Hmm. SF Encyclopedia gives her as a recommendation. plus we have a winner for least flattering author photo ever.
― Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Friday, 5 May 2017 03:13 (seven years ago) link
they made one of her People stories into a t.v. movie with william shatner that i vaguely remember.
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 03:40 (seven years ago) link
list from January:
https://www.theverge.com/2017/1/5/13811144/sci-fi-fantasy-book-recommendations-2017
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 16:41 (seven years ago) link
Those Zenna Henderson stories show up in some classy anthologies. Have yet to read one though.
― Trelayne Staley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 5 May 2017 16:47 (seven years ago) link
hmm some interesting stuff there. along w the usual space opera and quest fantasy dross
xp
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 May 2017 16:48 (seven years ago) link
yeah, that list is a mixed bag.
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 16:55 (seven years ago) link
is there one person making all the money with cover art like this or do people just rip off this style a lot.
https://cdn0.vox-cdn.com/thumbor/w3bejbkhFL3x7SzeM_9qA-a1x24=/800x0/filters:no_upscale()/cdn0.vox-cdn.com/uploads/chorus_asset/file/7709363/C0DanoDWIAAlaDe.jpg
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 16:57 (seven years ago) link
haha yeah so many shitty giant font designs, kind of a bummer
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 May 2017 16:59 (seven years ago) link
no i mean the art. it might just be one person.
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 17:01 (seven years ago) link
okay, its a john harris thing. i didn't know his name. he did the cover for ender's game even. he's been around the block.
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 17:04 (seven years ago) link
hmm some interesting stuff there. along w the usual space opera and quest fantasy drossxp
― Trelayne Staley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 5 May 2017 17:06 (seven years ago) link
anyway, people really dig his current style these days. i see it on a ton of books.
http://scalzi.files.wordpress.com/2014/05/cropped-ao-john-harris-hi-res-cover1.jpg
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 17:23 (seven years ago) link
So many Tor jack Vance paperbacks with those generic fuckin spaceships on them
― gimmesomehawnz (Jon not Jon), Friday, 5 May 2017 17:54 (seven years ago) link
http://wormwoodiana.blogspot.co.uk/2017/05/rip-richard-dalby-1949-2017.html
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:09 (seven years ago) link
Future people gotsta have some way to flee the Dying Earth, Jon not Jon
― Trelayne Staley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 5 May 2017 18:17 (seven years ago) link
were you asking for which ones I thought were interesting or which ones I thought were generic dross
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:18 (seven years ago) link
Tell us both.
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:22 (seven years ago) link
Interesting
― Trelayne Staley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 5 May 2017 18:23 (seven years ago) link
"Interesting" pile:The Wanderers by Meg HowreyNew York 2140 by Kim Stanley RobinsonAutonomous by Annalee Newitz
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:26 (seven years ago) link
I'm not gonna spend any energy slagging off stuff I haven't read but generally anything involving a "special" protagonist resolving some sort of epic conflict tends to bore me.
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:27 (seven years ago) link
I do wish Ted Chiang and Charles Yu were more prolific. So many of my favorite recent-ish authors publish so little. Pelevin cranks 'em out at least, but I have to wait around for translations.
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:28 (seven years ago) link
standin' on the corner. some pelevin in your hand. just waiting for your man.
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:31 (seven years ago) link
haha
he's v underrated imo
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:33 (seven years ago) link
"Pelevin's prose is usually devoid of dialogue between the author and the reader, whether through plot, character development, literary form or narrative language. This corresponds to his philosophy (both stated[where?] and unstated) that, for the most part, it is the reader who infuses the text with meaning."
no way, buddy, that's your job, i already have a job.
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:34 (seven years ago) link
he's probably too smart for me.
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:36 (seven years ago) link
"Pelevin's prose is usually devoid of dialogue between the author and the reader
what does this even mean
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:36 (seven years ago) link
I don't think he's "difficult" at all, not compared to, say, Cordwainer Smith or Bolano or idk Alasdair Gray. His actual prose is p simple, even though the plots are often hallucinatory or metaphysical or satirical. It's very Russian. Better than Bulgakov.
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:39 (seven years ago) link
he is no longer on speaking terms with us.
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:39 (seven years ago) link
i think that's what it means.
yeah, on the other hand, if i can read van vogt, i can read anybody.
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:40 (seven years ago) link
I think it's just kind of a bitchy way to say "he's a Buddhist"
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:41 (seven years ago) link
i'm really used to reading the first 20 pages of an SF novel and not knowing what the hell is going on or what the hell people are talking about. that's a barrier to entry! its also why people don't like opera. do you guys study the maps at the beginning of SF books? i glance at them. i just figure yeah you're somewhere. you'll go somewhere else. i'll just ride in the back.
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:44 (seven years ago) link
knowing yr tastes scott I'm not sure what you would make of him. I mean, he's definitely not in the American pulp tradition, and he's not really in the inscrutable/highbrow eastern european sf tradition (Strugatsky Bros, Lem etc.) either. But there are enough elements of the fantastic in his books - whether its werewolves or vampires or kafka-esque transformations or bee-worshipping cults or time travel - that he often seems to get slotted into the "speculative fiction" ghetto over here. Too weird/out there for the NYT Book Review crowd (who seem to prefer that way less interesting asshole Vladimir Sorkin) altho this piece is p good: http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/28/books/review/Schillinger-t.html
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 May 2017 18:48 (seven years ago) link
Think that quote maybe means he is not "in dialogue" with the long-standing, long-running arguments/disputes/discussions so beloved by the sf community.
