List of SFFaudio Podcast Episodes

SFFaudio Online Audio

The SFFaudio PodcastThe SFFaudio Podcast is big, really big. You just won’t believe how vastly, hugely, mind- bogglingly big it is. It’s so big in fact we’ve had to make this handy master list of all The SFFaudio Podcast episodes.

Podcast feed:

http://feeds.feedburner.com/sffaudiopodcast

iTunes 1-Click |SUBSCRIBE|

#001 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#002 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#003 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#004 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#005 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#006 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#007 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#008 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#009 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#010 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Bill Hollweg from BrokenSea Audio Productions
#011 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#012 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#013 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Mister Ron from the Mister Ron’s Basement podcast
#014 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#015 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#016 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#017 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Brian Murphy of The Silver Key blog
#018 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#019 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Julie Davis of the Forgotten Classics podcast
#020 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to short story author James Powell
#021 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to blogger Carsten Schmitt
#022 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#023 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to publisher and podcaster Rick Jackson
#024 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#025 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Brian Murphy of The Silver Key blog
#026 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#027 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk with Rick Jackson
#028 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Luke Burrage of the Science Fiction Book Review Podcast
#029 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk with Julie Davis
#030 – |MP3|-|POST| – AUDIOBOOK: The Friends Of Hector Jouvet by James Powell
#031 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk with Rick Jackson
#032 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#033 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#034 – |MP3|-|POST| – READALONG: The Steel Remains by Richard K. Morgan
#035 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk with Gregg Margarite and Luke Burrage
#036 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott, Jesse and Julie talk to Allan Kaster of Infinivox
#037 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#038 – |MP3|-|POST| – AUDIOBOOK: The Burning Bridge by Poul Anderson
#039 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Fred Greenhalgh of the Radio Drama Revival podcast
#040 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Steve Feldberg of Audible.com
#041 – |MP3|-|POST| – Jesse and Scott to Science Fiction author Robert J. Sawyer
#042 – |MP3|-|POST| – READALONG: The Coming Of Conan The Cimmerian by Robert E. Howard
#043 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#044 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Professor Eric S. Rabkin of the University Of Michigan
#045 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#046 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#047 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#048 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#049 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#050 – |MP3|-|POST| – READALONG: The Turn Of The Screw by Henry James
#051 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk with Professor Eric S. Rabkin about THE YELLOW PERIL
#052 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Science Fiction author and scholar William F. Wu
#053 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Anne Frid de Vries of the Anne Is A Man blog
#054 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#055 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Jack J. Ward of The Sonic Society podcast
#056 – |MP3|-|POST| – READALONG: The Status Civilization by Robert Sheckley
#057 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#058 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to John DeNardo of the SFSignal blog
#059 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse to Science Fiction author David J. Williams
#060 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#061 – |MP3|-|POST| – READALONG: City Of Dragons by Kelli Stanley
#062 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Mystery/Crime author Kelli Stanley
#063 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott, Jesse and Rick Jackson talk to audiobook narrator William Coon
#064 – |MP3|-|POST| – READALONG: The Stars My Destination by Alfred Bester
#065 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott, Jesse and Luke
#066 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott talks to SFF author Harlan Ellison
#067 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to podcaster Dan Carlin
#068 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#069 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk with Allan Kaster
#070 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse
#071 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to George Zarr of Seeing Ear Theatre
#072 – |MP3|-|POST| – READALONG: Assam And Darjeeling by T.M. Camp
#073 – |MP3|-|POST| – READALONG: Earth Abides by George R. Stewart
#074 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott, Jesse and Luke
#075 – |MP3|-|POST| – Scott and Jesse talk to Hugh McGuire of LibriVox.org
#076 – |MP3|-|POST| – READALONG: Mindswap by Robert Sheckley
#077 – |MP3|-|POST| – READALONG: Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson
#078 – |MP3|-|POST| – Jesse talks to Fred Godsmark of Audio Realms
#079 – |MP3|-|POST| – AUDIOBOOK: Queen Of The Black Coast by Robert E. Howard
#080 – |MP3|-|POST| – Jesse talks to cartoonist Eric Shanower
#081 – |MP3|-|POST| – AUDIOBOOK: Code Of The Poodles by James Powell
#082 – |MP3|-|POST| – READALONG: Memory by Donald E. Westlake
#083 – |MP3|-|POST| – Jesse talks to Jeremy Keith of HuffDuffer.com
#084 – |MP3|-|POST| – Jesse, Luke, Rick, Gregg and Paul W. Campbell
#085 – |MP3|-|POST| – Jesse talks to Gregg Taylor of Decoder Ring Theatre
#086 – |MP3|-|POST| – Jesse talks to Ben Aaronovitch of Blake’s 7

