Science Fiction

“One reason pro wrestling will probably stick around forever is that there are certain advantages to having everything scripted, such as making sure shocking underdog stories happen right on schedule, and celebrity guest appearance...
“One reason pro wrestling will probably stick around forever is that there are certain advantages to having everything scripted, such as making sure shocking underdog stories happen right on schedule, and celebrity guest appearances.” Go here to see the list.
about 1 hour ago
Anyone who reads fairy tales knows that things happen in the tales for seemingly no reason at all. But just because there’s no reason in then doesn’t mean something interesting can’t happen when reason is added to them....
Anyone who reads fairy tales knows that things happen in the tales for seemingly no reason at all. But just because there’s no reason in then doesn’t mean something interesting can’t happen when reason is added to them. Just ask Madeleine Robins, who mined a classic fairy tale when imagining Sold for Endless Rue. MADELEINE ROBINS: It started with a conversation. Or rather, an idea about a conversation. When my kids were small we read a picture book of Rapunzel, gorgeously illustrated by Paul O. Zelinsky.  You know: pregnant wife craves rampion, sends husband out to get it; he steals it from the garden of a witch, who catches him and demands his unborn child in return.  The witch locks the child in a tower, where the girl grows her hair long enough for a passing prince to climb up.  Merriment ensues. Zelinsky’s art sets the story in an early Renaissance could-be-Italy, and the central spread, chock full of drama, is of the witch taking the baby.  There’s a rumpled bed with the mother, post-partum, lying exhausted among the sheets. There’s the young husband, sitting with his head in his hands, horrified at what he’s given away.  And there’s the black clad sorceress, a classic old hag, stealing from the room with the newborn babe in her arms. Well, that musta been a hell of a conversation. Imagine the husband coming home: Honey, I got you your vegetables, but there’s a catch: the witch gets the kid. What would his wife say to him? And why does the witch want the baby? In fairy tales motivations don’t matter: the witch wants the baby because she’s a witch.  But I am contrary and difficult and I want a real motive for taking that child.  Sold for Endless Rue is, among other things, my attempt to do that. As happens with these sorts of bolt-from-the blue notions, it sat around gathering dust-bunnies and stray factoids while I wrote other things. I began cursorily reading up on daily life in the Renaissance, thinking of ways to rehabilitate the witch. Maybe she’s a midwife?  At least that would give her a reason to be in the room when the baby was born.  But why take the kid? I had nuthin. And then I stumbled across a factoid that rewrote my whole idea of the middle ages and, by the way, this story.  The first medical school in Europe, the Scuola Medicina Salernitana, not only had women as students, but women instructors.  One of the most famous, Trotula di Ruggiero (immortalized in the Jack and Jill rhyme as “old Dame Trot”), specialized in women’s medicine–what we’d call OB/GYN.  Her texts on the subject were in use for centuries.  Dame Trot was not a damsel or a peasant.  She was a professional woman. How cool is that? One of my secret vices: I love medical history, medical mysteries, medical technology.  Now I had an excuse to research the Scuola and dig deeper into medical theory of the time. Boy, did they have theories. Most of them are scary-laughable, but some of them were solidly sensible (for instance, the Scuola recommended a moderate diet, clean living, and lots of sleep).  Pretty quickly it was clear to me my witch wasn’t a witch but a doctor, and that her reason for taking the baby was rooted somehow in her ambition. I hate the sort of historical fiction where the heroine is a 21st century soul in a 13th century houppelande.  Unless you show me why that character is an outlier from her own culture, you lose me.  How would a peasant girl even think of becoming a physician, a profession overwhelmingly male, occupied by those wealthy enough to have the education required to enter the Scuola?  Where would she get, for lack of a better word, the balls? Then, among the dust-bunnies and factoids I’d been collecting, I got this image of a child running up a hill, trying to escape someone very scary who is as determined to catch her and beat her to death as she is to escape.  She reaches the top of the hill and is st
about 1 hour ago
BBC One viewer feedback show Points of View featured some Doctor Who related comments in its most recent edition (which aired yesterday) - watch it in the player below.
