essentialsaltes: (Default)
 The Playboy Book of SF collects a lot of big names Bradbury, Le Guin, Niven, Vonnegut, PKD, Ellison... 

The collection comes from 1998, and some of the stories date back to the 50s. But not every author is a household name, and while most of these were *somebody* at the time, many of them were not yet undying giants of SF. Like most jumbled anthologies, the quality varies, and some age better than others. I will not approvingly one of my favorite shorts of all time, "Gianni" by Bob Silverberg. They use a time machine to resurrect Pergolesi and he gets pulled into the world of dubstep (more or less). The Apotheosis of Myra is pleasantly wwird. PKD's "I hope I shall Arrive Soon" was sadly retitled "Frozen Journey" for Playboy. Many of the authors take the license Playboy offers to add some sex, but not all.

Of Sound Mind by Nina Kraus
How Our Brain Constructs a Meaningful Sonic World 

Kraus is a researcher with a penchant for interdisciplinary looks at sound and the mind. There's a lot of great research on how the brain processes sound in terms of hearing and music and speech. But her penchant for everything leaves especially the latter half of the book more scattershot. Less a cohesive picture than a list of experimental outcomes.

The Rim of Morning by William Sloane collects two weird novels from the 1930s that feel like they dropped out of a parallel universe. The New York Review of Books resurrected them with an added intro by Stephen King. Both have science fictiony, horrory elements, but their general outline and shape is more akin to straight fiction. The closest comparison to the mood that leaps to my mind is something like Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca. A story of romantic, but possibly ill-considered, love. Manners and insults. But brooding dread and death lurking here and there. As for content, the first novel, To Walk the Night, is basically Lovecraft's Thing on the Doorstep, crossed with Lovecraft's Beyond the Wall of Sleep. And then written by du Maurier. Some of the similarities make me hard to think it coincidence, but Sloane had the good fortune to have Lovecraft die before he published it. I keed. The second, The Edge of Running Water, is less interesting and even more ploddingly paced. Somehow, it's the one that was made into a movie with Karloff -- The Devil Commands (1941).
essentialsaltes: (Default)
This got picked up by the NYT/PBS Newshour's Now Read This book club. It's been an interesting experience seeing a more general audience deal with a speculative work. I think there was more than the usual amount of "Nope. I'm skipping this one." And even among those who joined in, there was a surprising amount of "I don't understand what's going on!"

I don't think it's that inaccessible, but I wonder how much I have been 'trained' to understand modern speculative fiction by having consumed a lot of it and followed its progression. Maybe if you haven't read Anne McCaffrey and Katherine Kurtz, it's hard to absorb The Fifth Season. But again, I don't think it's that hard to take in, even if the world and reality is very different from our own.

In fact, it's so different that I'm somewhat surprised so many people think the book has some trenchant relevance to discussions of climate and race. I mean, surely it's there - persecution and control, and largescale climate effects on an entire world - but apart from very loose analogies, it doesn't seem very applicable. 

The story itself is interesting and engaging as you learn more about the world, and its characters. But... not enough for me to go on for a whole trilogy. Another common complaint in the book club (and a merited one) is the choice of a first book of a trilogy.
essentialsaltes: (agent)
Leviathan Wakes is the first in the Expanse series, which recently became a Syfy series. A pleasant blend of sf and detective noir. A few plot elements lacked in verisimilitude, but a pretty fun ride.
essentialsaltes: (quantum Mechanic)
They said that Einstein's curved space theory was wrong, and it was the ten-dimensional multiple theory that was right.

John W. Campbell, "Elimination" (1936)
essentialsaltes: (pKD)
A few images from the pulps I picked up at an estate sale.

Listerine to guard against Infection Dandruff!
essentialsaltes: (Grinch)
The Survivors' Menagerie is available for download at Goodreads, Amazon, and other locations. I think the pricing is a uniform $0.99.
Previously, at Kyle's behest, I reviewed an anthology in which Kyle's strong story was one of my very favorites. This time, he asked me take a look at this, a standalone novelette. As in "Too Close for Comfort", this story takes a close look at a science experiment that's quite a bit beyond our present capabilities, presents some ethical quandaries, and then details the dramatic consequences.

