ThReads Must Roll: the new, improved rolling fantasy, science fiction, speculative fiction &c. thread

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just roll w it u will come to love them, i am going to make t shirts out of captain vorpatrils alliance

adam, Tuesday, 7 April 2020 12:12 (four years ago) link

xp No way! Those covers are peak mass market luridness. The story goes on for generations btw, and I guess probably offer diminishing returns but I held on for like 15 books between Amazon and what the public lib had.

There's more Italy than necessary. (in orbit), Tuesday, 7 April 2020 14:49 (four years ago) link

adam otm iow

There's more Italy than necessary. (in orbit), Tuesday, 7 April 2020 14:49 (four years ago) link

The Penric omnibus has a decent cover.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Tuesday, 7 April 2020 17:39 (four years ago) link

Don't recall the cover, but paperback of Bujold's Memory was very impressive as something deep in series yet w pellucid, portable and plain handy layers of What Has Gone Before, mainly how any of that relates to what's happenin' now, in this scene pressing down and gliding by---always well-timed. Matters of class and social obligations, at home and in ceremonies, parties, etc. like filed-down Jane Austin, mam-talk on the job more broadly sardonic and gossipy (Le Carre kind of): plenty of intrigue, with somewhat bloody stakes, but this is a big transition for Miles V. and I would like more shit blowing up in space, so must check earlier vols. Don't think quality of this one is a fluke (though it may well be a peak): She's won a bunch of awards, has long-faithful stans, and see entry in sciencefictionencyclopedia.com

dow, Tuesday, 7 April 2020 18:30 (four years ago) link

"man*-talk, that is!

dow, Tuesday, 7 April 2020 18:31 (four years ago) link

The men are snarkier/more gossipy than the women.

dow, Tuesday, 7 April 2020 18:33 (four years ago) link

the whole memory-komarr-civil campaign stretch is incredible, pulling in threads of detective stories and interstellar political machinations and georgette fuckin heyer

actually trying to read the most recent one right now, gentleman jole and the red queen. no commute means no reading time as i have a 2 year old to wrangle sunup to sundown.

adam, Tuesday, 7 April 2020 19:34 (four years ago) link

https://www.tor.com/2020/04/07/announcing-the-2020-hugo-award-finalists/

One of the best related works being a speech from the previous year seems like a really bad idea to me. Movies are awful as usual.

Seemingly it's all going to be online this time and I'm curious how they'll do that. Poor New Zealand.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 9 April 2020 19:01 (four years ago) link

https://www.tor.com/2020/02/20/announcing-the-2019-nebula-awards-finalists/
I guess it's worse when SFWA members are choosing Marvel films.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 9 April 2020 19:14 (four years ago) link

This interview is eight minutes longer than ten, but the Robert Shearman collection sounds like an insane undertaking. Sadly the cheapest edition of it is £45 but it's a massive three volumes.
https://jonathanstrahan.podbean.com/e/episode-370-ten-minutes-with-ian-mond/

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 10 April 2020 20:14 (four years ago) link

Finished Falling Free - a pretty tight action adventure but I don't see it winning any awards. Oh right it won the Nebula :/ - I'll give The Warrior's Apprentice a go but now on to Ancestral Night by Elizabeth Bear which is more my cup of big dumb object tea, though it has a narrator who drones on too much and is at least 1/3 longer than it should be.. Coincidentally like Falling Free it has people with hands instead of feet for superior zero g agility.

a slice of greater pastry (ledge), Tuesday, 14 April 2020 07:37 (four years ago) link

Here's what I mean about the narrator droning on too much:

I didn't have any illusions about my ability to take her in single combat, For one thing, while humans traditionally divided themselves up into lovers and fighters, I considered myself living evidence that that was a false binary, having no skill with either set of tools. I belonged to a third group, equally useful: I was an engineer.

For another thing, I was pretty confident that Farweather hadn't come to this alien environment unarmed. Unlike me. Because she was a fighter, every centimeter of her.

