T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
405.1 | It's SF | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Mon Oct 27 1986 10:57 | 7 |
| I'd call them science fiction. They may not strike people as such
because they are not in one of the familiar sub-genres like space
opera, time travel, or post-holocaust. But the setting and the
nature of some of the characters is conjectural, based on science,
then extrapolating a little further.
Earl Wajenberg
|
405.2 | Thumbs down on the last book | NOVA::BNELSON | The Stars My Destination | Tue Oct 28 1986 09:10 | 25 |
|
I read the first two also. They were much better than the last one. I got a-
bout 200 pages into it, and after seeing the main character ( I forget her
name ) work her hundredth miracle, I gave up. I just can't believe how some
of those female authors think they can make up for a perceived lack of female
heroines in literature by creating female characters who can do anything better
than anyone else. She was doing things I wouldn't have believed even coming
from Superman! And she was making observations and conclusions which would
be very intelligent for TODAY's standards, much less for the Stone Age!!!
Don't get me wrong, I enjoy a female heroine as much as a male heroine, but I
have to _believe_ in them as they are presented.
The first was good, the second ok, and the last was truly awful. Pure bilge.
Each book has it's own precepts which you must accept at face value; after
that, it is the author's job to make you believe in everything else which hap-
pens. In that the author of this book failed miserably ( at least with me ).
I sure know I won't be reading any more of this series.
Brian
|
405.3 | Which Genre? | NY1MM::BOWERS | Dave Bowers | Fri Jan 16 1987 15:22 | 20 |
|
After reading all 3 of the Earth's children books, I'm sill ambivalent
towards them. The Ice Age background is very well researched and the
idea of racial memory in the Neanderthals is fascinating.
I can even stomach the superwoman heroine (almost). Romantic heroines
are permitted some super-human capabilities (mainly to endure
suffering). What I can't handle is being asked to believe that
one person was responsible for every major technological advance
of the Ice Age.
Are the books SF? I think not. Apart from the racial memory ideas,
once you allow for the odd setting (Ice Age Europe rather than
17th-18th century) the books are straight historic romances. The
plot situations and the problems faced by the protagonists are only
loosely connected to the particular setting. One could probably
rewrite all 3 book setting them in, say, 14th century Europe and
not have to alter many of the major plot elements.
|
405.4 | They'll Look Odd Next to Georgette Heyer | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Jan 16 1987 16:23 | 7 |
| I think we much allow "Earth's Children" a certain amount of
SF-coloring, even if it isn't a very pure example of SF. I base
that almost solely on the scientific speculations about the
Neanderthals. For the rest, I agree, they are "historical" (well,
pre-historical) romances.
Earl Wajenberg
|
405.5 | Homo Sapiens Neanderthalis | NY1MM::BOWERS | Dave Bowers | Fri Jan 16 1987 16:56 | 20 |
| While the Neanderthal speculation is fascinating and quite cleverly
worked out, it does suffer from a minor reality conflict.
If one looks at the human "family tree" one finds that Neanderthal
Man ("the Clan") and modern man ("the Others") are both members
of the species _homo_sapiens_. Auel in fact recognizes this fact
in having the 2 races able to interbreed.
The whole point of this is that it seems highly unlikely to me
that 2 races of the same species would differ so wildly in their
neural makeup. I can handle the language difference since speech,
as opposed to language, depends on the mechanical structure of the
mouth (chimps and gorillas couldn't talk if they had Einstein's
brain - humans with physical defects have great difficulty speaking).
The supposed mental diferences Auel describes would, on the other
hand, seem to imply major differences in brain structure and
organization which, as I have stated, would probably not occur between
2 races of a single species.
It is, however, a neat speculation.
|
405.6 | I don't remember momma | ROCK::REDFORD | On a dark desert highway | Fri Jan 16 1987 17:48 | 9 |
| I haven't read the books, but it could be that racial memory is a
latent ability in Cro-Magnon types as well. We're just defective in
that regard. Some minor mutation cut the wire to that section. We
get occasional glimpses of past lives (dreams of previous
incarnations, the collective unconscious, etc.) but can't really use
the facility. It's probably just as well; with a racial memory there
would be little need for writing, a key piece of civilization.
