This is a Worldbuilders blog.
So Worldbuilders is almost at an end for this year. We’ve got one last blog full of prizes. We’ve got music and some other cool miscellanea, including some signed DVD copies of The Guild.
But first, news:
First and foremost, the deadline: The fundraiser ends on January 15th. You have to donate before then to have a chance at winning the fabulous stuff we’re raffling off.
Second, as I’m writing this, we’ve already raised over 110,000 dollars. That means people have donated twice as much as last year.
This is empirical evidence that y’all are awesome. Seriously. Before I was just guessing, but now I can prove it with math and such.
Thirdly and lastly, a tiny story:
Yesterday Sarah was busy feeding the baby when I walked past her bedroom.
“Sweetie?” she called. “Can you do me a favor?”
“You can’t afford it,” I said.
I am, of course referring to the recently completed auction for the Golden Ticket. Apparently the thought of winning a favor from me was worth over 15,000 dollars to someone.
This leaves me stunned and more than slightly frightened. If someone paid, like, seventeen bucks for it, I’d feel free to tell them to go screw if they asked for something unreasonable. But for 15,000 dollars, I worry that I might end up being pressured into something morally reprehensible, like kicking a koala bear.
Anyway, I hope the favor granting goes smoothly. Unlike the uncannily timed comic that just came up on Cyanide & Happiness…

Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net
Okay. Enough news. On to the prizes….
- Two CDs of Manticores and Owlbears: Songs of Dragons and the Dungeons in which they dwell! by Daniel Marcotte.
I met Daniel Marcotte at Gencon this year. He was strolling the halls all minstreled up, and carrying a gorgeous lute.
We got to talking and quickly established our mutual geek cred. He gave me a CD. I gave him a book. The rest, as they say, is history.
This particular CD is a bunch of D&D songs played on classical instruments. Fun stuff. Plus, I’ve heard it rumored that listening to Dan the Bard’s CD gives you +1 on your next encounter. So you might want to look into it.
- Two CD’s of Unicorns and Dragons: Love Songs, Drinking Songs, and Fighting Songs from the Bristol Renaissance Faire! by Daniel Marcotte.
More from Dan. I’d already have a sample of his music up on my webpage right now if I weren’t so busy with book and baby. Hopefully soon.
- Two CD’s of To Walk the Land by Daniel Marcotte.
Not all of Dan’s music is steeped in modern-day Geekery. Some of it is old-school geekery as well. This CD is “Tales of Wizards, Knights, Pirates and Princesses, set to music of the Ap Huw Manuscript (16th c Welsh Bardic Tradition) and transcribed for Renaissance Lute.”
- A CD of Side by Side by Duo Siqueira Lima.
After I gushed about how awesome they were, we actually got in touch. I sent them a copy of the Brazilian translation of the book, they sent me some CDs for the fundraiser.
“They are considered a new phenomenon in the Brazilian guitar. With a mix of perfect technique, infallible repertory and a lot of charisma Fernando Lima and Cecilia Siqueira are winning admirers where they go” Published on “Violao Pro” Magazine, Sao Paulo – Brazil
You can also catch their music on their website and myspace page.
- Six copies of Only Ghosts Remain by Fermata.
I caught Fermata playing about a year ago at the Afterdark, the local coffee shop here in Stevens Point. It was cool stuff, and it gave me some ideas about what type of music a group of eclectic troupers might play.
I’d have a sample of their stuff up on my webpage too if I wasn’t so swamped…
Review from Sepiachord.com, “Fermata are not most bands and make the smooth mixing of pop elements and folk elements seem easy.There’s a confidence here that makes what they do feel light, effortless. Despite the somber mood they evoke this confidence gives a sense of hope and positiveness to the work. “Only Ghosts Remain” is a chamber pop album for goths-who-smile. This collection proves that all “gothic Americana” doesn’t have to be gutter tales of depravity and desperation.”
You can listen to the music of Fermata at their myspace page.
- A CD of I Was Already Too Late by Eli August.
Another Wisconsin musician was nice enough to kick in a CD of his work:
From Eli August’s myspace page: “Eli August creates music with zeal and energy, focusing on mood, tonality and lyricism. The songwriting mines memories of past regrets and failures to create melancholy aural set pieces that are sincere, passionate and some times dark, but never completely devoid of redemption.”
- Five copies of Carrot Carrot! by db pedersen.
