T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
333.1 | Supply and demand | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Mr. Gumby, my brain hurts | Sun May 18 1986 05:51 | 11 |
| I'm not really much of a one for fantasy, but I'd say that this
is just a case of the publishers feeding the market the junk food
that it's craving. Almost 10 years ago, the fantasy genre really
started to make it big, and since then, author after author, editor
after editor, publisher after publisher has been cranking it out
to feed the demand. The more fantasy that gets published, the more
bad fantasy gets published. The percentage is probably no higher
than it was 20 years ago, it's jsut that each percentage point
represents a larger number of books.
--- jerry
|
333.2 | | JEREMY::REDFORD | John Redford | Mon May 19 1986 11:59 | 2 |
| Who were the authors quoted? Should we no longer trust their judgement?
/jlr
|
333.3 | Yes, you are being naive. | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Mon May 19 1986 14:29 | 21 |
| Re .0
Just because you like a given author, it doesn't follow that you
like the same books that author does. You found the characterization
dreadful, yet it was endorsed by an author you like. It may be
that that author values inventiveness or pacing more than
characterization, yet is able to characterize well enough, yea better
than the author you hate.
Also, publishers are perfectly capable of plucking one favorable
comment out of a generally negative review and turning it into a
laudatory blurb.
I agree with Jerry; I doubt the percentage of quality fantasy is
going down. If it is, that may be because of its popularity, which
attracts people with no love of the genre, but know a big market
when they see it.
Don't judge a book by its cover blurbs.
Earl Wajenberg
|
333.4 | nolo contendere | CGHUB::CONNELLY | Eye Dr3 - Regnad Kcin | Wed May 21 1986 13:59 | 20 |
| re: .2
i don't know if i can remember all the authors involved, but Marion
Zimmer Bradley, Andre Norton, Evangeline Walton and Anne McCaffrey (sp?)
are some of them; i happen to like what i've read by the first three
mentioned...don't know much about the last except i believe she's won
a Nebula or Hugo or something...
re: .3
yes, i guess there isn't necessarily any correlation between a writer's
talent and his/her tastes; maybe part of the problem also is the ongoing
inflation/devaluation of the English/American language--everything is
just so AWESOME nowadays that it's hard to believe that people didn't
used to die of boredom in the old days; every other adjective seems to
be a superlative now, so it's no wonder that the abysmal can claim to be
good and the mediocre can claim to be "one of the year's best" (i wonder
if this is related to the devaluation of grades in our schools, where
you can get a B+ for just showing up and not falling face-first into the
mashed potatoes during lunch :-))
|
333.5 | linguistic note | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Wed May 21 1986 14:48 | 8 |
| Actually, advertizing has always inflated the language into
valuelessness. (And blurbs are advertizing. So are book reviews,
sometimes.) It isn't a modern phenomenon. Just look at an old
Barnum and Bailey poster. ("Colosal! Stupendous!") People get
numb to one set of superlatives, so the forces of slang and Mad
Ave select a new set.
Earl Wajenberg
|
333.6 | Supply and demand? | MAGIC::HAGEL | Andrew Hagel | Wed May 21 1986 20:53 | 12 |
| Perhaps an alternative suggestion is that the population from which
to draw good fiction has been decreased as a result of an increase
in demand. I seem to recall somewhat of a renaissance of SF about
1979-1982, and noticed that the quality of subsequent work by authors
that I appreciated dropped afterwards. Corroboration of this viewpoint
might be seen in the DelRey collection (which I have a good deal
of respect for). Recent entries include re-issues of older works by
authors such as Murray Leinster, which is something I hadn't noticed
when the series originally began.
Regards,
Andy Hagel
|
333.7 | how's that again? | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Thu May 22 1986 10:08 | 7 |
| I'm afraid I didn't follow that. How would an increase in demand
cause the population of good fantasy authors to shrink? Shrink
in proportion to the demand? Or do you mean the authors would start
cranking out the stuff with less care because of the increased demand?
Or something else?
