Pixel Scroll 7/3/24 The Magic Morlock, So Pixeled And So New

(1) OCTAVIA’S BOOKSHELF RESCUED BY CROWDFUNDING. A  GoFundMe appeal reopened to keep Octavia’s Bookshelf in business raised its target amount almost immediately reports Pasadena Now: “Black Woman-Owned Bookstore Relaunches Urgent Fundraiser to Stay Open”.

A fundraiser to save a local bookstore has raised almost $70,000 in a matter of days.

Nikki High, founder and owner of Octavia’s Bookshelf in Pasadena, has reopened a GoFundMe campaign to raise funds for her struggling bookstore, Octavia’s Bookshelf. 

In a heartfelt social media post, she revealed her heavy heart, tired soul, and months of sleepless nights, and said she needed transparency with her community….

As Nikki High explained in her GoFundMe call:

We managed to open last year to great support and lots of excitement. This past year has been some of the most rewarding and difficult times in my life.

Bookselling is a tricky animal and being a Black Women entrepreneur adds another level of hardship that I was not quite prepared for.

Being underresourced but determined, I have fought through the highs and lows of retail. I’ve made some mistakes, and I’ve learned so much. Of all the sleepless nights and hardships, it’s the community we’ve built that has kept me going and reaffirmed to me that Octavia’s Bookshelf is a space we need to keep in our community.

To be completely transparent, we need an urgent influx of cash to keep us afloat right now. The coffers are dry and the reserves are non existent. We are being faced with tremendous financial mountains to climb to get here we need to be to be sustainable and I need your help once again…

The bookstore, named for Octavia Butler, opened its doors on February 18, 2023, at 1361 North Hill Ave, in Pasadena. 

(2) CORY PANSHIN Q&A. [Item by Andrew Porter.] Alexei Panshin’s widow on their collaborations together, Robert A. Heinlein, other subjects. “Interview with Cory Panshin” at One Geek’s Mind.

John Grayshaw: How did you and Alexei become writers and critics of science fiction?

We both started off as SF and fantasy readers from an early age and then as  fans. Alexei has written detailed accounts of his pathway in a couple of places, but the short version is that as a teenager he began subscribing to fanzines. Then he received a typewriter as a high school graduation present and the idea struck him that he should be a writer. He started out by writing a novel which was very amateurish. (As I recall from the one time I read the manuscript, it was something like a spaceship full of librarians seeking refuge from an evil empire.) He made better progress doing book reviews for fanzines, as well as short stories, of which he wrote about twenty between 1960 and 1965.

As for me, it’s a little more complicated, since I didn’t launch right into writing the way Alexei did. When I was twelve, I started trying to write a spy novel, and only got a few pages in. I recently found that old notebook and discovered to my surprise that I’d kept adding pages on and off for the next four years before giving up entirely and launching into a science fiction story about a spaceship crew that goes astray in hyperspace and finds itself battling a jabberwock that attacks them with its eyes of flame.

That might have been the beginning and end of my abortive science fiction writing career, but that fall I started my freshman year at Harvard College, where my roommate Leslie Turek and I discovered we had a lot in common; but also that Harvard was not particularly geek-friendly, being primarily dedicated to grooming the scions of the ruling class. So instead, we found our way to the MIT Science Fiction Society, where we were quickly drafted to co-edit the MITSFS fanzine and from there got drawn into science fiction fandom.

There weren’t a lot of women in fandom at that time, so it was easy for us to get noticed. Alexei spotted me in costume at the 1966 Worldcon and we were married in 1969. Around the same time, my fellow MITSFS member Fuzzy Pink married Larry Niven, while Leslie became actively involved in convention-running and eventually chaired the 1980 Worldcon.

Except for occasional con reports and other fanzine articles, I wasn’t doing much writing in the late 60s, but once I married Alexei we discovered a mutual interest in theorizing about the nature of science fiction and began to do critical writing in collaboration….

