Pixel Scroll 3/26/18 You Know How To Pixel, Don’t You Steve? You Just Put Your Files Together And Scroll

(1) BANKS WITH AND WITHOUT THE M. Abigail Nussbaum’s latest column for Lawyers, Guns & Money is “A Political History of the Future: Iain M. Banks”.

In this installment of A Political History of the Future, our series about how science fiction constructs the politics and economics of its future worlds, we discuss the late, great SF author Iain M. Banks, and specifically his Culture series.

Iain M. Banks died in 2013, and his last work of science fiction was published in 2012. In the context of this series, one might even argue that the last book Banks published that is relevant to our interests was Look to Windward (2000), or maybe The Algebraist (2004). There are, however, two reasons to go back to Banks in 2018. The first is that last summer, the University of Illinois Press’s Modern Masters of Science Fiction series (edited by Gary K. Wolfe), which produces short studies about important mid- and late-20th century science fiction authors, published what is to my knowledge the first complete critical study of Banks’s life and work. Iain M. Banks, by the Hugo-nominated British critic Paul Kincaid (by next week we will know whether he’s been nominated a second time for this volume), is both a biography of Banks’s life and his writing career, and an analysis of the themes running through his work. It is essential reading for any Banks fan.

(2) THIS SPACE NOT INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK. Farah Mendlesohn’s book about Heinlein now has a title.

One of the comments I’ve frequently made, is that in some ways I have been channelling the great man himself. Verbosity, intemperance, etc etc. But nowhere has this been truer than my inability to come up with a title. Heinlein had a terrible ear for titles. Most of his stories were titled by magazine editors, and most of his adult novels were titled by Virginia. His original title for Number of the Beast, for example, was The Panki-Barsoom Number of the Beast, or even just Panki-Barsoom.

So I did what Heinlein did and outsourced the problem, in this case to many friends on facebook.

And the title is…..

The Pleasant Profession of Robert A. Heinlein.

With a release date in March 2019.

(3) A WAY. In “Mountain and Forest” Nick Stember analyzes “the Tao of Ursula K. Le Guin.”

For science fiction fans, the fact that The Left-Hand of Darkness owes a debt of inspiration to Taoism is nothing new, of course. As early as 1974 Douglas Barbour was pointing out parallels in Le Guin’s earlier books in the Hainish cycle, and Le Guin herself said as much in  interviews. Perhaps more surprising is the fact that Le Guin’s last novel in the Hainish cycle, The Telling, was directly inspired by the Cultural Revolution:

I learned that Taoist religion, an ancient popular religion of vast complexity and a major element of Chinese culture, had been suppressed, wiped out, by Mao Tse-tung…In one generation, one psychopathic tyrant destroyed a tradition two thousand years old…And I knew nothing about it. The enormity of the event, and the enormity of my ignorance, left me stunned.

(4) SUSPICION. The authorities spent the day grilling two writers:

(5) DON’T BOTHER ME BOY. And yet they let this one go Scot-free! Richard Paolinelli, borrowing a page from Lou Antonelli’s book – the one printed on a thousand-sheet roll – tried to embroil Camestros Felapton with the Aussie cops:

(6) PRO TIP. This is the way professional writers handle feedback, says Cole McCade in “The Author’s Guide to Author/Reviewer Interactions”. Strangely enough, calling the cops isn’t on his list.

B-but…I read a bad review of my book!

Then stop reading your goddamn reviews.

…all right. Okay. I know you won’t. I still read my reviews sometimes, I just don’t talk about it. And I generally try to stay on the positive ones; they’re a good pick-me-up. Even those, though, I don’t talk about.

That’s the thing. You can read reviews all you want, but you can’t engage with them save for in very specific circumstances. Don’t like a review on GoodReads. Don’t flag it for removal unless it actually meets the guidelines, such as posting derogatory things about you as a person/author rather than reviewing the book. Don’t comment on the review. Don’t send your fans to comment on the review defending you. (I actually have a policy in my street team that anyone caught attacking negative reviewers gets booted from the group.) Don’t seek out tweets about your book and reply to them (particularly if you or the book aren’t mentioned by name; if you’re stalking reviewers on social media for the idlest sideways mention of your book, that’s fucking creepy and intrusive). If you happen to have friendly conversations with a reviewer, do not bring up their review or try to chat about it.