Earl Wajenberg
|
333.8 | The Answer's You Betcha! | INK::KALLIS | | Thu May 22 1986 12:23 | 21 |
| Back to the basic question --
Yes, Fantasy is not what it was. The reasons are several and include:
"Fantasy" nowadays tends to mean "Heroic Fantasy" -- that is, imitation
Conans. This is both unimaginative and, ultimately, boring. Howard
was, in my opinion, a good nmatural writer who poured his soul into
Conan; later writers don't have that dedicattion.
I read one fantasy where the plotting was so transparent (the hero
was told that he would have to encounter hazards A, B, C , ...,
N along the way, and then he did so just like a straight-line program
with no element of surprise) that it was a total turn-off.
2) The market demands a higher percentage of fantasies, so a lot
of salable schlock is written. There are other areas of literature
where you'll find this phenomenon; check used bookstores to see
what I mean.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
333.9 | "fashions" are bad for art | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Thu May 22 1986 12:39 | 12 |
| Similarly, movie SF is dominated by special effects, often at the
expense of acting, plotting, or any directorial skill but pacing
(and sometimes not even pacing). All this because of Star Wars.
Nonetheless, there are some *good* SFX movies out, and some sf movies
without a lot of SFX. "Back to the Future" for instance, unless
you want to count all the '50's staging as special effects.
Similarly, there is fantasy wheat among the heroic tares. I'd cite
R. A. MacAvoy as a good example.
Earl Wajenberg
|
333.10 | | SERF::POWERS | | Fri May 23 1986 10:30 | 12 |
| Sturgeon's Law: 90% of everything is crap.
Powers' Lemma: plus or minus 5%
If only one in ten of anything is worth reading (seeing, listening to,
whatever) then an increase in the crap level from only 90 to 95 per cent
makes it twice as hard to wade through the muck to find the good ones.
Yes, if demand increases supply usually increases, and quality control
often suffers, and a small decrease in QC is amplified in the final
worthwhile output.
- tom]
|
333.11 | 2 cents (plain) | TROLL::RUDMAN | | Thu May 29 1986 21:25 | 21 |
| Yes it is.
Just slip into your root celler & dust off a Worlds of Fantasy,
read it and compare it to what's on the shelves today. (WoF would
probably make it now!) All I found on the shelves in the '60s were
Ballantine Adult Fantasies (I know there were more, but not in a
small Vermont town) and Tolkien. e.g., P. Anthony has more Fantasy
on the shelves right now than I *bought* back then. (Last time
in the bookstore I counted 32 F & SF titles!)
A good observation about Howard, his helpers done O.K. but were
definitely 2nd fiddle. (And let us not forget Talbot Mundy, a?)
Because of the Power-Sturgeon Combination I've pretty much gotten
away from reading Fantasy in general (Current Events are better!
:-).) Also find myself unwilling to take a chance on a new author
without rave reviews from fellow readers. Shoulda stayed in the
closet.
Don
|
333.12 | new authors | CGHUB::CONNELLY | Eye Dr3 - Regnad Kcin | Fri May 30 1986 02:26 | 10 |
| re: .11
> Also find myself unwilling to take a chance on a new author
> without rave reviews from fellow readers. Shoulda stayed in the
can't exactly rave yet, but the best new author of fantasy i've read
in the past few years is a fellow named Charles deLint: books include
"Riddle of the Wren", "Moonheart" and "Mulengro"...i would say right
now that he's at about the point Ursula LeGuin was when she was doing
"City of Illusions" (finding a strong voice but still waiting for a
"Left Hand of Darkness"-story to tell with it)
|
333.13 | "SUMMER TREE" WAS OK | SAHQ::COBB | | Thu Jun 05 1986 08:48 | 7 |
| I have to jump in here to disagree with .0 about the "SUMMER TREE",
I found it to be quite good. I also thought that the books main strength
were it's characters, (which were not cardboard at all).
I do agree in general that the quality of fantasy novels seems to be
on the decline, of course "The Sword of Sha-na-na" has been out for quite
a while.
Ken cobb
|
333.14 | Demonstration: | INK::KALLIS | | Thu Jun 05 1986 17:19 | 15 |
| Amplifying ...
If you haven't read them, I'd suggest the following fantasies:
_The Blue Star_ by Fletcher Pratt
_The Stray Lamb_ by Thorne Smith
_the Mislaid Charm_ by Alexander Philipps (sp?)
All written before 1950, all good, _none_ heroic fantasy.