(3) EATING THE FANTASTIC. Scott Edelman invites listeners to gab over garlic bread with Sally Wiener Grotta in Episode 229 of his Eating the Fantastic podcast.

Sally Weiner Grotta

Sally Wiener Grotta’s latest two books are Of Being Woman, a collection of feminist science fiction stories, and Daughters of Eve, a discussion workbook which uses tales of biblical matriarchs to explore the modern world. Her short fiction has appeared in anthologies and magazines such as the North Atlantic ReviewDreamForgeAcross the Universe: Tales of Alternative Beatles, and others.

Her previous books include Digital Imaging for Visual Artists (co-authored with Daniel Grotta), and the novels Jo Joe, which was a Jewish Book Council Network book, and The Winter Boy, which was a Locus Magazine Recommended Read. Sally is also co-curator of the Galactic Philadelphia Salon reading series. Plus she’s also an award-winning journalist and photographer who has traveled on assignment to all seven continents.

We discussed when we first met (and can’t quite figure out whether it was a third or a quarter of a century ago), how her first storytelling impulse began because she’d fall asleep while being read stories as a child, the importance of the question “what if?,” why she often finds horror difficult to read, the early experience which allowed her to have such a good relationship with editors, the story she wrote in Ursula K. Le Guin’s writing workshop which caused that Grand Master to say “what a darling monster,” when we should submit to editorial suggestions and when we should run screaming, and much more.

(4) MTV NEWS THROWN LIFELINE BY INTERNET ARCHIVE. “Search MTV News Articles Archive at Wayback Machine” reports Variety.

In the days after Paramount Global disabled mtvnews.com and mtv.com/news — removing a trove of hundreds of thousands of articles about music and pop culture from the internet — the not-for-profit Internet Archive assembled a searchable index of 460,575 web pages previously published at mtv.com/news.

You can search the MTV News archive on the organization’s Wayback Machine at this link. Prior to Internet Archive aggregating the MTV News pages into a collection, there was no way to locate articles based on search terms.

Paramount shut down the MTV News division as part of a larger round of layoffs in May 2023… 

(5) TODAY’S BIRTHDAY.

[Written by Cat Eldridge.]

July 3, 1937 Tom Stoppard, 87. I was delighted to discover that playwright Tom Stoppard has crafted far more genre than I thought, considering I all I knew he had done was Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead (which is adjacent genre if not actually genre). If you’ve not seen it yet, it is quite delightful. 

He scripted Brazil, which he co-authored with Terry Gilliam and Charles McKeow. Brazil was actually part of the Trilogy of Imagination, all written or co-written by Gilliam, which consisted of Time Bandits, Brazil and The Adventures of Baron Munchausen. Not my favorite of those three films by any means but certainly interesting to catch at least once I’d say. 

Tom Stoppard

He also did the final Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade rewrite of Jeffrey Boam’s rewrite of Menno Meyjes’s screenplay. Now I like that film a lot but not as much as Raiders of The Lost Ark, which I consider perfect. The Suck Fairy broke her buckles when she tried to sully Raiders of The Lost Ark’s reputation recently. 

He did one genre adjacent script, the adaptation of the Robert B. Parker and Raymond Chandler novel Poodle Springs for television. Chandler had completed four chapters before his death, so on the occasion of the centenary of Chandler’s birth, Parker was asked by the estate of Raymond Chandler to complete the novel. No, I’ve not read it for the same reason I don’t watch films or series off novels that I really like — I prefer the originals, thank you. 

Let’s not overlook Shakespeare in Love which he co-authored with Marc Norman. Any film with Geoffrey Rush in it is certainly going to be worth seeing and if the script is written by Stoppard in some fashion as it was here, it’s likely that the dialogue is going to be stellar. It certainly is here. 

He was even involved in the largest SF franchise ever as  he did the dialogue polish of George Lucas’s Revenge of the Sith screenplay. Polish? Interesting phrase there. 

(6) COMICS SECTION.

(7) TEDDY HARVIA CARTOON.

