| Seeing
Mars from Uppsala
Ken MacLeod ruminates on his trip to Sweden's national science
fiction convention, Swecon 2003, and finds a home away from home at
SF-Bokhandeln - the Swede's main SFF bookshop.
I've
recently returned from Sweden, where I was one of three Guests of
Honour at Swecon 2003, held 15-17 August at the Angstromlaboratoriet,
the physics building at Uppsala University.
The other writer GoH was Alastair Reynolds,
and the fan GoH was P. C. Jorgensen. I travelled with my wife Carol, who joins
me in thanking Swecon and the fine SF bookshop SF-Bokhandeln for their generous
hospitality. We stayed in the Eklundshof hotel, a very nice place about five hundred
metres from the con. 
Wednesday
13/8/03 We flew from a warm Edinburgh to a very hot Heathrow, and then
on to Sweden: over the North Sea, then over fields, then forests all the way to
the edge of the airport, Arlanda. It's a bright, airy, modern airport with great
curving metal ribs under the roofs and a control tower that looks like it came
from Tracy Island. Maria Jonsson and Sten Thaning met us and drove us to Uppsala.
It's a small university town, with few buildings over four storeys; its
skyline is dominated by a bulky red castle with dome-topped towers, and the distinctive
double spire of the cathedral. We passed through the centre and on to Eklundshof
to drop off our luggage, then to Johan Anglemark's house on the edge of town.
Johan had prepared dinner for us and for a dozen or so fans. Chili con
carne, followed by ice cream with warm cloudberry jam and punch (caloric punch),
chilled. Lots of conversation. As one might expect, Johan has an impressive number
of books and two cats. Thursday 14/8/03 Woke in the morning
to find the water was off, and that I'd forgotten to pack my shaving gear. Breakfast
was self-service, with rolls and rye bread and crispbread, hams and cheese, and
pots of pickled herring and caviar as well as cereals, dried fruits, and jams.
Walked to the nearby gas station for wipes and razors. The path took me
past the Angstromlaboratoriet, a linked series of large red brick and glass window
and metal strut buildings, outside of which shoals of bikes were parked. Back
at reception I got an explanation of the water problem - mains broken. It came
back on just before we left, at ten. Walked in to town along the riverbank,
past houseboats and other boats, turned right at the bridge and then took the
second or third left into main shopping street. The first shop we noticed was
a thrift shop, where Carol bought a skirt and blouse and I sifted through old
books. We had coffee and doughnuts at a pavement cafe, wandered through
a mall and bought an umbrella at Stadium, the sports shop, as showers threatened.
Met Sten at the station, as arranged, beside a big and rather odd statue of what
looks like a couple dancing on top of the heads of much larger naked and priapic
figures and various complicated symbolic instruments. He bought the tickets
and joined us on the train to Stockholm. Stockholm is much livelier than Uppsala.
Maria was waiting for us at the station. Walked up, past the big Lutheran kirk
opposite the station, to Cafe Kondittori Bellman where we had coffee and pastries.
Then walked down a long shopping street across bridges to the royal palace, guarded
by young soldiers doing their military service, and on in to the old town, Gamla
Stan. The SF-Bokhandeln, at the sign of the spaceship and dragon, is a
fair way down one of Gamla Stan's long and very narrow streets. It's big, well-organised
and has a huge English-language section. At the bookshop we met Al Reynolds and
his partner, Josette, and the owners and staff. Maths (pronounced Matts), one
of the owners, took me and Al through a low door down stone steps to an ancient
cellar, where he and a man called Kristian and a woman called Tove interviewed
us over a thermos of coffee. Carol and Josette went off with Maria and
Sten, shopping. After the interview we had a successful signing session, up at
the back of the shop. After the signing we had drinks in the basement bar
of Sally's Place, where one beer and one glass of wine cost 125 SEK. (10 pounds).
Then the SF-Bokhandeln people took us out to dinner in a very good restaurant,
again downstairs. Walked back in the rain showers with Sten, Maria and Therese,
who had baked the Tiptree bake sale cookies. Train to Uppsala, where Sten fixed
us a taxi to the hotel. Friday 15/8/03 and onward Carol and
I went into town and had a take-away lunch while people-watching in the mall (it
was raining outside.) After finding the Uppsala English Bookshop we crossed a
bridge to the town's cathedral, the double-spired Domkyrkan. We walked around
it, looking at the tombs of various kings (all of whom seem to be called Gustav
Adolf), of the biologist Carl Linne, and of the visionary theologian Emanuel Swedenborg. The
Uppsala English Bookshop has a better SF/fantasy selection than most bookshops
in Britain, and the quality of its general stock is likewise high. The signing
went well and afterwards we all ducked through rain and piled into cars along
with boxes of Al's books and mine and made for the Angstromlaboratoriet. Registration
was on the door, and quick. We walked through halls the size of turbine rooms
to the con's central site, a big room with a lot of tables, around which fans
were already gathering and drinking beer. All except most of the fans we'd already
met, who were on the committee and running themselves ragged, as they did all
weekend. They did a great job of it. Warm thanks to them all. It would be
tedious to recount all the panels, but it was far from tedious - in fact, it was
a joy - to participate in them. The English-language stream of the con seemed
spontaneously to shape itself into a single long conversation about the future,
about space and space opera, about the Singularity and alternatives to it. Everybody's
English shamed my insularity. We lived for three days on beer and microwaved dinners
and Tiptree cookies. It was great. On the Saturday night Carol and I were
walking back to the hotel with Al and Josette, and I said something about Mars,
and looked south and there it was, bright and red and close. A few minutes later,
as we walked between trees, Josette pointed up and said, 'There's the space station.'
