T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
406.1 | | AKOV68::BOYAJIAN | The Mad Armenian | Thu Oct 23 1986 01:49 | 10 |
| I've read the first three. I thought the first was passable Edgar
Rice Burroughs imitation, the second just barely the same (too
many extreme coincidences to be believable), and the third
surprisingly good sf. I wasn't entranced enough to continue on
with the series, however, so I stopped there. Friends whose
judgements I trust tell me that after another couple of books,
the series went rapidly downhill, once the "slave" aspect of the
books came to dominate them.
--- jerry
|
406.2 | -<GOR Maniac>- | TRACTR::JOHNSON | | Thu Oct 23 1986 13:44 | 7 |
| re:.1
What your friend told you is basically true, but you have yet
to read the best ones, infact the next few are really good. I
personaly have read all 27 books, and once I got into the character
I was willing to put up with his running off into tangents about
slaves. Don't give up yet!
|
406.3 | Does Pa-Kur ever return? | ANT::MLOEWE | Mike Loewe | Thu Oct 23 1986 14:20 | 10 |
| Well I read books 1 through 9, and the best ones were the first
three. I just couldn't get into the women slave aspect. The first
three books didn't hover about this matter but his later books did.
It seemed to get worst with each one. I was hoping they would get more
adventure and SF again like the first three, but they never did.
P.S. I agree with Jerry, number 3, PRIEST KINGS OF GOR was one
of the best SF books I ever read.
Mike_L
|
406.4 | Keep reading! | TRACTR::JOHNSON | | Fri Oct 24 1986 14:12 | 9 |
| I made a mistake, there are only 23 books so far, as to Pa-Kur
returning, he has not, but in book 20 he begins a series in which
Cos and Tyros are mounting together an army in which to attack
Ar. Tarl also learns that Marlenaus is away from the city and
that his daughter (Tarls former wife) is behind a plot to help Cos
and Tyros overthrow Ar. So far this story has involved books 20,21,23
and is still being continued. If you can put up with the slave aspect
the stories are basicaly pretty good.
|
406.5 | "... until you see the body." | DROID::DAUGHAN | Kelly | Tue Oct 28 1986 08:46 | 10 |
| I wouldn't say it went rapidly downhill, but did get repetitive,
even though his style improved with/after #3 (the last SF book in
the series, the rest being more adventure). In my opinion, TRIBESMEN
was the last book that upheld the action & excitement of the series;
lately he is stretching one book into two by cramming seemingly
endless pages of the slave-girl bit down our throats.
Best book of the series: NOMADS.
Don Rudman
|
406.6 | GOR BOOK LIST FROM USENET | EDEN::KLAES | Welcome to Olympus, Captain Kirk! | Mon Nov 03 1986 09:47 | 44 |
| Newsgroups: net.sf-lovers
Path: decwrl!pyramid!hplabs!sdcrdcf!ucla-cs!rutgers!clyde!cbatt!ihnp4!drutx!mtuxo!mtgzy!ecl
Subject: Re: Gor (BOOKLIST)
Posted: 31 Oct 86 13:31:46 GMT
Organization: AT&T Information Systems Labs, Middletown NJ
Cc: ecl
Well here's the list. I won't rate each one, but suffice it to say that
1 through 5 are okay adventure and just about anything from 6 on is not.
(Noman's non-Gor books are GHOST DANCE, IMAGINATIVE SEX, and TIME SLAVE.)
1 Tarnsman of Gor
2 Outlaw of Gor
3 Priest-Kings of Gor
4 Nomads of Gor
5 Assassin of Gor
6 Raiders of Gor
7 Captive of Gor
8 Hunters of Gor
9 Marauders of Gor
10 Tribesman of Gor
11 Slave Girl of Gor
12 Beasts of Gor
13 Explorers of Gor
14 Fighting Slave of Gor
15 Rogue of Gor
16 Guardsman of Gor
17 Savages of Gor
18 Blood Brothers of Gor
19 Kajira of Gor
20 Players of Gor
21 Mercenaries of Gor
22 Dancer of Gor
23 Renegades of Gor
Evelyn C. Leeper
(201) 957-2070
UUCP: ihnp4!mtgzy!ecl
ARPA: [email protected]
Are there times when it seems that parts of you are not all under
the same management?