/jlr
|
405.7 | Are they sf? | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | A disgrace to the forces of evil | Sat Jan 17 1987 00:58 | 10 |
| It depends on what you think makes something sf. Most sf
collectors' (to choose one point of view) and bibliographers
(to choose another) consider anything about the prehistoric
past to be science fiction.
Think of science fiction as fictional extrapolation of a
scientific idea. The science in the case of Auel's books
is anthropology.
--- jerry
|
405.8 | Bunnies, anyone? | BMT::BOWERS | Dave Bowers | Thu Mar 05 1987 22:37 | 3 |
|
Is _Watership_Down_ science fiction? There's a lot of extrapolation
from zoology.
|
405.9 | Rabbit Fantasies, Penguin Dreams | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Fri Mar 06 1987 08:53 | 4 |
| I'd call "Watership Down" fantasy, since the human-calibre mentation
of the rabbits is counter to fact, at least in the public opinion.
Earl Wajenberg
|
405.10 | Better filing through extended dimensions... | KALKIN::BUTENHOF | Approachable Systems | Mon Mar 09 1987 09:09 | 35 |
| .9:
In other words, every novel to use such concepts as
faster-than-light travel or time travel is in fact fantasy
because, as you say, it "is counter to fact, at least in
the public opinion".
Actually, you have a good point there... the problem with
its application in this case is that it negates much of what
we generally consider to be "science fiction", to the point
of rendering the term virtually useless.
Although, on the other hand, I've long since given up on
defining "science fiction" or "fantasy"... much less attempting
to define the distinction (if any) between them. There's
too much variety. I consider "fantasy" to be what's written
in books labelled as "fantasy", and "science fiction" to
be what's written in books labelled as "science fiction".
I am far more concerned about the quality and content of
a story than about what it's called. I have always been
primarily interested in science fiction reading, and therefore
I'm more like to find stories I like among those labelled
"science fiction"... but many of them are "fantasy", or
something else entirely. Nor is everything labelled "science
fiction" to my taste.
If I owned a bookstore, I'd have no hesitation putting Watership
Down on the fantasy shelf. I haven't the faintest idea where
I'd put Earth's Children(TM) books, but it most likely wouldn't
be either SF *or* fantasy... maybe right at the intersection of
the SF, adventure, romance, and archeology sections in my
special-order 4 dimensional bookshelves...
/dave
|
405.11 | Varieties of Unreality | PROSE::WAJENBERG | | Mon Mar 09 1987 09:34 | 41 |
| Re .10
Well, personally, I consider SF a sub-species of fantasy.
Poul Anderson proposed an interesting definition of "speculative
fiction" (= my category of general fantasy). It is fiction that
deals importantly with fictitious categories. Not only are the
people and events and maybe the places fictitious, the kinds of
things encountered are fictitious -- elves, magic, ESP, hyperdrives,
time-travel, ghosts, aliens.
You begin subdividing "spculative fiction" according to the, as
it were, kind of nonexistence enjoyed by the categories used. Alien
or artificial intelligence are neither of them part of our world
at present but might become so in the future. That makes them SF.
Elves, ghosts, and magic (and sapient rabbits) are not part of the
publicly accepted world view but, as they are usually described, they
ought to have been there all along. They are more strictly
counterfactual and so go into fantasy proper. (Though Anderson points
out that there are plenty of people who believe in any or all of
them.)
ESP, hyperdrive, and time-travel are intermediate. ESP happily
exists in both kinds of fiction, reflecting its ambiguous position
in public evaluation. Hyperdrive and time-travel are, perhaps by
accidents of literary history, usually portrayed as being done by
gadgetry. This together with sheer tradition tends to get them
stuck in the SF category, whatever you think of their real scientific
plausibility.
I'd classify "Earth's Children," or at least "Clan of the Cave Bear,"
as SF, since the Neanderthal character is a careful, if speculative,
construction from for-real scientific hypotheses, give or take a
little race memory (but remember ESP is amphibious).