You know why?

Because reviews are not for you.

They’re for other readers.

(7) EXPLOITATION. At the SFWA Blog, John Walters is irate about “The Egregious Practice of Charging Reading Fees” – although his examples are from outside the sff field —

The sad state of affairs in the field of literary magazines is that a high percentage now charge reading fees. The amounts range from two dollars to five dollars or more, but the average is three dollars. They justify it in all sorts of ways. Some, to avoid the stigma of charging reading fees, call it a handling fee or a software fee. Evidently they haven’t heard that many email services are free. Some, even as they ask it of writers, say outright: This is not a reading fee. Yeah, right. As if calling it by another name makes it all better. Several sites explain that if you were to send the manuscripts by mail you would have to spend at least that much in postage, so send that postage money to them instead. Most modern magazines and anthologies are getting away from postal submissions anyway, both as a money saver and to protect the environment, so that argument doesn’t make any sense.

(8) BSFATUBE. The British Science Fiction Association’s publication Vector has branched out to producing YouTube videos. Here’s the first one:

Glasgow-based DJ Sophie Reilly, aka ‘Sofay’, talks about her love of science fiction and the connections that exist between some of her favourite records and novels such as Ursula Le Guin’s ‘The Left Hand of Darkness’ and Stanislaw Lem’s ‘Solaris’…

 

(9) CARRINGTON OBIT. Actress Debbie Lee Carrington has died at the age of 58:

She began her acting career in 1981, appearing in the Chevy Chase-starring comedy, Under the Rainbow. Later, Carrington landed a role in Return of the Jedi, famously playing the Ewok who consoles another Ewok that was blown up by a landmine. She ended up starring in The Ewok Adventure and Ewoks: Battle for Endor as Weechee, Wicket’s older brother. Carrington was also an advocate for the rights of people with disabilities in Hollywood and also had a degree in child psychology, which earned her much respect in the industry along with her giant body of work. Mike Quinn, who worked with Debbie Lee Carrington on Return of the Jedi, had this to say.

“So sad to hear of the passing of a fellow Return Of The Jedi performer Debbie Lee Carrington. She was an advocate for actors with disabilities and had a degree in child psychology. She had done so much, not only as an Ewok but was inside the costume for Howard The Duck, appeared in Total Recall, Grace & Frankie, Dexter, Captain Eo, the list goes on… Way too young. She was a real powerhouse! My condolences to all her family and friends at this time.”

(10) CAMERON OBIT. SF artist Martin G. “Bucky” Cameron died unexpectedly on March 26.

For over 35 years he worked as a professional artist. He was the first 3D artist at the Lucasfilm games division. Other game companies he worked for included NAMCO, Broderbund, and Spectrum Holobyte. He also did art for magazines including Analog and Penthouse, and for myriad companies.

His recent project was creating a shared Steampunk world with Robert E. Vardeman. The first issue came out in February.

MT Davis adds, “Martin was usually known as ‘Bucky’ at the Cons he attended and was part of the Sacramento/Bay Area Fan nexus that went into the computer Gaming industry as it rose in the late 80’s early 90’s. Very congenial and always cordial accepting of almost all.”

(11) TODAY’S YESTERDAY’S DAY

It’s Tolkien Reading Day!

Tolkien Reading Day is held on the 25th of March each year.

It has been organised by the Tolkien Society since 2003 to encourage fans to celebrate and promote the life and works of J.R.R. Tolkien by reading favourite passages. We particularly encourage schools, museums and libraries to host their own Tolkien Reading Day events.

Why 25 March?

The 25th of March is the date of the downfall of the Lord of the Rings (Sauron) and the fall of Barad-dûr. It’s as simple as that!

(12) TODAY IN HISTORY

  • March 26, 1985 Outer Limits was reincarnated for TV.
  • March 26, 1989 Quantum Leap made its TV premiere.
  • March 26, 2010 Hot Tub Time Machine appeared in theaters.

