David Louis Edelman David Louis Edelman

David Louis Edelman, a writer and web programmer, is the author of the Jump 225 trilogy (Infoquake, MultiReal and Geosynchron). He has been nominated for the John W. Campbell Awards for Best Novel and Best New Writer. Infoquake was named Barnes & Noble Explorations' Top SF Novel of 2006.

Recent Entries RSS Feed

David J. Williams Reading Tonight in DC

The Ending of “Geosynchron”

“Geosynchron” Is Here. Officially.

Library Journal: “Geosynchron” “Takes Cyberpunk to the Next Level”

The “Geosynchron” Website Is Live

Full Archives...

Best of the Blog

Will the Novel Die?

The Bourne Paranoia

Introductory Science Fiction Books for Literary Readers

How I Promoted My Book

The Day “The Empire Strikes Back” Changed Everything

More...

Random Entries

Downloadable Excerpts and New Background Article for “Infoquake”

Building the Perfect User Interface (Part 1)

How I Promoted My Book, Part 2

Categories • Tags

Subscribe by Email

Sign up to get new blog entries sent straight to your email inbox. (Your email address will not be rented or sold, ever.)

Register | Log in

Archive for February, 1994

  1. Douglas Cooper’s Amnesia  • 
    This book review was originally published in the Baltimore City Paper on February 23, 1994. Canadian author Douglas Cooper’s debut novel, Amnesia, is a lot like an Escher painting. It twists your mind into strange positions, it dabbles in philosophically challenging angles and perceptions that could never exist in real life, and it ultimately leaves [...]
  2. Elizabeth Tallent’s Honey  • 
    This book review was originally published in the Baltimore City Paper on February 9, 1994. “It gets James out of bed in the barely-there light,” Elizabeth Tallent writes at the beginning of the story “James Was Here,” the last (and best) in her new collection, Honey. “He’s going to carry a gun.” Like most of [...]