Pixel Scroll 5/9/17 Help, I’m Floating And I Can’t Get Down

(1) D FRANKLIN AWARD PREMIERES. Nominations are open for a new award recognizing work in disability advocacy in SFF literature — “Announcing the D Franklin Defying Doomsday Award”.

This award is possible thanks to D Franklin, our wonderful Patron of Diversity who pledged the top pledge in our Pozible campaign!

The Defying Doomsday Award is an annual shortlist and prize. The award jury comprises Twelfth Planet Press publisher, Alisa Krasnostein, and Defying Doomsday editors, Tsana Dolichva and Holly Kench. The award will grant one winner per year a cash prize of $200 in recognition of their work in disability advocacy in SFF literature.

Eligible works include non-fiction or related media exploring the subject of disability in SFF literature. Works must have been published in 2016.

We are now seeking nominations for the 2016 Defying Doomsday Award. Please submit your nominations to Tsana and Holly by filling in this form: https://goo.gl/forms/Kq8jGrXlAcdNumxy1

Submissions are open until July 31. The winner(s) will be announced in September.

(2) NOW ON SALE. It’s not exactly a Meredith moment, but until the end of May you can save $200 on The Virginia Edition of Robert A. Heinlein’s collected works. That lowers the price tag to $1,300 in the U.S., or $1,600 for an international destination.

(3) SCIENCE BOOM. You can watch a flock of “Science Movies on Netflix in May”. Two examples –

Available May 5

The Mars Generation (Netflix, 2017): Could humanity’s future include travel to Mars? Astrophysicists and astronauts weigh in on the challenges of long-distance spaceflight and the dream of missions that could transport people to the Red Planet. Meanwhile, teenage trainees at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center immerse themselves in work toward making that dream a reality.

Available May 15

Command and Control (PBS, 2017): Building a nuclear arsenal comes with incredible risks, and most Americans may be unaware that in 1980, an accident at a nuclear missile complex in Damascus, Arkansas, nearly resulted in the detonation of a warhead 600 times more powerful than the bomb that leveled Hiroshima. Based on recently declassified documents, this fascinating glimpse into the American nuclear weapons program tracks its history, and evaluates the human errors and accidents along the way that could have doomed us all.

(4) THE BEER THAT HITCHHIKERS MADE FAMOUS. Martin Morse Wooster knows: “Short’s Brewing is notorious among beer geeks for its crazy beers.  So of course they produce Pan Galactic Gargle Blaster!  (It’s a really cool Space Invaders-style label.)”

(5) ANONYMOUS LONGLIST. Here’s something you don’t see every day, Edgar. An anonymous longlist for the 2017 James White Award has been announced – the titles of 17 short stories listed without the authors’ names, because the entries are still undergoing an anonymous judging process.

The administrators say the shortlist will come out within two weeks, and the winner announced soon after that.

(6) ABOARD THE QUEEN MARY. Ellen Datlow has posted her photos from StokerCon 2017 on Flickr. Below: Elizabeth Hand and Nancy Holder.

Elizabeth Hand and Nancy Holder

(7) WIN WWII QUICKER. Gregory Benford shares “The Big Idea” that led to his novel The Berlin Project.

How many more concentration camp victims would have survived if the war had ended one year earlier?  For one, Anne Frank. Most CC victims succumbed eventually to the rugged conditions… The difference between 1944 and 1945 as the end of the war is probably quite significant in terms of lives.

The central context for this novel came from the protagonist I chose to follow through it, Karl Cohen. I also folded in my experience of living in the US occupation of Germany in 1955-57, where my father commanded combat units.

Karl’s words made me think, because in the last year of war, whole societies collapsed. A million died each month, the Soviet Union captured many countries into subjugation, and the devastation of the Axis powers took decades to repair.

Alternative histories are ways of thinking. The entire history of nuclear weapons is interlaced with scientists considering the future, often using science fiction as a prompt. The 1913 “atomic bombs” of H. G. Wells and the Robert Heinlein and Cleve Cartmill stories in Astounding Science Fiction were indeed broadly discussed at Los Alamos –as told to me in detail by Teller.

