Pixel Scroll 5/26/21 Buy Me Some Pixels And Shadowjack, I Don’t Care If I Never Loop Back

(1) BLACK PANTHER. Today marks the end of an era for one of Marvel’s most acclaimed series: Ta-Nehisi Coates’ Black Panther. View never-before-seen artwork from Coates’ final issue and revisit some of the best moments of this iconic run in the all-new Black Panther #25 trailer.

Alongside artists Daniel Acuña and Brian Stelfreeze, the National Book Award winner and New York Times Best-selling author closes out his game-changing run with a special giant-sized finale issue. Since taking over the title in 2016, Coates has transformed the Black Panther mythos. Now five years later, he departs, leaving the world of Wakanda and the Marvel Universe as a whole forever changed and laying the groundwork for the next bold era of one of Marvel’s most celebrated heroes.

(2) BOSEMAN REMEMBERED. “Howard University names fine arts college after Chadwick Boseman” – the Washington Post has the story.

Howard University is renaming its College of Fine Arts after one of its most acclaimed alums: actor Chadwick Boseman.

On Wednesday, Howard renamed its performing and visual arts school after the “Black Panther” star, who earned an Academy Award nomination for his role in last year’s “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom.” Boseman, who graduated from Howard in 2000 with a bachelor of arts degree in directing, died in August at the age of 43 from colon cancer.The renaming unites Howard and Walt Disney Co.’s executive chairman, Bob Iger, who will spearhead fundraising for an endowment named after Boseman, as well as help raise money for the construction of a state-of-the-art building on the campus. The new building will house the Chadwick A. Boseman College of Fine Arts, the Cathy Hughes School of Communications, its TV station, WHUT, and its radio station, WHUR 96.3 FM.

(3) SFF FROM AFRICAN WRITERS. Omenana Issue 17 is out, the latest issue of a tri-monthly magazine that publishes speculative fiction by writers from across Africa and the African Diaspora. The magazine is credted by Mazi Nwonwu, Co-founder/Managing Editor; Chinelo Onwualu, Co-founder; Iquo DianaAbasi, Contributing Editor; and Godson ChukwuEmeka Okeiyi, Graphic Designer.

Omenana is the Igbo word for divinity – it also loosely translates as “culture” – and embodies our attempt to recover our wildest stories. We are looking for well-written speculative fiction that bridges the gap between past, present and future through imagination and shakes us out of the corner we have pushed ourselves into.

(4) TORCON 2021. Tor.com is running another virtual convention in June. The full schedule is at the link: “Stay Home. Geek Out. Again. Announcing the TorCon 2021 Schedule of Events”.

We’re thrilled to share that TorCon is back! Taking place from June 10 through June 13, 2021, TorCon is a virtual convention that was launched in 2020 with a simple goal: to bring the entertainment and excitement of live book conventions into the virtual space. From Thursday, June 10 through Sunday, June 13, Tor Books, Forge Books, Tordotcom Publishing, Tor Teen, and Nightfire are presenting ten panels featuring more than 30 of your favorite authors, in conversation with each other—and with you!

Join authors, including James Rollins, Charlie Jane Anders, Joe Pera, Catriona Ward, Gillian Flynn, TJ Klune, Alix E. Harrow, Seanan McGuire, Nghi Vo, and many others for four days of pure geekery, exclusive reveals, content drops, giveaways, and more…all from the comfort of your own home!

(5) REPRESENTING MEDIA TIE-IN AUTHORS. Here is Max Alan Collins’ history of how the organization began: “A Blast from the Past – the Origins of the IAMTW – International Association of Media Tie-In Writers”.

I got involved with tie-in writing when, as the then-scripter of the Dick Tracy comic strip, I was enlisted to write the novel of the Warren Beatty film. That was, happily, a successful book that led to my writing novels for In the Line of Fire, Air Force One, Saving Private Ryan, and many others, including Maverick, that favorite of my childhood. Eventually I wrote TV tie-ins as well, in particular CSI and its spin-offs. Finally I got the opportunity to work with the Mickey Spillane estate to write Mike Hammer novels – a dream job, since Spillane had been my favorite writer growing up and Hammer my favorite character.