(8) STARLOST AND FOUND. [Item by Michael Burianyk.] Any SF fan who was around in the early 70s will remember the TV series Starlost. Canadian writer Den Valdron is running a Kickstarter for his Starlost Unauthorized book which has six more days to go to reach its stretch goal. Den is a good writer (who has written unauthorized works discussing ‘Dr Who’ and ‘Lexi’) with a lot of energy and will bring a lot to understanding this little known piece of Science Fiction history in the context of Canadian cultural identity. I think the whole project is timely and is worthy of support. Starlost Unauthorized by D.G. Valdron”.

(9) CHURCH ARCHITECTURAL FEATURES FROM OUTER SPACE. Atlas Obscura introduces us to the “Cathedral of Salamanca’s Astronaut – Salamanca, Spain”. (Image at the link.)

…The thing that makes old hoaxes so frustrating is that they are hard to tease out from their actual history. Something fabricated in the 1600s made to look like it is from the 1400s can be very hard to pick out. The astronaut on the Cathedral of Salamanca is not in fact a hoax, but an approved and modern addition to the Cathedral, however it has all the earmarks of something which may provide for great confusion some 500 years from now.

Built between 1513 and 1733, the Gothic cathedral underwent restoration work in 1992. It is a generally a tradition of cathedral builders and restorers to add details or new carvings to the facade as a sort of signature. In this case after conferring with the cathedral, quarry man Jeronimo Garcia was given the go-ahead to add some more modern images to the facade.  He included an astronaut floating among the vines, a dragon eating ice cream, a lynx, a bull, a stork, a rabbit, and a crayfish….

A Scottish abbey, likewise, has a modern addition — a xenomorphic spout: “’Alien’ Gargoyle – Paisley, Scotland”. (Image at the link.)

…In 1991, the abbey underwent some necessary restoration work. Twelve of its 13 gargoyles were so badly ruined from water damage they had to be removed. The work was carried out by an Edinburgh-based stone masonry company, which replaced the carvings with newer models.

Apparently, some of the stone masons had a bit of fun with their creations. One of the gargoyles is certainly unique, which is fitting, as medieval tradition holds that no two gargoyles can look the same. The creature bears a strong resemblance to H.R. Giger’s Xenomorph from the Alien franchise. As the films were popular throughout the 1980s and early ‘90s, it’s likely one of the workers drew a bit of inspiration from its otherworldly antagonist….

(10) VIDEO OF THE DAY. “G. Rossini: Duetto para dos Gatos- Duet for Two Cats”. A YouTube commenter explains, “When you’re happy, you enjoy the music. When you’re sad, you understand the lyrics.”

[Thanks to Cat Eldridge, SF Concatenation’s Jonathan Cowie, Scott Edelman, Michael Burianyk, Daniel Dern, Steven French, Teddy Harvia, Kathy Sullivan, Mike Kennedy, Andrew Porter, John King Tarpinian, Chris Barkley for some of these stories. Title credit belongs to File 770 contributing editor of the day Andrew (not Werdna).]


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25 thoughts on “Pixel Scroll 7/3/24 The Magic Morlock, So Pixeled And So New

  1. (10) VIDEO OF THE DAY.
    Whoa, that’s a blast from the past. Haven’t seen that in well over a decade. I guess that’s what the cool cats of yore listened to.

  2. Thanks for the Title Credit!

    (8) Someday I’ll get around to reading Bova’s fictionalized account of working on that show

  3. Er Um, Heath Ledger is NOT listed in the cast of Shakespeare in Love.
    The leading male roles are Joseph Fiennes, Ben Affleck, & Geoffrey Ruch as the theatre producer.

  4. (9) Those are great, but here in Huntsville AL we have a church that not only seems to have its own rocket (disguised as a belltower) , but probably the only “Eggbeater Jesus” mosaic extant.