Compare them with the current crop, and the base-note question becomes
obvious.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
333.15 | | SHOGUN::HEFFEL | Tracey Heffelfinger | Thu Jun 05 1986 23:58 | 31 |
| Granted I'm not the most discriminating reader in the world.
(But at least I had the good sense to fling the sword of Shanana
against the wall and not read the rest....) But I liked the Riftwar
Saga. It's certainly not great literature, but I found it a good
enough read that I was looking forward to the last book.
Re:Who's Anne MacCaffrey? If you're serious... (Not being snotty
I just thought that all Norton lovers found MacCaffrey sooner or later.)
Try her Crystal Singer and its sequel Killishandra (Science Fiction)
and her Dragonriders of Pern Series (Of course I can't remember
the individal 3 titles) and Dragonsong, Dragonsinger, and Dragondrums
that are set in Pern at the same time as the others but from a
different viewpoint. I think MacCaffrey at her best is as good
if not better than Norton at her best. (Course what do I know?
I liked the Riftwar Saga.
To the original question, as others have said, I don't think
the percentage of good stuff has declined, merely the volume of
bad stuff has increased.
I find I'm pretty lucky at picking ones that I at least enjoy.
I rarely don't finish them. I don't mind a light read every now
and then especially when the work doesn't take itself too seriously.
I find the onesI tend to not finish are those that are pretentious.
I couldn't really tell you how I pick'em. Partly cover blurb, partly
kudos from other authors, partly LOCUS reviews, partly knowledge
of previous works, partly reading the first page to get a feel for
the authors style.... I haven't brought home too many real turkeys.
tlh
|
333.16 | | WIND::WAY | Frank Way | Fri Jun 06 1986 17:35 | 24 |
| Hi, I'm new to this conference, and I've been reading this topic
with interest, since I have, at times had the same complaints
many of you have had.
My reading depends a lot on the other factors in my life at the
time (i.e. whether I want something I can sink my teeth into, or
some light esacpist fair). However, I like whatever I read to be
fairly well written.
A trilogy by Barbara Hambly (one title "The Walls of Air" comes
to mind) really caught my fancy. In fact my nickname came from
one of her characters whose name I copped for a marathon D&D game.
That trilogy had what I call a "hook", in that it's idea was, to
me, fresh and new, not just some re-packaged garbage.
I've spent enough money on what I hoped was good fantasy, only to
be disappointed halfway in, so now I spend more time in the store,
carefully browsing, and I'd say I've done pretty well lately.
(Spending less money, reading good books....)
I still have never found a fantasy that left me quite as excited
as my first reading of Lord of the Rings.....
frank
|
333.17 | | PAUPER::POWERS | | Tue Jun 10 1986 10:43 | 11 |
|
Powers' other Lemma: Only the strong survive.
Yes, bad stuff outnumbers good stuff, and the ratio may be getting worse,
but historical perspective must be fair. In Steve's reply (.14)
he points out some instances where the strong have survived, at least
in his library. What was the proportion of BAD books (or movies, or
music, or baseball players, or whatever) from the same period?
It only takes a few survivors to make an era look great.
- tom powers]
|
333.18 | ...and only the good die young. | TROLL::RUDMAN | | Mon Jun 23 1986 23:42 | 6 |
| Re: .14
Very well, Mr. Kallis. I will restart The Stray Lamb (got as far
as the Horse) and get back to you. Do you also reccommend the other
2 in the 3-Decker?
Don
|
333.19 | You Betcha! | INK::KALLIS | | Wed Jun 25 1986 14:37 | 7 |
| re .18:
I'd reccommend virtually _all_ Thorne Smoth except _The Passionate
Witch_, _The Bishop's Jaegers_, and the Topper series.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
333.20 | "in my opinion" | USAT02::CARLSON | Fear is the mind killer | Fri Apr 24 1987 16:10 | 14 |
| re: 0, 13
I must agree with reply 13, I liked _The Summer Tree_. A lot.
Am eagerly awaiting the sequel. I hope reply 0 didn't mean
_The Copper Crown_ in lieu of _The Copper Throne_. Another book
I enjoyed immensely, and awaiting the sequel.