The founding of the IAMTW came out of a series of panels about tie-ins at San Diego Comic Con. Lee Goldberg, a rare example of a TV writer/producer who also wrote tie-in novels, was an especially knowledgeable and entertaining participant on those panels. He and I shared a frustration that the best work in the tie-in field was ignored by the various writing organizations that gave awards in assorted genres, including mystery, horror, and science-fiction.

Individually, we began poking around, talking to our peers, wondering if maybe an organization for media tie-in writers wouldn’t be a way to give annual awards and to grow this disparate group of creative folk into a community. I don’t remember whether Lee called me or I called Lee, but we decided to combine our efforts. What came out of that was the International Association of Media and Tie-in Writers and our annual Scribe Awards, as well as the Faust, our Life Achievement Award.

(6) SUPPORT YOUR LOCAL OUTLAW.

(7) HOW MANY HAVE YOU READ? AbeBooks has come up with their own list of “100 (Fiction) Books to Read in a Lifetime”, and some genre books are on it. I’ve read 29. (My midlife decision to read Moby Dick is constantly rewarded by raising my score on these things.)

We’ve seen these lists before – from Amazon to the Telegraph to Time Magazine and beyond. Plenty of folks have lists of the 100 best books of all time, the 100 books you should read, and on. And beautifully, despite overlap, they are all different. The glorious subjectivity of art means that no two of these lists should ever be exactly alike. So this is ours, our special snowflake of a list, born out of our passion for books. We kept it to fiction this time. Some of the expected classics are there, alongside some more contemporary fare. There is some science fiction, some YA, and above all else, some unforgettable stories.

Do any of the included titles shock you? Are you outraged by any omissions? Let us know what makes the cut for your top 100 novels.

(8) JMS’ B5 EPISODE COMMENTARY NOW ON YOUTUBE. For nearly a year J. Michael Straczynski has been providing his Patreon supporters full-length on-camera Babylon 5 commentaries. He’s now going to make some of them available to the public. Up first: “The Parliament of Dreams.” For this to work, you need to get access to a recording of the episode. Like JMS says —

For those who would like to sync up with the commentary on this video (since full-length TV episodes are not allowed here), fire up the episode and be ready to hit Play at the appropriate (or inappropriate) moment.

(9) CARLE OBIT. Eric Carle, who illustrated more than 70 books, most of which he also wrote, died May 23 reports NPR: “Eric Carle, Creator Of ‘The Very Hungry Caterpillar,’ Dies At 91”.

…Carle headed straight back to the U.S. after graduating from art school at age 23 and was immediately hired by The New York Times. He fell in love with the impressionists (“color, color, color!”), served in the U.S. military during the Korean War, and, upon his return, moved into advertising.

Perhaps that career helped him prepare for using the simple, resonant language of The Very Hungry Caterpillar. For the book’s 50th anniversary in 2019, professor Michelle H. Martin told NPR that The Very Hungry Caterpillar‘s writing helps little kids grasp concepts such as numbers and the days of the week. (“On Monday he ate through one apple. But he was still hungry. On Tuesday he ate through two pears, but he was still hungry.”)

Martin, the Beverly Cleary Endowed Professor for Children and Youth Services at the University of Washington, told NPR the book builds literacy by gently guiding toddlers toward unfamiliar words. For example, when Saturday comes around and the hungry caterpillar binges on “one piece of chocolate cake, one ice-cream cone, one pickle, one slice of Swiss cheese, one slice of salami, one lollipop, one piece of cherry pie, one sausage, one cupcake, and one slice of watermelon,” words such as salami and Swiss cheese might be new to 3-year-olds already familiar with ice cream and lollipops….

Jane Yolen mourned his death in a public Facebook post:

…I am devastated. One of my oldest friends in the business. Our whole family loved him. HE and Bobbie lived for years about twenty five minutes from our house, and then in Northampton for some time before moving down South.

He was funny, dear, a favorite “uncle” to my kids.And his museum is twenty minutes from my house. I have been sobbing since I heard about two hours ago from a notice sent out by the family….

(10) MEDIA ANNIVERSARY.