The wartime investigation into the Astounding stories, as I depict from documents I found, now seems odd indeed. The fiction writers had no classified information at all, just good guesses. Still, this possibility was viewed as very important by the security agencies, including the FBI. As Robert Silverberg has wryly remarked, “Turning war secrets into second-rate SF stories might seem, to the dispassionate eye, a very odd way indeed of betraying one’s country.”

Karl Cohen was my father in law. In 2000 he was voted to be among the 50 most prominent American chemists of the 20th Century. But he was haunted by what he felt was his personal failure to convince the U.S. government to pursue the centrifuge approach during the war. He died in 2012 at age 99. Alas, I had only begun on the novel.

(8) A GLOWING SMILE. Win WWII – and prevent tooth decay! Atlas Obscura tells how Manhattan Project experts got sidetracked in their pursuit of Nazi nuclear technology in “The Mysterious Case of the Radioactive Toothpaste”.

(9) SAVE YOUR MONEY. BookRiot’s Kay Taylor Rea advises which of the Best Novel Hugo finalists to buy, borrow, or bypass.

Death’s End by Cixin Liu, translated by Ken Liu

The final book in the Remembrance of Earth’s Past trilogy, Death’s End really goes for broke in its attempts to be an epic tale. I struggled through it for much the same reason I struggled through the first two books: the depictions of women are by turns baffling and infuriating. If you were bothered by that in the first two novels, I warn you it’s still at issue here. The woman at the center of Death’s End, engineer Cheng Xin, is by turns patronized, deified, and vilified both by the male characters and the narrative itself. If you can ignore this, and the author’s tendency toward paragraph upon paragraph of info-dumping, there are certainly the bones of a very compelling tale of humanity’s future within these pages. The science involved is fascinating, and if you’re on the hunt for oldschool hard science fiction this might fit the bill.

Verdict: Bypass unless you’ve read the first two and have a hankering for more hard SF.

(10) WHO IS NUMBER ONE? MeTV offers “TV Aliens, Ranked”.

Mr. Spock, ‘Star Trek’

Was this really a competition? Mr. Spock is beloved by the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise and fans of Star Trek alike. Even though Williams Shatner tried to take the lead on the original series, Spock’s likability and Leonard Nimoy’s depiction made him the most popular character on one of the most popular series of all time.

(11) WESTON OBIT. G.I. Joe inventor Stan Weston died May 1. The Hollywood Reporter recalls:

When Mattel’s Barbie dolls were introduced in 1960, Weston realized boys were an untapped market for the doll industry after noting that many of them played with Ken dolls. He conceived of the idea of a military action figure and in 1963 sold what would become G.I. Joe to Hasbro. The runaway hit would go on to be one of the most enduring toy lines in history, spawning hit TV shows and films as well.

…In 1989, he was among the inaugural class for the Licensing Industry Hall of Fame, which includes notables Walt Disney, George Lucas and Jim Henson.

(12) TODAY’S DAY

Jerry Goldsmith Day

Today Oscar- and Emmy-winning composer Jerry Goldsmith posthumously received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. He scored a vast number of movies, including many genre films. Director Joe Dante, for whom Goldsmith scored Gremlins, Explorers, and Innerspace, lent impetus to the award, saying he’d been “flabbergasted” to learn Goldsmith had not already received the honor. Dante told Variety, “Any film he scored was automatically improved tenfold.”

 

(13) TODAY IN HISTORY

  • May 9, 1980 — Sean Cunningham’s Friday the 13th premieres in theatres.
  • May 9, 1997 The Fifth Element is released in the U.S.

(14) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY BOY

  • Born May 9, 1860 – J.M. Barrie

(15) COMPETITIVE LENGTHS. Greg Hullender says, “Inspired by a blog post from Rich Horton I did a quick analysis of the lengths of novellas overall vs. the lengths of the ones that are Hugo finalist.” — “Story Lengths and Awards: When Does Size Matter?” at Rocket Stack Rank.

