IGMS Issue 18 (18 page)

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I've also accumulated a lot of shorter nonfiction pieces that ran in magazines ranging from the old
Ramparts
to
F&SF
to
Locus
to Andy Porter's
Algol/Starship
, and more recently in online periodicals like Arnie Katz's
VFW
and Earl Kemp's
eI.
A couple of publishers have approached me about putting these together as a sort of critical compendium crossed with an episodic autobiography. It's a monstrous chore, but I would like to do it if I can.

A lot of these projects are by way of tying up loose ends that have been dangling for years or even decades, but somehow when I shave in the morning that fellow who peers back at me from the mirror isn't the energetic twenty-something who started all these enterprises. I may not get them all finished in my lifetime, but I want to complete as many as possible.

SCHWEITZER:
Thanks, Dick.

Letter From The Editor
Issue 18 - August 2010
   
Guest Editorial by Mark Van Name

Lose yourself in other worlds, do a good deed in this one.

I want to persuade you to buy a book. It's my book, my latest novel,
Children No More
. I don't, however, want you to buy it to put money in my pocket. I want you to buy it so that I can give even more money to a group that's working to help rehabilitate and reintegrate child soldiers and other children affected by war, a cause that matters deeply to me.

The way this works is simple: I'm donating every cent I receive from sales of the hardback edition of
Children No More
to Falling Whistles. They then will use the money to work with groups to help such kids in the Congo. That's it. You buy a book, enjoy a good story (I hope and believe), and in the process you do a good deed.

Editor Edmund Schubert and I met the other night at a party at ReConStruction, the North American Science Fiction Convention in Raleigh. When I told him about this giveaway program and the horrific practices of using children as soldiers, he offered me the chance to write this guest editorial. I readily accepted. He's not paying me for this piece, of course, nor would I take money for it if he offered any; I'd tell him to donate it to Falling Whistles.

If you're reading the InterGalactic Medicine Show, odds are high that you, like millions of other people all over the world, have read Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game. In that book (and the many others in that universe), he addresses some aspects of the use of child soldiers. In
Children No More
, I focus briefly on the horrors the children experience and then at greater length on the challenges of rehabilitating and reintegrating them into normal society. Don't get me wrong: this book is not a polemic, nor is it non-fiction. As in all my books, my primary emphasis is on the story; if you don't enjoy reading it, I've messed up.

I wanted to explore this topic because it matters a great deal to me and because it is so clearly and simply and inarguably wrong. Estimates place the number of child soldiers in the Congo as around 30,000 and the worldwide total as about 300,000. This is unacceptable. Different groups may argue about the value of different causes, but I've never met anyone who thinks this practice is a good idea.

It is particularly important to me for reasons that I discussed briefly in the afterword to the book. As I wrote there:

"I must confess to a special connection to this cause because of a personal experience -- not, I hasten to note, as a child soldier. I have never experienced anything as bad as what these boys and girls undergo.

"I did, however, spend three years in a youth group that trained boys in how to be soldiers. The group's intentions were good: To use military conventions and structures to teach discipline, fitness, teamwork, and many other valuable lessons. It certainly accomplished many of those goals with me.

"The year I joined, however, was 1965, and war was ramping up in Viet Nam. I was ten years old. On my first day, an active soldier on leave showed up and acted as our drill sergeant. That day, I saw my first -- but not my last -- necklace of human ears and learned the ethics of collecting them. That day, I stood at attention in the hot Florida sun while this grown man screamed at me and, when I cried, punched me in the stomach so hard that I fell to the ground and threw up. He put his boot on my head and ground the side of my face into my vomit.

"That was not the worst day I had in those three years. It wasn't even close.

"My worst days with that group were nothing compared to what the child soldiers endure. Nothing."

These kids did nothing wrong. Many died senselessly. Those who lived carry within them the deep, soul-ravaging stains of violence. Trained to kill, traumatized by war, they are the children no one wants. Rehabilitating them and reintegrating them into normal society is difficult and expensive, but it is possible. The money that I would make from the sales of this hardback will help. If you don't want to buy a book, stop by the Falling Whistles site and make a donation; every little bit truly can help.

Thanks for listening.

Resources and associated links:

Falling Whistles:
www.fallingwhistles.com

This program:
www.childrennomore.com

About the Author

Mark L. Van Name is a writer and technologist. As a science fiction author, he has published three previous novels, edited or co-edited two anthologies, and written many short stories. Those stories have appeared in a wide variety of books and magazines, including
Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine
, many original anthologies, and
The Year's Best Science Fiction
. As a technologist, he is the CEO of a fact-based marketing and technology assessment firm, Principled Technologies, Inc., that is based in the Research Triangle area of North Carolina. He has worked with computer technology for his entire professional career and has published over a thousand articles in the computer trade press, as well as a broad assortment of essays and reviews.

For more information, visit his website,
www.marklvanname.com
, or follow his blog,
markvanname.blogspot.com
.

For more from Orson Scott Card's
InterGalactic Medicine Show visit:
Copyright © 2010 Hatrack River Enterprises

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