I guarantee you’ve never heard anything like this stuff. I could try to explain it to you, but I just don’t have the words for it…
Description from SkullsofHeaven.com, “db is a self-taught throat singer, nature mimic, and multi-voiced performance artist [...] He has rolled up his sleeves and written lyrics for some of the songs, though he still keeps the emphasis on wordless imaginary flight with his vocal gymnastics. Playing bass, bansuri flute, and percussion he creates menageries of animal worlds with minimal looping effects and expressive feats of multi-tonal singing.”
- Three CD’s by Janis Ian, Folk is the New Black, The Best of Janis Ian: The Autobiography Collection and Billie’s Bones.
Most folks know about Janis Ian because she’s a Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter who’s been making music for over 40 years. Fewer people realize that in addition to being a talented musician, Janis is also active in the Sci-fi community.
She contacted me after reading my The Name of the Wind and said some very flattering things. Then, despite her disappointment that book two wasn’t finished yet, she was nice enough to donate some CDs to Worldbuilders.
Blogcritics.org say, “Best Of Janis Ian: The Autobiography Collection is a two-disc retrospective of Janis Ian’s career. All of her hits and well know songs are included as well as some of her equally impressive but not as famous new material.”
- Two copies of Soul Catcher by Leigh Bridger (pseudonym for NYT bestselling author Deborah Smith) with signed bookplates.
“Now I can add another favorite to my Hall of Urban Fantasy Fame: Deborah Smith writing as Leigh Bridger… tense, heart wrenching and lovely.” – Pam Headrick, bookseller – A Thirsty Mind
- Two copies of Once Bitten by Kalayna Price with signed bookplates.
“Once Bitten is a solid urban fantasy debut with enough original ideas and twists to satisfy readers looking for something different and fresh.” – SciFi Guy Blog
- One set of the first two books in the Unbidden Magic series, Moonstone and Moonrise by Marilee Brothers with signed bookplates.
“Marilee Brothers’ novel stands out for its humor and Allie’s strong point-of-view as an underdog finding her place in the world. This is another good choice for public library teen/fantasy collections. I look forward to the next title in this series.” – Grinnell College Libraries
- A copy of Mutant Chronicles by Matt Forbeck. Signed by the author.
From the back of the book: “It will be a dangerous mission. I don’t expect that any of us will survive. But it’s a chance to save mankind, to save our world. Maybe the last chance.”
- A copy of Blood Bowl: Rumble in the Jungle by Matt Forbeck. Signed by the author.
“The action begins in the very first paragraph. From then on it is non-stop action, adventure, humor, and blood.” — Huntress Reviews
- A set of two books in Knights of the Silver Dragon, Prophecy of the Dragons and The Dragons Revealed by Matt Forbeck. Signed by the author.
“A thrilling series of adventures that will not only get kids interested in fantasy, but also the Dungeons & Dragons game as well.” — Tim Janson
- Two sets of the first two seasons of The Guild. Signed by members of the cast: Felicia Day, Sandeep Parikh, Jeff Lewis, Vincent Caso, Amy Okuda, and Robin Thorsen.
I’m guessing most of you already know about Felicia Day. She was Penny in Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along blog, after all.
However, I’m guessing some of you might be woefully ignorant about the The Guild: Felicia’s brilliant mindchild.
I got these copies of The Guild signed when I was out at San Diego Comic-con this year. I was doing it for Worldbuilders, of course. Not because I have a thing for Felicia Day, and certainly not because of my my burgeoning bromance with Sandeep Parikh.
Whatever my motivation, the result is the same: delightfully signed swag available if you donate at least 10 on my page at Team Heifer before January 15th.
Do it. You know you want to make the world a better place.
Want more details about the Worldbuilders fundraiser? Click HERE.
With thanks to our sponsor, Subterranean Press.













Fanmail Q & A: Coolness
It’s been a while since I answered an e-mail from a reader. How about we do that?
Jake,
You strike on a topic I’ve been curious about for some time. How cool am I?
As I’ve mentioned before in the blog, growing up, I wasn’t one of the cool kids. But things change, and these days geek is chic. I’m willing to admit to the fact that these days, I might actually be a little cool.
Your letter poses an interesting problem though. If you’d simply asked, “Are you cool?” I could have gotten away with answering “maybe” or “kinda.” But you’ve asked for a _degree_ of coolness. What’s more, you’ve requested that I *seriously* consider the problem.
That means we need to use science and shit. We need quantifiable units of coolness that we can plug into formulas. We need to be rigorous.
