Matthew Hughes's Blog: barbarians of the beyond - Posts Tagged "youtube"

Jack Vance YouTube Channel

Before he died, Jack Vance and his son, John, set up a webstore to sell Jack’s backlist. I was pleased to be asked to write some blurbs for the titles, some of which are favorites of mine from way back when.

More recently, John, together with Koen Vyverman, created a Jack Vance YouTube channel. Gradually, they are producing individual YT videos a minute or so long, to stimulate interest among the vast and fortunate throng who have never read Vance – I call them fortunate, because I envy them the experience of discovery.

The individual shorts feature artwork and music chosen by Koen and a blurb narrated by John. I’ve been writing quite a few of the texts – I’ve been told I have a knack for such wordsmithery, which is not surprising because I wrote PR materials of all sorts for forty years. More recently, John asked me if I would not only write but narrate the words I’d written. I said sure, and now I’ve done a dozen or so, with more to come.

The first of them promotes Mazirian the Magician, Jack’s preferred title for his seminal work originally released under the publisher’s choice of title: The Dying Earth. If you’re interested in hearing my oddly inflected mid-Atlantic accent trying to stimulate the world to read a Jack Vance classic, tune in here:
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Published on March 27, 2015 10:06 Tags: jack-vance, matthew-hughes, mazirian-the-magician, the-dying-earth, youtube

For the Jack Vance fans

Over the past few months, I've been writing blurbs and then narrating them for a series of YouTube promotional videos extolling the works of Jack Vance, upon whose literary shoulders I teeter.

The videos are produced by Koen Vyverman, Vance aficionado and one of the forces behind the Vance Integral Project, which restored all of Jack's novels and stories to their original form, removing edits which were often crudely performed by editors whose only concern was the space available in their magazines.

Spatterlight Press is run by Jack's son John, who has become a long-distance friend. If you wnt to read Vance -- and everybody should -- it's the place to go for ebooks. And you'll be reading Vance as he wanted to be read.

Here's a link to the YouTube channel.

 
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Published on July 01, 2015 10:26 Tags: jack-vance, matthew-hughes, spatterlight-press, youtube