|
406.7 | A CRITICISM FROM USENET | EDEN::KLAES | Welcome to Olympus, Captain Kirk! | Tue Nov 04 1986 09:38 | 46 |
| Newsgroups: net.sf-lovers
Path: decwrl!pyramid!hplabs!tektronix!reed!mirth
Subject: Re: Gor
Posted: 2 Nov 86 08:47:57 GMT
Organization: Reed College, Portland, OR
Keywords: avoid Gor like the plague
Even a line-eater won't eat a line from Gor!
I don't know why your friend recommended the Gor books...either it was
a cruel joke or you need to choose your friends more closely ( :-),
but with a grain of seriousness).
The Gor books are sexist. The Gor books are degrading to women, and a
bit to men as well (and no, I am by no means a rabid feminist. I
prefer to think of myself as a humanist; I believe in the dignity and
essential equality of all human beings). They promote the beliefs
that women want to be raped, that men can't enjoy sex unless the woman
is forced, that slavery is what most women really want.
These books involve violence, sex, and violent sex. I am not upset
that they are published, for I dislike censorship, but I feel that
purchasing them is a mistake, for doing so bolsters the Gor author's
belief that his opinions are valid and acceptable to others. Go to
the library and choose a Gor book at random. Open it at random. Read
a sentence at random. You are 85-90% likely to read a sentence
represenative of every other sentence in the series. Do you really
want to spend your money this way?
Again, I am not a censor, a prude, or anyone else upset by inclusion
of 'real-world' things, such as sex and violence, in fantasy media.
They can add that certain edge -- when they are NOT the sole point of
the story. Niven handles sex beautifully (if somewhat euphemistically)
in The Magic Goes Away. Harlan Ellison describes violent acts in many
of his stories. But these works depend on more than the reader's
'titillation' (for lack of a better word) for their impact. So: read
a Gor book or two. Get a feeling for what they are about. Then
please, tell me: what do you think? I hope you will agree with my
distaste (no, repulsion) for these books. But I will not tell you
what to think.
Any other netters share my feelings about Gor?
Yours for a better world,
Ellen C.
|
406.8 | I agree | ELMO::JESSOP | I am created Shiva... | Tue Nov 04 1986 11:24 | 8 |
|
I read one Gor book and the sole story was about a girl kidnapped
from Earth trying to make her owner actually fall in Love with her
instead of just keeping her around for sex. he would constantly
slap her around then rape her. It was pretty bad. Needless to
say I haven't read another one since...
Mike
|
406.10 | GOR the movie | ANT::MLOEWE | Up the paddle without a creek! | Mon Jan 09 1989 10:37 | 32 |
| I don't know what happened when I did my reply, but my title appeared to
the last note. Good thing I saved it, it didn't take the first time.
I suppose it was enevitable, but the story of GOR was made into a movie.
I don't remember seeing it advertised on television, but it has already been
released on video cassette. It is a 1987 film presented by "Cannon
International", and directed by Fritz Kiersch (Children of the Corn).
It stars Urbano Barberini as Tarl Cabot, Rebecca Ferratti (former Playboy
Playmate) as Taleena, Oliver Reed and Jack Palance.
I was walking around the video store last night when I saw it. I was very
surprised and rented it immediately. I enjoyed the first three books of the
series, so it needed a viewing.
This is my review without giving any spoilers.
I read stories 1-9 of GOR, and this movie did not have one iota of story-line
material.
Take all the character names, places and events, juggle them in a bag and
distribute to actors and actresses who never read the books to get a
character discription, and you would have this movie. Same names were even
used for different people and places.
The movie was about for the search of the "home stone" that was stolen from
the city of Koroba. As I recall it, the "home stone" was stolen from Ar.
Th priest-kings were just humans that wanted to steal home stones. There were
also no Tarns, just horses. No sleens, tharlarian lizards, Nar the spider,
nothing else to let you know you were on the counter-earth. The movie was
filmed in miles of desert terrain.