I do think there's a lot of junk out there too. I think it's harder
to weed out a good SF/Fantasy book, than any other type. But ,
it's fun trying most of the time.
Personal favs- the Pern series in entirety and The Lord of the Rings
series.
Theresa
|
333.21 | I really enjoyed _The Fionavar Tapestry_ | CURIUS::LEE | nota bene | Tue Jun 02 1987 09:52 | 16 |
| Re: _The Summer Tree_
I *loved* that book. Furthermore, I loved the whole trilogy. I
thought the character development was excellent. All three books of
_The Fionavar Tapestry_ have been published in hardcover. They are:
(Of course) _The Summer Tree_
_The Wandering Fire_
_The Darkest Road_
Of these, I believe the first two are out in paperback. As far as the
original topic goes, yes I think good fantasy is harder to come by
these days. Of what I've read recently, I liked _The Belgariad_ by
David Eddings and _The Fionavar Tapestry_ the best.
Wook
|
333.22 | excellant fantasy | STUBBI::B_REINKE | the fire and the rose are one | Thu Jun 04 1987 01:08 | 3 |
| I would second Wook on these books - they are the kind of book
that you consume in one gulp.
Bonnie
|
333.23 | A matter of taste | GRAMPS::BAILEY | quoth the raven, nevermind | Fri Aug 21 1987 14:04 | 31 |
| Just checked in to this confreence, and would like to add my 2 cents
to this old conversation.
I think there's plenty of good fantasy out there these days. Some
of my favorites have already been mentioned (Eddings and Hambly).
And for that matter, I really enjoyed the Riftwar Saga. Maybe it's
more a matter of what you're looking for in fantasy literature,
but I can handle shallow or faceless characters sometimes, if the
story's good. I thought that Feist dragged a little in the second
book, but the third book picked up quite nicely and I finished the
novel wishing there were a fourth book. Sure the characters were
predictable and in some cases not well developed, but I'd characterize
it kind of like the movie "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK". Pure escapist
entertainment. That's what some of us read fantasy novels for,
after all.
I also enjoyed Julian May's Pliocene Saga. This one kinda falls in
between fantasy and sci fi, but I see it more as fantasy.
But I agree that fantasy's not as good as it used to be. That's because
every fantasy novel that gets written is compared to Tolkien's classic.
And NO writer these days is going to take 17 years to develop his/her
story. The only one I know of that even comes close is Marion Zimmer
Bradley, and I don't think she's doing Darkover books anymore.
Anyway, the point is that there's admittedly a lot schlock fantasy
novels in print these days. But there's some gems in among the
gravel too. It's just a matter of what your taste and mood is.
... Bob
|
333.24 | The sun doesn't rise and set on Tolkein | ERASER::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Fri Aug 21 1987 15:59 | 16 |
| Re .23:
>But I agree that fantasy's not as good as it used to be. That's because
>every fantasy novel that gets written is compared to Tolkien's classic.
But there were far better written by people who ground them out
like sausages. Some of A. Merritt's stuff -- _Dwellers in the Mirage_
_Face in the Abyss_, and even _The Moon Pool_ are all good stuff,
better than a lot of schlock that's being printed these days.
Some of the better fantasies are older ones, or obscure, or both.
Alas, the come-into-it-lately reader doesn't even necessarily know
that a, say, _Blue Star_ exists, in the epic fantasy mode, or a
_Mislaid Charm_ exists, at a more lighthearted level.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
333.25 | Older is really better | ALIEN::MELVIN | Ten zero, eleven zero zero by zero two | Fri Aug 21 1987 16:13 | 19 |
| > But there were far better written by people who ground them out
> like sausages. Some of A. Merritt's stuff -- _Dwellers in the Mirage_
> _Face in the Abyss_, and even _The Moon Pool_ are all good stuff,
Definitely good stories.
> Some of the better fantasies are older ones, or obscure, or both.
Perhaps, because what was fantasy at one time has become fact (sort of).
Another part may be the fact that the older stories were written by authors
that did NOT have a large collection of stories to build on. It seems that
the fantasy was really THEIR fantasy put on paper and you got to share in
it. With a LARGE base of such stories behind you, I think it would be
difficult to be 'creative' and 'inventive'. Someone else's fantasy has
affected the new author and so you get some 'parroting'. An example of
this would be the Elfstones of Shannara books, which seemed to me to be TOO
close to LoTR.