  • May 26, 1995 — On this day in 1995, Johnny Mnemonic premiered. Based on the William Gibson short story of the same name, it was directed by Robert Longo in his directorial debut. It starred Keanu Reeves, Takeshi Kitan,  Henry Rollins, Ice-T, Dina Meyer and Dolph Lundgren. Despite the story itself being well received and even being nominated for a Nebula Award, the response among critics to the film was overwhelmingly negative. It currently holds a 31% rating on Rotten Tomatoes among audience reviewers. It is available to watch here.

(11) TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS.

[Compiled by Cat Eldridge and John Hertz.]

  • Born May 26, 1865 — Robert Chambers. His most remembered work was The King in Yellow short stories. Though he would turn away from these supernatural tellings, Lovecraft’s included some of them in his Supernatural Horror in Literature critical study. Critics thought his work wasn’t as great as could have been. That said, Stross, Wagner, Carter and even Blish are said to have been influenced by him. (Died 1933.) (CE) 
  • Born May 26, 1903 — Harry Steeger. He  co-founded Popular Publications in 1930, one of the major publishers of pulp magazines, with former classmate Harold S. Goldsmith. They published The Spider which he created, and with Horror Stories and Terror Tales, he started the “Shudder Pulp” genre. So lacking in taste were these pulps that even a jaded public eventually rejected them. (Died 1990.) (CE) 
  • Born May 26, 1913 — Peter Cushing. Best known for his roles in the Hammer Productions horror films of the Fifties to the Seventies, as well as his performance as Grand Moff Tarkin in Star Wars. He also played Holmes many times, and though not considered canon, he was the Doctor in Daleks’ Invasion Earth 2150 A.D. and Dr. Who and the Daleks. He even made appearances in both The Avengers and The New Avengers as well as Space: 1999. A CGI recreation of Grand Moff Tarkin was used for his likeness in Rogue One. (Died 1994.) (CE)
  • Born May 26, 1913 – Joan Jefferson Farjeon.  Scenic designer, illustrated published versions of plays she’d done, also fairy tales.  See here (a frog footman), here (a tiger lily), here.  From a 1951 stage production, here is a moment in Beauty and the Beast.  (Died 2006) [JH]
  • Born May 26, 1923 — James Arness. He appeared in three Fifties SF films, Two Lost WorldsThem! and The Thing from Another World. The latter is based on the 1938 novella Who Goes There? by John W. Campbell (writing under the pseudonym of Don A. Stuart). The novella would be the basis of John Carpenter’s The Thing thirty years later. (Died 2011.) (CE)
  • Born May 26, 1923 — Roy Dotrice. I’ll always think of him first and foremost as Jacob “Father” Wells on Beauty and the Beast. He was Commissioner Simmonds in two episodes of Space: 1999. He also appeared in a recurring role on Hercules: The Legendary Journeys as Zeus. He’s on A Game of Thrones in the second season playing “Wisdom Hallyne the Pyromancer” in  “The Ghost of Harrenhal” and “Blackwater” episodes. He narrates at least some of the GoT audiobooks. (Died 2017.) (CE) 
  • Born May 26, 1925 – Howard DeVore.  Began collecting, 1936.  Michigan Science Fantasy Society, 1948 (Hal Shapiro said it was the Michigan Instigators of Science Fantasy for Intellectual Thinkers Society, i.e. MISFITS).  Leading dealer in SF books, paraphernalia; known as Big-Hearted Howard, a compliment-complaint-compliment; called himself “a huckster, 1st class”.  Active in N3F (Nat’l Fantasy Fan Fed’n); Neffy Award.  Also FAPA (Fantasy Amateur Press Ass’n), SAPS (Spectator Am. Pr. Society).  Said a Worldcon would be in Detroit over his dead body; was dragged across the stage; became Publicity head for Detention the 17th Worldcon.  With Donald Franson The Hugo, Nebula, and World Fantasy Awards (through 3rd ed’n 1998).  Named Fan Guest of Honor for 64th Worldcon, but died before the con.  His beanie had a full-size airplane propeller.  (Died 2005) [JH]
  • Born May 26, 1933 – Yôji Kondô, Ph.D.  Black belt in Aikido (7th degree) and judo (6th degree).  Senior positions at NASA, Medal for Exceptional Scientific Achievement; two hundred scientific papers, see here.  SF as Eric Kotani; six novels, most with J.M. Roberts; two shorter stories; edited Requiem tribute to Heinlein; non-fiction Interstellar Travel & Multi-Generation Space Ships with F. Bruhweiler, J. Moore, C. Sheffield; essays, mostly co-authored, in SF Age and Analog.  Heinlein Award.  Writers of the Future judge.  Our Gracious Host’s appreciation here.  (Died 2017) [JH]
  • Born May 26, 1938 – Lyudmila Petrushevskaya, age 83.  Author (including plays and screenwriting), singer, painter, animator.  Russian Booker Prize, Pushkin Prize, World Fantasy Award.  Twenty short stories for us.  See here.  [JH]
  • Born May 26, 1954 – Lisbeth Zwerger, age 67.  Children’s-book illustrator.  Hans Christian Andersen and Silver Brush awards; Grand Prize from German Academy for Children’s & Youth Literature.  Thirty books, most of them fantasy; see here (Swan Lake), here (the Mad Tea Party), here.  [JH]
  • Born May 26, 1964 — Caitlín R. Kiernan, 57. She’s an impressive two-time recipient of both the World Fantasy and Bram Stoker awards. As for novels, I’d single out Low Red MoonBlood Oranges (writing as Kathleen Tierney) and The Drowning Girl: A Memoir as being particularly worth reading. She also fronted a band, Death’s Little Sister, named for Neil Gaiman’s character, Delirium. (CE) 