Even Hup the Fool makes an appearance in this film, but not as books portrayed
him. He was a midget who makes his money gambling and by thievery.
Don't waste you money if your a GOR fan on this movie. However, I know some
of you will rent it, but I warned you. On a scale from 1-10, this movie OWES
points.
Mike_L
|
406.11 | Tupperware Distributor of Gor | ATSE::KASPER | Heisenberg may have been here | Tue Jan 17 1989 15:51 | 10 |
|
Hmm, sounds like the movie's a must-miss. I liked the first few books,
though they did get repetitive.
One of my friends' pastimes for a while was coming up with silly names
for Gor books. "Certified Public Accountant of Gor" was my personal
favorite...
Beverly
|
406.12 | | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Oil is the work of the Diesel himself | Tue Jan 17 1989 16:22 | 7 |
| re:.11
That's a favorite pastime of a lot of people. My favorite was
"Redneck Truckdrivers of Gor" (colloquially known as "Good Buddies
of Gor").
--- jerry
|
406.13 | For the upscale set--Yuppies of Gor--a true horro story | JULIET::APODACA_KI | Hey, buddy....got a quarter? | Tue Jan 17 1989 19:43 | 5 |
| Hah ha!!! Good Buddies of Gor! I love it! ;DDDDDD
Best laff I've had all day....
---kim
|
406.14 | Science Fiction Noters of Gor | DDIF::CANTOR | And way over THERE was my baby. | Tue Jan 17 1989 19:45 | 0 |
406.15 | Andy Hardy Goes to Gor | VALKYR::RUST | | Wed Jan 18 1989 09:19 | 14 |
| Stepford Wives of Gor? (Nah, that's redundant.)
How about "The Total Woman of Gor"? Ol' whats-her-name ("wear
saran wrap to entice hubby when he gets home") would fit right in.
Hey, wait! Since the current trend seems to be dredging up those old
family-comedy series, how about: "Donna Reed Goes to Gor"? "Ozzie and
Harriet of Gor"?
And of course there's "The Beaver of Gor"...
(Gak! Jerry, it's all your fault - you started this!)
-b
|
406.16 | | BPT::MOREAU | Ken Moreau, VAX DEBUG | Wed Jan 18 1989 16:56 | 15 |
| RE: the last few on "xxx of Gor"
At Noreascon II (1980), a photographer was giving a slide retrospective of
the previous years Worldcon Costume Ball. One of the most impressive
costumes of the evening was one of the simplest: it consisted of sheer
harem pants, gold slippers, and small gold earrings. That was it. It was
worn by a woman with an *EXQUISITE* figure.
Well, you can imagine the reaction of most of the audience, and someone
asked the photographer if he didn't think of himself as the photographer
of Barsoom. His answer brought down the house:
"No, I prefer to be the Lensman of Gor"
-- Ken Moreau
|
406.17 | never read 'em | SARAH::J_JOSEPH | Have you seen Jack in the Green | Wed Jan 18 1989 18:13 | 6 |
| Well, I haven't read any of the GOR books (yet). But I do own two of
them. Well, at least one. A freind of mine, upon returning from Europe
presented me with my first GOR book, "Le Banni de GOR". I never did get past
the first page. Recently though, I did buy the english version "Outlaw of GOR".
Haven't got past the first page though.
-JJ
|
406.18 | Happy Brithday, Master.... | HPSCAD::WALL | Ready when the Dutchman comes | Thu Jan 19 1989 09:16 | 8 |
|
Someone you know with a birthday coming up?
Do you have a lot of mildly twisted friends?
Then have a "Birthdays of Gor" party. Just make sure the police
know you're not using real swords....