-Joe
|
333.26 | | CIMNET::KOLKER | Conan the Librarian | Mon Aug 24 1987 10:12 | 6 |
| re .25
An amen to that! Especially the Elfstones which are a second rate
LOTR ripoff. I like to refering to the Elfstone books as the Hot
Rocks of Sha-Na-Na by Terry O'PotBoyle (8>-)).
|
333.27 | can you find it in a bookstore? | GRAMPS::BAILEY | quoth the raven, nevermind | Tue Aug 25 1987 10:25 | 14 |
| Re. 24
You're right, some of the better stories are older and obscure.
One of my favorites was _The Worm Auroboros_ by E.R. Eddison. I've
never seen it in print, though, except for a beat-up old copy I
found at a yard sale. This is the problem; where do you find these
old books?
I really don't consider myself a newcomer to the world of fantasy
novels, but I've never heard of _Blue Star_ or _Mislaid Charm_.
Who wrote them? If they're obtainable I'd really like to read them.
... Bob
|
333.28 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Science Is Golden | Wed Aug 26 1987 02:05 | 19 |
| re:.27
Hunh? THE WORM OUROBORUS --- along with Eddison's Zimiamvian
Trilogy (MISTRESS OF MISTRESSES, A FISH DINNER IN MEMISON, and
THE MEZENTIAN GATE) had *scads* of printings in paperback from
Ballantine Books from the late 60's throughout the 70's. They
may even still be in print. You should be able to find them in
any well-stocked used_bookstore.
THE BLUE STAR is by Fletcher Pratt, sometime collaborator of
L. Sprague de Camp. I believe it recently came back into print,
but I'm not positive. The Ballantine/Del Rey edition for the
last 10 years has a *really* nice Darrell Sweet cover, too.
THE MISLAID CHARM is by Alexander Philips. Unfortunately, it
hasn't (to my knowledge) been in print in the US since the late
40's.
--- jerry
|
333.29 | | ERASER::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Wed Aug 26 1987 09:41 | 29 |
| Re .27, .28:
>THE MISLAID CHARM is by Alexander Philips. Unfortunately, it
>hasn't (to my knowledge) been in print in the US since the late
>40's.
True. It happens that I obtained an original edition in the 1950s;
it's a very cute story and well worth reading. The basic idea is
that a miracle-working charm that was stolen from one group of little
people was "concealed" by temporarily placing it within a weriter
who had just sold his first story (and without his knowledge), leading
to his temporary ability to produce minor miracles. For the current
science_fiction/fantasy crowd, it'd be a natural. It's short enough
to be included in a collection.
Also out of print, but occasionally findable is _From Unknown Worlds_,
a collection of good fantasy stories from the late lamented publication
of that name, which was also edited by John W. Campbell, Jr. It
was relkeased in the United States as an oversized softcover, with
an Edd Cartier cover; it was published in the U.K. (less one chilling
[and that's also a pun] Henry Kuttner story) as a slim hardcover;
it might still be findable in some of the more obscure
used-book_stores, and is well worth picking up, if for nothing but
the lead story ("The Enchanted Weekend"). I happen to have the
U.K. version, which John Campbell gave me when I visited him once,
though he didn't autograph it (we were busy discussing psionics
at the time); I really treasure it.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
333.30 | Ask Your Friendly Librarian | UCOUNT::BAILEY | | Wed Sep 02 1987 16:20 | 22 |
| Boys and Girls, this is your friendly neighborhood librarian talking,
here to remind you that we are here to serve, and one of the things
we do best is find books/authors/stories for loan. (Sometimes we
can even locate bookstores, but that's a bit far afield for some
of us.) I speak, here, for the public librarians in your towns
as well as DEC librarians. Obviously at work our help must be somewhat
limited, but we can, for example, check Books in Print for currently
available titles (Pratt's THE BLUE STAR, for example, is still
available from Ballantine for $2.50, but THE MISLAID CHARM is not
listed as "in print" at this time). We can also refer you to a
book called the Directory of Special Libraries, which describes
special libraries and special collections within libraries...a good
place to find out who has the best collection of Pratt or Heroic
Fantasy or Folklore or Speculative Fiction or whatever...to visit
or to find out about inter-library loans.