It looks like (this year, at least), when it came to getting nominated for the Hugo, longer stories definitely did better than shorter ones in the Novella category and (less dramatically) in the Novelette category, but length had no effect on short stories.

In fact, the effect is so dramatic that the longest novella published by any print magazine is shorter than the shortest novella in the Hugo finalist list!

(16) DIAL 2140. Carl Slaughter did a mini-roundup on a popular new novel.

The New Yorker described Kim Stanley Robinson as “generally acknowledged as one of the greatest living science-fiction writers.”  The Atlantic described Robinson as “the gold-standard of realistic, and highly literary, science-fiction writing.” Robinson’s novels have won the Hugo, Nebula, Locus, and Campbell awards.  His body of work won the Heinlein award.  He was an instructor at Clarion and the 68th World Science Fiction Convention guest of honor.  Major themes in his novels:  nature and culture, ecological sustainability, climate change and global warming, economic and social justice, and scientists as heroes.

“The environmental, economic, and social themes in Robinson’s oeuvre stand in marked contrast to the libertarian science fiction prevalent in much of science fiction (Robert A. Heinlein, Poul Anderson, Larry Niven, and Jerry Pournelle being prominent examples), and his work has been called the most successful attempt to reach a mass audience with a left wing and anti-capitalist utopian vision since Ursula K. Le Guin’s 1974 novel, The Dispossessed.”  –  Wiki

Robinson’s latest novel, NewYork 2140 , which came out in March from Orbit, is about residents of New York coping the the drastic affects of climate change, namely rising sea levels.

As the sea levels rose, every street became a canal. Every skyscraper an island. For the residents of one apartment building in Madison Square, however, New York in the year 2140 is far from a drowned city.

There is the market trader, who finds opportunities where others find trouble. There is the detective, whose work will never disappear — along with the lawyers, of course.

There is the internet star, beloved by millions for her airship adventures, and the building’s manager, quietly respected for his attention to detail. Then there are two boys who don’t live there, but have no other home– and who are more important to its future than anyone might imagine.

Lastly there are the coders, temporary residents on the roof, whose disappearance triggers a sequence of events that threatens the existence of all– and even the long-hidden foundations on which the city rests.

Praise for New York 2140:

“Science fiction is threaded everywhere through culture nowadays, and it would take an act of critical myopia to miss the fact that Robinson is one of the world’s finest working novelists, in any genre. NEW YORK 2140 is a towering novel about a genuinely grave threat to civilisation.”  ?  The Guardian

“An exploration of human resilience in the face of extreme pressure…starkly beautiful and fundamentally optimistic visions of technological and social change in the face of some of the worst devastation we might bring upon ourselves.”  ?  The Conversation

“As much a critique of contemporary capitalism, social mores and timeless human foibles, this energetic, multi-layered narrative is also a model of visionary worldbuilding.”  ?  RT Book Reviews (Top Pick!) on New York 214

“A thoroughly enjoyable exercise in worldbuilding, written with a cleareyed love for the city’s past, present, and future.”  ?  Kirkus

“The tale is one of adventure, intrigue, relationships, and market forces…. The individual threads weave together into a complex story well worth the read.”  ?  Booklist

(17) SPINRAD REVIEWED. Rob Latham shares his qualified enthusiasm for Norman Spinrad’s The People’s Police in “An Unkempt Jeremiad” at LA Review of Books.

I would affirm that The People’s Police is a continuous pleasure to read were it not for the poor production values that persistently hobble the story. While the physical book is well designed, including an arresting dust-jacket by Michael Graziolo, the text itself is littered with distracting typos, oddly repeated words (e.g., “his vehicle had come around again to where where Luke was standing”), and passages still showing the raw compositional process (e.g., “what the upstate Holy Rollers were calling called the People’s Police”). A better job of editing would have caught these various solecisms, as well as the embarrassing fact that some anecdotes — e.g., that Huey Long built “a half-assed half-scale replica of the White House” as his governor’s mansion — are recounted twice, thus compromising their effectiveness. Every time I began to fall under the spell of Spinrad’s kooky grandiloquence, some glaring error like this would throw me out of the story. This is particularly unfortunate given that, as noted above, The People’s Police marks the author’s dogged attempt to break back into the US market after a decade of frustrations.