DFW
|
406.19 | Sorry again; I'm in a silly mood. | STRATA::RUDMAN | The Posthumous Noter | Thu Jan 19 1989 17:06 | 10 |
| re: .15 You're on the right track: Eager Beavers of Gor.
re: .17 Maybe some day someone will give you a book written
in a language you recognize. :-)
Don
P.S. Pa-Kur's body was never found do I expect him to turn up
eventually. "Never be sure your enemy is dead unless you
have seen the body."
|
406.20 | Hows about, | POLAR::LACAILLE | Ignorance-curable,Stupidity-forever | Mon Jan 23 1989 12:33 | 7 |
|
- Carry-on Goh
- Bonzo goes to Goh
Charlie
|
406.21 | Autocrats of Gor | ATSE::KASPER | Kasper <-- the last day for this! | Fri Feb 10 1989 11:35 | 13 |
|
And for the SCAdians out there --
Seneschals of Gor!!
Re: .15: (Gak! Jerry, it's all your fault - you started this!)
No, I did!
Beverly (ska Alycia)
|
406.22 | I hear there's a movie in the works | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Tue Feb 21 1989 17:03 | 10 |
|
The only GOR book I purchased is also the only book I have ever
thrown out. What a bunch of perverted crap. This guy's sex life
must be a fright. With that in mind I've come up with a story
line for a new GOR book.
"Giget goes to GOR" - a disease runs rampant amoung the slave
girls turning them all terminally perky. After a number of
"masters" die by being "perked" to death all the slaves are freed
and the population starts on the road to civilization. liesl
|
406.23 | | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Ah ah, ee ee, tookie tookie | Wed Feb 22 1989 03:20 | 12 |
| re:.22
You may be surprised (or maybe not) to know that "John Norman"
is (or possibly was -- he may make enough money from the Gor
books to retire his "day job") a professor of philosophy at a
university in New York.
As for the movie, is not "in the works" -- it actually exists.
I've heard that it's out on video, though I believe it missed
the theaters.
--- jerry
|
406.24 | Not one, but two (shiver) | HPSCAD::WALL | Ready when the Dutchman comes | Wed Feb 22 1989 10:09 | 10 |
|
Legions of heaven and saints preserve us, there are two of them.
(Made simultaneously, like the Quatermain films from Cannon).
I read one Gor book, because I was attending a party called "Birthdays
of Gor." It would have made an interesting little story with all
the crap about naked flesh and D&S thrown out. Of course, it would
have only covered about 2,000 words, instead of 200,000.
DFW
|
406.25 | I just gotta say something | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Thu Feb 23 1989 13:06 | 17 |
|
< You may be surprised (or maybe not) to know that "John Norman"
< is (or possibly was -- he may make enough money from the Gor
< books to retire his "day job") a professor of philosophy at a
< university in New York.
He must still have a violent hate/fear of women. He made very
clear in the book I read (Mages of GOR or something like that)
free women were despicable and could only find happiness in being
raped and brutalized by men.
One last flame and I'll leave GOR alone. Would those of you who
found some of these books acceptable have found them so if the men
were the "love slaves" of the women? If the women made the men
crawl at their feet and plead to be beaten and abused, if they
were constantly humiliated and degraded would it seem so
harmless? OK, I'll stop bitching and get back to SF. liesl
|
406.26 | | ASABET::BOYAJIAN | Ah ah, ee ee, tookie tookie | Fri Feb 24 1989 01:59 | 42 |
| re:.25
There are a number of folks who feel that "Norman" (real name
is John Lange) started the "love slave" business as a put-on,
and ended up creating a monster when that proved to be the
biggest selling point of the series. Which, of course, doesn't
mean that he *doesn't* have a hatred or fear of women.
I have no wish to defend the Gor series. As I said way back in
.1, I've only read the first three, in which the "love slave"
business is barely present. The treatment of women in those
books is no different than in a random heroic fantasy novel
(which is probably damning it with faint praise). I certainly
don't consider the misogyny of the Gor novels to be acceptable.
(Also, after reading all of the replies here again, I've noted
that few people in this string has much good to say about the
series in general.)
Another thing I feel obliged to point out is that, surprisingly
enough, a large number of Gor fans are women. And Gor-based
costumes and skits were, at least back in the 70's, all the
rage at sf convention masquerades. Again, this is not intended
as a defense, merely presented as an observation. Personally,
I can't understand why a rational ($DEFINE RATIONAL NON-SEXIST)
man would find Gor's misogyny to be appealing. That a woman would
find it so is nothing short of mind-boggling.