For quick checks of Books in Print (BIP), you can contact me at
UCOUNT::BAILEY, and I will watch this conference, too.
(By the way, I too loved THE SUMMER TREE and sequel. Tastes do
vary, but "Sha-Na-Na" has value only as a Cliff notes to Tolkien
for lazy readers...that's the stuff to be warned against!)
|
333.31 | however... | ERASER::KALLIS | Raise Hallowe'en awareness. | Wed Sep 02 1987 18:05 | 34 |
| Re .30:
Yes, but ...
There are three problems here:
1) Comparing contemporary fantasy to earlier fantasy. That might
entail occassionally mentioning an out-of-print book. Although
_The Mislaid Charm_ is virtuaslly unfindable, perhaps awareness
of its existence over a wider audience will enable someone to
trace Lex Philipps or his estate so it could be reissued as
a paperback. Surely, there are enough copies of various Mer-
ritt books for people to read those.
2) Suppose I told you (correctly) that one of the libraries at Columbia
University had an original of _The Circus of Dr. Lao_, complete
with the Artzybasheff illustrations. It has; I've even seen
it and admired the pictures. _That_ one's long out of print,
but isn't the information of interest in this Conference?
3) How can you possibly compare things when you have a very narrow
frame of reference?
Agreed; it's difficult for me to discuss the plot structure and
characterizations of those in _The Mislaid Charm_ with someone who's
never read the story (saying, for instance that Dorothy was decades
ahead of her time would have to be taken on faith). But look at
the reverse: suppose someone goes into an old used bookstore and
just _happens_ upon a very slim and slightly oversized volume with
a green-colored dust jacket and _didn't_ know about _The Mislaid
Chartm_? He or she would be missing a great read!
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
333.32 | | AKOV75::BOYAJIAN | Science Is Golden | Thu Sep 03 1987 01:42 | 13 |
| re:.31
I don't see how what you're saying contradicts what .30 is
saying. He's mentioning how someone might be able to borrow a
copy of something that one cannot find. Unless you really
*want* a copy for your collection, it's always easier to try
to find a copy to read from a library.
(By the way, it just so happens that I found a copy of that CIRCUS
OF DR. LAO with the Artzybasheff illustrations a couple of months
ago. I wasn't even particularly looking for it, either.)
--- jerry
|
333.33 | I suppose it depends where you are... | INK::KALLIS | Take a deep breath .... | Thu Sep 03 1987 10:36 | 10 |
| Re .32:
>(By the way, it just so happens that I found a copy of that CIRCUS
>OF DR. LAO with the Artzybasheff illustrations a couple of months
>ago. I wasn't even particularly looking for it, either.)
Hmm. Was it a first edition?
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
333.34 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | Science Is Golden | Wed Sep 09 1987 01:55 | 6 |
| re:.33
Actually, no. It was the second edition from the mid-40's.
Still, beggars can't be choosers.
--- jerry
|
333.35 | Two years late and a short opinion.... | JULIET::APODACA_KI | Songs from the Razor's Edge | Mon Feb 06 1989 12:42 | 47 |
| Injecting a bit of new life into an old topic, but...
Not being quite as versed in the uh, past, of fantasy as some of
the previous noters are (read: I haven't been reading it all that
long and definitely have not read old stuff), my criteria for fantasy
(or even science fiction) being what it used to be is that when
I go to a bookstore, I tend to have a VERY hard time finding something
on the shelves that looks the least bit intriguing to buy. It really
takes something special to make me pick up a book written by an
author I am unfamiliar with--nothing ever seems to reach out and
"grab" me anymore. The whole section DOES look like the same books
with just different illustrations on the covers. A few years back,
I used to purchase books with a vengance--things seemed to be different
and more interesting then--now, I rarely, if ever, buy a new SF/Fantasy
book save by a small (VERY small) collection of names I know that
put out a good book.