BBC One viewer feedback show Points of View featured some Doctor Who related comments in its most recent edition (which aired yesterday) - watch it in the player below.
about 1 hour ago
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chosen_%28Buffy_the_Vampire_Slayer%29 Here is a link to the UPN promo for "Chosen".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chosen_%28Buffy_the_Vampire_Slayer%29 Here is a link to the UPN promo for "Chosen".
about 2 hours ago
I have three copies of Ian Cameron Esslemont's Blood and Bone up for grabs, courtesy of the folks at Tor Books. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.Here's the blurb:In the western sky the bright emerald banner of the Visi...
I have three copies of Ian Cameron Esslemont's Blood and Bone up for grabs, courtesy of the folks at Tor Books. For more info about this title: Canada, USA, Europe.Here's the blurb:In the western sky the bright emerald banner of the Visitor descends like a portent of annihilation. On the continent of Jacuruku, the Thaumaturgs have mounted another expedition in a bid to tame the neighbouring wild jungle. Yet this is no normal wilderness. It is called Himatan, and it is said to be half of the spirit-realm and half of the earth. And it is said to be ruled by a powerful entity who some name the Queen of Witches and some a goddess: the ancient Ardata.Saeng grew up knowing only the rule of the magus Thaumaturgs – but it was the voices from that land's forgotten past that she listened to. And when her rulers launch their invasion of this jungle, those voices send her and her brother on a desperate mission.To the south, the desert tribes are united by the arrival of a foreign warleader, a veteran commander in battered ashen mail men call the Grey Ghost. This warrior leads these tribes on a raid unlike any other, deep into the heart of Thaumaturg lands.While word comes to K'azz, and mercenary company the Crimson Guard, of a contract in Jacuruku. And their employer? Could it be the goddess herself...The rules are the same as usual. You need to send an email at reviews@(no-spam)gryphonwood.net with the header "BONE." Remember to remove the "no spam" thingy.Second, your email must contain your full mailing address (that's snail mail!), otherwise your message will be deleted.Lastly, multiple entries will disqualify whoever sends them. And please include your screen name and the message boards that you frequent using it, if you do hang out on a particular MB.Good luck to all the participants!
about 2 hours ago
Click for full image Piper Comments: Coughed-up hairball or sad attempt at a wookiee? Published 1984
Click for full image Piper Comments: Coughed-up hairball or sad attempt at a wookiee? Published 1984
about 3 hours ago
For the past two and a half months, I have busy with two jobs that take up 13 hours of my waking days/nights during the weekdays. I have not written as much here or at Gogol's Overcoat as I would have liked due to prioritizing sleep (an...
For the past two and a half months, I have busy with two jobs that take up 13 hours of my waking days/nights during the weekdays. I have not written as much here or at Gogol's Overcoat as I would have liked due to prioritizing sleep (and to a lesser extent, some reading) over writing reviews and commentaries. Now while this will change for a couple of months this summer to some extent (only working/driving 10 hours/day compared to 13), it does take a toll on me now that I'm approaching 40 (weird to think that is less than 14 months away now). Lots of thoughts lately on what I've been reading that I haven't yet put to e-print. Memories of past selves, dreaming and envisioning things that have not yet come to fruition or have shifted with age and experience. Not as many speculative fictions read lately, not because I've suddenly become inveterately opposed to them, but more because what I am seeking involving more a turning inward, for a time at least, and that seems to be more the province of poetry and realist literature, although certainly there are some "weird" fictions that explore things that jibe with my current desires. So with these thoughts in mind, it was interesting to discover this weekend this post written about two weeks ago by Tobias Buckell in response to a book blogger's (n.b. I reject this term in describing what I do) lament about his change in reviewing focus. Buckell raises some interesting points about the "maturation" of online reviewers/book bloggers, particularly in regards to his first point: 1) When you get to a point where you’ve read an amazing number of books, you change. You’ve read so much that what may seem new or interesting to most (and even to the writer of the book you’re reading) is just a variation to you. Your expectations regarding the work change. Due to subjectivity being what it is, many writers can mistake what’s happening and view it as the books getting worse, not their own aesthetic changing. Two things can happen. One, despair at what they perceive is the dying of quality. You see this a lot with people who hit a certain number of books read: they begin to rail against