Everything between For one thing and Unlike me is redundant. You might say this is developing character but when you have to read para after para of it on page after page it becomes increasingly tiresome. Also, the narrator was brought up in and escaped a 'clade', a commune that practises extreme neural programming to make everyone get along; but she's happy to accept the neural programming of criminals and sociopaths practiced by the galactic government - unlike the pirates who prefer liberty over equality. These contradictions are largely the driving force of the book, which is fine; but the endless discussions of systems of government, free will, liberty vs security, her traumatic upbringing and current mental state, hammer out the same points over and over again.

a slice of greater pastry (ledge), Wednesday, 15 April 2020 08:51 (four years ago) link

Trying to filter some of the things you don't like, ledge, I cautiously suggest Lois McMaster Bujold and Galactic Empires, the 2-volume Aldiss anth, from '76 or so, that helped pave the way for Bujold (and lesser talents).

J G Ballard (from a review of Galactic Empires in the New Statesman):

"Brian Aldiss is a tireless anthologiser, but for once he is recycling more waste matter than a space shuttle's latrine"!

Ward Fowler, Wednesday, 15 April 2020 09:20 (four years ago) link

ha. well i would probably take ballard over aldiss...

a slice of greater pastry (ledge), Wednesday, 15 April 2020 09:38 (four years ago) link

Yeah, I don't think Ballard had any of the same fondness for space opera pulp that Aldiss did.

Ward Fowler, Wednesday, 15 April 2020 09:52 (four years ago) link

Searching for the Aldiss I found this instead for free: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/29285022-galactic-empires - seven novels, probably trash but i'll give them a go, fully prepared to bail out early. From a goodreads reviewer:

Ch 5-10 The Use of the Word “Shit” is very oddly placed through out the book thus far and does not seem necessary.

a slice of greater pastry (ledge), Wednesday, 15 April 2020 10:13 (four years ago) link

"I hope all these writers have a day job"

koogs, Wednesday, 15 April 2020 10:50 (four years ago) link

yeah, you seemed to be looking for some light spacecars-that-go-boom reading is why I suggested it. Seemed like at the time, after New Wave etc,, that anth had some readers going o hey yeah the old stuff---like when prog and jams came back---so young Bujold was among those who could start playing with the form (come to think of it, there's a also an operatic hard sci in spaace LeGuin 1969 Grand Finale to xpost The Future Is Female, but might have been too soon; she went all-planetary again after that, far as I know).

dow, Wednesday, 15 April 2020 18:06 (four years ago) link

Tim Maugham, Infinite Detail: another book praised to the heavens which was... fine, I guess? A bit second-tier William Gibson with added grunge.

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Friday, 17 April 2020 05:57 (four years ago) link

Made the mistake of reading an issue of Locus again, which always depresses. Part of the problem is it seems determined to mention EVERY SINGLE BOOK published in the SF/F fields, and this means covering a hell of a lot of derivative, depressing, shat-out crap. Reading, say, the TLS means encountering a certain quantity of rubbish lit-fic books, but not ALL the rubbish lit-fic books.

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Friday, 17 April 2020 05:58 (four years ago) link

I've never bought Locus but I'm pretty sure they miss a lot of small press stuff.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 17 April 2020 22:41 (four years ago) link

They're pretty conscientious, and there's a lot of small press stuff in there.

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Saturday, 18 April 2020 01:40 (four years ago) link

2019

- severance by ling ma: funny!
- the dispossessed - le guin: quite good? not my favorite of hers.
- melmoth by sarah perry: absolutely loved this! ridiculous camp gothic. great fun.
- where late the sweet birds sang by kate wilhelm: complete pony, nearly threw in the towel around 50 pages, shouldn't have bothered finishing it.
- interference/semiosis - found these quite bleak but very good

2020 so far

- Borne: not as good as the southern reach trilogy, won't bother with the rest of the series
- Roadside Picnic: wonderful obviously, but especially good because I listented to the audiobook, which is read by robert forster!!!
- the city and the city: very good!