Donald Wollheim (founder of DAW Booksm the publisher of the Gor
novels) once said that the Gor series was far and away the best
selling books he published, and that their sales were such that
they balanced out the less commercial stuff that he wanted to
publish. It's worth noting that a lot of this "chancey" material
that the Gor series enabled him to publish was from women such
as C.J. Cherryh and Tanith Lee. It seems hard to believe in
retrospect, but there was a time when Cherryh was an "uncommercial"
author. Wollheim has made a career out of "discovering" and
promoting female authors (perhaps out of guilt for the Gor books :-)).
I suppose it can be said that *some* good has come out of the Gor
series.
--- jerry
|
406.27 | guilt works wonders sometimes | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Fri Feb 24 1989 11:26 | 16 |
| < publish. It's worth noting that a lot of this "chancey" material
< that the Gor series enabled him to publish was from women such
< as C.J. Cherryh and Tanith Lee. It seems hard to believe in
< retrospect, but there was a time when Cherryh was an "uncommercial"
< author. Wollheim has made a career out of "discovering" and
< promoting female authors (perhaps out of guilt for the Gor books :-)).
< I suppose it can be said that *some* good has come out of the Gor
< series.
I suppose we have to take what good we can out of such
situations. If Wollheim has indeed promoted such authors I guess
I have to forgive him. :*)
It does surprise me that women would be fans of this sort of book
but then S&M and B&D are not extinct in real life either. I feel
the need to start a new note comming on, get ready, liesl
|
406.28 | GOR OF GOR | STRATA::RUDMAN | P51--Cadillac of the Skies! | Thu Mar 02 1989 16:54 | 14 |
| Well put, Jerry. (You offended no-one ;-))
Actually, in the first (of 3) Guardsmen book he took men to task,
having a fellow brought from Earth as a love slave. Comparing
the male/female slave theme one gets the idea it is a form of
brainwashing: this is how it's done, the society is structured
this way, and the collar makes you inferior. I feel Mr. Lange
is having us on. So I just skip pages when he begins going on &
on & on & on. I wish he'd quit it so he can finish the story in
a single book.
I think the new one comes out this month....
Don
|
406.29 | ....take THAT!...and THAT!!!! | COOKIE::MJOHNSTON | MIKE.....(Dammit! Spock...) | Tue Jun 06 1989 15:42 | 25 |
| I'm surprised no-one has mentioned one of my pet peeves about these
books.
I, too, read the first three, then another, then another (I have a
high kink threshold), and they really DID go down hill. Still, every
once in awhile, in a fit of boredom, I'd pick up another. Then his
stories started getting quite a bit longer. The reason they got longer:
He would have his character think about what he was going to say. A
whole conversation..... sometimes pages. Later, he'd have the character
actually engage in this conversation; the whole thing.....pages. Later
yet, He'd have the character REMEMBER the damned conversation......
PAGES! This was not an isolated `convention'. He used this tactic
repeatedly: with thoughts, conversations, recounting action, etc. He'd
have OTHER characters come in and repeat parts of what they had heard
the first character say! I couldn't believe it! Even if he IS being
paid by the word, this was the pits. Then, to add insult to insult, at
the end of the book (I think it was EVANGELISTS OF GOR), with the story
line not even approaching resolution, were the words:
TO BE CONTINUED
Needless to say, I have never purchased another Norman book.
Mike
|
406.30 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Protect! Serve! Run Away! | Wed Jun 07 1989 03:15 | 4 |
| If one is into reading kinky stuff, alt.sex.bondage is *much*
more interesting. :-)
--- jerry
|
406.31 | | PFLOYD::ROTHBERG | I awoke on impact ... | Wed Jun 07 1989 23:56 | 16 |
|
I started reading Gor about 4 or 5 years ago when
my friend gave me the first 5 books. Since that
time, I've been trying to find each book in the
proper order. I've read up to 22 now and started
23. I don't know where It went cause i put it
down after getting bored with it. i though it
would continue where 22 left off (ar was under
attack), but no, it took off and that is
continued in 24. now i have to find 24 and 23
again. i'll eventually finish the series, but i
really like the tarl/bosk stories, not the ones
that are a one book standalone.