(12) COMICS SECTION.

(13) ZOOMING WITH THE TRIMBLES. Fanac.org has posted a videos of “Bjo and John Trimble – A Fan History Zoom Session with Joe Siclari (Parts 1 and 2)”.

Bjo and John Trimble sit with Joe Siclari (May 2021) to tell us about their fannish histories. In part 1 of this interview, they talk about how they each found fandom, their ultimate meet-cute under Forry Ackerman’s grand piano, Burbee’s “Golden Treachery” and more serious topics. The Trimbles changed their part of fandom. Bjo talks about how she revitalized LASFS in the 1950s, and about the beginnings of the convention art show as we know it today (and Seth Johnson’s surprising part in that). Fandom is not without its controversies, and the Trimbles also speak about the Breendoggle and Coventry. Part 1 finishes up with anecdotes about Tony Boucher’s poker games. In Part 2, the interview will continue with the Trimbles’ roles in the Save Star Trek campaign. For more fan history, go to <FANAC.org> and <Fancyclopedia.org>. If you enjoyed this video, please subscribe to our channel.

In part 2 of Bjo and John Trimble’s interview with Joe Siclari (May 2021), they tell the remarkable story of how they met Gene Roddenberry and became involved in Star Trek. Learn the story of how they started, orchestrated and managed the “Save Star Trek” campaign which resulted in the third year of Star Trek, the original series. Hint: it all started in Clelveland. There’s much more in this interview. There are stories of the early days of the SCA, including how it got the name “Society for Creative Anachronism”, the day that a Knight of St. Fantony appeared at an SCA event, and the unlikely story of the first coronation of an SCA king. Additionally, you’ll hear about costuming, Takumi Shibano and how Gene Roddenberry helped get him to Worldcon (and how Bjo helped Shibano-san learn that his wife spoke English), and Q&A from the attendees.

(14) HERE KITTY. The lion is moving. “James Bond, Meet Jeff Bezos: Amazon Makes $8.45 Billion Deal for MGM” – the New York Times is there when they’re introduced.

In the ultimate symbol of one Hollywood era ending and another beginning, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, home to James Bond and Rocky, finally found a buyer willing to pay retail: Amazon.

The e-commerce giant said on Wednesday that it would acquire the 97-year-old film and television studio for $8.45 billion — or about 40 percent more than other prospective buyers, including Apple and Comcast, thought MGM was worth….

So why did Amazon pay such a startling premium?