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Sunday, 19 April 2020 22:01 (four years ago) link

(Robert Forster!)
Hey I came across the two volumes of xpost Galactic Empires in storage, and looks like it might be alright: authors incl. RA Lafferty, Arthur C Clarke, Cordwainer Smith, Iris Seabright (Margaret St. Clair), John D MacDonald, AE Van Voght, Algis Budrys, James Blish, Avram Davidson, nand Fredric Brown, just to name most of those whose writing I've liked elsewhere. (Also incl.bunch other randos, maestros, who knows.)

Skimming intro to Vol.1: "Tumbledown squalor is often an attraction in the galactic story. The streets of Rael are depraved with good intentions, but they take place to the picturesque...The story itself is generally fairly traditional, the crux being resolved by quick wits, courage, and brute courage. If this sounds like a fairy tale, the point about fairy tales is that they enchant us and enlarge our perceptions.
...I say that this is what the authors give us in the main. Yet there is a moral which blows ever and anon like a chill wind down Rael's High Street, through the galactic tale: that it is better to govern than be governed.
...Morality is all very well, but give me luxury every time. There is an undeniable luxuriousness in the most characteristic of these stories, which shows itself in the asides. You have to love the throw-away explanation..."
(Also quotes CS Lewis quoting Tolkein on "escapism" (says jailers are the most "preoccupied and opposed.")

dow, Monday, 20 April 2020 00:48 (four years ago) link

"...take *second* place to the picturesque."

dow, Monday, 20 April 2020 00:49 (four years ago) link

Also says that these were published during the 1950s, Cold War taking hold, "The Earth was not particularly habitable to the imagination; it was a relief to go a-voyaging." Okay okay

dow, Monday, 20 April 2020 00:54 (four years ago) link

(The link ledge posted isn't the same Galactic Empires - the Aldiss edited 2 volumes Vs a "box" of 7 ebooks)

koogs, Monday, 20 April 2020 03:31 (four years ago) link

As an aside, I like the covers of the Aldiss short story reprints. I have the 50s one and there are 4 large volumes of the 60s and misc others all done in the same style with slightly different colours. Simple and extendible.

https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51H0giAxrzL.jpg

koogs, Monday, 20 April 2020 03:39 (four years ago) link

Which was the source of the film?

Together Again Or (James Redd and the Blecchs), Monday, 20 April 2020 23:33 (four years ago) link

Yes.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Monday, 20 April 2020 23:57 (four years ago) link

The first volume.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Monday, 20 April 2020 23:58 (four years ago) link

That sounds interesting, but that cover is absolutely terrible. "Why do more than 15 seconds of work?"

Tsar Bombadil (James Morrison), Tuesday, 21 April 2020 22:53 (four years ago) link

RB Russell on Sarban
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PIH5qt4n1DY

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 22 April 2020 22:36 (four years ago) link

RIP Joe Pulver. He was quite a big personality in the weird fiction scene, he was in hospital for years and now he's gone. Sad he didn't get the big comeback and I don't really know what his chances of recovery were.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Wednesday, 22 April 2020 23:37 (four years ago) link

Another big translation coming up: Alfred Doblin's Mountains Oceans Giants.

This is the blurbs from amazon

"The 27th century: beleaguered elites decide to melt the Greenland icecap. Why? – to open up a new continent, for colonisation by the unruly masses. How? – by harvesting the primordial heat of the Earth from Iceland’s volcanoes. Nature fights back, and it all goes horribly wrong...

Readers accustomed to following a story via Plot and Character may at first be disoriented by this epic of the future. Its structure is more symphonic than novelistic, driven by themes and motifs that emerge, fade back, emerge again in new orchestral voicings and new tempi. The prose – supple, rhythmic, harsh, elegiac, tender, unsparing – propels the reader on through scene after vivid scene. Mountains Oceans Giants is a literary counterpart to the painted dreams and nightmares of Hieronymus Bosch, in The Garden of Earthly Delights and The Last Judgement.