What makes good fantasy to me? Well, originality of plot is not
a high criteria. Just about every possible plotline in the universe
has been used in some way, shape or form--to expect something totally
NEW is unreasonable. However, old plotlines can be done in fresh
ways, with believable (relatively speaking, of course), fleshed
out characters--no cardboard, please. And I mean both good AND
bad guys need to be more than stamps. If the author takes care
to make the characters "live", the result is generally a book where
everything is real--the world, the motives for whatever it is the
characters are supposed to be doing (if it isn't at odds with the
character's personality), and so on. This transcends genre, of
course. It really doesn't matter what you're writing about--if
you use cardboard, it just isn't interesting. And, of course, you
do need that hook to make the reader pick up your book. I can't
really define that hook, but you know it when you see it.
Personally, I don't like overdrawn, ultra-detailed fantasy, in the
vein of JRR Tolkien. I never did finish LOTR. I do know that yes,
fantasy is compared to Tolkien quite often, even if it isn't a rehash
of Tolkien's books, and the comparison isn't always fair, but such
as it is. I don't mind the so-called "epic" style fantasy (I liked
Sword of Shannara and Elfstones, too--is that a bad word around
here? ;) ), as long as it is done in a relatively fresh fashion
with characters that are interesting to read about.
Regrettably, I can't seem to find newer books that I even want to
read the back cover blurb. That's too bad, but hopefully the cycle
will change. And that's the word from here..... ;)
---kim
|
333.36 | Less expensive, too! | STRATA::RUDMAN | P51--Cadillac of the Skies! | Mon Feb 06 1989 15:38 | 70 |
| Re -.1: It appears it's time for Used Book store visits. I
went thru my library list and went over the Fantasy
titles. I'm not sure what corner of Fantasy you tend
towards, but I've omitted Swords & Sorcery- and Folklore-
type books. (I didn't have any Occult- to omit. ;-))
ABBEY,L. BLACK FLAME, THE
ANTHONY,P. SPLIT INFINITY [T A A #1 THE APPRENTICE ADEPT]
ANTHONY,P. BLUE ADEPT [T A A #2]
ANTHONY,P. JUXAPOSITION [T A A #3]
BEAGLE,P.S. LAST UNICORN, THE
CABELL,J.B. HIGH PLACE, THE
CHESTER,W.L. HAWK OF THE WILDERNESS
DECAMP,L.S. CARNELLIAN CUBE, THE (W/PRATT,F.)
DECAMP,L.S. COMPLEAT ENCHANTER, THE (W/PRATT,F.)
[THE MAGICAL MISADVENTURES OF HAROLD SHEA]
DECAMP,L.S. TRITONIAN RING, THE
DECAMP,L.S. FALLIBLE FIEND, THE
DONALDSON,S.R. LORD FOUL'S BANE [C OF T C VOL I #1]
DONALDSON,S.R. ILLEARTH WAR, THE [C OF T C VOL I #2]
DONALDSON,S.R. POWER THAT PRESERVES, THE [C OF T C VOL I #3]
DONALDSON,S.R. WOUNDED LAND, THE [C OF T C VOL II #1]
DONALDSON,S.R. ONE TREE, THE [C OF T C VOL II #2]
DONALDSON,S.R. WHITE GOLD WIELDER [C OF T C VOL II #3]
FINNEY,C. UNHOLY CITY, THE
[AKA THE MAGICIAN OUT OF MANCHURIA]
GOLDING,M.J. NIGHT MARE
HYDE,M.P. SINGING SWORD, THE
KURTZ,K. CAMBER OF CULDI [C OF C VOL I]
KURTZ,K. SAINT CAMBER [C OF C VOL II]
KURTZ,K. CAMBER THE HERETIC [C OF C VOL III]
KUTTNER,H. MASK OF CIRCE, THE
KUTTNER,H. CREATURE FROM BEYOND INFINITY, THE
KUTTNER,H. WELL OF THE WORLDS, THE
LINDSAY,P. A VOYAGE TO ARCTURUS
MUNN,H.W. KING OF THE WORLD'S EDGE
NIVEN,L. MAGIC GOES AWAY, THE (ILLUSTRATED)
NIVEN,L. MAGIC MAY RETURN, THE
PEAKE,M. TITUS GROAN [G #1]
PEAKE,M. GORMENGHAST [G #2]
PEAKE,M. TITUS ALONE [G #3]
PRATT,F. LAND OF UNREASON (W/DECAMP,L.S.)
