About Alyx Dellamonica

After twenty-two years in Vancouver, B.C., I've recently moved to Toronto Ontario, where I make my living writing science fiction and fantasy; I also review books and teach writing online at UCLA. I'm a legally married lesbian, a coffee snob, and I wake up at an appallingly early hour.

Girlfriend Testing on the #BuffyRewatch on @tordotcom

slayerWay back when I was watching BtVS the first time through, I thought “I was Made To Love You” was the saddest damned thing I’d ever seen. Then, of course, “The Body” aired the following week.

I’m hoping that as the show gets grimmer, the rewatches will get funnier. Because, really, it’s tougher to say silly things about the nigh-perfect episodes, and out-funnying the funny ones is tough too. But the actual watching–some of it is going to be very grim, especially as I hit S6.

In which I #amreading crime, Victorian style (by @TheLitDetective)

keep readingAfter Suspect Identities: A History of Fingerprinting and Criminal Identification I jumped into The Murder of the Century: The Gilded Age Crime That Scandalized a City & Sparked the Tabloid Wars. In addition to also being a book with a very long title, Paul Collins‘s Murder of the Century is a book with some overlaps, in terms of its subject matter, with the fingerprinting history. It’s one of a number of books I’ve read lately about this era in New York history: there was The Poisoner’s Handbook, last year and The Uncrowned King: The Sensational Rise of William Randolph Hearst (which I remembered as “The Hearst Thing.”)

The Murder of the Century is, in its way, also a Hearst thing: it’s about how two rival newspapers–one owned by Hearst and the other by the Joseph Pulitzer–got into a crazy ratings battle triggered by the discovery of a dismembered corpse.

It’s obvious to us all at this point that sensational murders (or, to a lesser extent, sensational deaths) garner audience in big numbers for whatever news outlets feature them. This book is about the genesis of that knowledge. What’s most intriguing about this specific case is how deeply the reporters of these rival papers were mucking about in the actual detecting: running down evidence, for example, and proposing their own ‘favorite’ candidates for the identity of the headless corpse. At one point Hearst essentially leased a crime scene so his reporters would have sole access to it. But wait, there’s more! He then had his guys sabotage all the phones for blocks around so that reporters staking out the perimeter would have to leave the vicinity just to call in.

That’s just the iceberg tip of some crazy reporter antics.

It’s a nicely-written true crime story and a nifty snapshot of both the history of journalism and of policing in New York in the 1880’s, well worth your time if any of that appeals to you. Here’s the cover:

Paul Collins, should you wish to know more about him, is TheLitDetective on Twitter.

And, since some of you have asked: no, there isn’t much of this that’s for a specific project, though the fingerprinting history has already proved itself extremely useful. Fiction will come of all this reading eventually–it always does–but I have no specific plans yet. I’m basically just mulching the Gilded Age for the joy of it.

And next up is more of the same, in a way: I’m about a third of the way through Matthew Goodman’s Eighty Days: Nellie Bly and Elizabeth Bisland’s History-Making Race Around the World.

Main Guy’s Bumpy… Must Be Tuesday

We’re moving into more of a discussion of Spuffy with my essay on “Crush” on the Buffy rewatch now.

As with any series of columns, there’s some lead time in play here. “Crush” is the rewatch that’s on Tor right now; this past week I’ve watched “The Body” and “Forever.” I’ve been to a lot of family funerals in the period between the initial airing of these episodes and this month, and it made the experience of reviewing them more intense. I am really looking forward to getting a little distance from the tragedies of season five. I’d be looking forward to it even more if a lot of what happens in S6 and S7 wasn’t so grim. Still… musical episode soonish!

April Showers

We have been having a gorgeous spring, filled with light and birdsong and flowers. The double-flowering plums in front of my building are about to pop, and already the minivans of Vancouver are starting to be plastered with pink confetti from the cherries and apple trees that are currently in bloom everywhere you care to look.

My own little deck garden is looking quite spectacular of late, and on this rainy Sunday, if I cared to, I could go out and take a picture identical to this one:

Rainwet flowers

But there are goldfinches partying out there with the feeder, and Rummy is gently serenading them with the “I want to chew your neck” symphony, we’ve named BBC Two, so I’ll leave them in peace and give you last year’s model of the purple tulip. Tweety here thanks you for your patience.

Goldfinch love

Anthologies

What it says is what you get. The following multi-author volumes contain my stories and, in a few cases, non-fiction.

(I am still working on this page, in case you can’t tell, but here are Amazon links with covers to get you started!)

The Color of Paradox,” in Imaginarium 4: The Best Canadian Speculative Writing, edited by Sandra Kasturi and Jerome Stueart

“Rate of Exchange,” in The Change: Tales of Downfall and Rebirth, edited by S.M. Stirling

“Snow Angels” in Fractured: Tales of the Canadian Post-Apocalypse, edited by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

“Time of the Snake,” in Fast Forward, Future Fiction on the Cutting Edge.

“The Town on Blighted Sea,” in The Year’s Best Science Fiction 24, edited by Gardner Dozois

“A Key to the Illuminated Heretic,” in Alternate Generals III, edited by Harry Turtledove

“The Dream Eaters,” in The Faery Reel, edited by Ellen Datlow and Terry Windling

“Origin of Species,” from THE MANY FACES OF VAN HELSING, edited by Jeanne Cavelos

“Faces of Gemini,” GIRLS WHO BITE BACK: MUTANTS, SLAYERS, WITCHES AND FREAKS, edited by Emily Pohl-Weary

“Cooking Creole,” MOJO: CONJURE STORIES, edited by Nalo Hopkinson and PASSING FOR HUMAN edited by Michael Bishop and Stephen Utley

“A Slow Day at the Gallery” in The Year’s Best SF #8, edited by David Hartwell

“The Riverboy,” Land/Space, edited by Candas Jane Dorsey and Judy McCroskey

Non-Fiction

“Who’s the LIMA Loser? The Curious friendship of Noah Puckerman and Finn Hudson,” FILLED WITH GLEE, BenBella Books

“Stripping the Bones,” SO SAY WE ALL, BenBella Books

“Digital Watches may be a pretty neat idea, but peanuts and beer are what get you through the Apocalypse”, THE ANTHOLOGY AT THE END OF THE UNIVERSE, BenBella Books