- rob whose books may be off by one number -
|
406.32 | Just when you thought it was safe to walk back in the video store. | ANT::MLOEWE | Low in sugar; Low in salt; Lowenbrau | Thu Jul 13 1989 10:04 | 12 |
| NOOOOO not another one!!!!
I was in the video store over the weekend, and lo and behold there was a
sequel to GOR the movie. It was entitled, appropriately enough; OUTLAW OF GOR,
which happens to be the title of the second book in John Norman's series.
It stars all the same cast as I noted in my *.10 movie review earlier in
this note.
Folks, if this movie is anything like the first one, don't waste the money to
rent it.
Mike_L
|
406.33 | Low in story; low in sense; Lowenbrau is less dense. | STRATA::RUDMAN | Defenceless,adj. Unable to attack. | Thu Aug 10 1989 14:54 | 4 |
| Too late! Just for glee I rented it to see if it was as bad as
your description of the first. It seemed to be worse.
Don
|
406.34 | Duh... now I get it.. | COOKIE::MJOHNSTON | MIKE.....(Dammit! Spock...) | Thu Aug 10 1989 15:21 | 21 |
| � If one is into reading kinky stuff, alt.sex.bondage is *much*
� more interesting. :-)
Hey Jerry,
From awhile back.
I'm new to this stuff, and had no idea what you were talking about. Then I
heard about USENET. Tried to track this down, ended up in ROLL::USENET, and
read about 11 billion notes before I discovered it wasn't available through
there anymore. Heard about VNEWS, discovered NEWS-BACKBONE, and finally got
hooked up on a node that gets it (the usenet distribution). So far I
haven't read anything yet, because its an ULTRIX account, so I've been
learning new editors, etc. However, I did see the list, and there it was:
alt.sex.bondage; ASStounding!
Also, almost every notesfile I've discovered (with the exception of
SPORTS), you are in there - sometimes from years ago - noting your heart out.
whattayagotagainstsportsanywayhuh? *;'D
Mike
|
406.35 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | He's baaaaccckkk!!!! | Sun Aug 13 1989 23:58 | 6 |
| re:.34
I don't have anything *against* sports. I just don't have anything
*for* them.
--- jerry
|
406.36 | | PFLOYD::ROTHBERG | They've shut down the main reactors! | Tue Aug 15 1989 01:14 | 13 |
|
how many gor books are there these days anyway, i
just finished number 24. i'm going back to read
22. i skipped it cause i got bored about 60
pages through and 23 was a continuation of 21.
it took me time, but i'm finally learning to skip
over all the parts about kajira this and slave
that. we've already heard it at least 5 times in
each book. now, if i only had a chance to
practice it... :')
- rob -
|
406.37 | | AZTECH::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Thu Aug 24 1989 13:27 | 7 |
| < that. we've already heard it at least 5 times in
< each book. now, if i only had a chance to
< practice it... :')
<
< - rob -
Practice what? degrading and enslaving women? liesl
|
406.38 | | PFLOYD::ROTHBERG | Dragons is soooo stupid... | Fri Aug 25 1989 03:32 | 10 |
|
No comment due to the fact that it could return
to haunt me ...
:')
- Rob -
|
406.39 | How many gor novels are there?? | COFLUB::WRIGHT | What do you call a Boomerang that doesn't return? | Fri Aug 25 1989 18:30 | 8 |
|
Hi Rob!!