the dreadfulness of everything. It can lead to bitterness, cynicism, and outright hatred of something they previously loved. There is certainly a lot of truth to this. Over the course of 21 years (since my high school graduation in May 1992), I have probably read a little over 10,000 different books. Histories, cultural studies, monographs, poetry, religious tracts, novels, short fiction – in aggregate, reading and, even more importantly, commenting on these disparate works has helped me mature not just as a reader but also as a person. But I do not fully agree with Buckell's comment that "what may seem new or interesting to most (and even to the writer of the book you're reading) is just a variation to you." This statement implies a static relationship on the part of the text in contrast to a dynamic paradigm shift for the reader. This does happen often, yes, but not necessarily always. At times, texts can seem to shift themselves due specifically to the reader's own maturation. For example, I just finished re-reading F. Scott Fitzgerald's Tender is the Night for the first time in at least 15 years. I recall thinking back in 1997-1998 that it was superior to The Great Gatsby and that it had to do with how the characters of Dick and Nicole Diver were drawn, but re-reading this weekend (and also having just watched the 1961 cinema adaptation of it) made me appreciate it even more. Due to 15 years' greater experience with reading and reviewing fiction, I feel as though I have a greater understanding of how Fitzgerald came to spend so much time working on this novel; it has a raw, visceral quality to it that The Great Gatsby mostly lacks. It is not a work that has "aged poorly" for me, but instead one that speaks at least as well to the 38 year-old me as it did to
about 3 hours ago
Reviver by Seth Patrick Published by Pan Macmillan ARC - 409 pages Published June 2013 Review copy provided by publisher Before I set on my path as a die-hard fantasy fan, I was very much into the horror genre, especially stories ...
Reviver by Seth Patrick Published by Pan Macmillan ARC - 409 pages Published June 2013 Review copy provided by publisher Before I set on my path as a die-hard fantasy fan, I was very much into the horror genre, especially stories dealing with the supernatural. I've not really read much horror in a long time, but after reading Reviver, I'm seriously considering having another crack at it. One of the key factors of being a Reviver is the emotional exchange between the Reviver and the person being revived - there is complete empathy between the two, and Patrick excels in portraying this emotional connection. He uses this to great effect when Jonah starts experiencing memories and emotions of people he's revived, long after he should. Patrick uses this emotion to ramp up the tension with great effect. Another thing I really enjoyed about Reviver is the mix of scientific procedure and supernatural elements. There was a point where I feared that the novel would take a harder, more sci-fi route, but I was pleased when it remained in the realms of fantasy and took an unexpected turn. Reviver does for ghosts what Blade did for vampires; it gives it a slight rationalisation that makes it believable but still retained an aura of mystery. My only issue with the novel was the pacing. I sped through the first third of the book due to the high tension that was built, and the finale was pretty explosive and pulled you along for the ride. The middle portion, however, sagged slightly and was more focussed on answering questions and filling gaps ready for the final scenes. If you're looking for a good fantasy/horror crossover with a bit of crime thriller thrown in there for good measure, then definitely check out Reviver. It's intense, a little creepy and a hell of a lot of fun. About the author Jamie Gibbs is the overlord of Mithril Wisdom as well as a terminal geek and great lover of sandwiches.You can follow him on his Google+ or Twitter profiles for a daily dose of fanboy rants.
about 4 hours ago
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/tv_club/features/2013/mad_men_season_6/week_6/mad_men_review_ted_eats_don_alive_in_a_man_with_a_plan.html As part of Slate's "TV Club," discussing last week's episode of Mad Men, writer Paul Ford parall...
http://www.slate.com/articles/arts/tv_club/features/2013/mad_men_season_6/week_6/mad_men_review_ted_eats_don_alive_in_a_man_with_a_plan.html As part of Slate's "TV Club," discussing last week's episode of Mad Men, writer Paul Ford parallels Don Draper with Angel as the "handsome brute with awful secrets."Ford draws the comparison based on the character arc in Buffy, rather than the extended portrayal of Angel the series - made in response to another writer's name-checking Draper as morphing into Christian Grey. [ edited by Whedonage on 2013-05-20 07:40 ]
about 4 hours ago
One is near the end of his term! One’s term has yet to begin! Can you guess which is which? Photo by Catherine Shaffer.
One is near the end of his term! One’s term has yet to begin! Can you guess which is which? Photo by Catherine Shaffer.
about 5 hours ago