(13) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY BOY

  • Born March 26, 1931 – Leonard Nimoy

(14) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY VACCINE

On March 26, 65 years ago, Dr. Jonas Salk announced he had successfully tested a vaccine against polio. Look back at Dr. Salk’s achievement.

Alan Baumler comments, “If you are wondering ‘Who is the model for the heroic scientist who saves the world?’ as seen in thousands of SF stories, it is probably him.”

From the Wikipedia:

Author Jon Cohen noted, “Jonas Salk made scientists and journalists alike go goofy. As one of the only living scientists whose face was known the world over, Salk, in the public’s eye, had a superstar aura. Airplane pilots would announce that he was on board and passengers would burst into applause. Hotels routinely would upgrade him into their penthouse suites. A meal at a restaurant inevitably meant an interruption from an admirer, and scientists approached him with drop-jawed wonder as though some of the stardust might rub off.”

For the most part, however, Salk was “appalled at the demands on the public figure he has become and resentful of what he considers to be the invasion of his privacy”, wrote The New York Times, a few months after his vaccine announcement.

(15) CAPTAIN MY CAPTAIN. Not much about superhero movies has to make logical sense, but there’s an odd reason why this development does. Inverse reports that “‘Captain Marvel’ Will Bring Back Two ‘Guardians of the Galaxy’ Villains” who audiences have already seen killed off.

Captain Marvel may be the 22nd movie in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, but thanks to its Nineties setting, it’s chronologically the second film in the series, following Captain America’s World War II setting. That means that MCU characters who died in recent movies would still be alive during Captain Marvel’s time, and Marvel revealed on Monday that three somewhat unexpected deceased characters will be appearing in the upcoming film.

In a posting announcing the start of principal photography on Captain Marvel, starring Brie Larson as the titular hero, Marvel announced that Djimon Hounsou, Lee Pace, and Clark Gregg would all make appearances in the upcoming film. Hounsou and Pace played Guardians of the Galaxy villains Korath the Pursuer and Ronan the Accuser, respectively, while Gregg played the beloved Agent Coulson in the MCU’s Phase One (and continues to play the character on the TV show Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.)

(16) OH BRAVE NEW WORD. Tor.com’s Emily Asher-Perrin investigates “What We Mean When We Call Something ‘Shakespearean’”.

It does seem a term that falls into two categories: (a) a term used to denote high quality, or (b) a term used to denote a certain type of story. Sometimes it is used to indicate both of these things at the same time. But we see it everywhere, and often reapplied past the point of meaning. When Marvel Studios released the first Thor film in 2011, it was heralded as Shakespearean. When Black Panther was released earlier this year, it was labeled the same. Why? In Thor, the characters are mythological figures who speak in slightly anachronistic dialects, and family drama is the three-dollar phrase of the hour. Black Panther also contains some elements of family drama, but it is primarily a story about royalty and history and heritage.

So what about any of this is Shakespearean?

(17) APOSTLE TO THE CURMUDGEONS. What do Ambrose Bierce and the fashion magazine Cosmo have in common? Doctor Strangemind’s Kim Huett says you might be surprised: “Ambrose Bierce Buries Jules Verne”.

In Cosmopolitan Magazine, Vol. XL No. 2, December 1905 [Bierce] reacted to what he considered to be a hagiographic response to the death of Jules Verne:

The death of Jules Verne several months ago is a continuing affliction, a sharper one than the illiterate can know, for they are spared many a fatiguing appreciation of his talent, suggested by the sad event. With few exceptions, these “appreciations,” as it is now the fashion of anthropolaters to call their devotional work, are devoid of knowledge, moderation and discrimination. They are all alike, too, in ascribing to their subject the highest powers of imagination and the profoundest scientific attainments. In respect of both these matters he was singularly deficient, but had in a notable degree that which enables one to make the most of such gifts and acquirements as one happens to have: a patient, painstaking diligence—what a man of genius has contemptuously, and not altogether fairly, called “mean industry.” Such as it was, Verne’s imagination obeyed him very well, performing the tasks set for it and never getting ahead of him—apres vous, monsieur. A most polite and considerate imagination, We are told with considerable iteration about his power of prophecy: in the “Nautilus,” for example, he foreshadows submarine navigation. Submarine navigation had for ages been a dream of inventors and writers; I dare say the Egyptians were familiar with it…

(18) STOKERS. The Horror Writers Association has posted video of the 2018 Bram Stoker Awards ceremony held at StokerCon in Providence, RI on March 3.