Alfred Döblin, born in Szczecin in 1878, initially worked as a medical assistant and opened his own practice in Berlin in 1911. Döblin's first novel appeared in 1915/16. In 1933 Döblin emigrated to France and finally to the USA. After the end of the 2nd World War he moved back to Germany, but then moved in 1953 with his family to Paris. He died on June 26, 1957.

Extravagant praise for this novel:

"I know of no attempt in literature that pulls together so boldly and directly the human and the divine, piling on every kind of action, thought, desire, love... Here perhaps the true face of “Expressionism” reveals itself for the first time. – Max Krell

“The account of the expedition to Iceland and the defrosting of Greenland … generates a poetry of fact that deserves to be considered a major literary achievement. … Döblin and Høeg remind us that man is not the centre of a divine cosmos but simply a phenomenon, an unruly and destructive one, within the unimaginably larger system of nature.” – Richie Robertson, 2009, comparing Mountains Oceans Giants with Peter Høeg’s 1993 novel Miss Smilla’s Feeling for Snow

“…this extravagant book, whose theme is the heaven-storming extravagance of humanity, written as if under a visionary over-pressure…” – Gunter Grass 1978

“A unique and mighty work. The writer has created a gigantic animated teeming living world-picture, analytical and mysterious, mythical and scientific. He has unsealed a flask of powerful potion.” – Ernst Blass, in Die neue Rundschau 35 (1924)."

and this is John Clute on SF Encyclopedia

"Of direct sf interest is Berge Meere und Giganten ["Mountains, Seas and Giants"] (1924; cut vt Giganten ["Giants"] 1932), an extremely ambitious Future History, which extends from the aftermath years following the Great War into the twenty-seventh century CE. In the later years of the twentieth century the world, already plagued by Overpopulation and racism due to worldwide economic migrations, becomes a rigid, polarized Dystopia, a fixity (see Roderick Seidenberg) only to be shaken centuries later, when an indolent but restive underclass, locked into a Machine-driven culture that fails to supply its needs, inadvertently foments a world War whose advanced Weapons cause huge damage. Meanwhile, the Japanese have occupied much of North America, and the focus of the History shifts westward from Eurasia. A campaign to settle Greenland results in the melting of its icecap, and attendant Disasters; connected to this, giant Mutations in plant and animal life threaten the human world, and Monsters roam the transfigured islands that have emerged from what was once Greenland. As in more recent Zombie Apocalypse tales, contact with these Mutants is instantly fatal, and Homo sapiens moves Underground, constructing at the same time giant quasi-living defensive towers. Eventually humans and others tentatively join together to begin to reinhabit the Ruined Earth."

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 23 April 2020 00:03 (four years ago) link

Scientific Romance: An International Anthology Of Pioneering Science Fiction edited by Brian Stableford

The title is a bit misleading because it really is just two languages (English and French translated by Stableford) and three countries (UK, USA and France). This doesn't cover the entire pre-pulp period of science fiction, Stableford chose to focus on the era (1830s-1910s) that most epitomized the term "Scientific Romance" and explains the characteristics of this era. It's more earth bound, philosophical and more likely to use satire than the next generation of science fiction. Stableford says the list of novels at the end is a compensation because an anthology of short stories gives a slightly distorted image of the period.
At the end of the introduction he says that science fiction is in decline now but he doesn't really explain what he meant. Given that the english language editors and reviewers are unable to keep up with even the half of prose science fiction every year and the continual explosion of new writers, it's hard to take anyone's word for any decline in quality and it's hard to imagine that the genre has declined in popularity when it's everywhere in every creative medium now. Perhaps it's that the early science fiction writers tended to be extremely educated and the general level of prose would have been higher than the pulps and the more wildly varying quality of today?

This would have been a much lesser book without the introductions and footnotes and I could see some people enjoying these parts more than most of the actual stories. Stableford often notes the scientific and historical context of the tales. There were a few that I considered to be outright supernatural stories (including novels listed at the end) but he notes how at the time seafaring and air travel was not unlike space travel back then because just how much more of earth was uncharted. So monsters of the sea and air were not so different from space monsters in this way.

Here's some of the most noteworthy stories for me...