Posted by Jesse Willis

With A Little Help by Cory Doctorow (and his friends)

SFFaudio Online Audio

Check out the impressive list of narrators reading the stories in this new FREE short story collection from Cory Doctorow. The Neil Gaiman read story, The Right Book, takes on the future of books, ebooks and publishing. The Wil Wheaton read story, Scroogled, imagines a future (or perhaps present) in which your Google searches shall be held against you in the airport security screening, free wi-fi and webcams everywhere means you’ve constantly surveilled and Cardinal Richelieu get’s his revenge. This is a very cool project.

I’ve added a HuffDuffer podcast feed for the the entire collection or pick and choose individual stories.

With A Little Help by Cory DoctorowWith A Little Help
By Cory Doctorow; Read by various
14 Zipped MP3 Files or Podcast – Approx. 10 Hours 25 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]
Publisher: Craphound.com
Published: December 7, 2010
With A Little Help is my first serious experiment in self-publishing. I’ve published many novels, short story collections, books of essays and so on with publishers, and it’s all been very good and satisfying and educational and so on, but it seems like it’s time to try something new. With A Little Help consists of 12 stories, all reprints except for “Epoch” (commissioned by Mark Shuttleworth) This book is also available as a limited edition hardcover, a free ebook (in several formats) and an audiobook. It is licensed Creative Commons BY-NC-SA. Download the book, buy the limited edition hardcover and audiobooks at craphound.com/walh. This cover by Rick Lieder. Three other covers available.

Podcast feed: http://huffduffer.com/tags/with_a_little_help/rss

iTunes 1-Click |SUBSCRIBE|

1. Introduction
By Jonathan Coulton; Read by Jonathan Coulton
1 |MP3| – Approx. 6 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

2. The Things That Make Me Weak and Strange Get Engineered Away
By Cory Doctorow; Read by Hugh A.D. Spencer
1 |MP3| – Approx. 1 Hour 22 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

3. The Right Book
By Cory Doctorow; Read by Neil Gaiman
1 |MP3| – Approx. 17 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

4. Other Peoples’ Money
By Cory Doctorow; Read by Mur Lafferty
1 |MP3| – Approx. 15 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

5. Scroogled
By Cory Doctorow; Read by Wil Wheaton
1 |MP3| – Approx. 40 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

6. Human Readable
By Cory Doctorow; Read by Spider Robinson
1 |MP3| – Approx. 1 Hour 38 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

7. Liberation Spectrum
By Cory Doctorow; Read by Leo Laporte
1 |MP3| – Approx. 55 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

8. Power Punctuation!
By Cory Doctorow; Read by Patrick Nielsen Hayden
1 |MP3| – Approx. 30 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

9. Visit The Sins
By Cory Doctorow; Read by Roy Trumbull
1 |MP3| – Approx. 49 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

10. Constitutional Crisis
By Cory Doctorow; Read by J.C. Hutchins
1 |MP3| – Approx. 16 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

11. Pester Power
By Cory Doctorow; Read by Mary Robinette Kowal
1 |MP3| – Approx. 12 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

12. Chicken Little
By Cory Doctorow; Read by Emily Hurson
1 |MP3| – Approx. 2 Hours 7 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

13. Epoch
By Cory Doctorow; Read by Jesse Brown
1 |MP3| – Approx. 1 Hour 24 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

14. Afterword: I’m Only In It For The Money
By Russell Galen; Read by Russell Galen
1 |MP3| – Approx. 9 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]

[Thanks tamahome02000‎!]

