and we'll plan to meet up for lunch and compare notes."

"I think we have a plan," Aubrey said.

"We should set a solid meeting place and time," Kim said. "Cell phones are kind of tricky in the buildings."

"Right," I said.

We settled on half past twelve in the main lobby. Kim wrote detailed maps to get Ex, Chogyi Jake, and Aubrey where they were going, and then we headed off. It didn't take long before we were in the public parts of the hospital again. We passed a waiting room where an oversized television was blasting SpongeBob SquarePants to a shell-shocked, unsmiling family. In the hallway, a guy who was just about my age hunched over his cell phone, saying something about lab results and trying not to cry. The air smelled like cleaning solution. Outside the windows, blue sky and fluffy white clouds hung high above the buildings pretending there had never been a storm. The Sears Tower -- now officially the Willis Tower -- peeked out from behind smaller, closer structures, and I tried to pay more attention to it than the thousand small human dramas we were walking past. It seemed polite.

"What a difference a year makes," Kim said. Her voice sounded tight. Clipped.

"You think?" It hung halfway between question and agreement, and it got a hint of a smile. She didn't elaborate, and I didn't press.

Thinking about it as Kim led me confidently down the corridors and wards, there was something to what she said. It wasn't that the others wouldn't have listened to me before -- well, except Ex, and that was more about his own weird paternalistic streak. But when Kim had first met me, I'd been younger. And it was more than just the months and weeks. It was the mileage.

Being Eric -- taking over the work he’d left behind -- had put me in harm’s way more than once, but it had also given me chances to figure out who I was. To try being the sort of person I wanted to become. I was more confident than I’d been the first time she met me, more in control of myself and or the people around me. I wondered if my parents would have recognized me as the same girl who’d hurried through the kitchen on her way to school and church, or if I’d become someone so alien to my own past that I’d be a stranger to them. I wasn’t sure if the idea left me sad or proud.

I was still lost in thought when it happened.

We passed through a set of automated swinging doors, a blue-and-white sign above them announcing the rooms within as the Cardiac Care Unit. The hallway marched out before us, the glass walls of patients' rooms arrayed around a wide, high nurses' station, the same panopticon architecture as a prison. Half a dozen men and women in hospital uniform and almost that many in civilian clothes stood behind the desk or before it, engaged in at least three separate conversations. I didn't see the man until I bumped into him. It was like stumbling against a wall.

"Sorry," I said.

"You," he said, and then "What the hell is your problem?"

He was red haired and freckled, his jaw wide and starting to sag a little at the jowls. He stood a head and a half taller than me, which put him on the large side, even for a guy. His scrubs were powder blue, and an ID tag much like Kim's hung from his neck. The rage in his eyes unsettled me.

"I'm sorry," I said. "I was thinking about some-"

He moved in front of me, blocking my way with an out-thrust chest. A red flush was climbing up his neck.

"You were thinking?" he said. "You've got to be shitting me. That's you thinking?"

I looked at Kim looking back at me. I had hoped -- expected, even -- outrage and maybe an echo of my own sudden fear. Instead, she was considering me like I was an interesting bug. Everyone at the nurses' station had turned toward us. All the conversation had stopped. A nervous glance over my shoulder, and I saw the patients in the fishbowl rooms staring at me too. I lifted my hands and took a step back.

"Look, I said I was sorry. I just bumped-"

"You piece of shit."

His voice was low and shaking with rage. I felt the cold electricity of adrenaline hitting my bloodstream. Kim didn't say anything.

"You piece of shit," he said again.

The fear didn't leave me -- nothing simple as that -- but an answering rage started to bubble up along side it.

"Hey!" I said. "I don't know what your problem is, but I've had about as much--"

The red-haired man drew in a long, rough breath.

And so did everyone else.

Each nurse at the station. Each patient watching us through the open doorways of their rooms. Breath is a small thing, a subtle thing, until its coordinated, and then it's devastating. A moment ago, I'd been having a surreal encounter with the poster boy for steroid rage. Now, that soft, vast sound made me something very small in the middle of an unexpected battleground. I felt myself go suddenly, dangerously calm. It wasn't quite the I'm-not-driving experience of being in a fight, but I could feel myself leaning in toward that. The man's breath quickened, and the other people matched it. I took a step back. His hands were balled in huge fists.

"Kim?" I said, but her breath was keeping time with the sharp panting that rose up all around me. Whatever this was, it had taken her too. I licked my lips and pulled my qi -- the vital energy that fuels magic and life -- up from my belly and into my throat.

"Kim," I said, pushing the power out into my voice. "Wake up."

I didn't take my eyes off the red-haired man, but in my peripheral vision, I saw her fall out of the pattern. She put a hand to her head and looked around. The red-haired man was trembling now, shaking with barely-restrained violence. Two of the nurses behind their station put down long gray folders and stepped out into the hallway behind him. A blond woman in a business suit came out of one of the patient care rooms, her hands at her sides like claws. King Mob, closing ranks. Their synchronized breath filled the space: a single, huge, animal sound.

"Jayné?" Kim said.

"Just stay cool, and when I tell you to run, run," I said. And then, "Okay. Run!"

Check It Out! GH Tab Keeps You in the Know on All Things Gilly!

Get a little Gilly with the GH tab now on The Sitch on Fitch!
Ever informative, The Sitch on Fitch now has the GH tab to keep you in the know on everything going on in the Land of Down Undies! A must read for everyone in love with Gilly, the GH tab holds value inside info on what makes Down Undies totally irresistable! Check out the progress that Gilly Hicks has made since its opening in January 2008, find out what it means to be "the cheeky cousing of Abercrombie & Fitch," and get to know who the fictional Gilly Hicks is and what her story is (not many people know the story behind the brand). Don't be shy and get a little Gilly with the GH tab on The Sitch!

Pre-Spring Music Now Out

After all the cool jingles that rocked the stores this holiday season, there are now awesome new playlists dance away the new year!

The A&F Family got a little a head of itself and actually launched the post-Christmas/pre-Spring playlists on December 22 online. It's kind of a holiday turn off when you expect to listen to "The Naughty Song" by Oscillator (two days before Christmas) on abercrombie.com, but instead you here "Like a G6" by Far East Movement! "Hell, yeah," that was enjoyable, but just not appropriate in the timing. Nevertheless, you could still visit, say, HCo for last minute gifts and shop around while enjoying the SoCal "Last Christmas" remix.

Now that Christmas has finally come to pass, the late-winter/pre-Spring 2010 playlists are now keeping things pumping! They are all awesome in their own individual style. Visit the Music section of the Winter 2010 tab to get the 411 on these totally fantastic tracks!!!

A week of designing

This is going to be a good week. Aside from the crazy snowstorm that is still going on, this is going to be a good week. I have nothing to do but work on design projects - no external writing assignments (perhaps some blogging of course!), no teaching, no meetings. I just get to work on design projects all day every day. And, I'm lucky to have several projects to work on. I thought I'd give a sneak peak.


:: Sabrina's Bedroom: my long time client's 5 year old daughters princess bedroom is nearly completed. We're planning to get everything done within the next three weeks.


::Cambridge Bachelor Pad:  New paint colors and furnishings are on tap for this new condo.




:: New Construction Master Bathroom: a new addition for longtime clients means a new master suite to design. We're still working on completing their dining room and living room as well.


Living Room: Side table and accessories still to be completed


Dining Room: French doors to be added and molding to be applied to walls. Final paint color (something green) to be selected once lighting is installed.

So, you'll know where I'll be. Working in my office and shopping! Bliss!

If you would like my help on your next design project, please don't hesitate to contact me!

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