(19) ROBO PUNCHING. NPR’s Glen Weldon, in “‘Pacific Rim Uprising’ serves up another helping of mech and cheese”, holds a mock press conference:

REPORTER #1: … and then we clucked our tongues, the way we do, and sat there a while basking in our keenly developed aesthetic sense. Then we got to wondering who in the world would ever actually see it.

CRITIC: I mean … you shouldn’t.

REPORTER #1: So you agree. (Cluck.)

CRITIC: Do I agree that you shouldn’t see it? I very much do. I mean, listen to yourself. You expressly do not count yourself among the cohort of giant-robots-fight-giant-monsters potential filmgoers, safe to say. So clearly you shouldn’t see it. I mean … I would have thought that was obvious. Unless … I’m sorry, is someone forcing you to go see it? Are there armed gangs of street toughs employed by Universal Studios going house-to-house and frog-marching the hapless citizenry into Pacific Rim Uprising showings across this nation?

REPORTER #1: No. Look, I’m just sayi-

CRITIC: Yes, you are just saying, not asking, and I’m here to answer questions about the film Pacific Rim Uprising. This is not a forum for your smug condemnation of the fact that a given piece of popular culture is popular. This is a press conference, not Facebook. Security, kindly remove this person. Next question. Yes, you there….

Chip Hitchcock calls it, “Much kinder than the Boston Globe’s response: ‘If only they hadn’t made a movie that plays like a lost “Transformers” entry.’”

(20) RESISTANCE IS RUTILE. Got to love this. On Quora Nyk Dohne answers the question “Would a Borg Cube be any match for a Star Destroyer if the two ever met in battle?”

Here is what clearly will happen: The Borg beam over some scouts to investigate. Because the Death Star is so huge, let’s say it is only a few dozen scout Borg. Stormtroopers try to repulse them, and 2 Borg are killed before they adapt and become quite invulnerable. The Death Star predictably uses the superlaser to destroy the Borg Cube, which doesn’t have a chance to adapt because it is all over in one shot. Only a few components of the cube survive re-entry as they scatter and fall on the nearby forest moon; all the Borg humanoids are dead. All? Not quite: There are still a few dozen (-2) Borg on the Death Star. Those few dozen quickly begin Assimilating the Death Star and it’s crew. Because the Death Star is so huge, it takes a LONG time, but the Imperials are not known for the innovative tactics required to stop the onslaught. The battle lasts for months, but it is unstoppable. The Borg grows exponentially, despite reinforcements….

And Nyk goes on from there.

[Thanks to Mark Hepworth, Martin Morse Wooster, John King Tarpinian, MT Davis, JJ, Cat Eldridge, Chip Hitchcock, Alan Baumler, Michael Toman, Andrew Porter, and Carl Slaughter for some of these stories. Title credit goes to File 770 contributing editor of the day Jayn.]


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113 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 3/26/18 You Know How To Pixel, Don’t You Steve? You Just Put Your Files Together And Scroll

  1. (5) I don’t have anything printable to say about this.

    (1) I hope Kincaid’s book is nominated; I highly recommend it to anyone who’s a fan of Bank’s fiction.

  2. (10) Damn it. Cathy told me about Bucky earlier today, but it still hurts to read it again. He first crossed my path as “Bucky Starr, Spaced Cadet” in the pages of SLANAPA, and I’d sort of grown accustomed to him, as one does.

  3. 5) TFP! We already had a man killed in Wichita in a SWATting event. I wish the people who do that could be charged with attempted murder.
    6) Right on.
    Hey, first 5th!

  4. (5) Well, that’s a d*** move if I ever saw one.