Posted by Jesse Willis

BBCR4 + RA.cc: Keep Your Pantheon by David Mamet

SFFaudio Online Audio

BBC Radio 4RadioArchives.ccI use an RSS feed aggregator to check most websites these days but RadioArchive.cc is one I still have to check manually. One recent visit turned up a torrent that figuratively screamed for a download. Keep Your Pantheon was broadcast in 2007 on BBC Radio 4 and was written by David Mamet.

Yes, that David Mamet!

The production, as performed by a cast of veteran BBC voices, is of course a comedy (hopefully you could tell by the title), and follows in the fine tradition of A Funny Thing Happened On The Way To The Forum and Blackadder the ThirdSense and Senility. To get the MP3 head on over to RadioArchive.cc and do a search. You will, of course, also need a torrent client (thats the software for getting torrents). I use µTorrent.

BBC Radio 4 - Keep Your Pantheon by David MametKeep Your Pantheon (or On The Whole I’d Rather Be In Mesopotamia)
By David Mamet; Performed by a full cast
1 Broadcast – Approx. 45 Minutes [RADIO DRAMA]
Broadcaster: BBC Radio 4 / Afternoon Play
Broadcast: May 28, 2007
Provider: RadioArchive.cc
An impoverished acting company on the edge of eviction is offered a lucrative engagement. But through a series of riotous mishaps, the troupe finds its problems have actually multiplied, and that they are about to learn a new meaning for the term “dying on stage.”

Cast:
Strabo … Martin Jarvis
Lupus Albus … Lloyd Owen
Philius … Darren Richardson
Pelargon … Simon Templeman
Ramus … Morgan Sheppard
Quintus Magnus … Christopher Neame
Titus … Kenneth Danziger
Servant / 1st Centurion / Armourer / Priest … Alan Shearman
Messenger / 2nd Centurion / Guard … Matthew Wolf

Director Rosalind Ayres

A snippet from the script:

A snippet from ACT I of David Mamet's KEEP YOUR PANTHEON

Comparative videos for research, private study, criticism, or whathaveyou:

Posted by Jesse Willis

The SFFaudio Podcast #085 – TALK TO: Gregg Taylor

Podcast

The SFFaudio PodcastThe SFFaudio Podcast #085 – Jesse talks with Gregg Taylor (aka Martin Bracknell aka Red Panda) of Decoder Ring Theatre about The Red Panda Adventures and Black Jack Justice.

Talked about on today’s show:
Decoder Ring Theatre, Gregg is not as famous as Cher yet, something the same and something different, Girl’s Night Out, telling the mystery man’s story, World War II, Vancouver, secret identities, The Grey Fox (Vancouver’s own superhero), were there Japanese spy rings in Vancouver circa 1940?, Margo Lane, espionage, Nazi masterminds fomenting fifth-columns, Nazi Eyes On Canada |READ OUR REVIEW|, buying war bonds, Toronto, She’s secretly Japanese and secretly a superhero, Japanese-Canadian internment, Attack on Pearl Harbour, details from upcoming Red Panda Adventures episodes, the Dieppe raid, single-handedly defeating Hitler seems un-Canadian, augmented-dinosaurs, Professor von Schlitz, Captain America, Indiana Jones, how Gregg Taylor handicapped himself, “the man with an identity so secret even the audience doesn’t know it”, weaving a tangled web of lies, Superman was 4F, The Spirit, would static-shoes actually work?, Garth Ennis’ The Boys, what superhero you like tells us about you, the Martian Manhunter‘s kryptonite, Justice League: The New Frontier, Batman‘s superpower is a strength of will, Kit Baxter’s superpower is moxie, Trixie Dixon, creating dynamic female leads, CBC TV, the gender bending episode of Black Jack Justice (Justice In Love And War), Steven J. Cannell‘s Scene Of The Crime, gender switching, Black Jack Justice Hush Money, Cyrano de Bergerac, Roxanne, the formation of Black Jack Justice in opposition to The Red Panda Adventures, writing detective fiction vs. writing superhero fiction, Richard Diamond: Private Detective, the self-narrating hard-boiled post-war detective, The Adventures Of Sam Spade, paying your actors in corn, Philip Marlowe, writing drama in the half-hour format, Red Panda and retroactive continuity, an alternative universe that isn’t much different just a lot sillier, Baboon McSmoothie, the prime minister’s talking dog, the Moonlighting moment, flashback episodes, the Red Panda novels, Thomas Perkins, beautiful cover art helps, that repeated line: “It’s an interesting point.”, Aaron Sorkin, J. Michael Straczynski’s Babylon 5, Aaron Sorkin’s The West Wing, Gregg Taylor’s Decoder Ring Theatre, The Maltese Falcon, Sherlock Holmes, The Shadow, Orson Welles, a good TV show is like a play, The Green Hornet, “the MP3 revolution saved old time radio”, Gregg’s most frequently ignored piece of advice (write and record several shows before you release), might Decoder Ring one day adapt Cyrano or a Shakespeare play?, theater people are wonderful, Gregg would love to do cartoons (call him!), the Black Jack Justice comic, Gregg loves comics too!, the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, the continuity of stories makes them more real, the nearly static Black Jack universe, Robert B. Parker, Spenser, the Jesse Stone tragedy, if Gregg gets crushed by a cement mixer…, The Old Testament God vs. New Testament God.