All in all, though, I think the novel should be well received, as it manifests most of the strengths of Spinrad’s long career….

(18) APOCALYPSE OHIO. There were a few angsty moments at the Scalzi compound today.

(19) AT RISK COMICS. I scanned CosmicBookNews’ list of Marvel comics titles on the bubble, holding in mind the recent controversy about whether diversity sells.

Titles with an asterisk are already cancelled as of July.

CA: Sam Wilson – #21 – 18,650
Gwenpool – #14 – 17,972
Captain Marvel – #4 – 17,893
US Avengers – #5 – 17,880
Ultimates 2 – #6 -17,350
Dr. Strange & Sorcerers Supreme – #7 – 16,887
Man-Thing – #3 – 16,199 [Mini]
Hawkeye – #5 – 16,031
Totally Awesome Hulk – #18 – 16,009
Spider-Man 2099 – #22 – 15,273
Elektra – #3 – 15,113*
Silver Surfer – #10 – 15,041
World Of Wakanda – #6 – 14,547*
Nova – #5 – 14,525*
Silk – #19 – 13,524*
Thunderbolts – #12 – 13,780*
Kingpin – #3 – 13,765*
Rocket Raccoon #5 – 13,373*
Power Man & Iron Fist #15 – 13,055*
Bullseye – #3 – 12,912 [Mini]
Star lord – #6 – 12,278*
Squirrel Girl – #19 – 11,074
Occupy Avengers – #6 – 10,296
Unstoppable Wasp – #4 – 9,780
Great Lakes Avengers – #7 – 8,370
Moon Girl and Devil Dino – #18 – 7,966
Patsy Walker AKA Hellcat – #17 – 6,943*
Mosaic – #7 – 5,876*

On the fence:

Ms. Marvel – #17 – 20,881

(20) GUARDIANS INSIDE INFO. Don’t view this unless you are ready for SPOILERS. Looper picks out Small Details In Guardians Of The Galaxy 2 Only True Fans Understood.

After all the hype, Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2 proved itself a worthy successor to the first film. With another Awesome Mix Tape blasting and another round of adventures for Star-Lord and his gang of unlikely heroes, Vol. 2 offered up the same mix of action and comedy fans have come to love. And like the first installment, the newest Guardians is packed with Easter eggs. Here are all the small details only true fans noticed in Guardians of the Galaxy 2. Major spoilers ahead!

 

[Thanks to John King Tarpinian, Roger Silverstein, Cat Eldridge, Ellen Datlow, ,Andrew Porter, Kat, Kendall, and Carl Slaughter for some of these stories. Title credit goes to File 770 contributing editor of the day Daniel Dern.]

86 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 5/9/17 Help, I’m Floating And I Can’t Get Down

  1. I’m going to disagree about Stranger. For years, my main complaint about the original was that the last quarter or so stopped telling a story, and became more a dry recitation of facts. So much so that the transition was jarring. I think Heinlein’s story-telling skills are what set him above many of his peers, so I found this particularly disappointing. When I finally got the expanded version, it was pretty much all I’d hoped for–good story-telling (or at least, as good as H got) all the way through.

    Of course, if your tolerance for the way H tells a story is low (and I know this is true for a lot of people), your reaction may be quite different. 🙂

    As for Spinrad, yeah, his early stuff in particular can be a mixed bag. I was much less impressed by Bug Jack Barron when I re-read it around the turn of the century, but his later stuff, esp. from the eighties and nineties, still seems to hold up quite well. (At least if you, like me, have a fondness for unreconstructed old hippies out looking to cause trouble.)

  2. I have heard a rumor that the Super Nebula Humble Bundle includes not just the first Venus Prime novel, but the whole six-book series. Can anyone confirm or deny this?