PRATT,F. WELL OF THE UNICORN, THE
PRATT,F. BLUE STAR, THE
SCHOCHET,V. BERKELY SHOWCASE VOL 1 (W/SILBERSACK,J.)
SCHOCHET,V. BERKELY SHOWCASE VOL 2 (W/SILBERSACK,J.)
SCHOCHET,V. BERKELY SHOWCASE VOL 3 (W/SILBERSACK,J.)
SMITH,C.A. HYPERBOREA
SWANN,T.B. MOONDUST
SWANN,T.B. DAY OF THE MINOTAUR
SWANN,T.B. DOLPHIN AND THE DEEP, THE
SWANN,T.B. WHERE IS THE BIRD OF FIRE?
WANGERIN,W. BOOK OF THE DUN COW, THE
WHITE,T.H. ONCE AND FUTURE KING, THE
WHITE,T.H. MASTER, THE
WOLLHEIM,D.A. AVON FANTASY READER, THE (W/FRIESBURG)
The following I have but cannot recommend because I haven't read
them yet but seem to have potential:
BRADLEY,M.Z. GREYHAVEN
CHERRYH,C.J. ARAFEL'S SAGA
DICKENSON,P. BLUE HAWK, THE
I'm sure you've read many of them, and I'm sure some you didn't care
for. (They're not all classics.) And I'm sure there are others who
can add inputs (pros & cons & other titles) to the list, after all,
there's no accounting for taste. :-)
Don
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333.37 | Three more! Only the first 2 in p-back, though... | SKETCH::GROSS | Human Factors and much, much more. | Wed Feb 08 1989 12:37 | 11 |
| Don't forget Guy Gavriel Kay's books!
The Summer Tree
The Wandering Fire
The Longest Road
Somewhat of a cross-universe story, but that is a *very* small part
of it. Renewed my faith in adult fantasy, they did!
Merryl
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333.38 | | STRATA::RUDMAN | P51--Cadillac of the Skies! | Thu Feb 09 1989 13:30 | 4 |
| I didn't forget Kay; I've never read any. I don't read much Fantasy,
hence the short list and the old titles.
Don
|
333.39 | Minor nit: | HELIX::KALLIS | Pumpkins -- Nature's greatest gift | Thu Apr 02 1992 14:36 | 24 |
| Re .36 (Don):
A small nit:
> FINNEY,C. UNHOLY CITY, THE
> [AKA THE MAGICIAN OUT OF MANCHURIA]
"The Unholy City" was one of two novelettes in the book; "The Magician
out of Manchuria" was the other. They were somewhat different stories,
written some decades apart. They're both entertaining. The first is a
social-commentary piece I first saw paired with _The Circus of Dr. Lao_
in one volume I had. The second is a comedic piece about a magician (of the
non-stage variety) who goes on a journey (since he had a snake somewhere
in his ancestry, he occasionally sheds his skin).
Finny, who's most famous for _Circus_ also had a collection of short stories,
_The Ghosts of Manacle_, which take place in the southwestern United States
in a city named Manacle. The stories, though unconnected, have a pleasant
form of humor for the most part (though there's a rather sad story about a
rattlesnake). Doubtless out of print, it's worth looking for in used
bookshops, etc.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
333.40 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | History is made at night | Fri Apr 03 1992 02:20 | 9 |
| re:.39
Nit on your nit:
Don isn't claiming that the two stories are the same. What his
entry says to me is that the *collection* of those two stories
has appeared under both titles.
--- jerry
|
333.41 | Nitless | ZENDIA::BORSOM | | Sat Apr 04 1992 10:13 | 5 |
|
No nits to pick here. I just want to second the recommendation
of Finny as an author whose works are well worth taking the time
to track down.
|
333.42 | | STRATA::RUDMAN | The reports of my demise... | Tue Jan 12 1993 15:35 | 3 |
| Jerry's right; the "book" has been published under both titles.
Don
|
333.43 | Fantasy Fiction list | MTWAIN::KLAES | Houston, Tranquility Base here... | Fri Jul 22 1994 16:58 | 31 |
| From: US4RMC::"[email protected]" "MAIL-11 Daemon" 15-JUL-1994
To: Multiple recipients of list NEW-LIST <[email protected]>
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