Posted by Jesse Willis

LibriVox: Goblin Feet by J.R.R. Tolkien

SFFaudio Online Audio

LibriVoxGoblin Feet
By J.R.R. Tolkien; Read by Kim Stich
1 |MP3| – Approx. 2 Minutes [POETRY]
Publisher: LibriVox.org
Published:
Written in April of 1915. First published in Oxford Poetry 1915.

Goblin Feet
by J.R.R. Tolkien

I AM off down the road
Where the fairy lanterns glowed
And the little pretty flittermice are flying :
A slender band of grey
It runs creepily away
And the hedges and the grasses are a-sighing.
The air is full of wings,
And of blundering beetle-things
That warn you with their whirring and their humming.
O ! I hear the tiny horns
Of enchanted leprechauns
And the padding feet of many gnomes a-coming !

O ! the lights : O ! the gleams : O ! the little tinkly sounds :
O ! the rustle of their noiseless little robes :
O ! the echo of their feet — of their little happy feet :
O ! their swinging lamps in little starlit globes.

I must follow in their train
Down the crooked fairy lane
Where the coney-rabbits long ago have gone,
And where silverly they sing
In a moving moonlit ring
All a-twinkle with the jewels they have on.
They are fading round the turn
Where the glow-worms palely burn

And the echo of their padding feet is dying !
O ! it’s knocking at my heart —
Let me go ! O ! let me start !
For the little magic hours are all a-flying.

O ! the warmth ! O ! the hum ! O ! the colours in the dark !
O ! the gauzy wings of golden honey-flies !
O ! the music of their feet — of their dancing goblin feet !
O ! the magic ! O ! the sorrow when it dies.

More good goblin badness:

Posted by Jesse Willis

Review of Quicksilver by Neal Stephenson

SFFaudio Review

Cover of Quicksilver by Neal StephensonQuicksilver
By Neal Stephenson; Read by Simon Prebble and Kevin Pariseau
Audible Download – 14 Hours 48 Minutes [UNABRIDGED]
Publisher: Audible Frontiers
Published: 2010
Themes: / Natural Philosophy / History Of Science / Historical Fiction

Let me begin this review by saying that anyone with the cajones to write historical fiction on this scale deserves mad props. Quicksilver, being the introductory volume in Neal Stephenson’s epic Baroque Cycle, spins a dizzying tale of science and adventure on the colorful canvas of late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century Christendom. Like Stephenson’s massive World War II yarn Cryptonomicon, Quicksilver blends erudite discourse on the nature of the world with high drama and hair-raising adventure. The story sometimes takes a back seat to the intellectual ideas under discussion, but readers not afraid to apply a little mental elbow grease will find a lot to enjoy.