  3. @Joe H.:

    Looks more like five; #5 is not a complete novel in any of the three formats. I hope the HB folks fix that!

  4. @John A Arkansawyer on May 10, 2

    I’d love to know how much of the change in Heinlein over the years was Robert Heinlein and how much of it was Virginia Heinlein.

    I suspect that the change was in Robert, but heavily influenced by Virginia. I think this is so because you can so clearly see Leslyn’s similar influence on him while he was still with her.

    I suspect that . . . [Virginia’s] determined efforts to prevent a biography written about him (or them) in her lifetime . . .

    ??? Virginia spent her last few years working closely with Bill Patterson on the big RAH biography. I don’t think she wanted to prevent a biography, but rather to prevent either: a hack biography, or (more likely) one which would present RAH’s life and views incorrectly. (I gather she did not approve of either H. Bruce Franklin’s or Leon Stover’s books.)

  5. BravoLimaPoppa3: Great minds think alike…. I was just drafting a post about this, and linked to Nerd & Tie’s coverage.

  6. The Bundle looks awesome!

    But the 31 short stories which can only be acquired by signing up for and downloading an app pisses me off. I don’t read fiction on my smartphone — the screen is too tiny — and it seems a cruel joke to taunt people like me with stories we can’t access. 😐

  7. @Bill: I enjoyed Patterson’s biography, and wish he’d lived longer but–the think tank? Come on. I’d rather have accurate but incorrect over correct but inaccurate.

  8. @ BravoLimaPoppa3: Yep, the fit has already hit the shan in Houston fandom about this. My partner and I have been at the last 3 or 4 SCCCs, and we know for a fact that Comits stiffed a number of his media guests at the last 2 cons. At the 2016 con there were cops everywhere on Sunday. Not fun at all. We will not sign up for a booth at any event with which he is associated, because we got off lucky twice and to try again would be pushing it.

  9. @Rev Bob @Joe H

    I have heard a rumor that the Super Nebula Humble Bundle includes not just the first Venus Prime novel, but the whole six-book series. Can anyone confirm or deny this?

    That alone is reason enough for me to get it, cause I loved the Venus Prime series back in the day. I bought the first three Venus Prime books, when they first came out, special ordered the fourth, which back then was extremely expensive and took ages. And when I finally got it, the story still wasn’t finished. I’ve never managed to acquire the fifth and sixth book at all.

  10. That’s about the least humble bundle I’ve seen or bought. My hole beneath the Tsundoku Ranges is now in danger of collapse from the weight above it.

    Rev. Bob: I just downloaded it a couple of minutes ago and my copy of Venus Prime #5 is complete in the epub format. Maybe try again now.

  11. “Shaka, when the Scrolls fell. Pixel, his arms spread wide.” You gotta get both parts of both in there!

    (Don’t mention that episode to linguists; they get very testy, for good reason.)

    @Chip: I’m just over Spinrad, is all. What was fresh and edgy in the 60’s and 70’s is NBD nowadays. But perhaps not everyone has friends who go to the Folsom Street Fair, belong to Dykes On Bikes, or practice polyamory?

    Also, I know his ex-wife’s sister; when they first met right after the wedding, she was 15 and he immediately hit on her. Yes, his new wife’s gawky little sister, who he knew was underage.

    And in any case, I’m allergic to lack of proofreading, no matter whose it is.

    The real crime in the longer version of SiaSL is changing the opening sentence. It got much worse. Also $1300 for a set of books, they better be bound in gold or something for that kinda money. I haven’t read the expanded Puppet Masters.

    That Humble Bundle looks awesome, but what about those of us who don’t own smartphones? I’m a landline and pre-paid phone gal, for financial and spoon reasons, so this is certainly unwelcoming if not verging upon discriminatory. I literally cannot access these extra stories. Bad form.
    (I’m still giving them $1 b/c hubby wants Venus Prime and I want Waldrop’s book. Also the cookbook looks fun.)