Unfortunately, to the best of my knowledge, the BIPM hasn’t established a standard unit by which we can measure coolness. I can’t just tell you that I’m say, 85 pascals of cool. Or 158 newtons. Or whatever.
That means if we want to determine how cool I am, we have to measure me against some sort of universally accepted standard of cool. We need to develop our own yardstick, as it were.
So, let’s pick two people who are undeniably cool. The king and queen of geek cool: Felicia Day and Neil Gaiman.
Now we need some numbers. While popularity isn’t quite the same thing as cool, you have to admit they’re closely related. Since I don’t have access to things like book sales or website hits, we’ll have to go to the lowest common denominator: Facebook.
(Yes, I know. Technically, Myspace would be the lowest common denominator. But there’s only so low I’m willing to go, even for science.)
A quick search of fan pages reveals the following stats.
Felicia: 192,000 fans.
Neil: 90,000 fans.
Me: 10,000 fans.
Now we could stop here and say, that I’m about .05 as cool as Felicia. Or that I’m roughly .11 of a Gaiman. Or something like that.
But drawing data from only one source strikes me as slipshod. To round things out, why don’t we take a look at Goodreads rankings?
Here’s a screenshot of their list of most-followed people.
[Edit: Yes, I know these numbers have changed since I took the screenshot. I'm not redoing the math.]
As a side note, you can see that according to Goodreads, I’m ever-so slightly cooler than Wil Wheaton. I like how it looks like his little Lego man is pissed at me for being above him.
“Curse you, Rothfuss,” Lego-Wheaton says. “How dare you get between me and Felicia day?”
“Takest not that tone with me,” Russian-dictator-looking-Rothfuss glowers from above. “Lest I crush you with my manly, blue-lit beard.”
“Bring it Hagrid,” he replies. “I’ll beat you like a redheaded stepchild.”
“What are you going to use?” I say. “Your kung-fu grip? Hell, you don’t even have any elbows!”
Wait… Sorry, what was I talking about again?
Oh. Right. Coolness. I guess I lost a few points just there.
Anyway, as you can see things stand like this:
Me: 383 friends, 308 people following my reviews.
Felicia: 2,710 friends, 380 people following her reviews.
Not pictured above, Neil Gaiman sits at #1 on this list. Topping the chart on a mountain of cool with 5,175 friends and 3,133 people following his reviews.
Let’s just combine these for simplicity’s sake:
Gaiman: 8308
Felicia: 3090
Me: 691
Because the Facebook numbers are really high compared to Goodreads, we have to normalize them by multiplying by .045. (Don’t ask how I got there. It’s boring. If you understand statistics, you know how it works.) That gives us:
Gaiman: 4050
Felicia: 8550
Me: 450
So we add these together and apply the bonus multipliers.
Gaimain:
Medium Bonus – Novels, Comics, Movies, Audiobooks: *1.4
Association Bonus – Engaged to Amanda Palmer *1.5
Flair Bonus – Accent *1.4
Appearance Bonus: Sexy *1.5
12358 *1.4 *1.5 *1.4 *1.5 = 54499
Felicia:
Medium Bonus – Television, Webisodes, Comics: *1.3
(The Guild comic is coming out soon, in case you didn’t know.)
Association Bonus – Works with Joss Whedon *1.6
Flair Bonus – Smells like flowers and PS3 *1.3
Appearance Bonus: Sexy *1.5
11640 *1.3 *1.6 *1.2 *1.5 = 47212
Me:
Flair Bonus: Beard *1.2
Penalty: Engaging in imaginary smack talk with Lego-Wheaton. *.09
1141 *1.2 *0.9 = 1232
You still with me? Now we have to create our yardstick for the measurement of geek-coolness. Imagine if Neil Gaiman and Felicia Day were somehow alchemically combined into one creature. Some ubercool, sexy, hermaphroditic, webisode-creating, rockstar, gamer, author thing.
I think it’s safe to say that godlike creature would be the ultimate amalgam of geek cool.
So if we add together the scores of Neil Gaiman and Felicia Day, we get roughly 100,000 units. These I hereby term Gaiman-Day units. They will hereafter be used to determine how cool someone is. 100,000 Gaiman-Day units is the coolest you can be without collapsing into some manner of singularity.
So there we go. Now we have a way to quantify how cool I am, Jake. I am exactly 1232 Gaiman-Day units of cool. Only about one percent as cool as it’s possible to be.
I hope this answers your question, Jake.
pat