  5. (1) That’s good news. Hmmm…
    (2) Cory Panshin… sigh The last time I saw Alexei at a con, and, of course, begged him for The (Universal? Galactic?) Pantograph, he told me that no publisher wanted to buy it. I’d get down on my knees if Cory would try…
    Birthday: Love Stoppard. Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are even better in a small theater (we saw it a few years ago in Baltimore). Shakespeare in Love, yes… Last Crusade, I have always had Issues with (Indy should have been shot, and his father should save him, and there is NO WAY that his father would not relieve the knight).
    (7) Um, where’s the Teddy Harvia cartoon?

  6. mark: (7) I told Cat it’s a cartoon of the emperor’s new clothes, but he wouldn’t believe me. So there’s a real cartoon there now…

  7. (1) I hope they thrive.

    (4) This is the Internet Archive does that makes it so very valuable. Now, if they’ll just let go of the idea that being valuable makes them exempt from copyright law on books still in print and with authors and publishers eager to sell copies, both print and digital…

    (5) I had no idea Tom Stoppard got around so much in our genre! Bravo!

  8. (8) STARLOST AND FOUND
    Damn just noticed a typo (my fault). Den Waldron wrote about the tv show ‘Lexx’, NOT ‘Lexi’. ????

  9. @Andrew (not Werdna) wrote:
    (8) Someday I’ll get around to reading Bova’s fictionalized account of working on that show

    Yeah, I read it a very long time ago. I don’t remember much other that it wasn’t worth reading unless you were familiar with the show. Bova was one of Ellison’s fellow travellers, taking his cue from Ellison, as far as I can remember.

  10. What you’re forgetting is that Bova had his own experience with The Starlost as its science consultant. He didn’t need Harlan to tell him his opinion.

  11. Happy birthday to Tom Stoppard! I think Rosencrantz & Guildenstern may be on NT Live, in a nice production with Daniel Radcliffe (recent Tony winner).

  12. (5) Stoppard has also written a number of science-adjacent works, which ought to count too. He also doctored the script for Tim Burton’s “Sleepy Hollow”. Long may he live and write.

    (8) I read “The Starcrossed” (Bova). It was funny then, but with that being so long ago, it probably hasn’t held up well at all. I hope it at least gets a footnote in this book.

    But, sorry* — the show was bad SF even if it reflected CanCon. Fine as allegory, but bad as entertainment. And I say this as someone who was only a tween when it was on. I did enjoy looking at Dullea.

    Hope to see some of you at Baycon.

    *you read that in the accent, didn’t you?

  13. I think Tom Stoppard’s most science-fictional stage play is the very funny Jumpers, which besides a real-life enactment of Zeno’s paradoxes (well, sort of) features political takeover of the UK by “Radical Liberals” and tv coverage of a British lunar mission in which Captain Scott forcibly abandons Astronaut Oates on the Moon: “I am going up now. I may be gone for some time.”

  14. 8) I remember reading & enjoying Bova’s The Starcrossed back in high school, long before I ever knew it was inspired by actual events, however loosely.

    I wonder how differently it would read (especially the conclusion) these days in light of the whole ongoing AI kerfuffle.

  15. I hadn’t thought of The Universal Pantograph in years. I don’t know why the Villiers series wasn’t a success in its day, leading to its untimely termination. I certainly enjoyed it (although I confess I haven’t reread it in a long time). I wonder if it wouldn’t do better if given a push today. I see that the existing books are in e-print in an omnibus volume, but so many books are out there that good ones can be overlooked.

  16. 8) The Starcrossed is fun, though one does get the feeling Bova wrote it because that was cheaper than therapy.

    I have watched every episode of The Starlost, and, well, yeah, it might not be the worst SF TV show ever made… but it’s definitely a contender.

  17. I love the Villiers books but suspect that a fourth would just be more of the same (maybe not a bad thing). People who like the Villiers books should also read Walter Jon Williams’ Maijstral trilogy.

    And of course the whole point of a drapeau is that you need a highly trained servant to arrange it correctly.

  18. (10) The Duetto Buffo di Due Gatti isn’t actually by Rossini. It’s an arrangement somebody else did of his music. It’s a favorite of mine anyway.

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