Feelin a little cold and lonely at night??
grins,
clark.
|
406.40 | "Curiosity is not becoming in a Kajira." | STRATA::RUDMAN | Past,n. The Future of yesterday. | Wed Sep 20 1989 19:20 | 35 |
| SEE?!?!?!?!?!? I get Honorable Mention in the FEMALE SCI-FI WRITERS
(sic) note re: "sexist disclaimers--too bad we've become a society
of disclaimers" and here you are being pinged for saying you'd like
to try it. Next thing you know you're being accused of allegedly
(love that word; now more in use than "for only" and "free") enslaving
women and plying the whip. Well, I'd guess you could if you wished;
I'm sure you could find a willing partner (either "free" or "for
only"), and I'd also guess it is your business. Another aspect
of the disclaimers is that you can speak your mind but don't write
it down. (One of the Murphy's Laws' correlaries.) Now if you'd
said "*think* I'd like to try it" then you'd be fantasizing and that's
O.K., 'cause this *is* the file for fantasy (;-)). Let's face it;
Gor is a fantasy world (since NOMADS) and that's the name of the
game. Just as some women fantasize they're Jirel of Jorey or Red
Sonja (or even the Queen of the Black Coast), some men lament that
on Earth a dung bag is used only for gathering dung.
Now, before the IOM-bombs begin arriving I'll reiterate what I said
earlier: I skip the "slave-stuff" in the later Gor books and key
on the story. In the last book, I read only one passage on the Kajira
bit, and that was half-a-page. Why? It got boring having him ram
home a point every 5 pages. The result? A 45-min. read.
Good Lord! I just did it again! Another disclaimer!!! Maybe North
is on the right track after all...
Don
P.S. Re: how many-
I think you bottomed out with #24. I haven't seen a new
one on sale. Maybe he's being forced to write an *entire*
novel instead of a novella w/essays.
|
406.41 | | PFLOYD::ROTHBERG | Smoke if ya got 'em....THUD! | Fri Sep 22 1989 12:43 | 9 |
|
Well, I'm reading 25 now (Magicians of Gor) which
is about 500 pages, probably of which 100 is
Kajira stuff (which I'm skipping over - I'm sick
of hearing of the cursive Kef and the sme
different ways of using ropes and chains, and
those SCANDALOUS ta-teeras and siriks, etc)
|
406.42 | | STRATA::RUDMAN | Pledged To Protect Us All. | Tue Sep 26 1989 16:06 | 12 |
| Oh well. I haven't updated my library list since Oct of '86 (when
the house construction started) and it appears I won't get back
to it until the library shelves get built. MAGICIANS *is* the
last one out. And, since I followed the same reading routine, the
book went very quickly for me, also.
I figure sooner or later he has to bring back Pa-Kur, and/or send
Cabot to the Steel Worlds (or maybe not; a trip to the Steel Worlds
would be SF...) :=)
Don
|
406.43 | see, I can do smiley faces too | YUCATN::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Tue Sep 26 1989 19:58 | 3 |
| As I read your (generic) responses about why you read GOR I just
can't get over the feeling that all you folks probably buy HUSTLER
for reading the articles too. liesl :*)
|
406.44 | Hustler *has* articles? Maybe you could lend me one of yours. | STRATA::RUDMAN | Pledged To Protect Us All | Wed Sep 27 1989 17:47 | 11 |
| Probably beating a dead horse here, but the point is the first 4
books didn't force it down your throat. I like his style, and
when he is sticking to the action he keeps your interest up.
Like any other subject, after you've exhausted yourself there's
no sense trying to repeat it. Give it a rest, John.
Metaphorically speaking, of course.
Don
P.S. "Curiosity is not becoming in a Kajira."
|
406.45 | Where is Marlenus of Ar?!?!?!? | PFLOYD::ROTHBERG | Ubar of the road... | Mon Oct 02 1989 02:40 | 29 |
|
I was waiting for a long time for Pa-Kur to show
back up, I almost thought he would back in the
book with the Tuchuck 'egg', but Tarl killed off
they guy and no mention was made. At this point,
I don't think he will. I did like 'Ubar of the
skies' showing up with the red savages when he
did. THat caught me off guard, but this Kajira
stuff... I've had enough of it. When he starts
it, I just look for the next indent for a new
paragraph. At the place I buy most of my books
(Carey's bookstore in Plaistow, NH), he said he
actually had a woman in there once how insisted
that she was the author of the later Gor books
(supposedly there is more that one writer, but I
never noticed a style change).
At least the homestone of Ar's Station is on it's
way to Port Cos...