For starters, it can. The company has $71 billion in cash and a market capitalization of $1.64 trillion….

 Amazon most likely paid more than others thought MGM was worth because of its all-important Prime membership program.

In addition to paying Amazon $119 a year or $13 a month for free shipping and other perks — notably access to the Prime Video streaming service — households with Prime memberships typically spend $3,000 a year on Amazon. That is more than twice what households without the membership spend, according to Morgan Stanley. About 200 million people pay for Prime memberships.

“More and more Prime members are using video more often, spending more hours on there, so I think this is a way to add more content and more talent around movies,” said Brian Yarbrough, a senior analyst at Edward Jones.

“This isn’t one studio buying another,” he added. “If you’re Amazon, the perspective is what’s the potential for Prime membership, what is the potential for advertising.”…

(15) SAME BAT-TIME, SAME BAT-CHANNEL. Galactic Journey’s Erica Frank is tuning in to 1966 where Adam West’s Batman on the air: “[May 26, 1966] Batman: So Bad It’s Good?”.

I have been greatly enjoying the new Batman tv series. Campy costumes, over-the-top acting, wacky super-science gizmos, silly plots, the chance to see several of my favorite comic book characters on a screen; it’s all good fun….

The Batman Drinking Game

The best way to watch this show: Before it starts, get yourself a beer, glass of wine, or couple of shots of something harder. Every time you see a gizmo that can’t actually work as shown, take a sip. Every time Robin says, “Holy [something]!,” take a sip. When either of the Dynamic Duo is trapped, take a sip; if they’re both trapped, take two. Every time a supposedly valuable item, like a museum statue, is destroyed during the obligatory heroes-vs-thugs slugfest, take another sip. By the time the show is over, you’ll be pleasantly relaxed—unless you actually know much about science and technology, in which case, you’ll have left “relaxed” in the dust and be on your way to “blitzed.”…

(16) HUGO READING. Camestros Felapton reviews a finalist: “Hugo 2021: Black Sun (Between Earth & Sky 1) by Rebecca Roanhorse”.

…I thoroughly enjoyed this and despite the scale of the world-building, I found myself immersed into the setting very quickly. It is a book with a sense of bigness to it with quite different magical elements to it distinct to the individual characters. The growing tension as chapter by chapter we get closer to what will clearly be a very bad day for all concerned, is well executed and if I hadn’t been using the audiobook version I would probably have rushed through the final chapters.

I’ve enjoyed other works by Roanhorse but this is definitely a more skilful and mature work from a writer who started with a lot of promise. It sits in that sweet spot of delivering the vibe of the big magical saga but with enough innovation in setting and magic to feel fresh and original….

(17) AROUND THE BIG TOP. The latest sf review column in the Washington Post by Lavie Tidhar and Silvia Moreno-Garcia includes praise for Ray Bradbury’s Something Wicked This Way Comes and The Illustrated Man. “Clowns are creepy. Let’s talk about horror, science-fiction and fantasy books that make the most of circus settings.”

The circus, with its built-in otherworldliness, is an ideal setting for fantasy, horror and science-fiction novels. Authors have been capitalizing on it for years. Stephen King terrified a whole generation with Pennywise the clown in 1986’s “It,” then tackled a carnival setting 27 years later in “Joyland.” In 2011, Erin Morgenstern charmed readers and scored a big hit with “The Night Circus.” So what other great fiction hides under the big top?…

(18) INVISIBLE INKED. “Inquisitor 1699 An Alternative Guide to Wonderland by Phi” at Fifteensquared analyzes all the answers to a fantasy-themed crossword, with the added bonus of a David Langford comment.

…By now, I was starting to see that the shaded letters would be forming some sort of figure, a pooka indeed and it seemed to be symmetrical. Also, I had enough of the early across answers to start to see the quotation forming. With “Years ago my mother say this world”. An internet search revealed, “Years ago my mother [used to say to me,] she’d say, [“In this world, Elwood, you must be” – she always called me Elwood] – “In this world, Elwood, you must be [oh so] smart or [oh so] pleasant.” Well, for years I was smart. I recommend pleasant. You may quote me. ”…

(19) VIDEO OF THE DAY. In “Honest Trailers: The DCEU (400th episode), the Screen Junkies, for their 400th episode, portray the entire DC Extended Universe, a world where “Superman doesn’t want to save people, Batman’s a murderer, Wonder Woman’s an incel, and Harley Quinn takes three movies to break up with Joker, who looks like my coke dealer.”  And given a choice between all the quips in Marvel movies, and DC films where “everyone talks like a 14-year-old boy trying to sound badass while they’re reading a Wiki page,” wouldn’t you rather see an Air Bud movie?”

