Pixel Scroll 6/25/17 One Click, My Bonny Pixel, I’m After A Scroll Tonight

(1) MORE, PLEASE. Here’s a provocative (in a good way) question:

(2) NOMINEE REVIEWING. Marco Zennaro is making progress in his Hugo reading, adding reviews as he goes along. Here’s the latest addition to “The Hugo Awards 2017 Finalists: Best Novels”.

Death’s End by Cixin Liu Death’s End is the conclusion of the Remembrance of Earth’s Past trilogy by world acclaimed author Liu Cixin. The first installment of the series won the prestigious Hugo Award for best novel.

I finished reading the story a couple of days ago, but it is still stuck in my head. More I think about it, more I come to realize how adroitly woven it is. All the elements, themes, concepts from the three books fit together perfectly at the end, giving birth to a logically self-consistent, scientifically sound (and deeply terrifying) cosmology.

I also like how this third book manages to color what would have been an otherwise plot-driven hard sci-fi book, with very human, emotional, moments. Cheng Xin ethical struggles, and Yun Tianming love are some of the best elements of the story.

The story begins during the fall of Constantinople, and then moves backs to the event of the previous novels: after the Doomsday Battle, the uneasy balance of Dark Forest Deterrence keeps the Trisolaran invaders at bay. Earth enjoys unprecedented prosperity due to the infusion of Trisolaran knowledge. With human science advancing daily and the Trisolarans adopting Earth culture, it seems that the two civilizations will soon be able to coexist peacefully as equals without the terrible threat of mutually assured annihilation. But the peace has also made humanity complacent…

Hugo worthy? Yes! It was one of the books I nominated.

Was it part of a slate? No

Zennaro has also written about the nominated Novellas, Novelettes, and Short Stories.

(3) COMPELLED. In a review for Strange Horizons, Alexandra Pierce works hard to explain the complex world of Jo Walton’s novel Necessity.

On the philosophical side, the interactions of Apollo and Hermes demonstrate how gods are themselves constrained by higher powers: both by Zeus, father of all the gods, and Necessity. As the title suggests, the compulsion of Necessity is an important aspect of the novel. It’s a force that not even gods can avoid, and it can even be used to avoid the potentially damaging aspects of time travel, of getting stuck in difficult situations: if Necessity says you must do something later in your timeline, you can’t be stuck somewhere else. Complementing this is a strong focus on the free choices of humans to undertake either stupid or worthy actions, in politics and personal relationships and everything else—and the contention that this is a noble part of the human condition.

(4) BRONZE PLATE SPECIAL. The other day I Scrolled about the “Dendra panoply, the oldest body Armour from the Mycenaean era” – never suspecting my friend, archeologist Louise Hitchcock, has personally worn a replica.

After you’ve looked at the picture, check out Minoan Architecture and Urbanism: New Perspectives on an Ancient Built Environment edited by Quentin Letesson and Carl Knappett, which includes the co-authored article “Lost in Translation: Settlement Organization in Postpalatial Crete – A View from the East” by Louise A. Hitchcock and Aren M. Maier. The book is available for pre-order, with a release date of September 23.

(5) IMMORTAL CATS. No one can forget them once she’s told their story — “Mog author Judith Kerr, 94, to publish new book Katinka’s Tail”.

Almost 50 years after the appearance of one of the most famous felines in children’s books, Mog creator Judith Kerr is to publish a book inspired by her latest pet cat, Katinka. The much-loved author and illustrator, who celebrated her 94th birthday last week, is to publish Katinka’s Tail in the autumn.

The story of a “perfectly ordinary cat with a not-so-ordinary tail” was inspired by Kerr’s observations of her cat, the ninth in an inspirational line. “She is a ridiculous-looking white cat with a tabby tail that looks as though it belonged to somebody else,” she said. It was watching the “bizarre” behaviour of her first family pet, Mog – which included licking her sleeping daughter’s hair – that inspired the eponymous stories beloved by generations of children.