The rabbits remain fantasy. They could become science fiction if
they were a new and unexpected breed of mutant hi-IQ rabbits. Thus
"The Rats of NIMH" comes closer to SF. (It doesn't make it to SF
because lots of non-lab rodents are also depicted as sapient.)
Earl Wajenberg
|
405.12 | That's "The Secret of NIMH", rodent! :-) | YODA::BARANSKI | Searching for Lowell Apartmentmates... | Mon Mar 09 1987 12:53 | 0 |
405.13 | I prefer subsets of "Speculative Fiction". | ICEMAN::RUDMAN | Extraordinarily lifelike. | Mon Mar 09 1987 13:18 | 5 |
| re: .11 I think some of us understood what you meant. ;-)
Isn't there a file on defining SF, Fantasy, etc., in here somewhere...?
Don
|
405.14 | .12, closer but,... | DDMAIL::ANDREWS | Just living a life of illusion | Tue Mar 10 1987 18:33 | 6 |
| Re: .12
Actually it "Mrs. Frisby and the rats (of/from) NIMH". No idea
of the author, though.
R_o_b
|
405.15 | Everything you wanted to know... | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | A disgrace to the forces of evil | Wed Mar 11 1987 01:40 | 11 |
| R_o_b is correct. The original novel is MRS. FRISBY AND THE
RATS OF NIMH. The title was changed for the movie. They also
changed the character's name to Mrs. Brisby, because if they
didn't, they wouldn't be able to market any toys based on
here without infringing on the "Frisbee" trademark.
The author, by the way, is the late Robert Lesley Conly, under
the pseudonym Robert C. O'Brien. A sequel was published within
the last year or so, written by Conly's daughter.
--- jerry
|
405.16 | Meanwhile, back at the original topic... | WILKIE::RCOLLINS | He's Baaack! | Thu May 24 1990 20:35 | 4 |
|
Book #4 (The Plains of Patience) of the Earth's Childeren ??ogy
is due out in August.
|
405.17 | Ayla lives! | CHFS32::HMONTGO | Learn to adjust your time-flow | Wed Jul 25 1990 21:17 | 10 |
| Well, someone beat me to the question. Any details of the book?
Personally, I thought the third book stunk also, just how much
do we credit Ayla with? If you cut out the pages in that book that
were spent on Pleasures there wouldn't be much book left.
However, I'd love to see her reunited with Durc and face to face
with Broud, she could squish him once and for all if her upbringing
would let her.
Helen
|
405.18 | I found Ayla believable | BRUMMY::HAZEL | Every couple has its moment in a field | Sun Aug 26 1990 13:06 | 15 |
| FWIW, I found the descriptions of events surrounding most of Ayla's
'inventions' to be totally believable.
"Intelligence" is the ability to adapt concepts and tools to new
situations, and there is no reason why a Stone Age person should be any
less adaptable than a present day person. In fact there could be a good
reason (survival) why they might necessarily have been more adaptable.
If intelligence is partly related to environmental influences, then the
Stone Age environment might have made it more common than the present
day civilised environment where not bothering to think is less likely
to prove fatal.
Dave Hazel
|
405.19 | SF vs. Fantasy | ABSZK::SZETO | Simon Szeto, at Spitbrook | Mon Aug 27 1990 11:01 | 10 |
| > Isn't there a file on defining SF, Fantasy, etc., in here somewhere...?
Indeed, one of the early topics in this file was:
27 NACHO::CONLIFFE 14-FEB-1984 30 Science Fiction versus Fantasy
I haven't looked at the discussion recently; not sure we have SF and
Fantasy neatly defined, if that were possible.