― Trelayne Staley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Friday, 5 May 2017 18:54 (seven years ago) link
"In her guileful storytelling, the supervixen enfolds the precepts of Confucianism, Buddhism and Sikhism, along with the theories of Wittgenstein, William of Occam, Freud, Foucault and, especially, Berkeley. (A Hu-Li’s lover’s idea of pillow talk: “Everything only exists by virtue of perception.”) While writing her own Internet pornography ad for whores.ru, A Hu-Li teasingly draws from the fairy tales of Aksakov, the poetry of Blok, the writings of Nabokov. To spice up a casual encounter, she daydreams of Suetonius — who inspires one of her especially sadistic group sex sessions."
This is definitely the right kind of thing for SOMEONE. maybe not me though.
― scott seward, Friday, 5 May 2017 19:01 (seven years ago) link
Sounds pretty cool. Why is Sorkin an asshole? (I don't know who he is)
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 5 May 2017 19:11 (seven years ago) link
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 May 2017 19:27
Yeah these blurbs about a special person rising up to make things right sound awful but I try to ignore them because they can be as misleading as the cover art.
Probably part of the reason Princess Mononoke is a bit overrated.
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 5 May 2017 19:20 (seven years ago) link
haha that review does make it sound like a tiresome game of "spot the reference" but idk it didn't really come off that way to me. (That being said, I would rate the werewolf book as second tier Pelevin, nonetheless it seems like the one that got the biggest publicity push in the US)
― Οὖτις, Friday, 5 May 2017 19:46 (seven years ago) link
Been so long since I read any of those finds but do recall Liverpudlian Ramsey Campbell's The Face That Must Die mainly for the perp twitching his way through grey Liverpool department stores all playing Beatles, and having anxiety attacks in the phone booth amid fogbound thunder and lightning (v. relatable).
Going back much, much, much further, came across Zenna Henderson People stories in science fiction mags (wanna say Amazing; she wasn't man enough for Analog* or cool enough for The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction): pretty sure I read something that went pretty much like this: an endless fogbound bus ride, with various smells and coughing and baby cries and engine sounds all part of the drone, as she (always imagined as looking like that portrait of the author, though don't think I've seen it before) touches herself through her raincoat in the dark---"Tell yourself, It's only to help me sleep"(exact quote lodging in my middle school mind)---all part of the price paid and contrast with the lights of Revelation, for you are not alone. You are not a psi power witchy freak, never quite managing to keep it all hid.*Although come to think of it I can imagine Dianetics-era John Campbell digging this
― dow, Friday, 5 May 2017 22:50 (seven years ago) link
Also a Robert Charles Wilson novel about a Moral Majority etc utopia/dystopia, often on horseback (okay but got tired of the saddle), and a very good shorter one about an alt-u where the Civil War as we semi-know it never took place, but lots of over-the-border conflicts and all kinds of effects of sustained tensions, to put it mildly.
― dow, Friday, 5 May 2017 22:56 (seven years ago) link
I'm seeing some Paul Lehr influence in that one.
― alimosina, Friday, 5 May 2017 23:04 (seven years ago) link
Snow Crash was fun, but The Diamond Age seemed like he was maybe consciously trying to find his way beyond (and/or what was worth salvaging from) late-cyberpunk etc. assumptions and other reflex-tempted areas of thinking and writing. Not great, but worth a look.
― dow, Friday, 5 May 2017 23:08 (seven years ago) link
Could have sworn one of those classy anthologies with the Zenna Henderson story was The Very Best of S & SF
― Trelayne Staley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 6 May 2017 01:43 (seven years ago) link
Or maybe S & SF & M---I'm sure she got around more than I did, and good for her.
― dow, Saturday, 6 May 2017 02:53 (seven years ago) link
Science Fiction Encyclopedia: with "Ararat" (October 1952 F&SF), she began publishing the series of stories about The People which comprises her central achievement, and which became a central feature of The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. Wow, we were both cooler than I thought; don't remember reading or even seeing that 'til I got to the Eighth Grade (but at some point I got back issues of TMFSF, and her first People collection, Pilgrimage, mostly or maybe all from that mag----I guess I misremembered because she seemed so diff from Leiber and Sturgeon and Vonnegut and so on).
― dow, Saturday, 6 May 2017 03:07 (seven years ago) link
The Wanderers by Meg Howrey
^^^ this was pretty good
― Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Saturday, 6 May 2017 03:51 (seven years ago) link
And so wasThe Fortress at the End of Time by Joe M. McDermott — January 17th
― Mince Pramthwart (James Morrison), Saturday, 6 May 2017 03:54 (seven years ago) link
Short article by Aliette De Bodard
http://uncannymagazine.com/fallacy-agency-power-community-erasure/
― Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 6 May 2017 17:47 (seven years ago) link
S&SFShould be F & SF, of course.
― Trelayne Staley (James Redd and the Blecchs), Sunday, 7 May 2017 19:40 (seven years ago) link
one of the reasons i still haven't read the banks culture books is because i feel like i should own them all before i read them. but maybe i really don't.
I picked up Matter, which I later found out is supposed to be one of the most difficult Culture novels, on a whim and while it wasn't an easy read, I ended up finding it very rewarding and didn't come away with a "missing so much, should've read all the other ones first" feeling.
― Daniel_Rf, Monday, 8 May 2017 09:45 (seven years ago) link