(6) BIGGER ON THE OUTSIDE. The Last Knight, an unimpressive number one at U.S. box offices this weekend, did better overseas — “No. 1 ‘Transformers’ hits new low with $69-million domestic debut, but is saved by global box office “.

“Transformers: The Last Knight,” the fifth installment in the blockbuster franchise from Michael Bay, may have topped the weekend, but all the robot-smashing has gotten a bit rusty at the box office.

The Paramount film, which opened Wednesday, took in $45 million in the U.S. and Canada over the weekend, placing it in the No. 1 spot ahead of returning titles “Cars 3” and “Wonder Woman.” When factored into its five-day debut, “The Last Knight” grossed a franchise low of $69 million.

….The latest installment, which stars Mark Wahlberg and Anthony Hopkins and features a new mythology involving King Arthur and Stonehenge, cost $217 million to make. And however squeaky “The Last Knight’s” debut may have been domestically, the film took in an Optimus Prime-sized number overseas. It earned $196 million from its first 40 markets — with $123 million of that haul coming from China.

(7) TRIVIAL TRIVIA

“I’m Batman.”

Anyway, he was – Olan Soule (1909-1994).

Soule’s voice work on television included his 15-year role (1968-1983) as Batman on several animated series that were either devoted to or involved the fictional “Dark Knight” superhero

(8) TODAY IN HISTORY

  • June 25, 1953 Robot Monster began stalking movie theatres.
  • June 25, 1982 The Omen arrives to terrify movie audiences.
  • June 25, 1982 Blade Runner was shown on some theater screens.
  • June 25, 1982 – Meanwhile, other screens played John Carpenter’s remake of The Thing.

(9) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY DYSTOPIAN

(10) LINE DIRECTOR. While being interviewed about his new assignment directing the Han Solo movie, Ron Howard reminisced that right after he and his wife saw Star Wars they loved it so much they got right back in line and waited to see it again.

As news of the 1977 film Star Wars began to unfold, Howard said he became “so curious.” He and his wife went to see it on the first day of release and were “so moved by the movie. It was all the things you dream you’re going to experience in the movies.”

Although they had stood in line for two hours to see it, when Howard and Cheryl came out, they threw each other a look and decided to see it again immediately — standing in line for another 90 minutes.

Which made me wonder — how did Ron Howard not see this movie at a free pre-release screening? After all, I did — along with many other LASFSians.

(11) WHY IT HAPPENED. Carl Slaughter recommends, “For those in shock or scratching their heads over the Han Solo project shakeup, Mr. Sunday Movie offers an explanation that seems to make sense.”

(12) EQUIVALENCIES. Jesse Hudson makes clear there are some usages of alternate history that have worn on him, in his “Review of Bring the Jubilee by Ward Moore” at Speculiction.

Its Jonbar point the American Civil War, Bring the Jubilee looks into the idea ‘what if the South won’?  The story of Hodge Backmaker, son of a poor farmer in what’s left of the United States of America (essentially the Union), the young man breaks free of his rural home at an early age and heads to New York City—an impoverished metro compared to the grand, lavish cities of the Confederate States of America.  Getting lucky and finding work with a book printer, Hodge spends the next few years of his life learning the trade.  And he learns much more.  The book printer’s essentially a front, namely that of printing propaganda and counterfeiting money, Hodge learns of ongoing secret operations to build a Grand Army and restore the United States to its former glory.

While many readers might expect such an early effort of alternate history to go the black and white route of vilifying the South by portraying them as tyrannical victors while glorifying the North as honorable victims, instead, the South is not portrayed as a slave-loving region which stamps the poor further into the ground, rather simply an economically and politically aggressive government bent on empire.  In other words, Moore spins the tables… to look something like the North.  This is all a convoluted manner of saying Bring the Jubilee is more interested in finding common ground between reality and the alternate reality, than it is putting the 8 millionth nail in the coffin of ‘slavery is bad’.

(13) EUROCON REPORT. Alqua shares the many highlights of “Eurocon 2017 (U-con) in Dortmund” at Fandom Rover.