"Artist Of The Beautiful" by Nathaniel Hawthorne is really nice and has a different flavour from everything else.

"End Of The World" by Eugene Mouton is a gleefully detailed and miserable story of death by global warming caused by human activity from 1872.

"Child Of The Phalanstery" by Grant Allen is quite a moving story about eugenics in which people are discouraged from loving too much and a couple are expected to let their disabled child die for a supposedly greater good.

"The Salvation Of Nature" by John Davidson has Scotland evacuated, destroyed then turned into a pleasure park. Other countries follow this example until a virus kills nearly everyone. The end resembles an adventure quest fantasy that stops very quickly. Kind of strange but nice to see a story like this end in Arran island.

"Tornadres" by JH Rosny has a very strong resemblance to Lovecraft's "Colour Out Of Space" but this was several decades earlier and I doubt Lovecraft ever read this. Other people have called Rosny one of the earliest writers of cosmic horror.

"Professor Bakermann's Microbe" by Charles Epheyre is a comedy about a man who creates deadly viruses as a egomaniacal hobby but doesn't worry about whether they ever escape his lab and kill everyone.

"In The Year Ten Thousand" by Edgar Fawcett is the story that most made me want to read more by an unfamiliar author (I already liked Hodgson, papa Hawthorne, Poe, Wells, and had planned to read Rosny, Renard, London and Doyle before). It's a really baroque and beautiful socialist utopia in a very short poetic conversation form. I know other science fiction authors have done extravagant socialist utopias but rightly or wrongly I generally expect socialist fiction to be pathologically drab and afraid to dream this much; so this is lovely.

In Julien Hawthorne's "June 1993" there is a similar idea to Simak's City in that advances in air travel would make cities unnecessary; I wonder how common this idea was?
Stableford notes (with presumably a lot of amusement) that this story is written for Cosmopolitan magazine (and the story even takes the explicit form of an article for the magazine) and J Hawthorne spends quite a lot of the story talking about how awful fashion and shopping are, obviously unaware what the magazine would turn into. Some of the story is supposed to be comedic and that is how I taken the aggrandizement of Cosmopolitan magazine within the story.

Jerome K Jerome's "The Dancing Partner" is macabre and funny.

"The Conqueror Of Death" by Camille Debans is a really good piece about someone withholding the secret to immortality for humanitarian reasons.

"The Star" by HG Wells was probably pioneering but I got really bored by the telling. I think Clark Ashton Smith's "The Eternal World" was inspired by this but I prefer Smith's story because it takes away all realism and goes extremely outlandish.

Jack London's "Shadow And The Flash" is well told but despite my lack of scientific education, I didn't have much confidence that it made sense. Even if a house was invisible, surely the ground it was built on would be a giveaway? Wasn't it upon grass?
If you were expecting the possibility of racism from London, he fulfills this by giving us a man so dark that he is practically invisible in a darkened room.

Edmond Haraucourt's "Gorilloid" has an extremely advanced civilization of apes and a scientist discovers a degenerated survivor of the human race and tries to convince the ape civilization that they are related to humans, in a lecture theatre of apes who are either outraged or delighted by the controversy. It's really well done.

I was already familiar with William Hope Hodgson's "Voice In The Night" and it's rightly considered one of his best stories.

Maurice Renard's "Singular Fate Of Bouvancourt" has quite a cool depiction of what it might be like if a man could walk into a mirror.

Arthur Conan Doyle's "Horror Of The Heights" was dragged down for me by the technical detail but the visions at the end were enjoyable.

Been unsure how to rate this. Towards the end I felt like I was really having to push through this and I wasn't sure the stories were strong enough to really recommend it a great deal. It's consistently interesting and at worst the concepts seemed a little too modest unless you keep the context in mind. But on examining the stories again and considering the scarcity of anthologies serving this era, I think this deserves four stars even if I don't love it as much as four stars usually indicates.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Thursday, 23 April 2020 04:08 (four years ago) link

I forgotten to mention that in the Julien Hawthorne story, there is the idea that everyone around the world looks whiter as their life improves.