    Though I wonder what happened if/when the Aussie police actually clicked on Cam’s blog, and saw Susan Triceratops there, chatting amiably away about ceratopsian horns. No wonder they politely told Richard to get lost.

  5. @Bonnie McDaniel
    They probably filed him under “nutcase who believes he’s being stalked by dinosaurs”.

  6. 5) That’s the most lackluster and incompetent attempt at swatting I’ve ever seen. It’s like a pack of pithed weasels watched GamerGate unfold.

    15) Given what I’ve heard of the time frame of the film, the most likely explanation is that they all appear in flashback scenes. Regardless, it’ll be nice to see Agent Coulsen on the big screen again.

    16) It means Highfalutin’. Spend money on it and you can claim to be cultured. But then wasn’t this really an exfended excuse to point at books the author liked?

    17) Ambrose Bierce really needed an internet.Truly, the most amazing thing is realizing Cosmopolitan magazine magazine has been around for over 113 years. What did Cosmo do before there were supermarket racks?

  7. What did Cosmo do before there were supermarket racks?

    Mostly, be a very different kind of magazine.

    Helen Gurley Brown transformed COSMO from a stagnant general-interest magazine to a racy women’s magazine in 1965. But back in 1905, it was a family/literary magazine, and had just been purchased by William Randolph Hearst, and was on its way to being a very successful version of the magazine Brown would rescue it from failing at 60 years later…

  8. 5) (and JdA’s lawsuit) What’s with all these self-described Libertarians whose first thought on having their feelings hurt by people exercising their god-given rights to free speech and free association is to run crying to the government for help? I think they lack conviction. (The same will hold true for their legal complaints.)

  9. (5) Oh, have pity, man!

    According to Mr. Paolinelli’s Tweet, he and his friend jondelarroz are so pathetic and powerless that a pseudonymic blogger with (if I may say so without offending) a very modest audience is capable of RUINING THEIR ABILITY TO EARN A LIVING!

    Men like Paolinelli and delarroz are mere ants–nay, mere gnats! mere protoplasmic amoebas!–compared to the might, the power, the majesty that is Camestros Felapton! FEAR HIM/HER/IT/THEM AND TREMBLE!

  10. (5) Yeah, JDA boasts that his fanbase is expanding because he stands up to the “bullies,” and then Richard Paolinelli whines about Cam’s blog posts shutting them down.

    Pick a side, people. Y’all can’t have it both ways.

  11. 5) hurhurhur snowflake. Oops, forgot JdA was a rugged individualist, except when whining.

    15) Brie is one of my favorite cheeses.

  12. Leading Hispanic: JdA claimed that Worldcon banning him “openly discriminated against libertarians and conservatives” here . I assumed that meant he was both (Libertarianism is inclusive that way). I guess it means he’s two people.

    BTW: How is book 8 of The Expanse coming along?

  13. Well, gee, Jon, that’s a rather underwhelming response.

    Maybe if you told Richard he was flat wrong and shouldn’t have done what he did, we might feel a little more charitable towards you.

    Although given all the bullshit you’ve spewed on your Twitter feed today…..nah.

  14. 5) Oh My Freakin’ God.

    I just went over to Twitter and looked up the twit’s tweets to the cops. Talk about the World’s Specialest Ever Snowflake. ROFL.

    As for The Voice: Your GoFundme fundraising page claims that being banned by Worldcon “torpedoed Del Arroz’s career as a writer”, but your blog claims that your sales are doing better than ever — one phrase you wrote said “the highest it has ever been”. Which is it, Voice? (Or maybe just Mouth would be more appropriate? Is “Leading Hispanic Voice” code for “Biggest Hispanic Mouth”?) You wouldn’t be trying to fundraise under false pretenses, would ya, Jon?

    Your career can’t be “torpedoed” and doing great at the same time, Jon. Please pick one line and stick with it. Otherwise someone might get the odd idea that you’re lying about something.

  15. Mister Dalliard: Leading Hispanic: JdA claimed that Worldcon banning him “openly discriminated against libertarians and conservatives” here . I assumed that meant he was both (Libertarianism is inclusive that way). I guess it means he’s two people.

    JDA is both Schrödinger’s Hispanic and Schrödinger’s Libertarian.