--Simon
|
405.20 | Also discussed in BOOKS | ABSZK::SZETO | Simon Szeto, at Spitbrook | Mon Aug 27 1990 11:55 | 60 |
| <<< COLBIN::$1$DUA1:[NOTES$LIBRARY]BOOKS.NOTE;1 >>>
Topic Author Date Repl Title
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
156 ROLL::GAUTHIER 28-APR-1986 9 MAMMOTH HUNTER, ANYONE?
320 RETORT::HARMON 10-APR-1987 16 Jean Auel
499 BPOV09::GROSSE 19-FEB-1988 12 J. Auel
================================================================================
Note 156.8 MAMMOTH HUNTER, ANYONE? 8 of 9
HANZI::SIMONSZETO "Simon Szeto, ABSS/FER, Hongkong" 30 lines 1-MAY-1988 09:35
-< Making prehistoric people in our image >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Well, you may be right about men learning something from reading
Mrs. Auel's stories, but I'm skeptical about it being from prehistory.
The author apparently did a lot of research, and I don't cast doubt
on her scholarship. However, these novels are still very much fiction.
There were no written historical records from back then, and whatever
anthropologists/archaeologists may have deduced from what's left
behind from prehistory, I don't believe that detailed human behavior
is part of the result of that research.
That these prehistoric people had different sexual mores than
contemporary societies, is quite possible, even likely. I do not
presume to know one way or another. But I consider these novels as
romanticized versions of life set in the Stone Age, not necessarily
the way it was in those days.
I saw the movie too. I agree that it's very difficult to do Clan of
the Cave Bear right. For example, how are you going to find actors
that look like Clan, even heavily made-up? Also, because Clan don't
speak much, it's really tough to get "dialogue" across to us who're
just as disadvantaged as the Others?
As I read through the novels, particularly Valley of the Horses,
I couldn't help but marvel at the resemblance between Ayla and your
typical movie sex goddess. (They could have picked somebody better
than Darryl (sp?) Hannah to play Ayla, in my opinion.) Does anybody
know whether the Cro-Magnon really looked like modern-day Nordic
people?
--Simon
[The following is reposted without prior permission. I hope Larry Klaes
doesn't mind.]
================================================================================
Note 156.9 MAMMOTH HUNTER, ANYONE? 9 of 9
DICKNS::KLAES "Know Future" 12 lines 2-MAY-1988 13:31
-< One old myth - humans have always been brutal killers >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Keep in mind that just twenty years ago, humanity's ancestors
right up through the Neanderthal were considered vicious hunters
and killers. Only recently has there become more evidence that
early humanity were actually more peaceful vegetarians (This is
more specifically theorized for Austalopithecus and Homo Erectus).
The attitude we see in ourselves today seems to have started with
*our* direct branch of evolution - Homo sapiens and Homo sapiens
sapiens. Cro-Magnon Man is now an obsolete term, and is put in
the Homo sapiens category; yes, they did look very much like us.
Larry
|
405.21 | ***Attention Readers*** | WFOVX5::BAIRD | | Tue Sep 11 1990 10:45 | 18 |
|
Ok, everybody who's been waiting for the next book in the series...
RUSH to your local Waldenbooks store to pre-order your copy of
"Plains of Passage". Notice the title. This title makes more sense
than the one reported earlier.
The book will be out in late Sept., so pre-ordering is only for
the next two weeks (approximately). The list price is $24.95.
Pre-order price is $17.95, but if you have a Waldenbooks Preferred
Reader card then the price is only $15.71. Good deal! My name
is on the list.
Enjoy!!
Debbi
\
|
405.22 | | ABSZK::SZETO | Simon Szeto, ISEDA/US at ZKO | Sun Oct 21 1990 23:36 | 7 |
| Not only is "Plains of Passage" out, but they have the first three
books alongside, in hardcover, no less.
I think I'll wait for the softcover, though.
--Simon
|
405.23 | Ayla Lives! But not in Mammoth Hunters. | CHFS32::HMONTGO | I feel a thought approaching | Thu Nov 01 1990 21:02 | 26 |
| re .17, .18
Please don't get me wrong. I love the first two books, I have no
problem with Ayla discovering an easy way to make fire, hunt alone,
domesticating the first cat and horse, and for that matter the first
dog (which came along in Mammoth Hunters) etc. Actually, Ayla is
my hero.