[Thanks to Andrew Porter, Martin Morse Wooster, JJ, StephenfromOttawa, David Langford, Daniel Dern, Michael Toman, John King Tarpinian, Cat Eldridge, John Hertz, and Mike Kennedy for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to contributing editor of the day Jack Lint.]


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71 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 5/26/21 Buy Me Some Pixels And Shadowjack, I Don’t Care If I Never Loop Back

  1. First!

    (2) BOSEMAN REMEMBERED I think Marvel did a better job job with Black Panther by casting Chadwick Boseman than they did with any of the other MCU characters. I mourned his loss in a way that I’ve mourned few others.

  2. (7) 31, a lot of them for school. And no intention of reading those again.

  3. (7) 55. A few more I want or intend to read, and a good many that don’t interest me.

  4. (11) I liked Robert Chambers’ humorous cryptobiology stories (collected in “In Search of the Unknown”) – fans of old-time radio will also recognize him as the author of “Tracer of Lost Persons” – the origin of “Mr. Keen, Tracer of Lost Persons”

    “Roy Doltrice” is “Father” to me, as well – and he’s the father of Karen Doltrice, who played “Jane Banks” in Mary Poppins.

  5. (7) 33, not counting The Romance of the Three Kingdoms, in which I got bogged down about 1/3 of the way in. But I’ve seen at least one Japanese cartoon very loosely based on it.

  6. 7) Hmmm. Also, only 33

    16) Re Black Sun. I see very few reviewers as disturbed as I was by chapter one (I kept reading, very glad I did, but I found chapter one quite dark).

  7. 7) 28 for me. The list is a curious mix of school/university reading list classics, book club standbys and WTF? choices such as Sidney Sheldon’s 1980s potboiler If Tomorrow Comes. At least, it’s not the Sheldon I hate with a passion, but Sheldon has pretty much gone into “inexplicably popular bestsellers of yesteryear that no one reads anymore” territory. Or does anybody still voluntarily read Sidney Sheldon?

  8. 7) 41. I was surprised how many books there were that I had not heard of.
    My recommendation for Romance of the three kingdoms is to skip the first quarter which is a giant prologue full of characters that appear only for a few pages.

  9. P J Evans says a lot of them for school. And no intention of reading those again.

    Same here. Most of what I recognise here I read for school, some in University, and I’ve no reason at all to read them ever again. Even Clockwork Orange is an interesting novel but I’ve never seen any reason to revisit it.

    Now listening to P. Djeli’s Clark’s A Master of Djinn

  10. @gottacook Slaughterhouse-Five was my introduction to Vonnegut sophomore year in high school, followed it up with Cat’s Cradle and Mother Night. At that point I was hyped for any Vonnegut I could get my hands on so I picked up Breakfast of Champions.

    *

    I was not amused.

  11. @Soon Lee
    Wish he’d learned it sooner. Also to check the demographics for the universe he’s filming: it’s likely not who he thinks.

  12. (11) It’s Pam Grier’s birthday (b. 1949) Famous for various roles in Blaxploitation films, including Scream Blacula Scream, she was also the Dust Witch in Something Wicked This Way Comes.

    (14) Colbert suggests the reason Amazon is buying MGM is that MGM owns The Apprentice and all its outtakes. So the lesson here is don’t piss off a real billionaire.

    (15) If you were drink whenever you see that light blue van that all the villains use in the first season (with different company markings) you’d die of alcohol poisoning.

    By the scrolling of my thumb, something pixlish this way comes

  13. Hmm. I’ve read 27 of the hundred books. Some of them I wonder why I ever read. Oh well. And yeah, the ones I read for school tend not to get re-read.