    When it suits him to claim that he’s being discriminated against as a miniority, he is Hispanic. When it suits him to claim that white people are being discriminated against (e.g. ECCC not having a mixer for white males), he is white.

    I also would like to know when The Leading Hispanic Voice In Science Fiction will have the next Expanse novel out. Persepolis Rising was an excellent addition to the series, and I look forward to the next one.

  16. @JJ —

    I also would like to know when The Leading Hispanic Voice In Science Fiction will have the next Expanse novel out. Persepolis Rising was an excellent addition to the series, and I look forward to the next one.

    Do I correctly remember seeing somewhere that there are only two more planned? I’m currently in the middle of Babylon’s Ashes and having a good old time.

    And speaking of another Hispanic voice who is actually leading — has anyone here read Shadowshaper or Half-Resurrection Blues? I keep meaning to read em, but they keep languishing on Mt. TBR. I should get on that!

  17. JJ: I’m concerned the next logical step will take this discussion into the area that I will need to delete comments. However, I still need to make the point that it depends on who you talk to whether white and Hispanic are different, or the latter is a subset of the former. Whether or not JDA is operating in good faith, I’m concerned about offending others who definitely are.

  18. Mike Glyer: Whether or not JDA is operating in good faith, I’m concerned about offending others who definitely are.

    Gotcha. I will leave it at “the various demographic groups to which JDA claims to belong change from moment to moment, depending on what best suits his narrative agenda at any given moment”.

  19. @Mister Dalliard: now I know what it feels like to violently spray honey lemon tea out of my nose, thanks.

    @Leading Hispanic: who said you endorsed it? You know what you should do? You should report them to the police for being big meanie faces and hurting your feelings.

    (5) but seriously, I can’t think of a more appropriate response than WTF?

  20. Bonnie McDaniel, JJ et al: I think I’ve figured out the violent oscillations of JdA’s career. It’s all because of time zones. By day he builds his career up and it’s better than it’s ever been. But eventually he has to go to sleep. That’s when we Australians – Camestros, me and our imaginary mate Toby – go to work with our torpedoes and blow it all up again.

    Same thing every day, every night. We tear it down and he builds it up again. Just so as the generals can say the road is open.

    Oneiros: You’re welcome. Mrs Dalliard swear by that stuff for soothing a number of maladies so I hope it cured you of something on the way through.

  21. “What are we going to do tomorrow, Brain?”
    “Same thing we do every day, Pinky. Try to take over the Worldcon.”

  22. Ready Player One has come up a few times recently, so I thought this piece on the backlash against it might be of interest:

    https://www.vox.com/culture/2018/3/26/17148350/ready-player-one-book-backlash-controversy-gamergate-explained

    (tl;dr: What read as a “simple bit of fun” in 2011 looks much less benign after GamerGate brought questions of gatekeeping and entitlement in fan cultures into public view. Though I think they overstate how much of a new thing GamerGate and the associated critiques of fan cultures actually were.)

  23. 3) “the Tao or Ursula K. Le Guin.”
    That should be “of” not “or”.

    Mister Dalliard wrote:
    5) What’s with all these self-described Libertarians whose first thought on having their feelings hurt by people exercising their god-given rights to free speech and free association is to run crying to the government for help?
    Upholding their Hypocritical Oath.

    17) If you enjoy Ambrose Bierce’s bite i recommend AB’s “The Devil’s Dictionary”.

  24. (1) BANKS WITH AND WITHOUT THE M.

    I was recommending this book to a friend only last night. I don’t think it’s the great book on Banks, but I think it’s the one that starts the conversation that produces really great books on Banks.

    (5) DON’T BOTHER ME BOY

    Paolinelli only ever seems to do trolling that someone else has tried first, which he then copies in a more lacklustre and/or pathetic way

    (6) PRO TIP

    A few days ago an author “liked” a 4 star review I’d given their book on goodreads. I’m glad they liked it – I’d basically said I enjoyed it but had an issue with one element – but it did feel a bit odd to me. I like picking books apart but don’t generally want to do so to the author’s face, not least because when being picky I often forget to preface it with the “I mostly really liked this but….” that would hopefully soften the criticism.