The evening concert on Friday was called A night to remember. I was a little bit sceptical if it would be really a night I will remember for long, but I was wrong. There were few artists presenting their pieces. We were able to hear people playing guitar and theremin, reciting poetry or “interpreting alien poetry”. But the best pieces of this evening were songs played by Dimitra Fleissner on her harp and the ATS show by Gata. Music and dance were quite different but they both left me astonished and I will be looking forward for another possibility to see one of these artists performing.

(14) DISSENTING VOICE. Brad R. Torgersen deems “cultural appropriation” of no concern in his Mad Genius Club post titled: “If you’re not appropriating culture, you’re not paying attention”.

Clearly, nobody owns culture. So why do we worry about appropriating it?

(Cough, when I say “we,” I mean American progressives and Social Justice Zealots who clearly have too much time on their hands, cough.)

My take: If you’re a science fiction or fantasy writer, you have more to say on this topic than anyone. Because you’re extrapolating futures, presents, and pasts. Alternative histories. Possible horizons. The “What if?” that makes SF/F so much fun in the first place. There are no rules which you aren’t automatically authorized to break. The entire cosmos is your paint box. Nobody can tell you you’re doing it wrong.

Are we really going to be dumb enough to pretend that SF/F authors of demographics X, Y, or Z, cannot postulate “What if?” for demographics A, B, and C?

We’re not even talking about homework — which is a good idea, simply because some of your best syntheses will occur when you take Chocolate Culture and Peanut Butter Culture — kitbash them together — and come up with the inhabitants of a frontier planet for your thousand-year-future interstellar empire.

We’re talking about authors voluntarily yoking their creative spirits to somebody else’s pet political and cultural hobbyhorses. A game of rhetorical, “Mother, may I?”

(15) WEIRD TECH. Labeling produce with lasers instead of paper: “M&S says labelling avocados with lasers is more sustainable”.

M&S will sell avocados bearing what look like pale tattoos, showing a best-before date and origin.

Peeling away the traditional labelling will save 10 tonnes of paper and five tonnes of glue a year, says M&S.

More of its fruit and vegetables may be laser-branded in future, the retailer says.

“The laser just takes off one layer of skin and instead of inking it or burning it, the skin retracts and leaves a mark,” says Charlie Curtis, senior produce agronomist at Marks and Spencer.

“What we’re putting onto the fruit is country of origin, best before date and there’s a short code so you can put it through quickly at the [checkout] till.”

(16) JUST WEIRD. The new Canadian Toonie glows in the dark.

Canadians may now have a slight advantage when it comes to digging for lost change in sofa cushions and car seats; the Royal Canadian Mint has unveiled what it described as the world’s first glow-in-the-dark coin in circulation.

The specially designed two-dollar coin, or toonie, as it’s known in Canada, features two people paddling in a canoe as the northern lights – vivid in green and blue – dance high above them. When the coin is put in the dark, the aurora borealis glows softly, thanks to a new ink formulation that contains luminescent material.

The coin, part of a collection created to mark the 150th anniversary of Canada’s confederation, also ranks as the world’s first coloured bimetallic coin, said a mint spokesperson. “Only the core of the $2 coin is coloured and the glow effect makes the aurora borealis part of the design look lifelike,” said Alex Reeves.

(17) UNABOMBER INVESTIGATION. Polygon’s article “The FBI kept a list of D&D players as part of its hunt for the Unabomber”.

It appears that in 1995 the FBI made a sincere effort to investigate a group of D&D players. It suspected them of having a connection with the Unabomber, a terrorist named Theodore Kaczynski who spent the better part of two decades mailing people explosives.

Step one was to dig back into the past of TSR and the role-playing hobby as a whole. In so doing, the FBI put together a pretty decent three-page history, if I do say so myself. It also came up with a list of armed and dangerous individuals who were “known members of the Dungeons & Dragons” that it pulled from TSR’s own computer system.