Before diving into an actual review, a note on this audio edition is in order. Audible Frontiers has elected to split the three massive print volumes of the Baroque Cycle into eight audiobooks. They haven’t just taken a metaphorical paper knife to the series, though. They’ve worked closely with Neal Stephenson to ensure the audio volumes have their own cohesion and progression. Neal Stephenson also lends his voice to a brief audio introduction preceding each volume. Thus, this audio performance of Quicksilver comprises only part of the print volume of the same name. I’ve not read the print edition, so I can’t draw any further comparisons.

In typical non-linear Stephenson fashion, Quicksilver narrates the pivotal events in the life of Puritan-turned-scholar Daniel Waterhouse. The story jumps between his youth in the mid-1600s and his later life in the early 1700s. Readers of Cryptonomicon will be familiar with this technique. They’ll probably also recognize our protagonist’s surname, as the Waterhouse family plays a pivotal role in the aforementioned novel. The ageless enigmatic Enoch Root also makes an appearance early on in the novel. Stephenson, to some extent, seems to be following the example of James Clavell, whose Struan family formed the backbone of his Hong Kong novels through different time periods. Having said that, one certainly doesn’t need to have read Cryptonomicon to appreciate Quicksilver.

The similarities between Cryptonomicon and Quicksilver also extend to theme and writing style. Stephenson takes frequent detours to explain the dynamics of a sun dial, the optics of a telescope, or the physics of eighteenth-century seafaring vessels. The digressions feel appropriate to a tale that features the likes of Isaac Newton, Samuel Pepys, and Gottfried Leibniz. Indeed the title Quicksilver, the common name for mercury, serves as a metaphor for the transition in modes of thinking and reasoning that the novel is trying to highlight. Daniel Waterhouse witnesses the nascent days of experimental science as we know it. The erudite dialogues and monologues sometimes made my eyes glaze over, however, and I was yearning to return to the story.

What saves Quicksilver from sometimes devolving into a mere lecture on the history of science is Neal Stephenson’s vibrant prose. Stephenson writes with the exact precision of a philosopher, but with an eye for earthy metaphors and a sensitivity towards the modern reader. I might quibble with occasional use of language that wasn’t current in the seventeenth century, but must concede that these (usually very minor) transgressions make the work far easier to read and digest. As a lover of language for language’s sake, I found Quicksilver a philological joy to read.

The colorful prose is brought to life by Simon Prebble’s artful narration. Narrating historical fiction can be almost as monumental a task as writing it. How does one lend a voice to the intellectual magnificence of a Newton or a Leibniz? Simon Prebble does a magnificent job, aided by Stephenson’s written cues, of bringing real life and character to most of the novel’s characters. The cast of Quicksilver encompasses a vast ethnic background, from British to Dutch to German to the New World, and Simon Prebble juggles this diversity with ease. Kevin Pariseau narrates only the epigraphs beginning each chapter, which are usually apropos to the following content.

One last observation about Quicksilver: it isn’t really science fiction. Okay, if you want to get pedantic, it’s actually the purest form of science fiction–fiction about science and its development. But the novel certainly isn’t science fiction in the modern genre sense. The ageless (immortal?) Enoch Root figures into the tale, and there are certainly themes reminiscent of science fiction (what is real? how does the world work?), but listeners casually browsing the science fiction portion of Audible hoping for a straightforward science fiction story will be disappointed. Like so often happens in publishing, I assume that the categorization was a marketing decision, by analogy with Stephenson’s more strictly science fiction work like Snow Crash. Still, fans of science fiction with an open mind will find lots to appreciate in these stories.

I’ve begun listening to King Of The Vagabonds, the follow-up volume to Quicksilver. The story shifts gears abruptly in both focus and tone, turning its attention now to the homeless beggar and thief Jack Shaftoe (another familiar name to readers of Cryptonomicon). Clearly the Baroque Cycle has a wide array of stories to tell, and I’m looking forward to following its tangled webs.

Posted by Seth Wilson