This time, it's time travel. Not just time travel, but the 'abduction' of subjects from the past (who were fated to die soon (shades of Silverberg's "Gianni", a favorite of mine)) for research purposes. A gladiator, a young woman from the Titanic, and a physicist enter a bar are the primary subjects addressed in the story. Through their interaction with the research staff and each other, they and the principal investigator all advance toward their destinies.

Unfortunately, I wasn't as impressed by this effort. The Gladiator's Tale, while clever and exciting, is not integrated enough with the rest of the characters and overall story. I have some issues with some rather suicidal motivations. A few other details here and there bother me, but it's hard to explain without ruining the story. There is a lot to like about the story, particularly the resolution of the main(?) story (although I'm not so keen on the antepenultimate and penultimate paragraphs). But something about the relative proportions and integration of the various stories, and some of the character motivations, didn't quite work for me.

I believe Kyle also acted as publisher in this case. I read it as a PDF and the format and text was perfectly fine, and the copyediting nearly flawless -- I spotted just one 'and' for 'an'. But I think the story could well have benefitted from the outside input of an independent editor.
essentialsaltes: (PKD)
Jerry Weist's science fiction and fantasy art and book collection. Frazetta, Emsh, Virgil Finlay... I haven't even gotten to the books yet.
essentialsaltes: (PKD)
via Improbable Research...
New Maps of Science Fiction (1977)

"Before we could analyze the 27 x 130 = 3,510 bytes of data generated by these questions, we had to punch the questionnaire responses onto IBM cards and feed them to a computer."

The researchers queried 130 fen about authors and generated interesting data like:



But it's also interesting to get a reading on fen circa 1977 with their favorite authors:

1. Isaac Asimov
2. Arthur C. Clarke
3. Robert A. Heinlein
4. Larry Niven
5. Poul Anderson
6. Theodore Sturgeon
7. Roger Zelazny
8. Fritz Leiber
9. J. R. R. Tolkien
10. Ursula K. LeGuin
11. Robert Silverberg
12. Clifford D. Simak
13. Jack Vance
14. Harlan Ellison
15. Frank Herbert
16. John Brunner
17. Philip Jose Farmer
18. Anne McCaffrey
19. Samuel R. Delany
20. Gordon R. Dickson
21. Philip K. Dick
22. H.G. Wells
23. R. A. Lafferty
24. John W. Campbell
25. Jules Verne
26. Edgar R. Burroughs
27. H. P. Lovecraft
essentialsaltes: (wingedlionbook)
The Frankfurt trip and its sequelae, catching up with the other work that was not Frankfurt-related, and preparing for Maxicon have spared you from my recent reads. But no longer!
Sheri Tepper, pseudo-Ambrose Bierce, Gene Wolfe & special guest star: Kiwi Evangelist Ray Comfort )
essentialsaltes: (Robot in Orbit)
1:30 PMStar Trek "Mirror, Mirror" TV-G
2:30 PMStar Trek "Amok Time" TV-G
3:30 PMStar Trek "For the World Is Hollow and I Have Touched the Sky" TV-G
4:30 PMStar Trek "The City on the Edge of Forever" TV-G
5:30 PMStar Trek "The Trouble With Tribbles" TV-G
essentialsaltes: (Default)
Agh. Yesterday and today, Profiles in History is auctioning off Forry Ackerman's stuff.

The auction catalog is a 27 meg document with great photos of stuff I want and probably can't afford. And can I look through a thousand entries from today's auction in time to bid on anything? Doubtful.
essentialsaltes: (Agent)
"This is a literary idea."

"If it's Sands of Love, I've already heard it."

"That was a great plot. No, it isn't romantic fiction this time." ... "Imagine, if you will," Slater said dramatically, sweeping his arms out wide, "a --"

"Keep it short," Graham told him.

Slater looked hurt. "It's sort of a Byzantine future, a degenerate technocratic empire with -- "

"Oh, not science fiction again."

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