  14. (7) 35 out of 100. Some weird choices and multiple Hemingways? One Hemingway is more than enough of that, thanks. Some of the weird choices (The Vegetarian) are good and interesting; others are… just why? Why would Harry Potter or Hunger Games or Fault in Our Stars be on this list?

  15. 7) There are more than two books on that list that I was assigned in school, and hated so much I refused to finish them. My high school diploma is composed partially of bullshit and Cliff’s Notes, and I took no harm from that.

  16. To be fair, glancing over my “favorites” category in Goodreads, my own top 100 would clearly have some very odd choices, too.

  17. I started roughing up a list of my top 100 with some arbitrary rules to keep it in check (only one book by any author, only the first book of a series is eligible, only fiction, only novels, no books written by me even if I genuinely like them), but since going in alphabetical order I’d already hit 25 books by the end of the “B” section, I gave it up as Requiring A Lot More Work.

    But anyway, take home is, about a quarter of that initial subset could easily be classified as “Books Not Likely To Ever Show Up On Anyone Else’s Arbitrary List”.

  18. (5) I’m glad to see media fiction getting more respect, even if the writers had to grab it for themselves. It’s easy to scoff at it; complain that the books take up too much shelf space; etc. But like anything, it’s hard to write well. Lots of respect to writers who can take an existing property and create something pleases fans and yet adds something new to an existing property. When I was growing up, these books were the only way to experience movies and TV shows before the advent of VHS. The best adaptations added something extra, and even today, there are adaptations that get better reviews from fans than the final film. And without media fiction, we wouldn’t have standout books like Janet Kagan’s “Uhura’s Song.”

    (11) Kudos to Roy Dotrice’s villainous appearance as Troyan in the short-lived show “The Wizard.” I looked up his Wikipedia entry and was surprised he was in only three episodes. When Beauty and the Beast first appeared on TV, I was already looking forward to it because of the concept, but I was also excited because he was in it.

  19. 7) 15/100, possibly a couple more that I’m not sure about, and in several further cases I’d read the authors but not the specific listed books.

  20. @Kyra I’ll tell you my most unlikely Goodreads favorite shelf book if you tell me yours.

  21. @iphinome

    Hm, tricky. I think the prize might go to The Dark Beneath The Ice by Amelinda Bérubé for combining low ratings + few reviews + relatively obscure author, although I expect the reaction to this not to be shock so much as, “What now?” But if someone made a list of Dark Twisty Queer Fantasy YA, then… this book would probably still not be on it because it’s too obscure and unpopular, but I would definitely read that list.

    The lowest rated book on my list is actually A Short Sharp Shock by Kim Stanley Robinson (3.43), and the book with the least number of ratings is Without Armor by James Hilton (48), but both of those are by authors famous enough that I could see them showing up on some iconoclastic list as “If you think Red Mars is his best well here’s the REAL truth haters etc.”

  22. @Kyra Mine is The Rise and Fall of a Dragon King by Lynn Abbey. A D&D tie-in novel that came out right around the time TSR was losing their pants and getting bought out by Wizard of the Coast. It takes place in the less popular Dark Sun unlike the more popular Dragonlance novels and the protagonist is a thousand-year-old magic super-powered warlord turned local deity who committed genocide.

    The story shifts between two timelines, the past with Hamanu’s early life, loss, and the war that eventually led him to become a genocidal warlord, his own regrets over what he did, and the present where the other living sorcerer-kings are coming for him, his city, and his remaining humanity to suit their own needs.

  23. Meredith moment: Hothouse, the Brian W. Aldiss novel, is available from the usual suspects for a buck ninety nine. The Hothouse series that it’s based upon which ran in the Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction won a Hugo at Chicon III.

  24. The only ones I read for school were Great Expectations, Jane Eyre, and The Chrysalids. (The last for a high school English teacher who probably wanted to give the kids something more appealing than the standard Victorian fare.)

  25. @7, 39 for me, and a few others that… well, if I read them (and I might have) they didn’t stick with me enough to be sure of. With regard to OGH’s Moby Dick comment, that book for me was War and Peace….