- Rob -
The next book should be out, Magician's was
written over a year or two ago, and they must be
putting them out much faster than that, otherwise
the series would have started in 1964.....
|
406.46 | First and next GOR books | MEO78B::PADDON | | Mon Nov 20 1989 22:35 | 22 |
| _Tarnsmen of Gor_ was published in 1966, actually. Until lately,
Norman has managed to churn out one a year (sometimes two).
As for the next installment in the series, there has been no mention
of it in recent Locus publisher's lists, so don't hold your breath.
Some random observations:
Gor books have some redeeming features. As has been repeatedly
said, the first few novels were good and mostly clean swashbucklers.
Check out _Assasins of Gor_ (#5) for the best of this style.
Norman, unfortunately, went on to imbue his work with his own
peculiar fetishes; if you can ignore this material (or treat it
as irrelevant adolescent fantasy), the remaining words are still
worthy of moderate interest.
On the postive side, Norman does raise some interesting
philosopical points (not suprising considering his vocation) and
his writing style is unique.
If you think GOR is bad, have a look at stuff by Simon Finch
or Sharon Green. We are talking really offensive here.
Michael
|
406.47 | | PFLOYD::ROTHBERG | How'd you get to be King then, 'eh? | Tue Nov 21 1989 18:44 | 9 |
|
Funny you mention this, I just asked at a
bookstore about forthcoming GOR, and nothing at
all showed up. Looks like the latest is #25,
Magicians of Gor published in June 1988. *sigh*
I want my Tarl Cabot!!! :')
|
406.48 | | SUBURB::TUDORK | SKEADUGENGA | Thu Mar 08 1990 13:33 | 1 |
| Looks like some feminist finally got the author then ?
|
406.49 | Should we beat our shields? | ROULET::RUDMAN | Always the Black Knight. | Tue Mar 13 1990 14:49 | 3 |
| T'were liker a financial analyst...
Don
|
406.50 | | CAVLRY::ROBR | Turn this mutha out! | Fri Feb 22 1991 02:06 | 11 |
|
Tal!
Still no news here eh? Shucks. He used to fire these things out every
6-9 months, now nothing for years. The Kurii must have gotten him.
- Rob who was recently trying to design a Kaissa board -
Ta Sardar Gor!
|
406.51 | | CAVLRY::ROBR | Turn this mutha out! | Tue Mar 12 1991 15:34 | 6 |
|
Well, called DAW Books. Those guys were useless. Either that or I
spoke to the wrong people. THe only comment I got offered was, "Maybe
he got tired of writing books." They were rude and unhelpful.
|
406.52 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Wed Dec 15 1993 09:41 | 8 |
| Minor update re .10/.32: the movie "Outlaw," _very_ loosely based on
"Outlaw of Gor," received the honor of being MST'ed last weekend on
MST3K. It's really an incredibly bad movie, lots of incomprehensible
cuts, plots that twist away into nothing, no particular sense of time
or place - and what acting! Oh, my... [I needn't add that the MST guys
had a field day with it.]
-b
|
406.53 | Bad, bad, bad, bad, bad | RNDHSE::WALL | Show me, don't tell me | Wed Dec 15 1993 09:49 | 8 |
|
Boy, talk about not knowing your audience. One of the plot threads was
freeing the slaves. :-)
This is the first time I've actually sat all the way through MST3K in a
long time, and it was pretty amusing.
DFW
|
406.54 | Or is that "butt"? | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Dec 15 1993 12:33 | 3 |
| ... but fantastic (in the original sense) hats!
Ann B.
|
406.55 | speaking of hats | RESOLV::KOLBE | The Goddess in Chains | Wed Dec 15 1993 12:47 | 6 |
| I can't resist adding this. I met a man recently at a party that was *totally*
into GOR. What a mondo geek. I nearly lost it when he showed me his tinfoil
helmet and asked if I'd like to participate in a Gorian fantasy. He looked like
Marvin the Martian. Yeah right, sure I'd love to be humiliated by an overweight,
out of shape, pervert that can't even make a decent costume. (now if he'd been a
hunk in a great costume...) liesl
|