    @Laura Resnick

    pseudonymic blogger with (if I may say so without offending) a very modest audience

    It’s true, we are all very modest. Especially me. I am by far the most modest.

  25. ohhhhh…I get it now…the Conservative Libertarian Fiction Alliance is running their annual awards…hence, some ritual culture-warrioring from certain quarters

  26. @Mark: I must disagree. I am a very modest reader of Camestros’ blog; one of the most modest reading today.

  27. 5) That is pathetic, but it doesn’t look like a swatting attempt. More like performance art. I keep thinking one of these guys–just one, because most of them are Obviously Serious–is going to do the big reveal any day now. “I was an undercover performer for the Foolkillers, a cheap, comics-themed knockoff of the Yes Men .”

    19) I’m going to call that a positive review.

  28. 5) Wow, that’s a dick move for certain, and as noted above, a paler shadow of an original incident.
    And as noted above “I’m doing great, better than ever…but being banned from Worldcon is ruining me” is a real cognitive dissonance.

  29. 5) Of course, one effect of this sort of thing is to make the police less inclined to take actual Internet abuse seriously, so that they are more likely to discount it as “just another case of Net hurt feelings” when some woman and/or minority gets targeted by a hate group and receives several metric shedloads of rape and death threats.

    It would be cynical in the extreme to suggest that Paolinelli knows this, and even more cynical to suggest that’s one reason he’s doing this.

  30. @Oneiros,

    I wonder how Wright is doing these days. Since Teddy decided to try his hand at first Wikis and then Comics , I feel like we’ve been spared the wacky hijinxs of that crowd.

  31. ETA: Commenting on this blog is about as much work as I’m willing to do to find out.

  32. @Contrarious:
    i found Older’s short stories with Carlos Delacruz a lot better than Half-Resurrection Blues, which dragged along rather slowly.
    i liked Shadowshaper a lot more, although i usually don’t read YA. i remember that a had some minor quibbles on the writing, but nothing important and i’ll read #2.

  33. @Contrarius: I liked Shadowshaper well enough to dig up the sequel (Shadowhouse Fall); my notes say it worked out plausibly, although some of the answers/results were “as pat as Dickson” (e.g., this person is Right so whatever they do is Right).

  34. Thanks, Chip!

    I’m going to try to read more actual Leading Hispanic Voices this year. Older, Older, Moreno-Garcia, and so on. I need to broaden my horizons!

  35. 5) What a collection of twerps these weird little broken men are. They strut around pretending they’re the Alphas of the world and at the same time crawl mewling to any kind of authority they think can hurt the people who slap them around at will on the internet. These are the people that the Chess Club beats up for their lunch money.

  36. JJ: It’s offensive that you would try to use my heritage as a weapon to try to attack me. We’ve seen this site devolve into mocking my name before, which Mike was good about stopping those comments, but this sort of thing within SF/F fandom needs to stop. It’s not okay to do it against me any more than it’s ok to do it to someone else. Walk the walk.

  37. btw —

    (6) PRO TIP.

    JDA reaaaaaaaally, REALLY needs to read this one.

    I posted a review of his new book on Amazon last night — one which addressed the content of the book, including specific examples quoted from the book. Within just a couple of hours I got a comment from “Amazon Customer” (three guesses) claiming, amongst other things, that I have “a history of attacking certain authors because of their political views” and that “Amazon should not only remove this fake, dishonest review they should remove this fake, dishonest reviewer. Or at least block his account from leaving reviews.”

    Sound familiar?

    Cmon, Jon. Reeeeeead that piece by Cole McCade. It would do you a lot of good.

  38. (17) Just imagine letting Ambrose Bierce loose on Twitter. It would have been a Devil’s fictionary.

    Surely, “The scroll above the port was the color of a television, tuned to a dead pixel” must have been used already?
    – That colour is missing u, and don’t call me Shirley.

  39. @ O. Westin:

    As much as I like the quote, I would probably, in this day and age, when dead pixels is not infrequent, just go “of a dead pixel” and Gibsonian allusion be damned.

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