  26. Re: the Video Game Hugo category. It takes, what, a Nintendo Switch, some recent Sony PlayStation, and a gaming PC to play all of them? I figure somebody here is properly equipped, and can give us a comparison sometime.

  27. David Shallcross: Re: the Video Game Hugo category. It takes, what, a Nintendo Switch, some recent Sony PlayStation, and a gaming PC to play all of them?

    Supposedly those of us who do not have the gear are supposed to seek out “Let’s Play” videos on YouTube and judge based on that. I’m going to pass. 😐

  28. JJ says Supposedly those of us who do not have the gear are supposed to seek out “Let’s Play” videos on YouTube and judge based on that. I’m going to pass.

    I’ll pass too as I’ve never played a video game in some forty years. I’m guessing the number of voters here is going to be rather low.

    JJ — my system won’t reproduce your smiley.

  29. So I voted the first time, for now only in 3 catagories. But I voted. (Another is nearly done but here I have to really wait for the package to decied on the last Item)

    Re Videogames, I think my most modern games are Dragon Age Inquisition and The Witcher 3, sorry no. (Can access a P4, not so much the other stuff)

  30. Let’s play type videos have definitely given me some ideas what video games my kids might like, but I would hate to have to judge which one was the best to play by yourself based on those alone, especially if the videos are all by different people.

    I played Spiritfarer via steam, and it’s a lovely game, but that’s still a cost outlay, if less than for the consoles, and I doubt they all have Steam equivalents.

  31. I find entertainment value in watching youtube (and twitch, even better) streams of people I know playing video games. Valerie Valdes and NK Jemisin are two people who I often watch playing video games…

    …but several years ago when my friends daughter told me about this practice, I privately thought “why would you ever do that?”. My thoughts have changed, but I recognize it is very much a YMMV situation

  32. I don’t vote in the Hugos myself, but I have to say that watching video games to judge them is definitely going to favour certain genres over others. There’s no way you could appreciate the finesse of Mario’s control system or the clever way the difficulty is ramped up and problems are gently introduced to the player without playing it. Similarly, the charm and addictive nature of Animal Crossing has to be experienced I think.

  33. @Cliff: Which is in a way bad, because Animal Crossing: New Horizons is one of the nominees. (Final Fantasy, The Last of Us, Spiritfarer seemed to be more storydriven, Hades I don’t know and Blaseball I took a look and was Huh?

  34. Ran across this article from 1969, when Asimov reached 100 books: https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/books/97/03/23/lifetimes/asi-v-profile.html

    The world is the oyster for Asimov, and for the future there are vague plans for almost everything therein save two. No mysteries are on the schedule, and no books on computers. He has been asked to write his autobiography, but counters this with the remark, “What can I say?” There could be something in the future wind here, however, for he asked his father, Judah Asimov, now 74 and retired, to put down notes for his autobiography. When these come in, they are filed away and could end up as background for the Asimov younger days.

    The elder Asimov also writes on a typewriter. Having bought a couple when times were tough so that his son could become a writer, he finally bought one for himself. He wouldn’t accept one as a gift. Rugged individualist.

  35. @iphinome

    I’ve got at least one media tie-in book on my Favorites list but it’s such a well-regarded one (at least in the rarefied circle of SFF fandom) that I doubted it would raise any eyebrow for being there.

    I suspect the ones on my list that some people might actually look askance at are the popular-but-not-popular-enough-to-transcend-all-scorn no-literary-frills romance-y fantasy books that I just happen to adore (e.g. Succubus Blues by Richelle Mead, Tithe by Holly Black, or Evernight by Claudia Gray).

  36. @Kyra

    I’m conservative about what goes on my favorites shelf, it only has 15 books. https://www.goodreads.com/review/list/3246050-iphinome?ref=nav_mybooks&shelf=favorites

    Though if I expanded it, one people might quirk their eyebrows at is The Privilege of the Sword which has rather awful prose with stuff like -the duke replied creamily- but manages to tickle my particular quirks, bisexual woman with a sword and smexy guys kissing each other.

    Replace Katherine with Mary Bennet and any other character with a muderbot and I’d die of squee.

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