David Klaus sent the link along with his comments:

The fishing expedition into TSR as a cocaine front would appear to be sparked by cultural bigotry.  Unable to find real crime, to justify his existence, local FBI agent investigates legitimate business run by “weirdos” playing a game Pat Robertson says is Satanic.  (This would be in keeping with the Secret Service act of stupidity against Steve Jackson Games at about the same time.) Again, having no evidence of crime, just prejudiced opinion, the personal histories of all corporate officers are gathered, civil rights being violated, the company computers are invaded and lists of game purchasers are kept on file. And that Gary Gygax!  He answers his mail!  He ‘s a Libertarian Party member!  He had a difficult divorce!  He’s eccentric!  Somebody whose credibility can’t be judged says he’s “frightening”! His business makes money!  He spends his own money as he pleases!  The file included allegations he breaks drug and gun laws.  (If there were evidence, why didn’t they make an arrest?  Perhaps because there wasn’t?) We’re incompetent to find the Unabomber, and this guy uses a computer.  It might be him, yeah, that’s the ticket! Let’s drop some hints among his friends and watch them get paranoid about each other!  Since we couldn’t find evidence, let’s see if one of them will manufacture some out of fear!  Scare ’em enough, and they’ll say anything. These Flatfeet Keystone Cops are supposed to protect us from foreign terrorism.  Right.

(19) THE WAKING LAND. Strange Horizons reviewer Mark Granger finds much to like in The Waking Land by Callie Bates.

Callie Bates’s strength lies in how quickly and succinctly she lays down the plot without making it complicated, a great feat when you consider the story is told in the first person; Elanna’s view point restricts us to what she is seeing and hearing, but never distracts from the bigger picture—and Bates manages to cleverly insert plot points along the way without them appearing to be shoe-horned in. I was immediately sympathetic to Elanna’s plight, her confused and conflicted state: the fact that everything she has been taught—from history to basic morals—is falling down around her makes her someone you want to side with. In a lesser writer’s hands Elanna’s character could have easily become whiny, but Bates makes her a strong, opinionated woman, yet one who is forced to have her mind opened to something beyond herself.

[Thanks to John King Tarpinian, David K.M. Klaus, Cat Eldridge, Martin Morse Wooster, Paul Weimer, Chip Hitchcock, and Louise Hitchcock for some of these stories. Title credit goes to File 770 contributing editor of the day Stoic Cynic.]


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144 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 6/25/17 One Click, My Bonny Pixel, I’m After A Scroll Tonight

  1. (4) Reminds me of armor drawn by Sir John Tenniel in Through the Looking-Glass. He was going for a chess look, but might have known about the real armor with the same look.

    (17) NEWSWEEK spelled it “Unabomer,” apparently. Fun fact: they got it from the FBI.

    I WILL DESCROLL ALL THE CIVILIZED PIXELS!

  2. (1) I’d love a sequel to Kameron Hurley’s The Stars Are Legion. (As far as I know, it’s supposed to be a standalone.) Or maybe even more so, a prequel, to find out how the Legion came to be.

  3. 1) I’ve been waiting 25+ years for Michael Reaves to write a third Shattered World novel. (The second, The Burning Realm, left things at a bit of a cliffhanger.)

  4. @Rob Barrett,
    +1
    1. There was no indication in first volume that it was not a stand-alone (misleading).
    2. Volume one finished with a to be concluded in the next volume advisory (a lie).
    3. There is no third volume.

    It’s like that cake thing.

  5. 12) Getting the CSA to be a country that advanced is a neat trick – the southern states were mostly rural at that time, with very little industry.

  6. 1) I’ll also cheat by mentioning a sequel to Emma Bull’s Territory, which I understand does actually exist in some stage of not-quite-completion or other.

  7. 1) I’m going to have to name two: Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand by Samuel R. Delany and Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke.

  8. (8) Back in the late 70s, I remember reading a blurb in TV Guide that describes the movie like this:

    The Robot Monster (1953): Earth is invaded by moon monsters from Mars.

    If you look at the full synopsis, it’s actually a really grim movie, but the ending gives you an idea of why it periodically challenges “Plan 9 From Outer Space” as the worst SF movie of all time. (Spoiler: the hero wakes up and it was all a bad dream.)