But The Mammoth Hunters got a little thick for my taste. Sure,
Ayla was wonderful, but let's let some of the other characters have
some accomplishments too. In addition to all of her earlier
accomplishments we now find she's a caller, a seer, etc. I agree
also with an earlier response that she was more of a movie goddess
in the third book and second my own opinion that if Auel had left
Pleasures out of The Mammoth Hunters then there wouldn't have been
a third book. Had I known then what I know now, I wouldn't have
spent $20 on the hardcover, in fact; I probably wouldn't have bought
it paperback.
Someone read it fast and give us a quick review. After all these
years waiting for the fourth book, maybe Auel has had time to
rediscover her earlier talent of writing quality instead of something
Danielle Steel or Harlequin Romances could put out.
Helen
|
405.24 | | MXOV06::ZAJBERT | Salsabadeando | Sat Nov 03 1990 12:18 | 7 |
|
RE: .-1
Those are exactly my reasons for not buying the new one until
someone highly recommends it.
Mauricio
|
405.25 | If you're a fan in the Nashua area... | A1VAX::BARTH | Special K | Fri Nov 09 1990 10:00 | 7 |
| Jean Auel will be at Pheasant Lane Mall, Nashua, NH on either 15 or
16 November from 2 to 4 pm. One of the bookstores is hosting the event.
(Sorry I'm not sure which day - I didn't have a chance to write it down
and am relying on memory.)
Karl B.
|
405.26 | | CHFS32::HMONTGO | I feel a thought approaching | Mon Nov 19 1990 11:49 | 16 |
|
Was listening to a Larry King repeat show early this morning and
he had Jean on. Several people called in during the 1/2 hour I
listened who said they were having a problem with Plains. I got
the impression that there are a lot of flashbacks or something to
the old Clan days.
Someone called and asked about Durc, would he and Ayla ever be
reunited, and Jean replied that Durc was a tragedy and that Ayla
would live with the pain of that tragedy forever. Personally, I
feel that Ayla has done what Iza told her to do. She found the
Others, she has Jondalar, and I want her to go back for her son.
But then, nobody ever listens to me...*-)
Helen
|
405.27 | Ho-Hum | AUNTB::MONTGOMERY | I feel a thought approaching | Thu Dec 27 1990 11:46 | 4 |
| OK, recieved Plains of Passage for Christmas. Anyone want my opinion
after 200 pages?
Helen
|
405.28 | | MOMCAT::TARBET | ma bold Fisher Lass! | Thu Dec 27 1990 22:33 | 1 |
| yeah it was indeed a slow starter.
|
405.29 | | JETSAM::WILBUR | | Tue Mar 12 1991 10:24 | 11 |
|
I zipped right through Plains of Passage. Much better than the
Mammoth Hunters, but I still ended up skipping over the
Pleasures-pages which I'm happy to say were fewer and sometimes
(once or twice) actually were appropriate for the plot.
I highly recommend the book, I just wish the editor/publisher would get
a rein on the author.
|
405.30 | I like all of them | UNTADI::HAZEL | Vorsprung durch technik | Thu Mar 14 1991 08:57 | 16 |
| I re-read all three of the preceding books in the correct order (having
previously read them in the wrong order). Then I felt compelled to buy
Plains of Passage to find out what happened next. I am now waiting for
the fifth book to appear, to get the next instalment of the story.
Personally, I find these books a refreshing change from the usual
political/social intrigues which bear more resemblance to soap-operas
than stories. I also like the lengths to which Jean Auel has gone to
ensure that the descriptions of the environment are accurate. I always
feel as though I am there in Ice Age Europe (which sounds more pleasant
than present-day Europe on occasions).
I like these stories a lot.
Dave Hazel
|
405.31 | I liked it | KEPNUT::GRENIER | savoirfare is everywhere | Fri Aug 23 1991 17:02 | 7 |
| PLAINS OF PASSAGE was indeed an excellent read. I blasted thru it in
less than three days. It was much more adventurous and exciting than
the MAMOUTH HUNTER. It was a culmanation of all the previous books.
After MAMOUTH HUNTER, I too was hoping for a change. Well we got it
and it worked for me. Can't wait for the next book.
Rich
|