  12. @Bill: Sorry. In his Heinlein biography, which I greatly enjoyed, Patterson made the claim that Heinlein invented the think tank. It’s just not credible. There are factual errors folks have pointed out, not terrible ones–the two I can think of were avoidable but understandable–but the think tank claim is just not supported by the facts.

    I actually find the claim about the think tank more troubling than the two flatly wrong factual errors. Anyone can screw up a fact. I’ve done it myself.

    But that sort of really broad claim? That’s a different kind of error.

    I did really enjoy reading Patterson. I’ll read that biography again. I also really enjoy Carl Sandburg’s Lincoln biography, but I have others I read to get my history straight.

  13. John A Arkansawyer: Virginia Heinlein embellished Robert’s accomplishments whenever the opportunity presented itself. In Grumbles from the Grave, the posthumous Heinlein autobiography which she edited, it was claimed he was the first to use the term “sci-fi” (rather than Forry Ackerman). That came up in discussion here in 2008, and led to the discovery that the claim was false — read down the comments on this post for the documentation.

  14. Camestros Felpaton: As you know, the TTB mandates that American interpretations of Belgian beer styles have to be called “Belgian style” so that consumers know that the beer is not in any way a Belgian product.

  15. Current best scholarship is that the term “sci fi” came from Variety, rather than Ackerman.

    And it doesn’t strike me that to have transcribed “sci-fic” as “sci-fi” is so egregious that doing so should be called “embellished” rather than, say, “typographical error.”

  16. (1) I completely forgot to comment that this is a Neat Idea, and I look forward to reading the winner and nominees.

  17. I admire Virginia Heinlein’s efforts to make her husband look as good as possible. It’s loyal, and that’s an underrated virtue. I also am incredibly angered by her distorting the facts of his life, but that’s on Robert Heinlein as well as on her. No one made him go through his papers and burn many of them on multiple occasions.

    (With the possible exception of the time he burned papers because he was worried about getting caught up in the Red Scare. That’s on Joe McCarthy and his buddies.)

    It will probably never be possible to have a major reliable biography of the man, or of the couple. It’s not like an artist owes us a biographical record. The work is what counts. But it still ticks me off, big time. Maybe it’s just the collector in me, who aspires to be an archivist. And falls short. Very very short.

    But I do accumulate.

  18. Lee,
    Well, I guess I’m part of Houston fandom now. Given the past behavior of the organizers I don’t think I’d give them my business.

  19. International Meredith Moment:

    Walter Jon Williams reports that the Revised And Improved! first book in his Dread Empire’s Fall series, The Praxis, is on sale for 99-whatever-the-local-coinage-is in countries outside of North America. (In the U.S. and Canada it’s regular price.)

  20. lurkertype: Like the longer Stranger, the opening sentences of the longer Puppet Masters are no improvement on what was published while Heinlein was alive. It so happens I typed out both openings while replying to an A.V. Club thread ~7 years ago, so here they are:

    Post-1990 version:

    Were they truly intelligent? By themselves, that is? I don’t know and I don’t know how we can ever find out. I’m not a lab man; I’m an operator.

    With the Soviets it seems certain that they did not invent anything. They simply took the communist power-for-power’s-sake and extended it without any “rotten liberal sentimentality” as the commissars put it. On the other hand, with animals they were a good deal more than animal.

    (It seems strange no longer to see dogs around. When we finally come to grips with them, there will be a few million dogs to avenge. And cats. For me, one particular cat.)

    If they were not truly intelligent, I hope I never live to see us tangle with anything at all like them which is intelligent. I know who will lose. Me. You. The so-called human race.

    The shorter version is vastly superior at pulling you into the story:

    Were they truly intelligent? By themselves, that is? I don’t know and I don’t know how we can ever find out.

    If they were not truly intelligent, I hope I never live to see us tangle with anything at all like them which is intelligent. I know who will lose. Me. You. The so-called human race.

    Thus hath Ginny wrought.

  21. @gottacook: Ugh. Bleh. Blech.

    And whether it was Forry or “Variety” who invented “sci-fi” doesn’t matter in this context. It surely wasn’t Heinlein, and Ginny’s hagiographies did neither posterity nor her husband any favors.