    That and the fact that, owing to a limited special-effects budget, the monster was played by an actor in a gorilla costume wearing a deep-sea-diving helmet.

  9. Greg Hullender: That and the fact that, owing to a limited special-effects budget, the monster was played by an actor in a gorilla costume wearing a deep-sea-diving helmet

    Wow! This could be my new favorite movie (as long as I don’t actually have to watch it).

  10. That and the fact that, owing to a limited special-effects budget, the monster was played by an actor in a gorilla costume wearing a deep-sea-diving helmet.

    And is therefore awesome.

    Ro-Man rules.

  11. 1- While there are many, I’ve been waiting on The Captal’s Tower longer than any other planned sequel and I’d like to have that that just to feel the wait was worth something

  12. I remember at the first Farthing Party, Jon Singer coming up with “doubloon” for the $2 coin. This is a hugely better name than “toonie” and I am sad that it is unlikely to ever get much traction.

    What book do I love and wish could have a sequel? Hellspark. The background to that book was rich enough to support a twenty-book series.

  13. @Mike Glyer: There are less painful ways to experience such masterpieces.

    “Now, this is what Dr. Cornelius would look like if he was played by Raymond Burr.”

  14. @Greg Hullender

    (8) Back in the late 70s, I remember reading a blurb in TV Guide that describes the movie like this:

    The Robot Monster (1953): Earth is invaded by moon monsters from Mars.

    If you look at the full synopsis, it’s actually a really grim movie, but the ending gives you an idea of why it periodically challenges “Plan 9 From Outer Space” as the worst SF movie of all time. (Spoiler: the hero wakes up and it was all a bad dream.)

    That and the fact that, owing to a limited special-effects budget, the monster was played by an actor in a gorilla costume wearing a deep-sea-diving helmet.

    Robot Monster also stars George Nader who was eventually driven out of Hollywood for having a relationship with Rock Hudson and then went to Germany to find fame by playing G-Man Jerry Cotton, a German pulp hero, in eight movies in the 1960s. George Nader was great in the role and the Jerry Cotton movies are well worth watching, particularly the early black and white ones, if you can find them.

    I’ve never seen Robot-Monster, though I always wanted to, because hey – it has Jerry Cotton fighting aliens, so what’s not to love?

    BTW, everybody in Germany who was around in the 1950s/60s (as well as younger people who know both of them from TV) reacts to the fact that George Nader used to have a relationship with Rock Hudson with, “OMG, this is the coolest thing ever.”

  15. PS: George Nader apparently wrote an SF novel about the forbidden love between a robot and a human in the 1970s

  16. @P J Evans:

    Getting the CSA to be a country that advanced is a neat trick – the southern states were mostly rural at that time, with very little industry.

    Well, it would be a neat trick if Moore made it seem at all plausible — but he was more interested in writing a grimy story (as usual, IIRC) than being plausible. (Yes, I think the reviewer overrates this book, e.g. by understating the bulk and impact of the triangle.) IMO, just making the South an empire builder is implausible; the U.S. being split would have delighted revanchist Britons, who would have done their best to thwart CSA attempts to move away from being a client state.

  17. I was promised the fourth Anthony Villiers novel. Promised by Alexei Panshin personally. Where is it?

    Note: Not see. Don’t believe me if I claim otherwise.

  18. (1) MORE, PLEASE. The fourth and final “Tale of the Five” (“Middle Kingdoms”) novel by Diane Duane would be a treat. 😉 Also, I’m bummed Syne Mitchell’s “Deathless” series didn’t get past book 1; that book needs a sequel, but it’s not to be (there’s an excerpt of it at the end of book 1!).

    I’m struggling to think of stand-alone books or finished series that I feel need sequels, though I’m sure there are ones I’d welcome sequels to. It’s easier to think of unfinished series in this light.

    (16) JUST WEIRD. Uh, yeah, that is just weird. Oh Canada!

    @Soon Lee re. #4: Interesting Twitter thread, thanks.