Robert Adam Gilmour, Friday, 24 April 2020 22:32 (four years ago) link

Thanks for another set of appealing descriptions, Robert. The only one I'm sure I've read is the Wells, which I enjoyed more than you did, referring to it way up thread, in passing W.E.B. Du Bois's "The Comet" builds on the eerie, human-cosmic scale, austere grandeur of Wells' "The Star" through The Big Book of Science Fiction, which eventually gets as wobbly in quality as it does in the hands (monster trade paperback), but is pretty good-to=great for quite a while.
Science Fiction Encyclopedia is good on scientific romance, citing Dune as a good later example--I guess some things marketed as fantasy might also be considered s.r., even now?

dow, Sunday, 26 April 2020 02:39 (four years ago) link

I mean, some things marketed now as fantasy.

dow, Sunday, 26 April 2020 02:40 (four years ago) link

https://thequietus.com/articles/28209-ramsey-campbell-interview-horror-weird-books?page=1
Interesting list/good interview

Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 9 May 2020 17:46 (four years ago) link

good list!

i'm on a roll of giving up on recent "mainstream"/"hugo-friendly"(?) scifi after 20-50 pages. i've abandoned all of these recently:

NK Jemsin
Too Like the Lightning
The Power
Ancilliary Justice

the reason was pretty much the same for each of them: they seemed like adequeate YA fiction. i was genuinely baffled that adults get anything out of them other than technical admiration. it feels like a joke? do they get better? am i just doing recent scifi wrong?

i don't think the problem is that i don't like scifi. here's some recent-ish scifi that i did like.

the city and the city
station eleven
the southern reach trilogy
sue burke
ted chiang

interested in defenses of the books i abandoned, explanations of what's going on in my head, explanations of what's going on with scifi awards that this kind of stuff gets elevated, and ideally just recommendations of what else to try.

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Saturday, 9 May 2020 21:56 (four years ago) link

I tend to agree with you.

My Chess Hustler (James Redd and the Blecchs), Saturday, 9 May 2020 22:24 (four years ago) link

Station 11 was very YA as well, i thought. I lump it in with The Power for some reason (read at around the same time?). Prefer S11 though.

koogs, Saturday, 9 May 2020 22:35 (four years ago) link

The Power wasn't just winning SF awards either. It won the big UK women's fiction prize too (was Orange Prize, not sure it is now)

koogs, Saturday, 9 May 2020 22:37 (four years ago) link

The power was the one out of those four i came closest to throwing across the room

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Saturday, 9 May 2020 22:39 (four years ago) link

Once again frustrated by my reading slowness, because I really want to read the Palmer and Jemisin books but they're still far away at this point.

There's been a lot of conversations about YA in fantasy and people can be quite touchy about it. My theory about it is that a lot of writers feel they never had enough decent books as children that were aimed at their specific group(s). My worry is that people are increasingly going for comfort reads. Maybe they've always been like that; I've been a horror reader for longer and most horror people were willing to read any level of horrible, so coming into sff world, I'm struck by the number of people who have vast territories they wont go near and I have no idea when its because of really difficult trauma challenges or when its just general timidity.

On the other hand Tomi Adeyemi's Children Of Blood And Bone is supposed to be particularly brutal and it was a big success.

Somtow just released the fifth Inquestor book and is a few chapters into the sixth one. I kinda wish I could binge on a series but I tend to want as much variety as possible, so never read a series right through. I should start the third book soon.

Annoyed how many of my priority books are huge (Crowley's Little Big for instance).

Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 9 May 2020 22:52 (four years ago) link

i enjoyed the jemison series and thought the first ancillary book was interesting (the sequels were like miss marple mysteries set in space, with tea)

ted chiang i'll definitely give you, but i don't really see station eleven or the southern reach as leaps ahead? (haven't read the others)

as for what wins awards, well, they've never been fair and i'm not sure they're any more so now. but i don't read enough to say that certain works or authors have been robbed, so

mookieproof, Saturday, 9 May 2020 23:11 (four years ago) link


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