  22. Bill. I apologize for my previous comment. It made me sadder the more I thought about it.

    Anyway, the Variety reference opens whole new research possibilities. I’m glad you brought it to my attention.

  23. Bill: The Variety online site isn’t making this as easy as it could.

    A search for sci-fi returned a 1952 article about the movie War of the Worlds which contains the words “science-fiction” but not sci-fi. I tried different searches but haven’t gotten it to show the 1954 cite. In terms of what it is finding, the earliest appearance of “sci-fi” in Variety is 1962. I wish I could figure out how to find what Shapiro is quoting (without having to go and look at print copies!)

  24. Page 770 is about a black female SF writer! PROOF of the SJW conspiracy, right there! If you’re a numerologist, that is.

  25. @lurkertype: Spinrad is rather more than the … decorations … that got him denounced in Parliament (reportedly to the envy of many other SF writers) — sometimes. (Let’s just ignore the grade-school philosophizing after the orgies in Songs from the Stars. I had not heard of his wedding behavior and find it appalling; one Roman Polanski should have been enough.) And he seems to have grown out of the kneepads-and-mouthwash reaction of ~every female character to ~every strong male (which behavior was getting commented on over 40 years ago). But I suppose how much that “rather more” is worth is still subjective.

  26. @ Chip: After a day of thinking about it, the only response I can come up with is, “Are you sure we read the same book?” Because I didn’t see any of the things you’re complaining about. If I had to distill my opinion of the book down to one sentence, it would be that I really liked what seeing glimpses of all those very alien cultures can teach us about ourselves, if we’re willing to listen.

  27. Re. Stranger: maybe the opening sentences of the original version are slightly better; I don’t know. It had been a few years since I’d read the original when I tried the extended version. But for many years, I and most of the people I know had complained that the last third of the original was completely missing in story. It was the biggest complaint we had about the book. You can almost see the moment when H decided to give up on storytelling and just give us a dry recitation of facts to finish things off within the required word-count. It’s jarring. The extended version, on the other hand, reads fairly smoothly all the way to the end. There’s actual storytelling throughout the book.

    Maybe the ideal version would be somewhere between the two extremes we have. But overall, despite its flaws, I think the extended version is by far the better of the two. (Though I wouldn’t pay hundreds of dollars for it–my copy came from the Science Fiction Book Club.)

    @lurkertype: wow, I had no idea what Spinrad is (or was) like in person. That’s too bad, and I can see how it would color your opinion of him. But me, I really like his recent stuff much more than his sixties and seventies work. He matured a lot as a writer. His later stuff still tries to shock, but doesn’t rely as much on cheap (and, as you say, NBD) tricks.

    Plus, as someone who grew up in Berkeley, I find he’s one of the few SF writers to write about the sort of people I knew growing up without turning them into shallow, insulting stereotypes.

    (And if he matured as a writer, maybe he matured as a person too. Though I wouldn’t venture to bet money either way on that one.)

  28. @Lee: I found the lessons you like ridiculously clumsy; possibly I couldn’t see through the hectoring to their value.

  29. @Mike Glyer

    Bill: The Variety online site isn’t making this as easy as it could.

    A search for sci-fi returned a 1952 article about the movie War of the Worlds which contains the words “science-fiction” but not sci-fi. I tried different searches but haven’t gotten it to show the 1954 cite. In terms of what it is finding, the earliest appearance of “sci-fi” in Variety is 1962. I wish I could figure out how to find what Shapiro is quoting (without having to go and look at print copies!)

    Fred Shapiro is a legal librarian at Yale Univ, and has been antedating terms in the OED for years. (He’s also the editor of the Yale Book of Quotations, and an email friend). Rather than using Variety’s own unwieldy archives, he used the ProQuest digitized archives, which are much more user friendly (but more difficult for a person who is not affiliated with subscribing institution, typically universities, to use).

    UCLA’s library appears to have a subscription. They might allow a visiting non-student such as yourself to do some research on site — some universities allow such access.

Comments are closed.