    @Cora: Oh yeah, I own Nader’s Chrome and read it in the late 80s, IIRC. It was so long ago, I don’t remember much about this human-android (sorta) love story. I wonder if I ever finished it: I just skimmed a couple of synopses and it sounds like the book took a couple of weird turns later in the book that I don’t remember. (My memory bites, though.)

  19. A Meredith Moment – science fiction(ish) ebooks for $2.99 each!

    The Darkside War by Zachary Brown (Icarus Corps #1; Saga; no DRM); The Explorer by James Smythe (Anomaly Quartet #1; Harper Voyager; DRM); and Updraft by Fran Wilde (Bone Universe #1; Tor; no DRM; I don’t see the sale price in iBooks . . . yet).

    All three are on my list to look into. I know Updraft‘s supposed to be very good and won the Nebula. The third book in the trilogy? series? comes out in September.

    If anyone’s read the other two and would care to comment, please do. 🙂

    Brown’s sounds like MilSF, which I only occasionally read, but this sounded interesting. Book 3 comes out in a week. Hmm, I think maybe this isn’t a sale (all three books are listed at $2.99; I may be confused in reporting this here, sorry).

    Anyway, get ’em while they’re hot, I mean, inexpensive. ::samples downloading::

  20. 1. I’d go for a second part of Martin Millar’s The Good Fairies or New York.

  21. (7) I mostly remember Olan Soule from his role as the lab technician on Dragnet. He was one of Jack Webb’s stable.

    The Scrolls my Pixelation.

  22. Ro-Man was so bad he was good. And the cast stayed the same the whole time, unlike Plan 9. Mike, I am ashamed that a fan of your vintage never saw it.

    @Cora: The forbidden love between a man and a gay robot, to be exact. The cover is… well.

    @Kendall: Yes, I’d like that too, but at least we weren’t totally cliffhangered.

  23. Greg Hullender on June 25, 2017 at 10:24 pm said:

    That and the fact that, owing to a limited special-effects budget, the monster was played by an actor in a gorilla costume wearing a deep-sea-diving helmet.

    I’ve known of the film for many years but I’ve never seen it and I also wish I had a gorilla-in-a-space-helmet costume.

  24. (1) I would very much like another Chanur novel (or ten), and the sequel to Winds Of Winter
    @Lis Carey I looked for The Universal Pantograph for years before I found out it didn’t exist.

  25. 1) Since Lis Carey’s already mentioned the fourth Villiers book, I will go with a sequel to The Goblin Emperor, thankyouverymuch.

    I’ve seen Robot Monster… there was a spate of bad movies put out very late at night on Channel Four, years ago, and this was a natural choice. It’s everything people say it is… thing is, though, it is, in point of fact, a bad movie. Which means it’s actually not so much fun to watch in its entirety. For every giggle you get at things like Great Guidance (Ro-Man’s boss – same actor, same costume, accessorized with a violin bow), there’s a good five minutes of “dear Lord, is this thing still going on?” It’s so bad, it’s bad.

  26. (1) There are unfinished series where I’m waiting for the next installment. In most cases the next book have a release date, and then there’s Song of Ice and Fire and Gentleman Bastards.

    When it comes to standalones, or series that are officially finished, I can’t think of anyone where I really want a sequel. Or a part of me want a sequel, but mostly I prefer to leave the characters at the “(more or less) happy ever after”-ending of the original book. And I want the author to use their talent to create something new and exciting, rather than try to squeeze more out of an exisisting world just for the sake of fulfilling the fans’ desire for a sequel.

  27. Hey, I got an item credit. Huzzah. (I suspect it was Seanan’s twitter question–which I retweeted, but I found myself devilishly difficult to answer. I started to think and then I realized that I would be pointing, for good or ill at someone I know or an outright friend. So it felt really weird to answer. A dead author, ironically, would be a far safer target for me for that question.

    Too much knowledge of how the sausage of books gets made, from writing to the publishing business, can make that question rather pointed for a lot of authors. I recently learned a sequel to a novel I liked a lot will probably not happen because book one did not sell as well as hoped. So asking for a sequel for that book and author would be rather mean spirited on my part, even if I really do want a sequel to that book!