And there it was, a swift spark. After the con Carol and I stayed on for
a few days. We visited Stockholm again, and then again, and the beautiful island
of Vaxholm in the inner archipelago; spent a day in Uppsala going around the ancient
burial mounds of Gamla Uppsala, and the garden of Linnaeus where you can see plants
labelled in the format Genus species L. and realise they were named thus by the
man himself, the Adam of science in his own garden; and the Museum Gustavianum
with its precipitous and evocative anatomy lecture theatre and its cabinets of
curiosities. On our last day we went to the Vasa Museum, built around the
great doomed ship, a tall massive bulk surrounded by as conscientious and vivid
a reconstruction of its context as could be made. You walk around it, level upon
level, you read label upon label, and gradually it makes sense and fills your
mind. Sweden is like nowhere else I've been. You can - literally - set your
watch by the trains. Almost everyone looks healthy. Maybe it's the welfare state,
maybe it's the ubiquitous bicycling, and maybe it's the high price of booze. Whatever,
and whether or not it's the future, it works. Visit it if you can. Ken
MacLeod
| |
OTHER CONTENT - October 2003
The Horror of Hamilton Laurell K Hamilton on the eleven Anita Blake novels she has written to date, and why the series is a regular visitor into the upper reaches of the New York Times bestsellers list. (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
Navigating the Aldabreshin Compass Fantasy author Juliet E. McKenna interviewed about her new series, The Aldabreshin Compass. Will fans enjoy a ripping yarn set in a tropical climate with its roots far from the northern European staples of the fantasy genre? You bet. (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
Seeing Mars from Uppsala Ken MacLeod ruminates on his trip to Sweden's national science fiction convention, Swecon 2003, and finds a home away from home at SF-Bokhandeln - the Swede's main SFF bookshop. (COMMENT)
October 2003 Offworld Report: Science Fiction and Fantasy Spider Robinson blasts the genre and asks 'why are our imaginations retreating from science and space, and into fantasy?', Kir Bulychov dies, plus interviews with Jerry Pournelle, Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Bob Eggleton, Robert J. Sawyer, Ben Bova and Vernor Vinge. (NEWS)
October 2003 Offworld Report: Weird Science Why the US military want to unleash a new fleet of robot-controlled aerial vehicles, Arthur C. Clarke talks at the Los Alamos Space-elevator Conference, plans for a bacterial battery, Erich von Däniken wants a Themepark of the Gods, and why Cold Fusion scientists feel unloved. (NEWS)
October 2003 Offworld Report: RPGs and Gaming Half-Life raises its game, Futurama gets onto the PC, the howlers to avoid when designing RPG adventures, plus reviews of rulebooks for Unknown Armies, Twilight of Atlantis, and Dungeons and Dragons: The Dungeon Master's Guide. (NEWS)
October 2003 Offworld Report: Comics, Anime and Manga CrossGen is heading for the seven seas with their new pirate comic, El Cazador, the difference between fans and fanboys is examined, a look at reality in Anime, and 'Scooby-Doo Meets Batman' is reviewed (yes, really). (NEWS)
Spirited Away Frank finds Spirited Away an opulent and emotionally moving Japanese children's animated adventure that's sure to capture the intrigue and imagination of moviegoers of all ages. (FILM REVIEWS)
Freddy vs. Jason In an interesting yet sordid way, the invention of wanting to put together a couple of the big screen's most prolific slayers and have them duke it out for warped fun definitely had its advantages. After all, who wouldn't want to see the morbid mayhem between Nightmare on Elm Street's Freddy Krueger and Friday the 13's Jason Voorhees? (FILM REVIEWS)
Jeepers Creepers 2 Since useless sequels that no one was particularly clamoring for have bombarded the summertime, why break with tradition now? Frank finds himself exposed to the latest in a long line of unnecessary follow-ups with the release of Victor Salva's flavorless scarefest Jeepers Creepers 2. (FILM REVIEWS)
The Xindi In the first episode of the third season Enterprise, Evan discovers 'The Xindi' is not only a decent payoff to the second season finale, but it has some wonderful setups for the future. Trek on. (TV REVIEWS)
|

CHAT
ABOUT THIS STORY
Advertise
Here (More ...)
|