  28. @Tom Becker: Just the one I was thinking of – I’d love to find out what happens next in the Metropolitan sequence. I’ve heard that we will see Varley’s long-awaited “Irontown Blues” sometime soon, so at least there’s that.

    P.S. “Once upon a time when the Files were young, there was a Pixel named Scroll”

  29. What I want most is a novel-length sequel to Barbara Hambly’s Dog Wizard. The short stories she’s produced in recent years have been fun, but I’ve been waiting for the fallout from Antryg’s ‘… but I’m afraid they fell to me’ since I was fourteen years old, and I am now thirty-seven.

  30. 14: Since it’s Brad. What is his rant about? The Except and skimming the MGCPost doesn’t give it away… (so not Mikes fault that I don’t understand it)
    It leaves me as clueless as the feud between Donald Trump Jr and Johny Deep reported in the newspaper. Deep has made a strange coment about actors wanting to kill the president and Trumps son wants him fired? Can someone tell me what this is about or give me a link to understand the background. Thanks.

  31. “14: Since it’s Brad. What is his rant about? “

    It is the marxists. Or as Sh3tterly would say, it is the neoliberals. Same thing.

  32. Yay, contributing editor! 🙂 Though it’s a mixed blessing – Loreena McKennit is now ear worming me via a device of my own invention…

    For sequels I’ll join the the chorus for the third in The Metropolitan series. Aiah deserves a resolution. Then again, WJW has moved on stylistically. Would it capture the story it was shaping to be?

    About halfway through Raven Stratagem. Like it’s predecessor I’m not feeling the love many folks are. It’s got interesting world building but the execution is flat: like a two dimensional glass of triple distilled water served at body temperature flat. Be interesting to hear what others are seeing.

    Formation: Chicken in the bread pan picking out dough, pivot on Pixel Scroll 6/25…

  33. 1. The final book in the Alvin Maker series. Yes, I know who Alvin is supposed to be, so I know how it will end, but I’d like to see how it gets there and what happens to the rest of the folk-magic ensemble.

  34. Going to have to bug out of work early today and see how easy it is to squeeze an aircraft carrier under the Forth Bridge…

  35. “To be like the hu-man! To laugh! Feel! Want! Why are these things not in the plan?”
    “I can not, but I must. At what point on the graph do these two things meet? I must, but I can not.”

    bonus: TWO Ro-Men!

  36. (14) Oh good, we really needed to discuss this again.

    (1) Can’t really think of any standalones where I really want a sequel, but I am waiting on the next instalment of the Gentleman Bastards and the Kingkiller Chronicles. But they’ll get done when they get done, and in the meantime it’s not as though I’m short on other fantastic books to read. After finishing Raven Stratagem I’m taking a short break from SFF stuff to read Black Dahlia by James Ellroy.

  37. 1) I’d love to see the sequel to The Architect of Sleep, but my understanding is that so many fans have been jerks about it that Boyett will never write it.

  38. @Oneiros

    If you happen to be new to Ellroy, he’s pretty uneven in quality. Personally, I find The Black Dahlia to be one of his more ‘meh’ books. LA Confidential and The Cold Six Thousand are really good on the other hand. YMMV, etc.

  39. (14) I’m with @Oeneros on this, but I did come across an interesting post by Robert Yang on how and weather to move the conversation forward. There’s lots of good stuff – particularly on remix culture and positive uses of appropiation – and also this response to a critical piece in the NYT which…

    …basically argues that artists shouldn’t have to ask anyone for permission to make art, and fear of cultural appropriation forces artists to ask communities for permission, thus ruining art forever… as if art hasn’t already been ruined countless times already, as if artists are always right, as if art is immune from racism, as if Elvis wasn’t wrong, as if artists don’t make bad art all the time, as if the sovereignty of an individual artist is more important than the collective pain of a community… etc.

  40. Ghostbird:
    Thanks, that link answers everythink that I wanted to know.

    About Sequels I have waited a long time for a certain on. The sad think is in the USA it existed. (Wild Cards 7)

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